CenturyLink to buy Level 3 Communications for about $24 billion

Reuters

Published Oct 31, 2016 16:38

CenturyLink to buy Level 3 Communications for about $24 billion

By Malathi Nayak and Narottam Medhora

(Reuters) - CenturyLink Inc (N:CTL) said it would buy Level 3 Communications Inc (N:LVLT) in a deal valued at about $24 billion (£19.72 billion) to expand its fibre optic network and enterprise business and compete with telecommunications rivals like AT&T Inc (N:T) and Verizon VZ.N>.

CenturyLink's shares slumped 12 percent to $26.74 in afternoon trading on Monday, while shares of Level 3 surged 4.6 percent to $56.55.

The cash-and-stock deal, expected to close in the third quarter of 2017, comes as the companies struggle to expand their core operations and face rivals who also offer internet and phone services to businesses.

CenturyLink aims to create a formidable enterprise telecom player as business clients seek more bandwidth and faster networks to move data traffic.

"We’ve become a much larger and more focused enterprise player," CenturyLink Chief Executive Glen Post said in an interview after the deal was announced on Monday.

"Together with Level 3, we will have one of the most robust fibre network and high-speed data services companies in the world," Post said separately in a statement.

Post, who has worked at CenturyLink since 1976, will lead the combined company, while Level 3 Chief Financial Officer Sunit Patel will be chief financial officer.

Analysts were concerned over the fact that CenturyLink will be using its shares to cover the purchase price, which they said would raise its debt-to-equity ratio.

"Our hangup on valuation stems from the fact that CenturyLink is using its shares to fund 60 percent of the purchase price," Morningstar analyst Michael Hodel said in a research note.

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The offer of about $66.50 per share represents a premium of 42 percent to Level 3's close on Wednesday before reports surfaced on a potential pact between the two companies.

CenturyLink, which reported third-quarter earnings on Monday, forecast lower-than-expected fourth-quarter revenue of $4.28 billion-$4.34 billion, dragged by a decline in its wireline business. The company expects an adjusted profit of 53-59 cents per share for the quarter.

Analysts polled by Reuters expect revenue of $4.38 billion and earnings of 64 cents in the fourth quarter.

Monroe, Louisiana-based CenturyLink, which provides telephone services mainly in rural areas, has been investing to grow its enterprise business and upgrade its networks in recent years. Level 3 has one of the most desirable global fibre networks and provides internet services to clients like Apple Inc (O:AAPL) and Netflix Inc (O:NFLX).

Including debt, the deal is valued at about $34 billion and would result in cost savings of $975 million, CenturyLink executives said on a conference call with investors.

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"These are two companies looking for scale and synergies in reaction to the struggles that both companies are facing in their core business to deliver on growth," BTIG analyst Walter Piecyk said in an email.

CenturyLink, which operates more than 55 data centres in North America, Europe and Asia and provides broadband, voice, video, data and managed services, has been exploring a sale of some of its data centre assets. That sale process is underway, CenturyLink executives said on the call.

Colorado-based Level 3 narrowly avoided bankruptcy in the early 2000s and was helped by got a cash infusion of $500 million in 2002 from investors including Warren Buffett. It purchased enterprise company TW Telecom in 2014 for $5.65 billion.

Regulators will likely approve the CenturyLink-Level 3 deal, analysts said.

The global enterprise market is "so crowded with competition, with more and more new entrants building fibre every day that we see little cause for concern by regulators," Drexel Hamilton analyst Barry Sine said in a research note.

BofA Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) were CenturyLink's financial advisers, while Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz and Jones Walker were its legal advisers.