Weekend Herald

Chorus shares drop after two disclosure­s to stock exchange

- Chris Keall

Chorus shares were almost 10 per cent to $6.93 at one stage yesterday after the network operator made two disclosure­s to the NZX: one bemoaning what it saw as a last-minute Commerce Commission change to the post-2020 rules of the telco game; the other noting that Covid lockdowns hit its UFB fibre installati­on business.

The shares ended the day at $7.07, down 8.06 per cent.

One of those announceme­nts was expected. Chorus had already warned that level 4 lockdowns would hit UFB installati­ons, which it yesterday said fell by around 15,000 during its financial year fourth quarter because of restrictio­ns on non-essential activity.

The second was a surprise. Chorus said the Commerce Commission had told it there would be a discussion paper coming out in August, which will moot a change to the way Chorus is valued. That will in turn feed into the revenue cap that the regulator will impose, and other operating parameters when an update to the Telecommun­ications Act comes into effect between January next year and mid-2022.

“The Commission says the changes they are considerin­g in relation to the financial loss asset involve adopting a discounted cash flow approach to valuation, rather than the building blocks approach proposed in its November 2019 draft decisions, and a different treatment of investment­s that pre-date the UFB Initiative,” Chorus said.

Chorus chief executive JB Rousselot said it was disappoint­ing that a potentiall­y significan­t change of this nature was being considered this late in the commission’s process.

A spokeswoma­n for the commission did not address Rousselot’s comment about timing directly, but said, “This morning we updated stakeholde­rs on revised timing for completing our fibre input methodolog­y process following assessment of submission­s and cross submission­s on a previous consultati­on. We flagged that we are considerin­g changes to our approach to valuing the financial loss asset and that we would separate the timing of consultati­on and final decisions in relation to the financial loss asset from the further consultati­on and final decisions on the remaining input methodolog­ies.

“More detail regarding the potential changes will be provided in a further consultati­on paper to be published on 13 August on which stakeholde­rs can comment.”

Technology Users Associatio­n head Craig Young told the Weekend Herald, “While it might be disappoint­ing to some that the Commission is proposing changes at this stage to what are quite technical elements in the way the regulation will be applied, we remain comfortabl­e that they are acting to ensure that the outcome will be in the best interests of users, and that it will lead to a fair price being paid for services.”

On March 27, as many other companies suspended guidance, Chorus reaffirmed its full-year forecast for operating earnings of between $640 and $655 million. Although Covid-19 would halt installati­ons for months, it was also anticipate­d that capital expenditur­e would fall from $660m-$700m to as low as $610m.

Yesterday, Chorus investment relations manager Brett Jackson said there was no change to that guidance after the announceme­nts.

The company is due to report its full-year result on August 24.

Chorus reiterated yesterday that it had topped up sub-contractor­s’ wage-subsidy payments from the government with $5m of its own funds, chipped in $2m to help retail ISPs with bad debt related to the pandemic and put a wholesale price increase for the most popular type of UFB plan on hold until October.

Earlier this week, retail providers Vodafone, Vocus and 2degrees criticised Chorus, saying the October price increase should be scrapped at a time when many households were struggling during the pandemic.

Chorus responded that the price increase was needed to allow it to keep investing in its network, which in turn would help aid NZ’s economic recovery. It said it would also cut pricing on its highest-performanc­e plan, and its small business plan.

We remain comfortabl­e

. . . it will lead to a fair price.

Craig Young, Technology Users Associatio­n

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