WCOM: Putting AT&T announcement in Perspective Jack Grubman Salomon Smith Barney Tuesday, August 31, 1999
--SUMMARY:--MCI WorldCom, Inc.--Telecommunications Services *AT&T's lowering of guidance on LD is a function of AT&T's mix & competitive position not an overall statement about the industry.*In the consumer segment, WCOM is growing at a positive low single-digit rate vs. AT&T which is declining at a low to mid single-digit rate.*WCOM's market position in consumer is still below 20% market share which is why they continue to grow minutes, revs & profits.*WCOM's commercial business will grow top line in the mid-teens in contrast to AT&T's mid single-digit growth overall in the commercial space.*WCOM will post accelerating rev growth in the 3Q relative to the 2Q and is extremely cheap selling at the lowest P/E to growth ratio of all large cap S&P stocks w/ growth rates over 20%. --EARNINGS PER SHARE-------------------------------------------------------- FYE 1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr Year Actual 12/98 EPS $0.18A $0.21A $0.21A $0.22A $0.82A Previous 12/99 EPS $0.36A $0.45A $0.55E $0.65E $2.00E Current 12/99 EPS $0.36A $0.45A $0.55E $0.65E $2.00E Previous 12/00 EPS $N/A $N/A $N/A $N/A $2.90E Current 12/00 EPS $N/A $N/A $N/A $N/A $2.90E Previous 12/01 EPS $N/A $N/A $N/A $N/A $3.80E Current 12/01 EPS $N/A $N/A $N/A $N/A $3.80E Footnotes: --FUNDAMENTALS-------------------------------------------------------------- Current Rank........:1M Prior:No Change Price (8/27/99).....:$78.50 P/E Ratio 12/99.....:39.3x Target Price..:$130.00 Prior:No Change P/E Ratio 12/00.....:27.1x Proj.5yr EPS Grth...:28.0% Return on Eqty 98...:N/A% Book Value/Shr(99)..:26.00 LT Debt-to-Capital(a)26.7% Dividend............:$N/A Revenue (99)........:34933.00mil Yield...............:N/A% Shares Outstanding..:1900.0mil Convertible.........:No Mkt. Capitalization.:149150.0mil Hedge Clause(s).....:# Comments............:(a) Data as of the most recently reported quarter. Comments............: --OPINION:------------------------------------------------------------------ We put out our note on AT&T late yesterday and we re-issued it this morning regarding their takedown of guidance in the long distance business. Frankly, AT&T's conference call while supposedly a call regarding its new consumer pricing plans was, in reality, a call to lower long distance guidance. We fundamentally believe that AT&T's lowering of guidance is an AT&T issue relating to market share loss and mix issues more than symptomatic of industry issues. In particular, the contrast with WCOM is startling vis-a-vis relative growth rates in both consumer and business long distance. The point is that WCOM, while facing the same macro industry that AT&T is, is growing its core long distance business at a high-teens rate versus AT&T which is not growing. This is a function of relative weightings of voice versus data, dependence on wholesale versus commercial for growth (AT&T the former, WCOM the latter), and the truism of AT&T still being in a market share losing position versus WCOM which is in a market share gaining position. IN CONSUMER, WCOM IS GROWING WHILE AT&T IS DECLINING First, within the consumer space, AT&T's revenue performance while negative in the first half of 1999, nonetheless, was favorably impacted by the one-time benefit of adding back PICC and USF line charges as of July of 1998. We estimate this PICC/USF benefit might have added in as much as 3-4% to revenue growth which offset what was really an underlying decline of 6-8% in core consumer revenue for AT&T. Thus, as these impacts are anniversaried, the result is a worsening of reported revenue growth in consumer from -3.4% in the first half of 1999 to -5% in the second half of 1999. We should also point out that since AT&T's WorldNet is growing, the reality is that AT&T's pure consumer long distance revenue growth is actually worse than these numbers indicate. In addition, while AT&T clearly has been attempting to optimize their consumer base relative to low volume users, nonetheless, AT&T continues to lose share in both the transaction (i.e. 10XXX) and subscription (i.e. Dial 1) businesses. We believe AT&T's acceleration of declining revenue is more a result of losing Dial 1 customers mostly to WorldCom than any overall pricing phenomena. For example, WCOM has grown 1.6 million Dial 1 customers in the first half of this year alone with the vast majority coming from AT&T. WCOM has grown its base of Dial 1 customers by 23% over the last 2 years with Dial 1 minutes growing 27% during that same time. On the transaction side, WCOM's transaction revenue has grown 91% in the last 2 years with 85% of this coming from customers who are AT&T Dial 1 subscribers. Excluding transactional revenue streams such as Dial Around, WCOM's consumer revenues have grown $2 billion or 38% in the last 2 years. Thus, for AT&T to blame its worsening woes in consumer to the overall market is just not correct. WCOM, which obviously has to respond to all the same macro pricing moves as does AT&T has seen quite phenomenal growth in minutes, customers and revenues during the course of the last 8 quarters in the consumer long distance market. Furthermore, WCOM after all these years, only has less than 20% of the consumer long distance market thus WCOM continues to be in a position to take market share in the consumer space which is resulting in positive levels of growth for WCOM in terms of both customers and revenues. In fact, as we pointed out in the AT&T note, any new price points introduced by WCOM or Sprint over the last month or so were not a significant discount of prevailing rates in the market thanks to the monthly fees imposed in these plans. In addition, it is impossible for pricing plans introduced in August to impact overall third quarter results given the lag between introduction of the plans and full resonating of the advertising in the marketplace. The reality is that AT&T's problems in the consumer market are unfortunately unique to them given their 60% share of the space and somewhat less than great execution and is not symptomatic of problems in the overall marketplace. As far as the AT&T execution is concerned, it should be noted that virtually all of the gains of WCOM in customers have come at AT&T's expense. The reality is that AT&T's initiatives in the consumer space have not really resonated in the marketplace. For example, AT&T's personal network has not been a huge success. In fact, we wonder about its effectiveness given the introduction of AT&T's new plan. After 7 months and what advertising industry sources tell us is $150 million in expenditures, AT&T admits to only a few hundred thousand customers and we would be willing to bet virtually all of them are conversions of existing AT&T customers. AT&T's Digital One Rate, in our opinion growth in wireless has not translated into long distance growth and WCOM has not lost a single customer due to this wireless plan. In addition, AT&T's relationships with Internet portals have not translated into clearly any pick up in volume for consumer long distance. As far as WCOM is concerned, since the launch of their $0.05 every day plan on August 9th, WCOM, we estimate has already acquired one million customers in the marketplace, most of which are new. In general, WCOM's customer churn in the consumer long distance space has declined 7 of the last 8 quarters and is currently running at the lowest level since the early 1990's. Thus, on the consumer long distance side, we believe, AT&T's lowering of guidance is a function of arithmetic (i.e. the PICC/USF phenomenon), the fact that their 60% share position in consumer still makes them vulnerable to market share loss and not great execution in the marketplace. In contrast, WCOM for every quarter over the last two years has seen positive growth in consumer long distance customers, minutes and revenues--all of which will see an acceleration in the third quarter. IN THE BUSINESS MARKET, WCOM IS SIMPLY BETTER POSITIONED THAN AT&T On the business long distance side, WCOM's switched long distance business revenues will grow an estimated 9.3% year-over-year in the third quarter not including wholesale. Including wholesale, WCOM's switched long distance revenues for business will grow roughly 6%. Including data and local, in addition to commercial and wholesale voice, WCOM's business services segment which would be a basket of services comparable to what AT&T calls business services will grow roughly 15.1% in the third quarter up from the 13% growth for this basket of services in the second quarter. This is in contrast to AT&T's guidance of 6-7% revenue growth for a similar basket of services in the third quarter which will likely be a deceleration over 6.7% level of growth in the second quarter. The point is that AT&T's business services growth rate will decelerate in the quarter driven by the fact that a large portion of their minutes growth is wholesale, and the fact that AT&T is still largely a voice-centric company. In contrast, WCOM on a similar set of services will see its business services segment revenue growth in the 15.1% range up from the 13% level it posted in the second quarter looking at this combination of services. This discrepancy is due to the fact that WCOM is more data-centric than AT&T and WCOM is not relying on wholesale for its growth in volume whereas wholesale with its accompanying lower revenue yield is driving the majority of AT&T's business volume growth. Therefore, WCOM despite all the volatility that is real or perceived in the long distance industry, is likely going to post top-line growth rates in its core business of close to 17% even accounting for impact of the frame-relay outage. As an aside, the good news in the WCOM frame-relay situation is that the platform which went down only carried $1.3 million of WCOM's $21 million in daily data revenues. WCOM's overall growth rate in core revenues will accelerate in the third quarter, in both the consumer and business services segment area. Therefore, while AT&T is in a position where it's growth rates are declining due to an unfortunate mix situation and the fact that it is losing share, WCOM which is significantly overweight in data relative to AT&T (and relative to the industry as a whole), while also gaining share in voice, is in a position to see top-line growth accelerate in the second half of 1999. The bottom line is that AT&T's problems, we think, are more unique to them given their mix and relative share position than it is symptomatic of general problems in the overall marketplace. WCOM will post top-line growth of close to 17% on a reported basis including the frame-relay impact and Sprint will report overall top-line growth in long distance in roughly the 9% range. These are both in stark contrast to AT&T that on a blended business and consumer basis will post essentially no top-line growth. We believe investors should differentiate among the long distance stocks as to what the businesses portend. We would be very aggressive on WCOM here since we believe it is without question the cheapest large cap growth stock in the entire S&P (selling at the lowest P/E to growth ratio of large S&P stocks with over 20% growth) and we would take full advantage of the nervousness in the market to "Load Up The Truck." NET/NET: WCOM is in a far different position than AT&T. WCOM's consumer business is growing not declining and its commercial business is growing on any measure at more than twice the rate of AT&T's. We think investors should take advantage of this to buy WCOM at extremely cheap prices. |