Article on AT&T Board retreat:
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AT&T: Let's Make a Deal
AT&T's board of directors and executives are meeting at their annual retreat this week, and are reportedly discussing a wide variety of strategic options. Investors should consider whether any announcement that results from the meeting will help the company with its principle challenge: increasing the return on its huge capital investments.
By Chris Rugaber (TMF RFK) September 20, 2000
Shareholders in leading telecom and cable provider AT&T (NYSE: T) should prepare themselves, if they haven't already, for the onslaught of news, analysis, and rumors almost certain to emanate from the company's annual retreat, which begins tomorrow. Indeed, the speculation and gossip about what will transpire behind closed doors began days ago.
Regardless of the outcome, a key question for investors to consider while perusing news of any deals or restructurings is whether or how they will affect the company's declining returns on invested capital.
So many choices... AT&T's board will apparently consider numerous options to pump some life into the company, and more specifically, the stock. One of the most frequently mentioned possibilities is an alliance or combination of some kind with British Telecom (NYSE: BTY), which is also undergoing a painful transition as increased telco competition in the U.K. eats away at its former monopoly. The two companies could expand their current partnership for international business, known as Concert, or perhaps combine their wireless assets. Even a full merger has been rumored, though that seems unlikely. On Sunday, BT did confirm that the two companies were engaged in talks, though AT&T declined to comment.
Another option, widely reported last week, would be a combination of AT&T Wireless (NYSE: AWE) with Nextel (Nasdaq: NXTL). Finally, two different options may be discussed for the company's huge, profitable, but stagnant consumer long-distance division. One possible move would be to spin off the business into a publicly traded entity that would be controlled by a consortium of cable companies and AT&T. A second option would involve combining long distance with Liberty Media Group (NYSE: LMG.A), AT&T's cable programming division headed by board member John Malone.
It's not clear which of these maneuvers, if any, will do much for the stock price in the short term. Many of these possibilities have been floated for some time, and yet the only recent upswing in the share price resulted from a false rumor last week that CEO Michael Armstrong would be fired and replaced by Malone. According to a Goldman Sachs analyst, AT&T won't make any major strategic announcements until mid-October, so shareholders may have to be patient.
Capital spending: No way out? As Fool news writer Richard McCaffrey has written, AT&T's decline in its return on invested capital -- which fell from 21% in 1998 to 8% last year -- is one of its biggest problems, thanks in part to the huge capital expenditures (or "cap ex") it has made to purchase and upgrade its cable plant.
Certainly, the company is not alone. On an industry-wide basis, a recent Lehman Brothers report noted that the ratio of revenue to capital spending for the telecom carriers has declined dramatically in recent years, as revenues have not kept up with cap ex. This probably explains much of the carriers' recent poor performance in the markets.
AT&T is an excellent example of this trend. Its ratio of revenue to capital expenditures decreased from 10.4 to 1 in 1995 to only 4.6 to 1 last year, as revenues clocked in at $62.6 billion, and capital expenditures at $13.5 billion. In the end, billions in revenue and profits are fine, but the market isn't as impressed if you have to spend a tremendous amount to get there.
It's unclear whether any of the possible deals being discussed could improve this dynamic. An alliance with BT might provide some economies of scale. In addition, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal earlier this week, AT&T hopes that selling its long-distance business to a cable consortium would speed up deployment of cable telephony and other services, boosting returns from its cable investments.
What's next for shareholders? For what it's worth, many of these concerns and the uncertainty surrounding the company seem to be largely priced into the stock, which is down almost 40% for the year. In fact, Lehman estimates that, excluding the wireless business, the company's enterprise value (EV) is only two to three times next year's EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization). It may be an investing cliche -- and it may be wrong -- but it seems unlikely the shares can go much lower than that.
Your Turn: What do you think would be the company's best moves? Let us know on the AT&T discussion board. |