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1 Perspective on the Carrier Market: Is there light at the end of the tunnel? Sureel Choksi Level 3 Communications sureel.choksi@level3.com
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2 Life a Year Ago
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3 Summary of the Past Year
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4 Only a portion of the market caps of all of these companies are known from 11/00 (Level3, Global Crossing, ITC Deltacom, MFN, and Neon). Their average loss from 11/5/00 to 5/10/01 was 70%. The other companies market cap of 11/5/00 was calculated based on this average loss. Market Value of Emerging Carriers 1-year decline from $168B to $14B
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5 Wall Street’s Perspective “It’s the end of the world as we know it” - REM
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6 Reality “Rumors of our demise are greatly exaggerated” - Mark Twain
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7 Today’s Agenda What went wrong in the communications services industry? Current state of the carrier market Wall Street perspective What should carriers do in this environment? Where does Level 3 fit into all of this?
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8 What Went Wrong? The 1996 Telecom Act opened the market for competition Investment thesis: Demand for bandwidth is unlimited Incumbents were viewed as slow-moving Improvements in optics and IP fundamentally changed economics of communications Assets are worth at least 2-3x cost for facilities-based carriers Capital markets for capital intensive communications industry were free flowing Over $150 billion in capital raised by emerging communications providers in 1999 and 2000
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9 Early Signs of Trouble Capital availability was virtually unlimited Several “me too” business plans Sum of companies’ projections were 2x market size Dot-com fever spread to communications industry Liberal interpretations of the term “fully funded” Financial engineering by certain companies
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10 Evidence of the “Me Too” Phenomenon Europe as an example (1) : 29 long haul networks constructed or partially constructed in Europe 21 consist of swapped fiber and/or limited reach 8 are conduit-based networks Approximately 40% are financially distressed today At least 8 are in the process of shutting down or exiting Consolidation activity is limited to date (1) Source: Level 3 Analysis
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11 Catalysts to the Decline A “perfect storm” of: The dot-com growth followed by implosion Slowing economy Bandwidth supply / demand imbalance Shutdown of the capital markets to newer carriers Reduced revenue projections exposed significant funding gaps for certain companies
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12 What Happened to Bandwidth Demand? First, the bad news: n Demand was “exaggerated” by emerging carriers and dot-coms n Companies were purchasing bandwidth well in advance in anticipation of exponential growth that did not materialize n Economic downturn has reduced short-term demand n As a result, there is generally a supply / demand imbalance
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13 What Happened to Bandwidth Demand? Now, the good news: n End user demand for bandwidth continues to grow at a rapid rate n Even the most bearish industry assessments of unit growth are 60-100% per year n The industry is under-investing in capacity n Supply / demand imbalance is temporary
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14 Affected Sectors Emerging fiber backbone carriers CLECs / DLECs / BLECs ISPs Colocation / Hosting LD carriers, wireless companies, RBOCs and PTTs are in a separate category
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15 Chapter 11 Over 50 emerging carriers have filed Chapter 11 in the past 12 months (1), including: 360 Networks Exodus Iaxis Viatel Winstar PSINet Most companies facing liquidation rather than a reorganization Teligent Covad Rhythms Northpoint ICG (1) Source: JP Morgan Securities
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16 Current Wall Street Perspectives n Shaken investor confidence as a result of unexpected bankruptcies and liquidations n Too much competition and too much leverage n Market is unable to differentiate between winners and losers n Timing of economic recovery is uncertain n The result….
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17 The Dichotomy of Market Views The market is struggling to value emerging carriers Banks, bondholders and equity investors have widely diverging views Level 3 capital structure: 10x difference!
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18 What are Carriers Doing in This Difficult Environment? Scaled back business plans Back to basics Focusing on sales to customers that can pay their bills Differentiate through operational capabilities, not pricing Reducing expenses to weather the storm SG&A Capital Expenditures Selling non-core assets Restructuring the balance sheet Consolidation?
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19 Capital Spending Projections A recent Bernstein Research report provided capital spending projections.
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20 What Role will Consolidation Play? “Elimination” will outpace consolidation Most distressed companies will be forced to liquidate at 5 to 20 cents on the dollar Acquisitions will be focused on acquiring valuable customer relationships, as opposed to network assets Major industry consolidation would require restructurings High yield 101% change of control provisions would have to be waived
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21 There is Good News… There will be fewer competitors Those that survive will prosper The economy will improve The supply demand imbalance is temporary
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22 What Factors Will Determine Who Survives and Prospers? Realism Liquidity Ability to restructure balance sheet to create value Ability to generate cash flow (versus revenue growth) Focus on areas of competitive advantage Operational capability
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23 Why Level 3 is Well Positioned See previous slide!
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