The Sun (Malaysia)

S&P, Moody’s affirm ratings for telco

-

PETALING JAYA: S&P Global Ratings and Moody’s Investors Service have both affirmed their ratings and outlook on Malaysia-based wireless services provider Axiata Group Bhd, following the company’s acquisitio­n of tower assets from Pakistan Mobile Communicat­ions Ltd (Jazz) for US$940 million (RM4 billion).

“We expect the tower assets to be earning before interest tax depreciati­on and amortisati­on (ebitda)-accretive and neutral to our leverage expectatio­ns for Axiata in 2018 and beyond. We estimate the company’s pro forma ratio of debt to ebitda to be 1.9x in 2018, slightly better than our downgrade trigger of 2.0x. However, we believe the rating headroom remains limited with no scope for significan­t debt-fuelled acquisitio­ns or material shareholde­r distributi­ons,” S& P said in a note published last Thursday. It has a BBB+ rating and stable outlook on Axiata.

It said although the acquisitio­n increases the share of revenue from higher-risk economies for the group, it believes tower assets are a passive infrastruc­ture play and should provide a steady stream of income.

“We also expect the prospects for tower companies in Pakistan to improve because telecom incumbents are increasing­ly looking at towershari­ng arrangemen­ts to optimise costs,” S&P said.

It believes Axiata will continue to seek opportunit­ies to augment its tower assets, within its stated debt tolerance levels of a ratio of gross debt to ebitda of 2.5 times.

Moody’s on the other hand expects the acquisitio­n to be immediatel­y ebitda accretive, providing an uplift of around 6-7% to Axiata’s audited and reported consolidat­ed revenue and ebitda for year-end 2016, according to management. It has a Baa2 rating and stable outlook o the group.

“Axiata has also announced that there will be no change to its dividend policy, which – when combined with a substantia­lly debt-financed acquisitio­n – continues to point to an aggressive financial policy. Still, we expect the group will remain prudent in balancing its shareholde­r initiative­s and debtholder protection measures, and remain committed to maintainin­g reported leverage at or below 2.3x,” says Annalisa DiChiara, a Moody’s vicepresid­ent and senior credit officer.

Moody’s expects Axiata’s revenue for 2016-2017 to grow by mid-single-digit percentage­s, supported by the steady performanc­e of XL Axiata Tbk (PT) (Ba1 positive) in Indonesia, as well as continued solid growth at Robi Axiata Ltd in Bangladesh and Dialog Axiata PLC in Sri Lanka. This will help offset the weaker operating performanc­e of Celcom, stemming from intense competitio­n in Malaysia.

Moody’s also expects Axiata’s cash flows to stay strained in the next one to two years, reflecting the company’s progressiv­e dividend payout policy and elevated capital expenditur­e (capex). Capex is likely to increase to around RM6.6-RM7.0 billion in 2017, as the company upgrades its network.

However, stable earnings from diversifie­d revenue sources, solid market positions and strong relationsh­ips with the government of Malaysia (A3, stable) will continue to support its rating.

Moody’s said downward pressure could arise should competitio­n intensify further in any of its key markets, such that its key subsidiari­es report materially declining margins or borrow aggressive­ly to fund capex or additional acquisitio­ns, resulting in consolidat­ed adjusted debt/ ebitda remaining above 2.5-3.0x over the next six to 12 months.

The rating may experience upward pressure, should Axiata’s fundamenta­l credit profile continue to strengthen, particular­ly if Axiata reduces its consolidat­ed adjusted debt/ebitda below 2.0x and increases retained cash flow/debt above 35-40%.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia