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		European telcos cash in on tower assets as high-cost 5G investment looms
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		 [March 03, 2021]  By 
		Isla Binnie and Supantha Mukherjee 
 MADRID/
 STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - European 
		telecoms firms are cashing in on the money-making power of masts, as 
		tower companies line up to pay multi-billion dollar price tags for 
		antennas buzzing with ever more data ahead of the advent of 5G.
 
 Faced with straitened revenue growth and stubbornly high debt built up 
		during the last network upgrade, telecoms companies are relishing the 
		quick cash injections they can get from selling these portfolios, or 
		future income from spin-offs.
 
 Upgrading networks, including towers, for 5G - which promises an age of 
		self-driving cars and brain surgery performed at a distance - will soak 
		up some $890 billion between 2020 and 2025, the GSMA industry body says.
 
 European operators are increasingly willing to exploit assets to help 
		finance those build-outs. While selling towers outright brings piles of 
		cash, many are also looking to create separate tower units or launch 
		joint ventures with independent companies as a way to keep a chunk of 
		potential future growth.
 
 So far this year, Vodafone has lined up its towers business for the 
		European sector's biggest listing since 2014, while Orange created a 
		separate towers unit.
 
		
		 
		
 Independent tower companies have proved hungry to buy, snapping up more 
		than 14 billion euros ($16.9 billion) worth of assets so far this year 
		to access the steady, inflation-linked returns antenna-topped towers 
		generate.
 
 But around 66% of sites in Europe are still wholly or partially owned by 
		phone companies, Barclays estimates, compared with less than 10% in the 
		United States. "The market is unlocking," said Julian Plumstead, Chief 
		Executive for Europe at American Tower, which bought more than 30,000 
		towers from Spain's Telefonica in January.
 
 Compared to the United States, Plumstead told Reuters, "We are still in 
		the early to middle ages of our industrial development, but looking 
		forward I think the trend will continue and possibly accelerate."
 
 GRADUALLY RELINQUISHING
 
 In cases where operators and tower companies have signed joint ventures, 
		the tower companies say they usually have the option to buy out the 
		operators after a number of years.
 
 This means some are gradually relinquishing these unlikely trophies in 
		stages. Telefonica netted more than $9 billion with the sale to American 
		Tower of sites it had already hived off into a separate unit in 2016.
 
 "We fully understand the interest of the operators in going for this 
		two-stage approach," Cellnex Deputy Chief Executive Alex Mestre told 
		Reuters. "There is revalorization of the asset ... and the operators can 
		seize that."
 
 Plumstead said American Tower had managed to beef up its portfolio - 
		from an admittedly low base - in Europe this year despite restrictions 
		on movement.
 
		
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			A visitor tries out a VR headset at the Telefonica booth during the 
			Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain February 28, 2018. 
			REUTERS/Yves Herman 
            
			 
"Getting people into the field has not been as easy... but we've built more 
towers this year than in Europe last year and we'll plan to do the same again 
this year." Towers are prized assets partly because contracts to use them are 
like an "infinite marriage" in which operators pay steady rates for decades, in 
the words of one industry expert. 
Shares of both American Tower and Cellnex touched record highs last year during 
the pandemic after more than doubling and more than tripling respectively in 
value in the last half decade.
 TOWERING OVER EUROPE
 
 Deal-making has been concentrated in Western Europe until now, but regional 
leader Cellnex and American Tower, whose buy from Telefonica increased its 
presence in Europe sevenfold, are both now looking further east and in 
Scandinavia.
 
 "We are looking at a wider geographic scope," Cellnex's Mestre said. "We have 
started also in the Nordics, we have started in Poland and in all those areas in 
our core geographies where we believe there are still a lot of towers yet to be 
outsourced."
 
 Almost all European operators are now discussing what they should do with their 
tower assets, industry executives say.
 
 High multiples paid for recent deals have piqued their interest. American Tower 
paid Telefonica around 30x its tower unit's most recent core earnings for the 
assets, according to analysts at Moody's.
 
 Operators willing to part with their towers have commanded average valuations 
22.1 times higher than the assets' core earnings since mid-2018, Moody's also 
said. Cellnex clinched the lowest price among recent deals, paying 16x earnings 
for a portfolio from Poland's Play last October.
 
 "If you conclude that it's not really a competitive advantage to own the towers, 
then you should dispose of them because the multiple arbitrage is high," said 
Nikos Stathopoulos, chairman of mobile operator United Group, which owns 6,000 
towers in Bulgaria, Slovenia and Croatia.
 
 
 Sweden's Telia is also considering wringing money out of its more than 9,000 
towers by partnering with external investors, a spokeswoman told Reuters, while 
Telenor is also aiming to generate value from its tower portfolio, a 
representative said.
 
 ($1 = 0.8314 euros)
 
 (Reporting by Isla Binnie in Madrid and Supantha Mukherjee in Stockholm; Editing 
by Jan Harvey)
 
				 
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