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Entries in Deal Advisor (60)

Tuesday
Jun022015

Charter Communications Announces Acquisition of Bright House Networks

U.S. cable provider Charter Communications (NASDAQ:CHTR) announced on Tuesday, March 31st that it had acquired Bright House Networks, in a deal worth approximately $10.4 billion.  The transaction will result in Charter owning over 80 percent of Bright House Networks once the deal closes.  The transaction increases Charter’s footprint in the U.S. and helps it compete against other large cable providers.

Valuation Analysis and Deal Metrics

Transaction Facts

  • Charter Communications announced on May 26, 2015 that is was acquiring cable competitor, Bright House Networks for approximately $10.4 billion. 
  • Charter will finance the transaction through approximately $2.0 billion in cash, $2.5 billion of convertible preferred partnership units, and $5.9 billion of common partnership units.
  • In the deal, Charter will own approximately 86-87% of Bright House and Advance/Newhouse (a parent of Bright House) will own the remaining 13-14%.
  • Expected to close by the end of 2015.

 Strategic Considerations

  • Transaction further increases Charter’s footprint across the United States.   
  • Increases competition in the already competitive cable industry. 
  • Bright House is the largest cable operator in Tampa and Orlando, Florida.
  • Gives Charter the ability to leverage its operating structure and platform investments.

JSICA's Take

  • Charter-BHN transaction, when compared to some of the priced transactions in this industry since the beginning of 2012, comes in significantly lower multiples.
  • Based off of the average EV/LTM Revenue for priced transactions since 2012, Charter paid 0.5x lower in this transaction.
  • Based off of the average EV/LTM OIBDA for priced transactions since 2012, Charter paid 1.1x lower in this transaction. 
Monday
Jun012015

Crown Castle Announces Acquisition of Quanta Fiber

On Thursday, April 30th wireless tower company Crown Castle (NYSE: CCI) announced that it had acquired Quanta Fiber Networks, Inc., also referred to as Sunesys, a subsidiary of Quanta Services Inc. (NYSE: PWR).  The transaction is for approximately $1.0 billion and could bode well for Crown Castle, which is trying to increase its fiber network. 

 

Valuation Analysis and Deal Metrics  

 Transaction Facts

  • The deal will be financed through approximately $1.0 billion in cash.
  • Expected to close by the end of 2015. 

Strategic Considerations

  • Before the transaction, Crown Castle leased approximately 1,000 miles of fiber from Sunesys. 
  • Transaction should strengthen Crown Castle’s small cell networks. 
  • Sunesys has the rights or owns approximately 10,000 miles of fiber in major markets spread throughout the U.S.
  • Transaction gives Crown Castle access to a fiber network that includes cities, such as Philadelphia, Atlanta, Chicago, Silicon Valley, as well as northern New Jersey.
  • After the acquisition closes, Crown Castle will own or have rights to over 16,000 miles of fiber. 

JSICA’s Take

  • Overall, the multiples for the transaction seem to be relatively higher than past transactions in this industry over the last few years.
  • The deal provides significant lease-up potential in major metro markets, such as Southern California and Philadelphia. 
  • The current acquisition and Crown Castle’s previous acquisition of 24/7 Mid-Atlantic in September 2014 should help add to the firm’s total fiber miles and promote further growth for the company in the industry. 
Thursday
Apr302015

Lightower Announces Merger with Fibertech

On Monday, April 27th, Lightower Fiber Networks announced that they have agreed to merge with Fibertech Networks.  The transaction is an all cash deal for $1.9 billion funded with a mixture of debt and equity and is expected to close in Q3 2015.  The merger will allow the two companies to serve more locations, while being able to offer more service options to customers. 


 Transaction Facts

  • Lightower Fiber Networks is a leader in providing custom all-fiber and high-capacity network services.
  • Lightower serves enterprise, government, carrier and data center customers.
  • Fibertech Networks is a leading provider of fiber-optic based network services.
  • Fibertech serves wireline and wireless carriers, data centers, large enterprises, and facilities in several industries.

Strategic Considerations

  • Merged company will have approximately 32,000 fiber route miles connected to 5,000 wireless towers and 13,000 POPs. 
  • Transaction provides a complementary network and geographic footprint. 
  • Both companies offer fiber-based services such as Ethernet, dark fiber, wavelengths, Internet access, private networks and colocation services, which makes for a natural fit.

JSICA’s Take

  • Win for customers, due to the fact that the combined company will be able to offer the same superior level of customer support and reliability as it has in the past, except in more locations.
  • Merger creates a strong presence for the two companies in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic.
Friday
Feb062015

Frontier Communications to Acquire Verizon’s Wireline Operations in CA, FL, and TX

Frontier Communications Corporation (NASDAQ: FTR) announced on Wednesday, February 4th that it had agreed to acquire wireline operations in California, Florida, and Texas that belong to Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZ).  The transaction is for approximately $10.54 billion and should benefit Frontier as it continues to create scale through M&A.

Valuation Analysis and Deal Metrics

Transaction Facts

  • The transaction is being financed through $10.54 billion in cash.
  • The acquisition includes Verizon’s wireline voice, broadband and video operations.
  • Expected to close by the first half of 2016.

 Strategic Considerations

  • Transaction will allow Frontier to double in size.
  • Frontier expands its footprint, primarily in areas where it did not have a significant presence.
  • Frontier’s experience with its newly acquired U-verse properties should benefit the integration of its FiOS markets. 
  • 54% of the acquired network is FiOS enabled, repositioning Frontier’s business mix more heavily to fiber-based services.
  • The acquired wireline operations generated revenue of approximately $5.7 billion for Verizon in 2014.
  • Frontier’s lower cost structure is expected to reduce costs by $525 million in the first year after the close and by $700 million by year three post-close.

 JSICA’s Take

  • A comparison of the multiples of priced transactions since the beginning of 2012, shows Frontier paid relatively lower multiples in the deal.
  • Since the beginning of 2012, the average EV/LTM Revenue on priced transactions was approximately 1.9x, which is 0.1x higher than the FTR-VZ transaction multiple.
  • Since the beginning of 2012, the average EV/LTM OIBDA was 6.0x, which is 1.5x higher than the multiple in the transaction.
  • The average EV/P_ OIBDA since the beginning of 2012 was approximately 4.7x, which is 1.2x higher than the FTR-VZ transaction multiple.

 

Tuesday
Sep162014

Consolidated/Enventis Merger a Strategic Fit

The Deal

On June 30, 2014, Mattoon, IL-based Consolidated Communications announced it would merge with fellow publicly-traded ILEC, Minnesota-based Enventis (formerly HickoryTech) in an all-stock transaction valued at $350 million.  At the deal’s targeted close in 4Q14, Enventis shareholders will receive 0.7402 shares of Consolidated stock for each Enventis share—an implied value of $16.50 on announce date.  

During the past year, Consolidated CEO Bob Currey had indicated on earnings calls that CNSL would be open to deals if a property with right mix of assets hit the market.  Behind the scenes, Consolidated already had its sights set on Enventis. 

According to the proxy statement filed with the SEC, Currey and Enventis CEO, John Finke began discussing a possible transaction in June 2013, a year before the merger’s eventual announcement.  Consolidated’s initial merger proposal--offered on June 29, 2013--valued Enventis shares at $12.50, approximately 25 percent below the announced deal price.  The parties engaged in talks on-and-off over the next year negotiating terms—fixed vs. floating share exchange rates, number of board seats (Enventis wanted 2, got 1), and termination fees ($8.5m) among others. 

Strategic Considerations

Strategically, the merger makes sense as both companies have employed similar growth strategies over the last several years, focusing on enterprise-centric, broadband services.  Consolidated acquired SureWest in 2012, picking up FTTH-based networks in Kansas City and California.  HickoryTech, which officially changed its name to Enventis in April, acquired network provider Enventis Telecom in 2005 and added Fargo, ND-based IdeaOne in 2012 further expanding its fiber network.  Although the companies do not have contiguous footprints, their operations are both largely centered in the Midwest. 

The proxy statement indicates that Enventis’s management and board considered other strategic alternatives, but determined a merger with Consolidated was in the best interest of its shareholders.  In the board’s estimation, Consolidated was the most strategic acquirer and that Enventis was unlikely to fetch a higher price through an auction due to the limited number of strategic buyers and the lack of synergies present for financial buyers.

Financial Highlights

The deal values Enventis at implied multiples of 1.9x trailing revenue, 7.3x trailing OIBDA and 5.6x pro forma OIBDA factoring in $14m in annual operating synergies.  By comparison, Consolidated paid just 6.3x trailing and 4.8x pro forma cash flow for Surewest, indicating that the market for wireline telecom has stabilized during the past few years.

Structuring the deal as an all-stock merger allows Consolidated to delever its balance sheet. Factoring in synergies, Consolidated’s debt to OIBDA ratio will decline from 4.3x to 3.9x.  Additionally, the all-stock transaction frees up cash to invest in success-based capital projects including near-net opportunities on Enventis’s 4,200 mile fiber network.

Closing Thoughts

While Consolidated touts the organic growth opportunities granted by the merger, the truth is that delivering meaningful organic growth is difficult, and M&A remains the primary driver of growth for wireline telecom providers.  Consolidated has grown revenue from $349m in 2011 to $601m in 2013, but pro forma the SureWest acquisition, its revenue has actually declined year over year since 2011.  With shareholder pressure to maintain dividends and to keep stock prices elevated, another year of limited top-line growth is a difficult narrative to sell—M&A tends to offer a more compelling story.  Now the ball is in Consolidated’s court to translate the Enventis merger into value for its shareholders.

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