Title: Pitchbook US template
1M A Y 2 0 0 7
T E L E C O M S E C T O R O V E R V I E W
Presentation to FIN 824 (SPRING QUARTER) Marc
Reitter Siddhesh Sankulkar
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
2Telecom Sector Overview
1
Sector Overview
2
2
Sector Weights SIM v SP 500
3
3
Size Composition
4
Sector Performance
5
Economic Analysis
6-10
Financial Analysis
11-14
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
Valuation Analysis
15-20
Domestic MA Activity
21
Recommendation
22
1
3Sector overview defined
SP Telecom Sector
- The Telecom sector is grouped into two primary
segments - Telecommunications Equipment
- Wireless, Satellite Network
- Telecommunications Services
- Cable Satellite, Data Services, Wireless
Communications - Telecom Industry Growth
- The worldwide telecom industry is in a strong
growth mode, and overall industry revenue is
expected to climb to 1.3 Trillion in 2007. - Strong growth in wireless is leading the way as
wireless service revenues are expected to grow at
a compounded rate of nearly 10 percent over the
next few years.
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
Source Insight Research Corp. 2007 industry
review
2
4Sector weights SIM vs. SP 500
SIM overview
- Current holdings
- Current holdings
SIM overweight Telecom by 3.43
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
SP 500 overview
YTD Return
3
5Sector overview company analysis
Size composition
- Telecom defined within the SP 500
- Current SIM holdings
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
Source Yahoo Finance Bloomberg
4
6Sector overview performance strength
Performance of SP Telecom Services (SP50)
Strength of SP Telecom Services (SP50)
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
5
7Sector Overview Economic Analysis
Telecom Sector Outlook is positive in the recent
past and for the foreseeable future
- In 2006, the U.S telecommunications market grew
at its fastest rate since 2000. - TIA states that the U.S Market grew 9.3 in 2006
to total 923 billion in revenue. - Projected revenue for the U.S Market in 2007 is
at 1025 billion at 11.05 - Major drivers of high growth rates are expansion
of wireless communication and broadband access. - Wireline is losing ground to wireless and VoIP
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
6
8Sector Overview Economic Analysis
United States market is looking good but the real
growth is overseas
- Growth is expected in VoIP, as the
broadband-based phone technology is forecast to
make up 34 of all U.S residential landlines by
2010, up from just 10 in 2006. - Overall, the international market grew 12.1
percent in 2006. Middle East/Africa was the
fastest growing region, expanding at 21.6 - By 2010, the global market is expected to reach
4.3 trillion in revenue, up from 3 trillion in
2006.
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
7
9Sector Overview Economic Analysis
Non-voice revenues on the rise
- While growth in voice traffic continues to
stimulate the wireless market, data and
multimedia applications will drive wireless
revenues in the future. - The number of broadband subscribers increased
from fewer than 5 million in 2000 to nearly 57
million in 2006. - Dial-up subscribers fell to 35 million from a
peak of 47 million in 2006. - With nearly 80 of all households already online
and the majority of online households already
having a broadband subscription, overall
subscriber growth and broadband subscriber growth
will necessarily slow.
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
8
10Sector Overview Economic Analysis
Key Economic Drivers
- Sector growth is correlated with
- GDP ()
- Population Growth ()
- Unemployment Rate (-) Most pronounced
- Wireline growth is more strongly correlated with
above than wireless
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
9
11Sector Overview Economic Analysis
Key Economic Drivers Unemployment Rate (-)
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
10
12Sector Overview Financial Analysis
SP-50 Income Statement Analysis
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
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13Sector Overview Financial Analysis
SP-50 Cash Flow Statement Analysis
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
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14Sector Overview Financial Analysis
SP-50 Income Statement Ratios
SP-50 Cash Flow Statement Ratios
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
13
15Sector Overview Financial Analysis
SP-50 Prospective Growth and Margin Data
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
14
16Sector Overview Valuation Analysis
SP-50 Historical Sector Performance (5 Years)
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
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17Sector Overview Valuation Analysis
Price/Yr-Forward Earnings relative to SP 500
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
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18Sector Overview Valuation Analysis
Price/EBITDA relative to SP 500
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
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19Sector Overview Valuation Analysis
Price/Sales relative to SP 500
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
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20Sector Overview Valuation Analysis
Price/Book Value relative to SP 500
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
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21Sector Overview Valuation Analysis
Price/Cash Flow Adjusted to SP 500
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
20
22MA activity
A look at what is happening to the Industry in
the US before we recommend
21
23Sector Overview Recommendations
- Hold current SIM overweight position of 3.43
- Divest holdings in Wireline companies which have
no wireless component e.g. Windstream
Corporation. - Invest more in US companies offering integrated
telecom services i.e. wireless, wireline,
broadband and video services. We see brightest
prospects for the national carriers (ATT,
Sprint/Nextel, Verizon) which are able to market
on a nationwide basis, offer nationwide calling
plans, and carry most traffic on their own
networks. They get to exploit both economies of
scale and economies of scope. - Invest more in Wireless providers in emerging
markets. General consensus of industry experts is
that these providers will continue to realize
double-digit subscriber and revenue growth in
2007, improving margins and profitability.
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
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24Sector Overview Questions
T E L E C O M S E C T O R
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