PARIS- Orange said it planned to carve out its mobile towers in most European countries to shore up the group’s value, but the move was overshadowed by the French telecom firm’s modest dividend outlook, sending its shares lower.
The company is following similar moves by other European firms that are looking to sell mobile networks as infrastructure valuations surge on interest from investors such as U.S. private equity firm KKR and Spain’s Cellnex.
The infrastructure sale aims to beef up its valuation as tough regional competition hampers Orange’s growth and margins.
Bigger rivals Deutsche Telekom and Britain’s Vodafone have separated their mobile tower assets and are seeking to sell part of them via a listing or private sale. Vodafone’s shares jumped when it announced spin-off plans.
“Today, we believe that the value of our all of our networks isn’t reflected in our stock prices,” Orange Chief Executive Stephane Richard said.
But Orange shares still fell by about 4% in early trade, with traders citing disappointment about the dividend outlook after Orange said it would pay out a minimum annual dividend of 70 cents per share over the period.
“Investors will need to wait until 2021 and beyond to see more tangible positive results,” Bryan Garnier analyst Thomas Coudry wrote in a note after the mobile mast move was announced.
Although the new tower firm aimed to show the value of infrastructure, there was a “very limited” opportunity to turn this into cash, investment bank Jefferies wrote in a note, adding that the “dividend floor is not raised”.
POTENTIALLY LUCRATIVE ASSETS
Orange’s mobile towers could be worth around 10 billion euros (8.6 billion pounds), analysts have estimated. Citi said their value may reach 13 billion euros, or 20 times the operating results generated by towers.
France’s former telecoms monopoly said it owned about 40,000 towers for its network on the continent. The first “TowerCos” will be created in 2020 in France and Spain, Orange’s two biggest markets.
The Paris-based company will retain control over the new entities with the aim of merging them into a European company in future that would also be majority-owned by Orange.
The group also said it was selling 1,500 mobile masts to Spain’s Cellnex for 260 million euros.
The divestments were part of Orange’s five-year strategic plan, which it said included sharing the deployment of high-speed fibre broadband technology with other operators via dedicated firms that could be opened up to outside investors.
(Content and photos syndicated via Reuters)