DJ TALES OF THE TAPE: Move Toward Value In Start-Up Telecom
16 Apr 14:04
By Christine Nuzum Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Spring has brought a new focus to investing in startup telecommunications companies, and it has an unlikely undertone of value. With the change has come a rethinking of Wall Street's top picks in the sector.
A value focus is relative in this sector where even the more conservative analysts extoll companies with profits two or three years down the road. The sector's only profitable company, Pac-West Telecomm Inc. (PACW), draws mixed reviews while McLeodUSA (MCLD), which lost half a billion dollars last year, is cheered.
Factors outside of financial statements, such as the quality of corporate management and the impact of expected changes in the law, continue to play important roles in how Wall Street assesses these stocks. But over the last few months, the discussion of numbers already reported has grown louder while talk of hopes like projected growth and revenue forecasts has dimmed.
For example, UBS Warburg's new analyst for the start-up telecom sector, Glenn Waldorf, takes a relatively conservative approach, analyzing equity from a credit perspective and focusing on a company's balance sheet as much as its earnings potential.
Many research outfits turned the corner during the first week of April, shaken by a couple of bankruptcies and a broad devaluation of the emerging telecom stocks.
Shares of Winstar Communications Inc. (WCII), once on many firms' A-list, suffered the quarter's most dramatic decline, plunging to penny-stock territory from $16 in seven weeks. A request to delay its annual report took Winstar's bonds to levels that forecast bankruptcy as concerns over the company's $3.4 billion debt load and ability to raise additional funding heightened.
Several analysts, late to cut their ratings on Winstar, began tweaking their top picks. Two months ago, four carriers - McLeodUSA, XO Communications (XOXO), Allegiance Telecom Inc. (ALGX) and Time Warner Telecom Inc. (TWTC) - seemed to be firmly in the top tier of the sector. Some analysts, including Salomon Smith Barney and Credit Suisse First Boston Corp., had also put Winstar in that top tier.
Putting A Hold On XO Once fears emerged that Winstar would go under, analysts took the company with the heaviest debt and the steepest recent stock declines - XO Communications - and either cut their ratings or tempered their recommendations.
New analysts at UBS Warburg and William Blair put a hold rating - a bearish call for the sell-side - on XO's stock. Prudential Securities Inc. downgraded the stock to hold from strong buy and Frost Securities Inc. initiated coverage with a hold rating. It's worth noting that the preceding analyst at UBS Warburg had a strong buy rating on XO.
XO Communications' shares closed at $3.61 Thursday, down 87% from Jan. 19, when they closed at $27.81. Adjusted for two-for-one stock splits in 1999 and 2000, shares are also down more than 50% from the company's 1997 initial public offering price of $17. The company's bonds were quoted at 50 cents on the dollar Thursday, showing that those more senior investors were expecting to take a 50% loss on their XO stake.
The market's disenchantment with XO roughly traced the declines of Winstar.
Like Winstar, the company has heavy losses and only enough cash projected to carry it into next year. Also like Winstar, XO has much more debt than shareholder equity. Before a $517 million convertible bond deal in January, the company had $4.4 billion in long-term debt and $1.8 billion in total stockholders' equity. This imbalance, combined with the frigid capital-markets environment, makes the public debt market look inaccessible to XO.
Unfortunately, as its stock price has declined, an equity offering has also become a less viable option.
One thing XO has going for it that Winstar lacks is confidence in its financial backers. While the financial troubles of a major provider of Winstar's vendor financing, Lucent Technologies Inc. (LU), eroded hopes for a deal from that source, analysts still talk of a likely private investment in XO. In telecom entrepreneur Craig McCaw and leveraged buyout firm Forstmann Little, the company has deep-pocketed and well respected financiers.
"XO today is a pure bet on funding," said Morgan Stanley analyst Todd Scott.
He has placed his bets on the company receiving funding, this time not from Forstmann Little or McCaw, but from another private investor. However, he is quick to say that others aren't so hopeful.
"Others believe they're not going to get the funding, in which case it would be a bankruptcy," Scott said.
Still others, including Ken Hoexter of Merrill Lynch & Co. and Waldorf of UBS Warburg, expect XO to soon cut its $1.9 billion to $2.1 billion capital budget for the year.
A spokesman for XO said the company is "evaluating all our options" to extend its cash further, including a scaled back business plan and financing deals.
Scaling back the business plan might change Morgan Stanley's opinion of XO.
"If we saw them scale back in a small way, we would not view that as a positive signal," Scott said. "If they do scale back, that sends out a signal that the capital that we believe is there is not there." If XO were to announce a more dramatic restructuring, Scott would reevaluate the new business plan, and then determine whether to stay bullish on the company.
Time Warner Telecom Rising As XO lost footing on most analysts' lists, Time Warner Telecom edged up.
Merrill Lynch's Hoexter recently listed Time Warner Telecom and Allegiance as his top picks instead of XO and Allegiance, earlier favorites. UBS Warburg and Legg Mason Wood Walker initiated coverage with strong buy ratings, William Blair and Thomas Wiesel Partners with a buy. Gerard Klauer Mattison upgraded the stock to buy, its highest rating.
Spun off from Time Warner Cable in 1999, Time Warner Telecom is now 45%-owned by America Online Inc. (AOL).
On paper, what sets Time Warner Telecom apart from its "top-tier" peers is its smaller debt load. In January, Time Warner Telcom sold $400 million in bonds, bringing its long-term debt to about $1 billion.
David Rayner, Time Warner Telecom's chief financial Officer, told Dow Jones Newswires his "conservative approach relative to the sector" has helped buoy its stock price against a broad devaluation. Compared with its peers, Time Warner Telecom's stock is doing well to be valued at more than 50% of its January high.
Among the four widely followed companies in the sector, only Allegiance Telecom has less debt, $566 million. However, unlike Time Warner Telecom, Allegiance does not have positive cash flow to help support that debt.
Allegiance also has nearly twice as much shareholder equity, totaling $958 million.
Time Warner Telecom's shareholder equity is roughly equal to its long-term debt, a balance that is part of the company's financial strategy. The company ended last year with $585 million in long-term debt and $472 million in stockholder equity. The company's mixed shelf offering in January lifted both sums to roughly $1 billion, according to CFO Rayner.
If the debt level is too high, "you're not going to be able to generate enough of a return to pay the interest," Rayner said. Too much equity dilutes investor returns, he added.
"Equity holders are looking for something north of 20% in terms of returns on their investments," over the period of that investment, he said.
Further interest rate reductions might encourage Time Warner Telecom to raise more debt, perhaps without an accompanying increase in equity, Rayner said. But he is also wary of the interest costs that come with being considered a risky concern.
"While we have been very successful, we still are not an investment grade credit," he said.
-ChristineNuzum, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5172 (END) DOW JONES NEWS 04-16-01 02:04 PM |