Scott Moritz

Merger Talk Rings Hollow for Big Telcos

 

MCI and Verizon declined to comment. SBC was unavailable.

Yet despite the newly charged, or in some cases recharged, negotiations, nothing by way of a major merger has materialized in more than two years. And few industry experts see anything developing immediately from the current round of talks.

"There's no doubt that there has to be consolidation, and it will eventually happen, but not in the near term," says Mike Smith, an analyst with Stratecast Partners, a consultancy for most of the large telecom companies.

There are several obstacles such as antitrust concerns, the need to make competitive divestitures, and the potential for shareholder dilution, says Smith. But most important, there's valuation.

Given the strength of their balance sheets, BellSouth and SBC are in the best positions to drive the deals, says Smith. But potential partners AT&T, MCI and Sprint make for tough targets, thanks to their relentless revenue erosion and uncertainties in the market.

Sliding

Last week's earnings reports gave a fresh update to the familiar sales deterioration story that AT&T and its ilk have been enduring. Chief among the reasons BellSouth would want AT&T is the lucrative business services operation. But AT&T shocked investors by posting a 6% decline in business revenue from the year-ago period. For its part, BellSouth posted solid numbers and seems to have opportunities, albeit modest and well within its regional borders.

"It would certainly answer their executive ascension questions and fix their growth problem, but I just don't see BellSouth hooking up with AT&T anytime soon," says Marty Hyman, an independent telecom consultant who has provided strategy and analysis to several of the big phone companies.

And while the other players maneuver, the largest is somewhat hobbled. Verizon, with more than $50 billion in debt, has less financial flexibility and is probably wise to shop for cheap network routes and other assets outside its territory, say analysts.

But in order for the acquisition race to start one big merger will be necessary to trigger a chain reaction, say analysts.

Until then, there's little to talk about but the talks.

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