our old friend CWP: - How often do you hear -- and this column isn't innocent -- that a stock buyback would support some beleaguered company's share price? Plenty. Well, the next time an analyst or journalist cheerily offers that "the downside is limited" thanks to an aggressive buyback program, point out Cable & Wireless's woes.
Last November, C&W, flush with about £6 billion in cash from some well-timed asset sales and under heavy pressure to "do something," began buying back a ton of its own shares. And it didn't stop until it had scooped up some 15% of the outstanding by the end of last month, according to figures from WestLB Panmure. The result? The stock fell 44%, from as high as 380 pence in mid-November to 213.75 now. Its ADRs closed around 9.27 Friday. "About 1.1 billion pounds of shareholder money expended provided no support for the price," notes Benedict Evans, a telecoms analyst at WestLB Panmure, London.
The timing was awful. Hostile sentiment against telecoms stocks in general and so-called alternative telecoms, in particular, worsened, and it remains pervasively negative. Over the last 12 months, the European telecom group is down 32%, far worse than all other sectors in Europe.
Yet, the sagging stock price is all the more interesting because a sum-of-the-parts evaluation suggests that the market is essentially betting that C&W management will destroy value. Analyst Evans, for example, notes C&W still has about £2.3 billion or about 125 pence per share in net cash on the books now, and that its various regional incumbent telecoms businesses, mostly in the Caribbean, are worth arguably 80 pence per share. That leaves a scant 8.75 pence for the C&W's future supposed growth engine, the global division.
Over the last few years, CEO Graham Wallace has sold off most of C&W's traditional wireline and wireless telecoms business around the world, at near top-of-market prices. This was done to refocus on that global division, which provides snazzy new alternative telecommunications services for business customers like Internet-protocol and data-telecommunications services, as well as Web-hosting. C&W has invested in fiber-optic networks in anticipation of strong growth for IP-driven voice and data traffic. But the highly-competitive industry is suffering from an enormous excess capacity, lower-than-expected demand for fiber capacity by both businesses and telecom operators, and falling prices.
In February, the company lowered its guidance to a 10% revenue decline from a 5% drop in the global division for the fiscal year just ended in March, 2002. That wasn't the first disappointment, and Evans says he doesn't expect any growth this year in that division.
C&W's management is in a "weird" bind, he opines. If C&W uses its hoard of lucre to buy more cash-burning alternative telecom assets like Exodus and Digital Island, the market will hammer it. If the company just sits on the cash, it'll be criticized. And clearly, the buybacks haven't worked.
Yet those buybacks came under duress, after strong lobbying by shareholders, asserts James Clunie, head of global equities at Aberdeen Asset Management. CEO Wallace "has been a bit unlucky," avers Clunie, who adds management has fallen out of favor with UK money managers.
On valuation grounds, C&W looks cheap, though that was also the case last October when this column first noted that cash made up more than 50% of the market capitalization, as now. The stock is at an eleven-year low. On price to book, the shares trade at around 0.4 times, though some of the telecom assets on its books probably are overvalued. On price to sales, C&W trades at about 0.84 times. The latter measures are far lower than other telecom stocks. And, there's the cash in hand.
The key to C&W is whether the global division will be a cash producer or cash vampire. "The global division continues to be hugely cash consumptive," Evans contends. The company replies that Global will be free-cash-flow-neutral (that's adding back capital expenditures to earnings before interest, depreciation and amortization expense) in the year ending March, 2004 -- implying it will be negative in the current fiscal year.
That's the value destruction the market is worried about.
Clunie says that until there's more evidence, investors should make a conservative assumption of middle-single-digits long-term growth for the global business. In that case, there's probably long-term value and upside in the shares, he believes, perhaps 50% or more in a few years. Unlike other hard-pressed alternative telecoms firms, it's not a question of survival for C&W -- because there's that cash again.
Some feel the company hasn't disclosed enough. As Henry de Vismes, a managing director at Citigroup Asset Management, notes, C&W is going to have to demonstrate where the volume growth is going to come from in the Global division, which parts are profitable and which not. "It's a show-me stock now."
If the market's ugly telecoms mood doesn't change, C&W will need to put on a pretty convincing show come May 15, the next scheduled reporting date. If ignored, the market will just go on assuming the global division is destroying value. It's up to management to prove otherwise. |