Comcast Gets Smaller
The nation's largest cable-system operator just got a wee bit smaller.
Comcast (CMCSA Quote), which completed its acquisition of AT&T Broadband last November, said Tuesday it had reached a definitive agreement to sell systems in four Western states to privately held Bresnan Broadband Holdings. As part of the transaction, Comcast will receive $525 million in cash, enabling the cable operator to do what all major cable operators are interested in doing these days: cutting debt to ease investors' concerns and improve their own deal-making flexibility. Comcast's shares fell $1.15 Tuesday to trade at $24.90. The proposed transaction, which AT&T (T Quote) first announced in early 2002, may indeed improve Comcast's balance sheet and sharpen its focus on systems in larger markets. The deal won't, however, reduce Comcast's official subscriber count, nor -- despite the half-billion-dollar check -- will it shed much light on how cable operators are valuing cable systems these days. The cash portion of the deal comes to about 2% of the $28.5 billion in long-term debt that Comcast carried on a pro forma basis as of Sept. 30. The cable systems that Comcast is handing over to Bresnan have a distinctly "nonurban" flavor, as Comcast hints; they amount to 317,000 subscribers in Montana, Wyoming, Colorado and Utah. Meanwhile, Comcast says it reaches 70% of cable subscribers in the nation's 20-largest markets. Comcast's latest official count of 21.4 million subscribers will remain unchanged, says a spokesman, since the company hasn't included the affected systems in its recent official counts.- Loading Comments...
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