Liberty Global Ltd.
(Commission File No.: 001-35961)
Pursuant to Rule 425 of the Securities Act of 1933
and deemed filed pursuant to Rule 14a-12
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
[The following is an excerpt from a transcript of an interview
by Liberty Global Ltd at a Bank of America conference held on June 11, 2024]
Presentation
David Wright - BofA Merrill Lynch – Analyst
Okay, very good. We're going to come back on some of the implied share
price dynamics, which is always a fun conversation, but I did want to move over to Sunrise a little. The basic justification for the spin,
I'm assuming is that you bring it out of the conglomerate and a conglomerate discount that is undoubtedly present your share price –
Charles Bracken - Liberty Global Ltd - Chief Financial Officer,
Executive Vice President
Thank you. I am glad that you said that (multiple speakers).
David Wright - BofA Merrill Lynch - Analyst
You’d probably say it's in the high-tens of percentages is to bring
it out, obviously the Liberty conglomerate, but also it being a Swiss asset, they do tend to trade a little bit more on dividend it's
a different cost of capital market. We've seen this dynamic with Swisscom.
I'm assuming that’s the basic theory around this, apart from the
fact that it's (inaudible).
Charles Bracken - Liberty Global Ltd - Chief Financial Officer,
Executive Vice President
Let me give you the sort of rationale from a Liberty point of view, Jany
really must - can give you the story, but we've announced that Sunrise will pay a CHF240 million dividend. And that's a dividend floor,
which implies a progressive dividend, and it will be levered in a 3.5 times to 4.5 times range. It will go out at 4.5 times, which is
a little bit top end of the range. But you can assume there is some growth and some deleveraging, and you can assume it's announced to
a free cash flow this year of CHF360 million to CHF400 million. So, that 240 is pretty well
covered. And you can assume excess capital is going to be available for deleveraging. So, if you take that 240 million and you apply a
reasonable dividend yield - reasonable amount - I'll argue about this, but I think Swisscom is at 4, Swisscom bonds are at one, let's
just hypothetically use 6%. You're probably around the CHF4 billion market cap, and CHF4 billion is about $4.5 billion, Liberty Global
stock price yesterday implied a market cap of CHF6.5 billion, and pro forma for the spin, aside from everything else that owns, aside from
everything else, Liberty will and have at least 2 billion-plus of cash, an additional $500
million of liquid investments.
So, we think that this is a very, very key step to unlock that
valuation. And I'm sure it will trade in a very choppy way when it goes out, but ultimately should settle around that dividend,
which we think will also be largely tax free to Swiss investors.
…
David Wright - BofA Merrill Lynch - Analyst
Okay. So there go that your dividend commitment.
Charles Bracken - Liberty Global Ltd - Chief Financial Officer,
Executive Vice President
Good. Don’t (inaudible) up.
…
David Wright - BofA Merrill Lynch – Analyst
Exactly. So, look, first things
first, obviously, you’re Sunrise, but it is a reasonably recent merger of Sunrise and UPC. How is that integration progressing? You’re now towards
the closing stages or is there still more to come?
Jany Fruytier - Liberty Global Ltd - Chief Financial Officer,
Sunrise GmbH
…
We have a growth plan in front of us, and we believe that there is some
in the setup of the DSL with adjacent services in B2B. There's also some new areas that we can go after. So, from that perspective, you
have a clean story with growth potential with the integration behind us with limited capex intensity, given the 5G rollout that is there
given the hybrid strategy, given the integration and therefore also the IT harmonization and transformation behind us. So, it's a natural
point to start the journey on and to sort of bring investors on board to benefit from that.
David Wright - BofA Merrill Lynch – Analyst
Absolutely. Okay. So, lots to unpack there. But essentially, it's a pretty
tough environment. The Swiss market, you've got this very sort of very high level -- service level
operator and incumbent in Swisscom and got this very aggressive guy in Salt, and the price points are quite remarkably different that
we are seeing that in the KPIs. Where is Sunrise positioned, if they are the extremes, are
you guys in the middle? I've always been quite nervous about operators in the middle. I like to think operators perform when they are
the best or the cheapest. So, I'm interested in your view.
Jany Fruytier - Liberty Global Ltd - Chief Financial Officer,
Sunrise GmbH
Yes, sure. Look, I think there's a couple of points to be made. It's
a tough market on the one hand, I think it's a stable market on the other hand. And what do I mean with that? I think internet pricing
has been stable, perhaps aggressive, especially if you see what you get for the internet price, but it hasn't moved so you can from there
play in the field that is at least stable first.
Mobile, perhaps slightly different. But what we would argue is it actually
intensity -- promotional intensity levels have gone down a bit over time. So there, again from an inflow ARPU perspective, it has stabilized.
Now that inflow is sometimes still higher than the back book, so that is something to play around with. But I think again, tough market,
but stable, which helps to sort of then define the right strategy to compete in first.
I think secondly, perhaps different than in some other markets, the Swiss
market is very quality focus. So, I think, yes, you have, but especially in Salt, an aggressive attacker, at the same time, I think we
can debate on how those shares are, but we would say 50% to 60% of the Swiss market is very value driven, but with that quality and so
they are ready to pay a bit more for a good service.
Now this is where I think our strategy comes in because you have Swisscom,
which is very high priced in comparison to us and to Salt, and they can continue to demand that premium. Now what our strategy is on the
one hand with Sunrise to move close to Swisscom, acknowledging that there is some price discount to debt, but we can play in that market
and I think we have done well.
I think we have done a number of place to support that like the Swiss
key sponsorship, which is a big thing in Switzerland, getting debt making sure that people recognize us as a quality brand. We have set
up some loyalty programs like O2 has here in the UK. We have that -- we have added additional services so effectively, what we're
doing with the main brand is creating this very rich offering with good service, with good loyalty programs, with additional services
so that we can play in that. Now that is a trajectory that we're on. I would say we're not fully there, but we're seeing good traction.
I think brand recognition, brand awareness, that is all trending up. So, there's a big part of the market that we can play in, with some
discount, but with significantly higher pricing than on that more as a price-sensitive segment, where you have Salt playing, where you
have yallo playing where you have Wingo playing. Those are main and second brands of us and of Swisscom. So, I think you'll see the market
going into extremes where a large chunk sits on the premium segments we play with Swisscom, Salt, and our second brands playing in that
lower segment, I think what's interesting in that as well is that Salt recently come out, is that and have said the they see yallo our
second brand and Wingo as their main competitor. Also letting go if you will wanting to compete on that, of course, at that lower
price, and we'll see if the market wants to go there, but we feel strong that with the dual brand strategy we can play effectively in
those two different segments.
David Wright - BofA Merrill Lynch - Analyst
Okay very good and let's talk networks. You are predominantly cable today.
I'm not sure whether you've got any fiber -- it's very, very small, predominately cable operator, you have a fairly slow-moving Swisscom,
and that's a function of some regulatory issues, but either way the fiber has lagged, but their ambitions are high in terms of their coverage
and the risk that could perhaps be perceived is the Salt has access to that fiber. So, they have access to this.
Jany Fruytier - Liberty Global Ltd - Chief Financial Officer,
Sunrise GmbH
We as well, by the way.
David Wright - BofA Merrill Lynch – Analyst
You have access to it, and I agree with that. But in terms of how do you
think about the migration of your cable or the evolution, I should say, of your cable strategy over time?
Jany Fruytier - Liberty Global Ltd - Chief Financial Officer,
Sunrise GmbH
Yeah, good questions. I think.
David Wright - BofA Merrill Lynch – Analyst
Charlie gets this one from
me all the time.
Jany Fruytier - Liberty Global Ltd - Chief Financial Officer,
Sunrise GmbH
No. I think it's a key element to get right in our story and sort of
why let me try to explain simply why we feel so strongly that this hybrid network strategy that we're on is the right way to go. I think
couple of things to note, Swisscom has indeed 40% coverage. Now they have said they go to 70% to 80%. They have approximately 5 percentage
points to 10 percentage points of that country ready to deploy once, as you say, and that is now more or less done, that's regulatory
issues behind them. So, we expect it to go up, but that's the fiber element of it. Now we are only three real in-home players in the market.
As you say, Salt has access, we have access as well. So therefore, I think we are all playing in that network, and we have all access
to it.
I think then also important to note, as we got into the merger, we had
50% of the customers approximately on wholebuy nets of Swisscom, partially fiber, partially DSL, 50% our own network. We have 70%, 75%
if you add our partners coverage in there as well. So that was the starting point. Now over the last three years, we have migrated some
of those DSL customers onto our HFC footprint. And on the other hand, we have increased a bit of fiber customer as we sold those. Three
years down the line the distribution of that customer base, of course, has changed between fiber and DSL. But overall whole versus rented
is still more or less the same, both from a total base, but also from an inflow perspective. So, and that is also on the fiber only footprint.
So HFC is still a meaningful product for our customers. I don't know if you've seen, but we last week announced that we're going to upgrade
our network to 2.5 gig whereas fiber is on 10 gig. All to say that in Switzerland, I think we have the opportunity to always offer to
our customers at the moment the best speed available and what we see in the Swiss market is that fiber or HFC is not a theme as such.
So right now the markets sometimes people are actively marketing fiber or the legacy technologies.
For us, it's about speed and customers don't really care.
So that is the third point, I think given that, we have to moment, have
a base that is 50% approximately still owned and bought. So that also sits in our cost base. Now fast forward for the next years, what
we have forecasted and what we believe, and I mean, if you think of 5, 7 or perhaps 10 year forecast, we see perhaps a slight erosion
of that base going to fiber, whereas the rest will still be on our own network.
And so for us, the question very much is - Charlie first talked about
a 30% penetration that you need in order to do, we have a total of 30% market share, i.e., our fiber at the moment is at 15%. So, to --
for us to deploy the capital, given that we have the access already that we have a good wholesale and wholebuy economics, that it's not
a customer point.
What we're saying is we don't see the erosion quickly in our margin. We already have a large chunk in that. So therefore,
we can play with that DSL versus fiber distribution to offset some of that. We have good cooperation with them. Our customers don't care.
So, therefore, to then now go out and say we want to deploy all of that capex to in the future, perhaps get to that payback. It just doesn't
make sense from a capital perspective. And I think what is also interesting, of course, let us play out five to seven years. We are at
the moment the biggest wholebuy customer of Swisscom. So, the moment we decide to potentially build our own network. I think they'll come
and talk to us the same. What are you intending to do? And perhaps there is another way to think about this. So therefore, we feel strongly
that from a cash flow perspective, if you take the dividend perspective into consideration, this
is by far the most economical thing to continue on that hybrid strategy.
David Wright - BofA Merrill Lynch – Analyst
Okay. So essentially, there's an element of there’s a very good
network, there’s a kind of sweat the asset element at the moment until maybe the obligation
is that to really move forward. And then you have options, whether you invest or whether you.
Charles Bracken - Liberty Global Ltd - Chief Financial Officer,
Executive Vice President
Or put it another way, I think is a 50/50 coax fiber, and we don't really
think it’s materially going to change, so the benefit of buying, wholebuying, the fiber is already embedded in the cash flows. Now, the
exam question is, will there be an imperative to go to 100% fiber. And he's making the point that at a certain point, Canton by Canton,
village by village, at some point there’s is an economic case to build or buy from somebody else. So, we don't think there's a big
risk to the cash flows.
David Wright - BofA Merrill Lynch - Analyst
Okay, fair enough. I think that's very, very credible. Okay - so, if
we then think about the growth and the cash flow growth, can you just walk us through the parts a little, for instance, I think on pricing,
you guys are having to look at a much lower - in fact, I don't think you're raising prices this year. Is that right for us across the
portfolio?
Jany Fruytier - Liberty Global Ltd - Chief Financial Officer,
Sunrise GmbH
Yes.
David Wright - BofA Merrill Lynch – Analyst
So, we think about how you're actually going to grow your cash
flows, whether that be market share growth through to OpEx synergies, lower capex, et cetera, if you could just give us a simple
walk through?
Jany Fruytier - Liberty Global Ltd - Chief Financial Officer,
Sunrise GmbH
Sure. I think we typically start with saying that we believe we have
three growth engines, the main brand, Sunrise, yallo as the second brand, and B2B as a third growth engine. I think if you look at it
over the last three years what we have seen is that yallo and B2B have grown well and that in the main brand as part of the integration
of the two brands as part of the repricing of that UPC base, we have had a drag.
And so therefore, if you look at it combined, there was
this flattish line and, in some quarter, some growth, but in general flattish. Now, what we believe fast forward is that on the main brand,
given that some of that pricing tension is behind us, given the fact that we have launched a number of adjacent services, given that we
expect churn to come down as we get out of this repricing integration.
I think, we'd like to think that we're fantastic integrators and we are
but operationly of customers, of course, in that process and have some tensions and so, therefore, churn has been elevated over the past
two years on the back of that. So, all to say that the dynamics that we saw in the main brand, we see easing, we believe technically as
the integration of those two brands has done, there's a further easing, and then with some adjacent services, further penetrating of FMC
and multi mobile, there is a changing dynamics. And one of the other things that happened, yallo in that market is still continuing to
grow. We have only been a fixed provider in that second brand for 1.5 years, whereas in mobile it's
been six years. So therefore, there's quite some growth left there, we feel, and then B2B, as we have integrated the two brands,
we now have a meaningful competitor to Swisscom.
By the way, Swisscom has 80% market share,
we have 20%. So, there is that underpenetration. So, all of that to say that I think different
dynamics in those three engines, but we believe that in the combined of those three, there is revenue growth. Now I don't say mid-single
digit percentages, but there is some growth that is different than what we have seen so far.
Now, of course, there is some margin erosion in that to offset that
growth in part a little bit of that wholebuy owner to whole bought economics on the one hand, some of those services, especially in
B2B have slightly lower margins, but all in all, still a meaningful margin growth, we believe over the coming years. And then how we
think about OpEx is there is still some of those synergies left on the one hand that I was talking about, not meaningful, but still
some as a tailwind. We see inflation coming down, so also that normalizing a bit. What
we have done as part of the integration over the last three years is we invested in this Swiss Ski partnership in the loyalty
program to set the company up to add to sort of harvest those three growth engines. So again, those costs are now normalizing out
and then with some efficiencies from a digitization from an AI, that we talked about before. I think there is some left. So, all in
all, we believe that OpEx is flattish then so that -- so again, that falls nicely down to EBITDA. Having the integration behind us
having the 5G rollout behind us, the IT transformation, again, you can take an assumption on what capex is - definitely not growing,
so that organically, that all drives nice free cash flow growth, we believe in the coming period. But then interest being I mean, we
need to see where that goes. But we, as Charlie said, we started 4.5 times excess cash flow used to.
Charles Bracken - Liberty Global Ltd - Chief Financial Officer,
Executive Vice President
And you are fixed until 2028.
Jany Fruytier - Liberty Global Ltd - Chief Financial Officer,
Sunrise GmbH
At least 28, 29, 31, but yes. So having debt and then with some de-levering
coming from the excess cash flow, we believe there is a free cash flow growth in there.
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This communication is not an offer to sell or a solicitation of offers
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Additional Information and Where to Find It
This communication does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation
of an offer to buy any securities or a solicitation of any vote or approval, nor shall there be any sale of securities in any jurisdiction
in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such
jurisdiction.
As previously announced, Liberty Global intends to spin-off its businesses
attributed to Sunrise GmbH (“Sunrise”) into a separate publicly-traded company (the “Transaction”). In connection
with the Transaction, a registration statement on Form F-4 that will include a preliminary proxy statement (the “Proxy Statement/Prospectus”)
will be filed and mailed to the Liberty Global shareholders.
LIBERTY GLOBAL SHAREHOLDERS ARE URGED TO READ THE DEFINITIVE PROXY STATEMENT/PROSPECTUS
AS WELL AS ANY AMENDMENTS OR SUPPLEMENTS THERETO AND ANY DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE THEREIN AND OTHER RELEVANT DOCUMENTS IN CONNECTION
WITH THE PROPOSED TRANSACTION THAT LIBERTY GLOBAL AND SUNRISE WILL FILE WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION WHEN THEY BECOME AVAILABLE
BECAUSE THEY WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT THE TRANSACTION. Liberty Global shareholders and investors may obtain free copies
of the Proxy Statement/Prospectus and other relevant materials (when they become available) and other documents filed by Liberty Global
and Sunrise at the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Copies of the Proxy Statement/Prospectus (and other relevant materials when they
become available) and the filings that will be incorporated by reference therein may also be obtained, without charge, by contacting Liberty
Global’s Investor Relations at ir@libertyglobal.com or +1 (303) 220-6600.
Participants in Solicitation
Liberty Global and its directors, executive officers and certain employees,
may be deemed, under rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), to be participants in the solicitation of
proxies in respect of the proposed Transaction. Information regarding Liberty Global’s directors and executive officers is set forth
in Liberty Global’s filings with the SEC. Other information regarding the participants in the proxy solicitation and a description
of their direct and indirect interests, by security holdings or otherwise, will be contained in the Proxy Statement/Prospectus and other
relevant materials to be filed with the SEC (when they become available). These documents can be obtained free of charge from the sources
indicated above.
Forward-Looking Statements
This communication contains forward-looking statements within the meaning
of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements regarding the Transaction, the listing of the Sunrise shares
for trading on the SIX Swiss Exchange (the “SIX”) and other information and statements that are not historical fact. These
forward-looking statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties, some of which are beyond our control, that could cause actual
results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by these statements. Such risks and uncertainties include the risk that we
do not receive shareholder approval for the Transaction and/or related matters, our ability to satisfy the other conditions to the Transaction
on the expected timeframe or at all, the approval of the shares of Sunrise for listing on the SIX and the development of a trading market
for them, the Liberty Global Board of Directors’ discretion to decide not to complete the Transaction for any reason, our ability
to realize the expected benefits from the Transaction, unanticipated difficulties or costs in connection with the Transaction, Sunrise’s
ability to successfully operate as an independent public company and maintain its relationships with material counterparties after the
Transaction and other factors detailed from time to time in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including our most
recently filed annual report on Form 10-K, Form 10-K/A and Form 10-Q, as they may be supplemented from time to time by our quarterly reports
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