Steven Moskowitz
Analyst · Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead
Thank you, Kris, and good afternoon, everyone. Today, our Company announced very exciting news that we successfully signed a definitive agreement to sell our Fiber segment to a combination of companies, EQT Active Core Infrastructure fund and Zayo Group Holdings. EQT has agreed to acquire Crown Castle’s small cell business and Zayo has agreed to acquire Crown Castle’s commercial enterprise fiber business. The transaction will be subject to customary regulatory approvals and we expect the transaction to close sometime in the first half of 2026. I’m happy to say that with this announced transaction, we have officially concluded Crown Castle’s fiber strategic review. Let me repeat, we have officially concluded Crown Castle’s fiber strategic review. As we’ve conveyed in the past, the Board of Directors dedicated a tremendous amount of time to conduct a comprehensive strategic and operational review of our fiber businesses with the end game in mind to maximize shareholder value. After considering a variety of transaction structures and potential counterparties, we believe the sale of these businesses to EQT and Zayo will maximize the long-term value to Crown Castle’s shareholders from the combination of the proceeds from this transaction and Crown Castle’s ability to enhance the value of our tower business by creating a focused and premium pure-play U.S. tower company. In consultation with financial, legal and strategic advisors and the executive management team of Crown Castle, Crown Castle made the decision to sell the businesses at this time for the following reasons. Although the 90,000 route miles of high strand count fiber located in the largest markets in the U.S. are great assets. The fiber solutions business has a different business model and different customer base than towers and requires different operational capabilities. Because the similarities between towers and fiber solutions are somewhat limited, we determined they should be separated to enhance focus on the systems, structure and capabilities needed to maximize the value of towers. And while towers and small cells share similar market dynamics, we ultimately decided that the operating capabilities needed to run a tower business and a small cell business were dissimilar enough that the synergies between the two businesses were more than offset by the enhanced value we believe we will unlock in the tower business by creating a focused and premium pure-play U.S. tower company. Lastly, we felt that if we were able to secure enough value for the fiber portfolio, it would position the tower business well for future growth and maximize shareholder value. After the anticipated transaction closes, we will generate substantial cash proceeds from the sale of our Fiber segment that we expect to use to transform our tower business by repaying debt, strengthening our balance sheet and returning capital to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases. We believe this greater financial flexibility and optionality will help us to grow into the future as the only pure public U.S. tower company, which I’ll comment a little bit later in the discussion. Additionally, we believe in the attractive value of our U.S. tower business and that share repurchases are a compelling opportunity in the current market environment. So before I move on, I would like to send a message of thanks and appreciation to the Crown Castle employees, particularly those in the fiber side and those who have been providing extensive corporate support to the fiber businesses. Their tireless work has allowed us to continue delivering solid results as we’ve evaluated strategic alternatives. As part of the strategic and operating review, we announced the realignment of our operational strategy to focus on free cash flow generation as opposed to topline revenue growth. We increased the hurdle rates of our project pipeline, increased the efficiency of our capital spending and updated our 2024 forward forecast. And through all of this, our fiber solutions, our small cells and our corporate support teams remain positive, intent on delivering for customers at the same rate as always and focused on achieving solid financial and operating results. So, thank you. Thank you to the Crown Castle team members. I also want to send a shout out to our lead advisors, Marco and Calvin at Morgan Stanley, Dan and Chris at Bank of America, Andrew and Scott at Paul Weiss, David and Harry at Morgan Lewis and Sarah at Ernst & Young. We appreciate you and your team’s dedication to helping us complete this transaction. Now, let me focus for a few minutes on our results for last year. I’m pleased to report that our teams delivered solid operating and financial performance for the fourth quarter and full-year 2024 across our towers, fiber solutions and small cell businesses. Our results continue to validate our ability to deliver for our customers and shareholders in a year where we implemented significant changes to how we operate and invest in our business. In fact, we drove structural reductions in operating costs of $100 million on an annualized basis and reduced net CapEx by almost $200 million versus the revised 2024 full-year forecast that we announced in June and $400 million versus the original 2024 guidance we provided in October of 2023. We achieved these cost reductions while delivering organic growth net of Sprint churn of 4.5% in towers, 12% in small cells and 2% in fiber solutions. There is a point I want to emphasize and that is the 12% organic growth in small cells was driven by over 12,500 revenue generating nodes that we added during 2024. And not only is that in-line with the updated guidance, we had gave in conjunction with our operating plan changes that we announced in June, it happens to be the highest level of incremental annual node production in the Company’s history. There are a couple of additional items we noted in our press release that I would like to comment on briefly. First, we’ve enhanced the way we report our organic growth to provide investors with more specificity around recurring revenue. And these changes are reflected in the numbers that I just mentioned 4.5% growth in towers, 12% growth in small cells and 2% growth in fiber solutions. With this more granular approach to organic growth reporting, which you can find in our earnings supplement, we’ve separated out other billings and other revenues, which capture the impact of items unrelated to recurring leasing activity, including non-recurring revenue items like back-billings, like pass-through taxes and tenant cancellation fees. We believe providing this additional level of transparency is a better indication of recurring growth and will help investors better track our underlying business in progress. We will continue to look at ways to improve our disclosures and provide investors with more granularity and transparency, which we hope is helpful to understand the financial and operating performance of the business. As is always the case, in the fourth quarter, we performed our annual goodwill impairment test, which indicated that the carrying amount of the Fiber Reporting unit, which includes both our small cells and fiber solutions businesses exceeded its estimated fair value. As a result, we’ve recorded a goodwill impairment charge of about $5 billion for full-year 2024 and have no goodwill remaining for the Fiber Reporting segment. The reduction to fair value was driven primarily by our decision to reduce and defer our small cell development plans because of the changes we made in our return thresholds. Also the work that we did with our customers on their recalibrated network deployment plans in the short-term and mid-term, and that the higher cost of capital we’ve experienced as interest rates have stayed higher for longer than anticipated. So for the outlook for 2025, I wanted to start the discussion off by mentioning that our 2025 outlook looks different since it excludes the results of our Fiber segment, which in a go-forward basis for reporting purposes will be accounted for in discontinued operations. We will continue to operate the Fiber segment as in the ordinary course of business during 2025 and believe it will generate results largely in-line with 2024. As a result of these changes in reporting, I will only be talking about tower outlook for 2025. So, as it relates to towers, underlying our 2025 outlook, we believe we will deliver organic growth of 4.5% in towers, excluding the impact of Sprint consolidation churn, as we see our customers activity levels being similar in 2025 to what we experienced in 2024. The wireless carriers level of activity continues to be positive as they are busy fortifying their networks with new spectrum and new equipment. Most of the work on our sites continues to be 5G overlays. As our customers shift toward densification, we believe our towers are well-positioned to capture this activity. As a result, for 2025, we believe it will be a continuation of solid growth with organic growth excluding Sprint cancellations of 4.5%. Now our growth in 2025 is offset by the impact of the Sprint consolidation churn, which the Company has previously reported. This churn, which has hit as of January 1, will be approximately $205 million in towers. Now staying with churn expectations for towers, we also expect to have just under 1% churn excluding Sprint in 2025. And looking beyond this year, our expected churn range remains 1% to 2%. Now, this includes around $20 million in annual Sprint churn that we have from leases that will be coming to their natural final termination date between 2026 and 2034. So, our longer-term churn expectations excluding the trailing Sprint churn is between 0.5% to 1.5%. In towers for 2025, you can expect to see an increase in capital spending and a majority of that anticipated increase is going toward investing and controlling the parcels of land under our towers. This higher expected level of investment will be focused on select site locations that we deem as both strategic. They may generate significant revenue or be prime sites for future colocation activity and also provide us positive returns. By either extending leases through perpetual easements or acquiring the deed, we’ll use our capital wisely, secure future cash flows and improve operating margins. We also expect to spend more to improve our project management capabilities and to enable us to work more closely with our customers to make faster and more informed commercial and operating decisions. We believe these initiatives will make it more efficient for our customers to add equipment or colocate on our sites, accelerate the customer application cycle-time and increase the rate by which customers can complete their installations. So, as we move to our priorities in towers for 2025, I’ll refer to Slide 5 in the earnings presentation. Basically, here’s what you can expect from us. Customer service, we’re going to be absolutely laser-focused on delivering great customer service for the wireless carriers as we drive operational excellence into the business, refining processes, leveraging technology better and enhancing automation, all in the effort to improve speed and ease of service. I mentioned operational excellence. Operational excellence is critical for us. Again, we’re going to look to leverage technology and make sure that we have what we need to be able to make very well-informed commercial and operating decisions with our customers benefiting both of us. Improved profitability is also critical and we will leverage our scale and operational efficiency as we look to secure and optimize our long-term revenue and drive operating margins higher through efforts like those to economically secure the land under our towers, which I just mentioned before. And strong balance sheet, we will target investment grade credit rating and practice strong financial discipline while allocating capital to maximize shareholder returns. And, while we will focus on these four strategic priorities, we’ll be working very hard to deliver for the buyers of our fiber businesses and to pursue a transition and separation plan with the closing anticipated to be in the first half of 2026. So, while we’re focused on these priorities as we work to close the sale of the fiber and small cell businesses, we know the next goal for our Company is to maximize shareholder value as a focused pure-play U.S. tower company. And with the sale of the fiber segment, we’re updating our capital allocation framework to focus more on free cash flow generation and financial flexibility as you can see on Slide 6. It starts first and foremost with returning capital to our shareholders via quarterly dividend. Going forward, Crown Castle intends to set its dividend at a rate of about 75% to 80% of AFFO excluding amortization of prepaid rent. We anticipate reducing our annual dividend to approximately $4.25 per share starting in the second quarter of 2025 based on our expected annual AFFO excluding amortization of prepaid rent following the close. Second, after the close, we will target about $150 million to $250 million of annual organic capital expenditures, opportunistically pursuing value enhancing growth. And this includes purchasing land under our towers, which is a key priority for us this year and in the future, selective new builds as we have opportunities and investing more in technology to enhance our margins for our revenue growth. The third thing we’re going to do post-closing is we plan to manage our debt balance to maintain an investment grade credit rating. After closing the fiber transaction, we expect to use substantial cash proceeds to repay debt. And based on preliminary analysis, we believe the enhanced ability of our free cash flow profile as a pure-play U.S. tower business will allow us to maintain an investment grade credit rating with the target leverage between 6 times and 6.5 times. Finally, we expect to repurchase shares. Currently, Crown Castle intends to implement the share repurchase program of approximately $3 billion in conjunction with the close of the transaction, which we expect to happen again in the first half of 2026. We believe this capital allocation framework provides an attractive near-term capital return, while allowing financial flexibility to pursue opportunistic share repurchases, as well as organic growth and inorganic growth opportunities in the future. I’d like to conclude by saying as a pure-play U.S. tower company with clear focus on driving best-in-class customer service and more efficient operations, we believe we will have a unique opportunity to enhance shareholder value by providing focused exposure to the best market for wireless infrastructure in the world with positive secular trends bolstered by 15% plus annualized growth in mobile data consumption, financially sound counterparties who are spending at a rate of $30 billion or more annually on network deployment and optimization, all leading to an environment that should drive tower growth for years to come. I also want to thank our employees who helped us achieve our fourth quarter and full-year 2024 results. Your effort and focus enabled us to deliver solid revenue growth, while significantly lowering operating costs and capital expenditures as we implemented revised operating plans and concluded the fiber strategic review. Finally, as you know, Dan Schlanger will be leaving Crown Castle at the end of this month. Amazing that this will be his last earnings call. And, I’d like to take the opportunity to thank Dan for the many contributions that he has made for our Company over the last nine years, particularly in the past year, supporting me as I joined this Company and for his work on the strategic review and transaction. I know I can speak for everyone at Crown Castle. Dan, we wish you all the best in your next endeavors. Now, I’ll turn it over to Dan, to walk us through the details of the quarter.