MCI WorldCom May Bid on AirTouch, People Familiar Say (Update4)
Bloomberg News January 7, 1999, 6:46 a.m. ET
MCI WorldCom May Bid on AirTouch, People Familiar Say (Update4)
(Updates Vodafone share price, in 16th paragraph.)
Jackson, Mississippi, Jan. 7 (Bloomberg) -- MCI WorldCom Inc. may enter the bidding for AirTouch Communications Inc., a move that could drive up the price for the U.S.'s largest cellular phone company, people familiar with the companies said.
MCI WorldCom, the No. 2 U.S. long-distance company, has contacted AirTouch to express its interest, though it hasn't made an offer, the people said. Vodafone Group Plc, the U.K.'s largest cellular phone company, has offered to buy AirTouch for about $54 billion, or $90 a share, while Bell Atlantic Corp., the largest U.S. local phone company, has bid about $43 billion, people familiar with their plans said.
AirTouch would give MCI WorldCom 16.1 million cellular phone customers in the U.S and Europe, filling a hole in its global package of telecommunications and Internet services. Any bid from MCI WorldCom would be an about-face for Chief Executive Bernard Ebbers, who's long said that WorldCom's primary focus is on business customers who aren't demanding wireless services.
''Getting into wireless would take away from management's focus,'' said Alan Hoffman, senior portfolio manager at Value Line Asset Management, which owns 223,400 MCI WorldCom shares. ''I would like to see them concentrate'' on the fixed-line business.
Last month, however, MCI Worldcom Chairman Bert Roberts told Bloomberg News the company could buy a cellular phone service provider ''in the next several years,'' as competition drives down the value of cellular phone companies, a signal that MCI Worldcom may be prepared to change tack.
Officials of AirTouch and MCI WorldCom declined to comment on the status of any discussions.
A purchase of AirTouch would rank among the 10 largest mergers and acquisitions ever. Any buyer also would assume AirTouch's $2.8 billion in long-term debt.
A bid from MCI WorldCom would mark the second time that Ebbers has entered a bidding war for a coveted telecommunications company. WorldCom bought MCI Communications Corp. in September for $47 billion, outbidding British Telecommunications Plc and No. 3 U.S. local phone company GTE Corp.
An AirTouch acquisition could cut into MCI WorldCom's future earnings -- something that Ebbers has promised he'd avoid, analysts and investors said.
Engaging Suitors
AirTouch and Vodafone officials, including Finance Director Ken Hydon, are scheduled to meet today in their first face-to- face meeting since Vodafone's offer Tuesday, said Alan Harper, Vodafone's group commercial director. Vodafone Chief Executive Chris Gent is in New Zealand and will not attend, Harper said.
Vodafone spokesman Mike Caldwell wouldn't say whether the company would raise its bid if MCI Worldcom or another company made a higher offer. If Vodafone deemed a higher price would place too much of a burden on earnings, it would bow out of the running, he said.
''Everything has its price and we have to make sure it's good for our shareholders,'' Caldwell said.
AirTouch's shares trade at about 16 times cash flow, compared with a ratio of 27 times cash flow for Vodafone's shares, said Alan Lyons, an analyst at ABN Amro. Because that makes AirTouch comparatively cheap compared to the U.K. company, Vodafone can afford to pay a price for AirTouch that may cause other bidders to shy away, Lyons said.
Bell Atlantic is unlikely to increase its bid because it would slash too deeply into future earnings, analysts and investors said. ABN Amro's Lyons named Bell South Corp. as another company that may be interested in AirTouch.
Investors have been bidding up many telecommunications shares. As of yesterday's close, Bell Atlantic was trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 30.62, while AirTouch was trading at a P/E of 75.35.
AirTouch shares rose 2 3/8 to 78 7/8, which is 78 times its estimated earnings. MCI WorldCom rose 3 7/16 to 78 3/8, or 94 times its earnings estimates. Bell Atlantic rose 7/8 to 55/78, or 21 times estimates.
Vodafone's shares fell 35 pence, or 3.12 percent, to 1,055, or 60 times estimated earnings, in London trading.
AirTouch Chief Executive Sam Ginn pinned his hopes on wireless when he resigned as chief executive of local phone company Pacific Telesis Group in 1994 to lead AirTouch. Wireless has become one of the fastest-growing areas of the phone industry.
Initial Reticence
Ebbers has shied away from the wireless business because it takes years to earn a profit due to the high costs of building networks and signing up customers. Several wireless companies are now profitable or close to earning money, making the business potentially more attractive to Ebbers, who built WorldCom through acquisitions with the company's high-flying stock.
What's more, rivals like Sprint Corp., the No. 3 U.S. long- distance company, now consider digital wireless personal communications services, or PCS, integral to their ability to offer bundled services to customers, ABN Amro's Lyons said.
''MCI could feel a bit behind,'' Lyons said.
One analyst said WorldCom doesn't need to own wireless networks to be successful in that market.
''I don't believe MCI WorldCom needs a facilities-based presence in wireless to be a global telecom player,'' said Kevin Roe, an ABN Amro analyst who has a ''buy'' rating on AirTouch. ''They'd be very late in the game and have no experience in wireless competition.''
MCI WorldCom has been expanding quickly overseas and plans to triple the size of its network in Europe, spending as much as $1.2 billion to boost its total cities connected to 45 from 10.
That would complement AirTouch's European cellular operations. AirTouch boosted international wireless customers by 88 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier, compared with a 22 percent increase in the U.S.
On Tuesday, several AirTouch shareholders sued the company demanding that its directors get top dollar by entertaining competitive bids.
Unprecedented Competition
Competition is flourishing in the global cellular industry as more companies enter the market for digital wireless personal communications services, or PCS. Growth in customers is slowing and the average monthly price per customer is falling in the U.S.
In addition to AirTouch, Nextel Communications Inc. has long been viewed as a potential wireless acquisition for WorldCom because it also concentrates on selling to business customers.
WorldCom made a bid to buy Nextel in 1994 and withdrew its offer after studying the wireless network and market, which had ample capacity, Roe said. WorldCom believed that it didn't have to own its own network.
''They made a decision that there's too much capacity,'' Roe said.
Ebbers is known for building his company primarily through acquisitions, making more than 50 purchases in the past decade.
In December 1996, WorldCom's $15.5 billion purchase of MFS Communications Co. more than doubled its market capitalization, and analysts and investors expected at least a year to pass before it announced any more acquisitions.
Nine months later, WorldCom agreed to buy CompuServe Corp. and America Online Inc.'s ANS Communications network services unit for $1.3 billion. The next month, it entered the bidding for MCI and agreed to buy local phone company Brooks Fiber Properties Inc. for $2.9 billion.
Looking Abroad
MCI and WorldCom were each among the first phone companies to focus on the Internet and invest in networks to carry data. The company is now the world's leading carrier of Internet traffic.
MCI WorldCom has outpaced its rivals, AT&T Corp. and Sprint Corp., in revenue growth primarily because of strong increases in sales of international and data services.
MCI WorldCom had a third-quarter profit before charges of $430 million, or 19 cents a share, compared with a loss of $265 million, or 17 cents, a year earlier. The company stated both quarters' results on a pro-forma basis, as if MCI and WorldCom Inc. were combined in both periods.
Third-quarter revenue rose 30 percent to $8.61 billion, led by a more than sixfold increase in international phone sales to $1.23 billion. Data-services revenue rose 33 percent to $1.52 billion, while Internet services rose 72 percent to $589 million.
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