We published our Global High Yield Quarterly this week – HERE. For a European perspective, we provide a summary of our thoughts and ideas on the European HY issuers in this piece, which takes excerpts from the Global HYQ and adds to it, including asset cover and a summary of our most preferred and least preferred names.
Orange has reported a solid set of results, with EBITDA c+0.4% ahead of consensus. Guidance has all been reiterated, and cost synergy numbers for Spain have been lifted (with new additional revenue synergy numbers given, that are based on intra-company churn switching data, which makes it plausible some could be delivered in our view).
Broadband industry growth slowed in 4Q23. We wondered, exiting the quarter, whether growth would level off or slow further in 1Q24. Based on the data we have collected so far, it appears that growth has slowed further, and possibly quite materially. We suspect slower growth will impact all operators, although for fiber, it should be partly offset by footprint expansion.
Altice International reported a solid set of results today. The war in Israel has impacted the Israeli numbers, but broadly as expected. Portugal continues to perform very nicely, and overall the guidance suggests that ATCI, like NOS (read HERE), see minimal impact from Digi in 2024. The guidance looks sensible (conservative), but German construction revenue could be a big delta to numbers, and the impact here remains uncertain.
The European Telco landscape is dominated by three high profile billionaires. Patrick Drahi, John Malone, and Xavier Niel. They all have multiple debt silos, and large empires, but the bonds trade at very different spreads. In this note, we look at why that might be the case, and in particular, if the Niel businesses deserve to trade at tighter spreads. We think they do, which means that Xavier Niel should be able to continue to raise funds cheaply (albeit the Iliad spreads widened after the Tel...
The EC has approved the Orange Masmovil merger (HERE) with remedies unchanged from the announcement in early December (HERE). We continue to be of the view that the remedy package is a good one for the operators in Spain, and indeed for the likelihood of further M&A in Europe.
A break-up of Altice International, is, we are told, option A for delevering at Altice France. According to press reports however, there is a gap between the offers made for Altice Portugal and the amount that Patrick Drahi wants (€7bn of proceeds wanted vs €5bn-€6bn offered); because Altice International debt will have to be repaid in the event of a sale of Portugal, €5bn of proceeds might not be enough to persuade Drahi to sell, as the amount of cash that could be up-streamed might be too smal...
A break-up of Altice International, is, we are told, option A for delevering at Altice France. According to press reports however, there is a gap between the offers made for Altice Portugal and the amount that Patrick Drahi wants (€7bn of proceeds wanted vs €5bn-€6bn offered); because Altice International debt will have to be repaid in the event of a sale of Portugal, €5bn of proceeds might not be enough to persuade Drahi to sell, as the amount of cash that could be up-streamed might be too smal...
Orange has reported a very solid set of results, with EBITDA c1.5% ahead of consensus for Q4. France guidance for 2024 EBITDA has been lifted, and overall Group guidance is in-line at EBITDA and 3% ahead at OCF. Ex energy, Group EBITDA is growing at >4%. Comments on the call about the Digi remedy package are very positive for European in-market consolidation in our view.
Patrick Drahi’s net worth is an important topic for all three Altice silo bondholders. We first wrote about that HERE. We update those thoughts in this report, based on the recent financial results at Sotheby’s. We evaluate performance since Sotheby’s was taken private and give our thoughts on valuation as well.
On Tuesday of last week we received notification of a remedy proposal for Orange-Masmovil in Spain (HERE), which we thought could encourage other 4-3 deals in Europe. Less than a week later, Iliad has proposed a merger (really a takeover) with Vodafone in Italy. In this note, we run through our thoughts on the proposed deal.
The decision that we have all been waiting for has finally arrived. Orange Masmovil and Digi have reached an agreement for a remedy package in Spain. We provide our thoughts on the package in this piece. The headline “Digi buying spectrum” is bad, but we think that the reality and specifics of the package are nowhere near as bad as the headline would suggest.
Q3 was a decent quarter for Sub-Saharan African (SSA) operators. Fundamentals remain strong. We have updated forecasts post Q3 results, and our recommendations and target prices remain unchanged, except for Safaricom. AAF remains our preferred play in Africa.
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