With Time Warner Deal, AT&T Bulks Up on Content -- and Debt
14 Giugno 2018 - 12:51AM
Dow Jones News
By Matt Wirz
AT&T Inc.'s $85 billion purchase of Time Warner Inc. is on
track to go down as one of the largest acquisitions in history, but
the deal will be dwarfed by an even bigger figure: the combined
company's approximately $181 billion debt load.
That would be a 12% jump from AT&T's already hefty $163
billion of bonds and loans outstanding, according to data from
research firm CreditSights.
"It's going to be one of the most heavily indebted corporate
issuers and that in and of itself makes the company highly
dependent on continued access to the capital markets," said Neil
Mack, a telecommunications analyst at Moody's. "If the capital
markets aren't open and healthy the company could have higher
levels of refinancing risk going forward."
Increased revenue from Time Warner's media properties and
postdeal cost-cutting is expected to generate cash to pay down the
additional debt over time. The company could repay as much as $10
billion a year over the next four years, according to a research
report by Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.
An AT&T representative wasn't immediately available to
comment.
Nevertheless, the additional borrowing would elevate one measure
of AT&T's leverage -- based on its debt to earnings before
interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization -- to a multiple of
about three from its stand-alone level of about two times,
according to research by Deutsche Bank AG.
That would push AT&T's measure well above that of its
largest competitor, Verizon Communications Inc., which is at about
2.6 times, according to CreditSights.
Credit-rating firms have taken notice of the rising risk
presented by the Time Warner takeover. Moody's Investors Service
has placed its rating of AT&T on review for downgrade pending
the deal's completion. A two-notch downgrade would put AT&T at
the lowest investment-grade rating Moody's assigns, increasing the
likelihood of AT&T falling into the junk-debt category.
AT&T's 4.3% bond due in 2030 traded for around 96 cents on
the dollar Wednesday, according to data from MarketAxess,
relatively unchanged from levels before the court ruling Tuesday
approving the purchase of Time Warner.
AT&T's balance-sheet risk could be even greater than its
debt load indicates, according to a report by research firm
MoffettNathanson. The firm's estimate of the company's leverage
includes operating leases and employee postretirement obligations.
That raises the combined company's liabilities to about $249
billion, implying a four-times leverage multiple, according to the
report.
Write to Matt Wirz at matthieu.wirz@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 13, 2018 18:36 ET (22:36 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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