Earnings Labs

Cable One, Inc. (CABO)

Q2 2018 Earnings Call· Mon, Aug 13, 2018

$98.96

-0.83%

Key Takeaways · AI generated
AI summary not yet generated for this transcript. Generation in progress for older transcripts; check back soon, or browse the full transcript below.

Same-Day

+0.34%

1 Week

+1.87%

1 Month

+10.78%

vs S&P

+7.69%

Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good morning, and welcome to the Cable One's Second Quarter 2018 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note, this event is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Kevin Coyle, Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead, sir.

Kevin Coyle

Analyst

Thank you, Denise. Good morning and welcome to Cable One's second quarter 2018 earnings call. We're excited to have you with us this morning as we review our results. Before we proceed, I would like to remind you that today's discussion may contain forward-looking statements relating to future events and expectations. You can find factors that could cause Cable One's actual results to differ materially from these projections listed in today's press release or in our recent SEC filings. Cable One is under no obligation and, in fact, expressly disclaims any obligation to update it's forward-looking statements whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. Additionally, today's remarks will include a discussion of certain financial measures that are not presented in conformity with U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles. Reconciliations of non-GAAP financial measures discussed on this call to the most directly comparable GAAP measures can be found in our earnings release or on our website at ir.cableone.net. Joining me on today's call is our President and CEO, Julia Laulis. And with that, let me turn the call over to Julia.

Julia Laulis

Analyst

Thank you, Kevin. Good morning, thank you all for joining us on our second quarter 2018 earnings call. I will review a few highlights and then hand it over to Kevin for a full recap of our financial performance. Before getting into our results though, I want to congratulate and thank our associates. Earlier this summer, Cable One received the Cablefax 2018 MSO of the Year Award. This award is a direct result of the hard work, dedication and commitment of our associates. I couldn't be prouder to lead this distinguished team. Our positive second quarter results also flow from our outstanding team of associates. Some highlights include year-over-year increases in legacy Cable One total revenues of more than 5%, and an adjusted EBITDA of 6.2%. These results reflect a successful execution of the long-term strategy we've discussed on previous calls, a strategy which we believe is serving both Cable One customers and our shareholders well. We were pleased to announce our second dividend increase earlier this week, up 14% to $2 per share quarterly dividend or from $7 to $8 per share on an annualized basis. Also related to capital allocation, you may have noticed that we've made significant share repurchases during the quarter which Kevin will address later in the call. Now turning to our operations, let's review how HSD unit growth stacked up for the quarter. We saw 2.5% combined residential and business HSD unit growth for legacy Cable One. Meanwhile, legacy Cable One experienced it's strongest quarterly residential HSD unit growth on a year-over-year basis that we've seen since June of 2017. In the second quarter, we began testing market based pricing and new packaging options with early results showing higher selling rates to faster tiers, as well as decreased churn, especially from customers and competitive…

Kevin Coyle

Analyst

Thank you so much, Julia, I appreciate that. Before getting into the details, I want to remind everyone that our 2018 second quarter results include three months of NewWave operations, while our 2017 second quarter include only two months, as NewWave acquisition was completed on May 1, 2017. Now getting into our 2018 second quarter results; the operating results for the second quarter of 2018 demonstrate a continuation of the robust financial performance achieved during the first quarter. Consolidated revenues for the second quarter of 2018 were $268.4 million, including a $49 million contribution from NewWave operations compared to $241 million in the prior year quarter. Consolidated residential data revenues increased 18.3% and business service revenues increased 18.4% year-over-year. Legacy Cable One had strong revenue growth of $10.6 million or 5.1% compared to the second quarter of 2017 with year-over-year increases in residential data and business service revenues of 11.1% and 11.3% respectively. Net income in the second quarter was $43.8 million compared to $27.9 million in the prior year quarter, an increase of 57.2%. Excluding NewWave, net income would have been $40.5 million, a 57.1% increase. The increase in net income was driven primarily by lower income taxes with our second quarter effective tax rate decreasing to 22.6% from 38.6% in the second quarter of 2017 as a result of federal tax reform legislation enacted at the end of 2017, and of course our strong revenue increase. Net income per share increased from $4.85 to $7.65, an increase of 58%. Consolidated operating expenses were $91.8 million or 34.2% of revenues in the second quarter compared to $84 million or 34.9% of revenues in the prior year quarter. Excluding NewWave, operating expenses were flat at $68.1 million in the current quarter compared to $68 million in the prior year quarter.…

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question this morning will be from Philip Cusick of JPMorgan.

Philip Cusick

Analyst

Can you talk about the consumer response to the new pricing and broadband Julia? And where are we upselling the basis [ph] at this point?

Julia Laulis

Analyst

I caught your first part but not your second Phil. I don't want to get too far ahead on the pricing and packaging; I think by the time we talk next quarter we'll have very holistic results versus top line but interesting to note that when we reduced prices on faster tiers ARPU actually goes up because selling goes up, and our already low churn is going lower. So those are the topline previews that have us pretty excited but look forward to a more fulsome discussion next quarter.

Philip Cusick

Analyst

To be clear, when you reduced prices on faster tiers as in -- sell a premium to your standard 55 but faster than the 100 you're selling today?

Julia Laulis

Analyst

That's correct. So customers are making a call on value. If you think about our 100 meg service, that $55 on a price per meg that's $0.55. If you look at in those tasks, the next high to your 200 meg at $0.65, that's $0.32 price per meg; customers are voting and it's exciting to see.

Philip Cusick

Analyst

And you will be able to tell us next quarter about sort of what the customer responses looked like?

Julia Laulis

Analyst

That is my guess, yes.

Philip Cusick

Analyst

And then business growth decelerated a bit this quarter; are you confident that this can continue to grow at double-digits?

Julia Laulis

Analyst

I am, yes. It's likely -- you know, seasonal, and I felt very confident; actually, just had an exchange with our VP of Business Services this morning about our strength relative to our competitors.

Philip Cusick

Analyst

Can you expand a little bit on what programs or products are driving that strength?

Julia Laulis

Analyst

Sure. We went through some of them today. Piranha Fiber is something that serves us very well. We think about business services, we are the disruptor in that space, and Piranha Fiber is something that serves that competitive marketplace very well, rolling out host of voice and improving our WiFi service which is everything the customers need. Those are also products and value-added services that are helping business services to grow. We continue to make in-roads into the enterprise phase as well.

Operator

Operator

The next question will be from Zack Silver [ph] of B.Riley FBR.

Unidentified Analyst

Analyst

I just wanted to drilldown a little deeper into the net-adds on the residential data side. I mean, for legacy you guys were able to grow straight going back some promotion, then also the increased modem fee. Are you seeing in uptake in churn and maybe is that being more than made up for by gross ads? And then on the NewWave side, how are those customers receiving kind of the new pricing as you kind of bring NewWave's prices upto the legacy price?

Julia Laulis

Analyst

The net adds, they just be in Cable One, you asked about churn; and churn is not going up in legacy Cable One, it's going down. It seems that people that are choosing us are -- again, are making a value call and they like what they are getting. It is actually amazing. In NewWave, I don't think we can make a judgment call on the new pricing there because we have put so many changes into effect in those systems, we've shortened collection cycles, we've stopped giveaways, we've stopped discount, at the same time we've increased the speeds which customers appreciate, and introduce new pricing. While we're doing so many -- we're making so many changes in those areas, I think we have to wait and see as they normalize.

Unidentified Analyst

Analyst

You shared your thesis that you guys can be a natural kind of aggregator of world cable, so since expanding on this I wanted to see if you could provide what you're kind of seeing in the M&A landscape relative to maybe a more kind of chills [ph] environment for M&A in the first half?

Kevin Coyle

Analyst

I don't think we can really comment on specifics; as we've said in the past we view that we're the natural aggregator of cable systems in rural America, and that continues. We will be aggressive, as we've said in the past, we continue to look at all potential opportunities that are out there, we know everyone in the market from venture capital backed properties to family-owned properties. We will continue to be aggressive, we think we can do it better than anyone out there, and that there will be synergies as you pointed out in your research earlier this year on any acquisition we make. So we're very bullish on acquisitions and we look at all of them and any of them but I can't really comment on any one in specific.

Operator

Operator

The next question will be from Frank Louthan of Raymond James.

Frank Louthan

Analyst

Any promotions or any other things that would have helped the residential video subs in the quarter? Just curious on that a little bit, a little better trend that we thought. And then, on the new customer portal, there are any development costs for that that might go away as you roll that out from developing it? Thanks.

Julia Laulis

Analyst

On the promotion point, we actually have been -- what I would call trying to establish value of our standard product, that's our 100-meg product at $55 for several months now. And so what that means is we have not been doing discounting. In the quarter we did tip in a promotion and we plan to do that on an ongoing basis but these are short-term promotions versus promotions that [indiscernible] tipped into normal everyday pricing; so there was some of that. In terms of development cost for our portal, that is being done in-house with Cable One associates.

Operator

Operator

The next question will be from Brandon [ph] of KeyBanc Capital Markets.

Unidentified Analyst

Analyst

What needs to happen Julia to get EBITDA margins upto legacy Cable One? And then I guess, maybe -- can you give us a sense on timing around when you think you can get margins higher? And then maybe on the new packaging and pricing; when do you think we might get back to the 2% type of broadband subscriber growth rate as a result of some of these changes? Thanks.

Kevin Coyle

Analyst

The margins for NewWave; we obviously have done a lot already, when we acquired NewWave, the margins were at 34%, they are already north of 38%, obviously our margins are at 49%, so there is still a disparity but we're probably only in inning number four, if you're looking at a baseball game. I mean, we're still -- this fall will be combining our billing systems, that will be a synergy you will see, there is still some programming synergies to come. So there is still a lot of ongoing things, we're very happy as I said earlier that cash flow has gone from an annualized basis from $64 million already upto $75 million, and there is still synergies to come but it takes a little bit of time. We told the market when we did the deal, it was going to take 2.5 to 3 years, so again, we're probably in inning number four of the game.

Julia Laulis

Analyst

And we already addressed the timing issue. We originally stated 3 years as our horizon although we said last quarter and this quarter as well that things are going very well with the NewWave integration and it is performing ahead of expectations. On your question on growth rate, is that also aimed at NewWave specifically or new CABO?

Unidentified Analyst

Analyst

I guess CABO; legacy CABO but like -- as you roll up the pro forma, when do you guys think you can get back to that sort of 2% type of range? And I guess, are some of the promotions centered around getting back to that type of growth rate?

Julia Laulis

Analyst

For legacy Cable One we are essentially there, we do intend to -- we've stated in the past and continue to maintain that we think a steady growth rate in the 2% to 3% range is what we can accomplish. We're not going to do promos simply to drive growth, we have a strategy, so we're going to stay with our strategy because it's serving us well but I don't see us having an issue with hanging in the 2% range.

Operator

Operator

The next question will be from Craig Moffett of Moffett Capital.

Craig Moffett

Analyst

Julia, I guess it's staying with the same theme of a number of the previous questions but particularly back when Tom was CEO, there were -- he would comment that the upside for penetration in your footprint for broadband was probably a bit lower because of demographics. I'm wondering if you still have that view given the technology advantages you've got and what you've seen competitively from the deployments of upgrading DSL and whether you're looking at some 5G fixed wireless broadband deployment that you'll be competing against. If you could just talk about kind of how you see the longer term penetration upside for broadband across your footprint, both old and new?

Julia Laulis

Analyst

Older new legacy and NewWave?

Craig Moffett

Analyst

That's right.

Julia Laulis

Analyst

Okay. Upside the penetration we believe there is determined in measure by how the product is delivered, i.e. the type of competition that's in a marketplace. Given that our markets are relatively competition free at this point, and I'd say relatively and at this point highlighting those two pieces, there are marketplaces that we do very well in terms of penetration but not all markets are created equally, so penetration varies by market, by regions depending on the competitor and the marketplace. I don't expect that penetration in markets in Mississippi or [indiscernible] are going to match New York City exactly, but I think we have room on the penetration side and we are going to aim to get there with a balanced mix of rate and volume, and we are testing those pieces right now.

Operator

Operator

And ladies and gentlemen, this will conclude our question-and-answer session. I would like to hand the conference back over to Kevin Coyle for his closing remarks.

Kevin Coyle

Analyst

Thank you, operator. I just want to thank Julia and the entire Cable One team for all their support over the past 3.5 years. I have really enjoyed my time at Cable One since we took the company public in mid-2015 and I look forward to working with Steven Cochran, our incoming CFO to ensure a seamless transition. And with that, let me turn the call back over to Julia for just some final words.

Julia Laulis

Analyst

Thank you, Kevin. We are sincerely grateful for all that you've done since joining the Cable One family. As I mentioned, we welcome Steven as our new CFO next week, and he will also be heading up our Investor Relations function. So we invite you to reach out schedule meet and greet call [ph]. Steven and I will also be attending the Deutsche Bank Annual Leverage Finance Conference in October in Scottsville, Arizona. We hope to see many of you there. We appreciate you joining us for today's call, and we look forward to speaking to you again next quarter.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, the conference has concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. At this time, you may disconnect your lines.