Cable One, Inc.’s (CABO) CEO Julie Laulis on Q2 2022 Results – Earnings Call Transcript

Cable One, Inc. (NYSE:CABO) Q2 2022 Earnings Conference Call August 4, 2022 5:00 PM ET

Company Participants

Jordan Morkert – Investor Relations

Julie Laulis – President and Chief Executive Officer

Todd Koetje – Chief Financial Officer

Conference Call Participants

Dan Osley – Wells Fargo

Craig Moffett – MoffettNathanson

Frank Louthan – Raymond James

Brandon Nispel – KeyBanc Capital Bank

Operator

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for attending today’s Cable One Second Quarter 2022 Earnings Call. My name is Tia, and I will be your moderator for today’s call. All lines will be muted during the presentation portion of the call with an opportunity for questions and answers at the end. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to pass the conference over to your host, Jordan Morkert with Cable One. Please go ahead, sir.

Jordan Morkert

Thank you, Tia. Good afternoon, and welcome to Cable One’s Second Quarter 2022 Earnings Call. We’re glad to have you join us as we review our results. Before we proceed, I would like to remind you that today’s discussion contains forward-looking statements relating to future events that involve risks and uncertainties. You can find factors that could cause Cable One’s actual results to differ materially from the forward-looking statements discussed during today’s call in today’s earnings release and in our recent SEC filings.

Cable One is under no obligation and expressly disclaims any obligation, except as required by law, to update or alter its forward-looking statements, whether as results 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 or GAAP. 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, Julie Laulis; and Todd Koetje, our CFO.

With that, let me turn the call over to Julie.

Julie Laulis

Hi, Jordan, and good afternoon, everyone. We appreciate you joining us for today’s call. I’m going to ask for a little bit of grace as I tested positive for COVID on Tuesday. I am isolating and feel okay, but if I end up coughing, I apologize. Our second quarter of 2022 results reflect continued broadband customer and revenue growth at a more seasonally adjusted pre-pandemic levels. And we continue to generate industry-leading margins. Compared to the second quarter of 2021, total revenue increased 6.8%, adjusted EBITDA increased 6.7% and adjusted EBITDA margin was 53%.

Any customer growth in the second quarter, which is traditionally the toughest quarter of the year is reason for confidence in the long-term fundamentals of our business. While we experience some challenges in the execution of certain pricing and packaging adjustments within the quarter that affected our residential ARPU. We’ve observed other factors that enhance our confidence. Despite the macroeconomic environment, we find ourselves in.

Looking first at our residential internet service, approximately 41,000 customers on a year-over-year basis for 4.4% growth. On a sequential quarterly basis, we grew by 1,300 customers. As we previously discussed, these numbers represent a more normalized pre-pandemic seasonality. And our customers in the second quarter was in line with a comparable quarter during 2019. We believe that we are and will continue to grow off the peaks achieve during the height of the pandemic.

And we have already realized continued modest growth so far through the month of July. We anticipate our business will continue to demonstrate resilience due to the growing need for reliable internet service in the markets we serve. Our residential internet ARPU for the second quarter increased by 2.7% year-over-year. Our ARPUs can and should be [Technical Difficulty] as a reminder, we have not implemented rate adjustment since fall of 2015, nearly seven years ago.

In late first quarter, we migrated about 15% of our residential internet customer base from 100 to 200 meg with an initial increase of $5. In hindsight, this approach along with some offsetting adjustments related to seasonally low levels of customer data usage, increased promotional campaigns and small one-time accounting changes made to align the ARPU methodology of our acquired brand, all resulted in ARPU growth that did not meet [ph] our expectations.

That said, we expect usage will grow seasonally throughout the second half of the year. And we see positive impact in ARPU as the promotions roll off. Add to that and acceleration in our [Technical Difficulty] higher tiers than we – but if we can move this lever as customers demonstrate the type or higher speed in data. For context, our gigabit service selling nearly doubled sequentially from 16% to 28% in the second quarter.

Moving to business services, we saw revenue of 7.8% over year, an acceleration from the first quarter when excluding CableAmerica and the operations contributed to Clearwave Fiber. From small businesses to enterprise customers, [Technical Difficulty] leads the way with broadband customers and ARPU showing continued durable, organic growth.

And with our deep commitment to address digital equity across our footprint, we continue opportunities to partner with government and local entities to provide connectivity and rural communities. Most recently, our team received a grant to provide [Technical Difficulty] for service in the Eastern Arizona region of Heber-Overgaard. Extending broadband service to areas previously unserved and underserved will remain a key [Technical Difficulty] because we understand how critical, fast and reliable internet is to the economic development of small cities in large towns.

As mentioned earlier, another indicator of our long-term growth potential is reflected in our network usage. Although, average data usage increased year-over-year by approximately 16%, our downstream and upstream utilization during peak hours never exceeded [ph] 22%. With nearly $1 billion in capital investments in our network over the last years, Cable One, and will continue to deliver a reliable premium customer brands across our family of brands.

Looking at our unconsolidated investments in total, residential and business data customers grew by approximately 9,100 customers or 2.2% on a sequential basis from quarter one of 2022. This investment strategy, which we initiated back in 2019 with our small investment in Hargray has become an important element of our long-term capital allocation philosophy. And affords Cable One with the opportunity to align with entrusted management teams and financial firms in the communications sector, through these partners, we were able to successfully accelerate our collective ambition of being the most trusted providers of solutions to small cities and large towns across America.

This quarter, we are excited to announce our most recent strategic growth capital investment in Visionary Broadband, a leading fiber-based broadband provider, serving rural communities across Wyoming, Colorado, and Montana. Todd will provide more detail about our partnership with Visionary and other small transactions that were closed during the quarter in his remarks. Transitioning to integration activities, the team continues to execute multiple integration and deconsolidation program, meaning maintaining focus on speed to realizing synergies and while continuing to deliver on our commitment to our associates, customers and communities.

While there will be near-term integration costs, we are confident in the long-term values these new brands will create despite the quarter that didn’t live up to our expectations, I’m confident about our future. Our strategic positioning over the past decade, which includes our data-centric strategies and rural markets, where we choose to operate with the relentless execution of our [Technical Difficulty] continues to having meaningful impact on our business, as well as the lives of the customers and communities we serve.

Before handing the call over to Todd, I’d like to share a few items from the quarter that we are exceptionally proud of [ph]. The first is our recent donation of nearly 600 Chromebooks to 11 Title I schools across our footprint. Now in its ninth year, our Chromebooks for Kids initiative began simply as a way to augment technological resources to schools that’s funding in our community.

Over the past several years, however, access to technology in schools has moved from being a luxury to absolute necessity. And our goal is to help bridge the [Technical Difficulty] schools that may not have access to funding to support this effort. We have donated nearly 3,000 Chromebooks to schools in need. As another example of supporting the communities where we live and work, we are pleased to have recently been named by Cablefax as the Corporate Social Responsibility Operator of the Year for our commitment to advancing education, strengthening communities and improving lives across our 24 state footprints.

Among the efforts highlighted in this recognition was our Charitable Giving Fund, which annually awards $250,000 in grants across our footprint concentrating support in the areas of education and digital literacy, hunger relief and community development. Other efforts included the Chromebooks for Kids initiative I mentioned previously, our partnership with the Arbor Day Foundation and Keep America Beautiful and last but not least, the thousands of hours our associates spend each year volunteering their time and talent with nonprofit organizations in our community.

Our associates’ unwavering commitment to our customers and their passion for giving back to the communities we live in and serve, created a unique culture that continues to flourish even in times of growth and change.

And now welcome Todd to position effective July 1. Todd will provide a full recap of our financial performance.

Todd Koetje

Thanks, Julie. I’m excited to be here with you all today. Before I begin, I’d like to remind everyone that our second quarter 2022 results do not include operations contributed to Clearwave Fiber at the beginning of this year and the results for the second quarter of 2021 included just two months of Hargray operations and did not yet include CableAmerica operations.

Starting now with revenue, total revenues for the second quarter of 2022 were $429.1 million, compared to $401.7 million in the second quarter of 2021, 60.8% increase. This was fueled by a 12.4% growth in residential internet revenue. When excluding Hargray and CableAmerica, as well as the impact of the Clearwave Fiber deconsolidation, residential internet revenue growth was 6.4% and business services revenue growth was 7.8% on a year-over-year basis.

While the deconsolidation of Clearwave Fiber was predominantly business services revenue, our remaining residential internet and business services operations still comprised over 72% of our total revenues. Operating expenses were $118.4 million or 27.6% of revenues in the second quarter of 2022, compared to $112.4 million or 28% of revenues in the comparable quarter of the prior year.

Selling, general and administrative expenses were $90.8 million for the second quarter of 2022, compared to $88 million in the prior year quarter. These expenses were 21.2% of revenues in the second quarter of 2022, compared to 21.9% of revenues in Q2 2021, a 70 basis point improvement.

Net income in the second quarter was $69.2 million or $11.11 cents per share on a fully diluted basis. Adjusted EBITDA was $227.5 million for the second quarter, an increase of 6.7% when compared to 2021. Our adjusted EBITDA margin was 53%. Please note that, we do not provide adjusted EBITDA growth rates that exclude the impact of the Hargray and CableAmerica acquisitions and the Clearwave Fiber deconsolidation. This is due to the challenges in providing the required non-GAAP reconciliations when taking into account corporate allocations that were a part of Hargray’s financial statements in 2021.

Capital expenditures totaled $107.3 million for the second quarter of 2022, which equates to 47.2% of adjusted EBITDA. During the quarter, we invested $11 million of CapEx for network expansion and $6.5 million for integration activities. By continuing to leverage our scale and long-term vendor relationships, we had the opportunity to bring forward approximately $9 million of incremental fiber and related broadband equipment purchases to support our ongoing growth initiatives. While supply chain challenges persists, we feel good about current inventory levels and ongoing access.

We expect our pace of capital investment to temper throughout the balance of the year. Adjusted EBITDA less capital expenditures was $120.2 million for the second quarter. In the second quarter of 2022, we distributed $16.4 million in dividends to shareholders. We repurchased approximately 96,000 shares for $122 million bringing the total capital return to shareholders during the quarter to $138.4 million.

Year-to-date, we have repurchased nearly 144,000 shares for approximately $192 million. Under the new Board authorization approved during the quarter, we had approximately $403 million remaining for share repurchases at the end of the second quarter. And we will continue to be opportunistic with how we allocate our capital.

Turning to our financial structure, while the increasing rate environment resulted in slightly higher interest expense for the quarter, we feel very well positioned from a balance sheet and liability management perspective as we have been able to proactively take advantage of strong markets over the last couple of years, locking in long-term, low cost and predominantly fixed rates across our capital structure, a nod to this great team and my predecessor.

From a liquidity standpoint, we had $280 million of cash and cash equivalents on hand as of June 30. And we continue to generate significant free cash flow. At quarter-end, our debt balance was approximately $3.9 billion consisting of approximately $2.3 billion in term loans, $920 million in convertible notes, $650 million in unsecured notes and $5 million of finance lease liabilities. We also had approximately $449 million available for additional borrowing under our revolver as of June 30.

Overall, our debt to last quarter annualized adjusted EBITDA after netting cash on hand against debt was at 3.9x as of June 30. During the quarter, we closed three transactions. As Julie discussed earlier, on June 1, we made a $7.2 million equity investment in Visionary Broadband in partnership with GTCR.

We are excited to support this proven team with growth capital that is being used to accelerate their strategy of bringing leading broadband solutions to underserved rural markets in Wyoming, Colorado, and Montana. On April 1, we contributed our Tallahassee assets to Metronet systems in exchange for combined cash and equity interests totaling $15 [ph] million. The first quarter 2022 revenues associated with the operations contributed to Metronet were approximately $530,000.

Finally, on May 20, we divested Hargray’s managed IT service, which we considered non-core. The first quarter 2022 revenues associated with Hargray managed IT were approximately $1.9 million. Lastly, as mentioned on previous calls during the second quarter, we unloaned a majority of our remaining bulk cable video offerings. While we estimate this initiative reduced video revenues by approximately $1.7 million in the second quarter of 2022, more importantly, it has helped prepare our network for the next-generation of high speed data enhancements. It is also reducing the amount of time and energy spent focusing on an unprofitable product offering and is expected to continue to help improve our margins.

With that Tia, we are now ready for questions.

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

Absolutely. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] The first question comes from the line of Steve Cahall with Wells Fargo. You may proceed.

Dan Osley

Good evening. This is Dan Osley on for Steve. Just had a quick question on fixed wireless, maybe for Julie, if you can talk through the availability of fixed wireless in your footprint today and how you expect that to change the near-term. We’re just trying to assess whether your current growth is in the face of increased competition or if it hasn’t quite yet picked up? Thank you.

Julie Laulis

You bet. We have information that tells us, and it is preliminary, but that as it relates to mobile specifically because we are seeing – I don’t want to say absolutely. I’ll say virtually nothing related to Verizon, but T-Mobile’s installed share in our footprint is essentially the same as T-Mobile installed share in its wide footprint. Now, I think most folks are expecting that fixed wireless will have more of an impact in rural, but to-date that it’s not the case. And installed share does not mean that that share may have taken from any other provider. We have not seen, but a handful of [Technical Difficulty] remains quite low, record low.

So my guess would be that T-Mobile finding customers from DSL makes sense to me because we position ourselves as a premium product provider. And so, likely they are getting customers from lower end of the funnel.

Dan Osley

Thank you.

Todd Koetje

And Dan, I’ll just add. This is Todd. We mentioned this on the first quarter call and some follow ups, but from a T-Mobile perspective, there were overlap of us is, again from third-party resources, approximately 40% to 50%. So it’s not even a full overlap of our markets.

Dan Osley

Got it. Thank you.

Julie Laulis

I like Charter’s idea that the fixed broadband customers are in a parking lot, waiting to become high speed internet customers of ours as their needs for data, which they will.

Operator

Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Craig Moffett with MoffettNathanson. You may proceed.

Craig Moffett

Thank you. Hi, Julie, with – with Altice USA staying formally now that they are conducting a process on – I wonder if you could just comment on your appetite for a transaction of that size.

Todd Koetje

Hey, Craig, it’s Todd. I’d say consistent with our past practice, as you know, we don’t comment on public M&A speculation. But I will tell you right now, we continue to be highly focused on the integration and operational success of the brands that we have recently acquired and the great teams that we’re partnering with on those opportunities.

Craig Moffett

All right, I won’t try another roundabout way of asking. So let me switch then to the other obvious question besides fixed wireless, which is fiber and see if you could just update us a little bit on what you’re seeing in terms of fiber and both in the rate at which the fiber is expanding across your footprint and also what you see competitively when a new entrant comes in. We’re certainly hearing stories about the cost of fiber deployment rising pretty rapidly with pressures on available labor and that sort of thing. I’m wondering if you’re seeing that having any impact on the rate of fiber builds in your footprint.

Julie Laulis

I’ll start off with that. And Todd, you feel free to add. Yes, Craig, you’re right. And the way we figure it anyway, the way we pencil it out, we think that the cost for us, for example, to rebuild ourselves with fibers about five times the cost us going to [Technical Difficulty] and we know the things that we have worked nine months ago are coming in today. And we know what the labor market is like as well. So are watching, how quickly we can roll out fiber and tend to have some skepticism, especially with the newer entrants.

Our biggest over builders have been legacy telcos, AT&T and CenturyLink specifically. And we do have a smattering of upstarts, some towns, but obviously nothing that hits all of us since we are in very diverse locations. We ourselves are over builders. So I don’t know what they will expect when they come into Cable One markets, but I know how we go into other markets.

I don’t think that at this point in time, we are seeing – well, I know that we are seeing high levels of churn from any separate items. But overall, I would expect that in time competition is going to [Technical Difficulty] it will come more slowly to our markets because of where we’re situated and because we’re not consolidated in one region. But today we’re used to what we see as a matter of fact, going back and looking at 2019, compared to 2022 we think that’s the original guide.

Our win share flow is in line with actually slightly better than it was back then. So far feeling good about our situation, but very focused on making sure that we are providing customers with a service that is incredibly reliable and that absolutely [Technical Difficulty] so that don’t have to worry too much about any folks were incurring on our footprint.

Craig Moffett

Thanks, Julie. I hope you feel better soon.

Julie Laulis

Thank you.

Todd Koetje

And Craig, I’ll add just a couple things on that briefly, but we’ve discussed in the past. So our competitive landscape, the fact that in Q1, we talked about approximately 30% of our markets do have a competitor that can provide over 100 megabits of speed that number has moved up about a percentage point so nominal move there. We’ve talked about fiber overlay on our network which is specific to your question that was about 20% in the first quarter were 21.5% now.

So another nominal move up but not meaningful. And then we importantly point out, where there’s more than – or there’s two or more operators. That number remains still very small at 6% across our market. So I think those are important factors when thinking about that as well, we tend to think about the competition as Julie said, is it’s coming, it’s we fight every day down to the neighborhood as if it’s there, but it’s slower and it’s lower in our markets.

I don’t know if it’s because of maybe some of the economics that you referenced in terms of the cost of fiber deployment, but I can tell you on time and on budget for those models is critically important. And on time with labor and supplies is hard to predict right now, we’re seeing it and navigating it through it. And I know others are – the penetration ramps for those are very critically important. And I know our competitive awareness is very high, so we fight very hard against those.

And I would say then obviously the price at which you sell that service is kind of the third important leg of those stools, if you’re going to have a successful business model and the escalations of that price. And we do think that that will continue to, as people look to both ours as others, fiber deployments as a critical need. That’s not even mentioning the capital markets. As I mentioned in my remarks, we feel really good about our position, but if you’re raising capital out in the debt capital markets right now for those platforms, it’s not as easy as it was nine months ago.

Craig Moffett

Thanks. That’s really helpful color. I appreciate that.

Todd Koetje

You bet.

Operator

Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Frank Louthan with Raymond James. You may proceed.

Frank Louthan

Great. Thank you. And I apologize if I missed this at the beginning of the call, but in the release, it says G&A was up a little bit partially due to bad debt. Can you comment on that or does that – just the accountants being conservative? Are you seeing any actual change in consumer behavior? And then, if you can comment on any capital, maybe putting into the JV that you have this year, what the total amount that might be? Thanks.

Todd Koetje

Frank, I’ll take the first one and Julie – or I’ll take the second one in terms of the capital and the JV, and Julie can comment on the bad debt. I’m happy to as well. In terms of the JV, as we’ve stated before that Clearwave Fiber JV, I’m assuming you’re referencing with capitalized initially at the end of this year with $320 million of cash and do not have any anticipation of putting incremental capital into that business, outside of if there were to be meaningful M&A opportunities that they identified and pursued.

Julie Laulis

Yes. And Frank, bad debt was up from last year but – again, if we compare back to 2019, it’s actually lower 2019 levels, whether on a quarterly basis or a year-to-date basis. So bad debt all is not a problem. It’s just growth from the pandemic years. Everything’s just sort of falling back into normal levels again, that’s the way I think about it.

Frank Louthan

Okay, great. That’s very helpful. And I think you gave the amount of the buyback to authorization that was still at the end of the quarter. Can you update us on what it is quarter-to-date?

Todd Koetje

We cannot, in terms of after the quarter ended, but at the time that the quarter ended, we did have that $403 million remaining and recall that the authorization that we approved and announced early in the second quarter was $450 million.

Frank Louthan

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. The next question from the line of Brandon Nispel with KeyBanc Capital Bank. You may proceed.

Brandon Nispel

Great. Thank you for taking the questions. I must be a little bit slow today, but could you just unpack the organic HSD net additions this quarter with the divestment of the Tallahassee portfolio? And then what are you seeing to-date in the third quarter?

Julie Laulis

I caught some of what you said, Brandon, but not all of it. Start with the backwards part, year-to-date again, I mean, through the third quarter, meaning just July, modest growth and typically August and September months of the year. So the third quarter 2012 from how July went. I think you also said something about Tallahassee.

Todd Koetje

Yes. Brandon, on that real quick. Brandon on Tallahassee, that was – there were no residential customers, that was all biz services that was divested, I’m sorry. HMIT was all biz services. Tallahassee also was all biz services which was contributed to Metronet. Does that help?

Brandon Nispel

Yes, I think it does.

Todd Koetje

And then on the – the only thing on the pro forma, Brandon, I apologize. I just spoke over you on the residential internet service, there was some adjustments, consistent with what we disclosed on the first quarter call that were related to the Clearwave Fiber deconsolidation, as well as CableAmerica. Those would be the only pro forma adjustments. So we reported 41,000 customers on a year-over-year basis when adjusting for those two events, it’s 35,000 or 3.8% growth.

Brandon Nispel

Got it. All right. Sounds good, I’ll just jump back into the queue. Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] There are no additional questions at this time. I will pass it back to the management team for closing remarks.

Julie Laulis

Thank you, Tia. As always, I would like to thank our associates for the incredible work on behalf of our customers in Cable One. We appreciate everyone joining us for today’s call. And we look forward to speaking with you again next quarter. Todd and I will both be attending the conference, assuming negative COVID test in Colorado next. We hope to see many of you there.

Operator

That concludes today’s conference call. Thank you. You may now disconnect your line.

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