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Merger Mania

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The industry is suddenly awash with talks of acquisitions and mergers.

In September, Verizon announced the acquisition of Frontier Communications in an all-cash deal valued at $20 billion. The deal was touted for adding Frontier’s fiber customers to Verizon’s base of FiOS customers – which would grow Verizon to approximately 10 million customers.

T-Mobile has announced two acquisitions of fiber overbuilders. The first was the acquisition of Lumos, which has been building fiber in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia. Lumos currently has over 300,000 customers, but T-Mobile said it would continue to invest for the company to grow pass 3.5 million homes by the end of 2028. T-Mobile also announced the purchase of Metronet, a fiber overbuilder from the Midwest that has expanded into 17 states. Metronet currently passes 2 million homes, and T-Mobile says it will invest to grow to 6.5 million fiber passings by the end of 2030.

T-Mobile is also buying Uscellular from TDS for $4.4 billion. This purchase has drawn attention from six Senators who disapprove of the sale.

As I was writing this blog, Bell Canada, a subsidiary of giant BCE, announced it wants to buy Ziply for $3.6 billion. Ziply was formed in 2020 by buying properties in the Pacific Northwest from Frontier.

DirecTV announced recently that it will acquire all of the video assets of EchoStar, which had just merged with Dish at the beginning of this year. This means that DirecTV will take on all of the Dish video customers along with Sling TV. As part of the merger, DirectTV is also taking on all of EchoStar’s debt.

Will not directly broadband, but highly related, Qualcomm has made overtures to buy Intel. This is a particularly interesting offer since a decade ago Intel had looked at buying Qualcomm.

Fierce Network published an article in September that said that 400 fiber ISPs are ripe for acquisition. Assuming that even just fraction of those ISPs are interested, this foretells a lot more coming announcements of industry consolidation. There is an interesting quote in the article. Andrej Danis of AlixPartners said that many fiber overbuilders “will never reach critical mass.”

This is an interesting observation that highlights the difference between how the financial world and investors look at the fiber business compared to many of the ISPs who have built fiber.

Many fiber businesses clearly have the goal of growing large enough to flip to somebody larger. The investors in these businesses are largely venture capitalists who hope to sell companies at a premium multiple of what they paid to build the business. For example, the Lumos deal is reported to be valued at over $9,000 per existing broadband customer – a lot more than what the company spent to build the existing networks.

Almost anybody who owns a fiber ISP is going to be tempted to sell at those kinds of valuations. But there are still a lot of ISPs with a different motivation. Once a broadband network is mature, it turns into cash cow and spins off a lot of cash annually. I know ISPs that have expanded fiber networks strictly for the permanent cash flow that builds long-term family wealth. Such ISPs envision operating networks for many decades to come.


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