Sunday, July 4, 2010

Telstra (ASX:TLS) A Good Investment?

Now, I'm no Telecommunications analyst but that hasn't stopped me from thinking a lot about Telstra. 


I must admit that there have been times when I have thought "Why am I invested in this Company that is so much at the behest of Political events". However with some sort of resolution of the political situation the stress of that thought is largely removed for me. Either the NBN is going ahead with a re-elected Labor Government under a deal that Telstra has negotiated or the NBN will be cancelled/modified under a newly elected Liberal Government. Neither of those outcomes will provide any further negativity for Telstra. I'm going to assume the first outcome (the second outcome may be marginally "better" for Telstra).


If we dissociate from our personal views on whether the NBN is a good or bad thing and, furthermore put aside our own personal views as customers of Telstra ("I hate Telstra because they took 3 days to fix my phone") then we might have a chance of seeing through to Telstra as an investment.


Let's cut to the chase. Telstra is currently paying an annual dividend of 28c. On a share price of $3.20, that is a dividend yield of 8.75%. That is a fully franked dividend so it grosses up to a yield of 12.5%. Nobody can argue that that is not a great return on our investment. 


Clearly, the question is "How long can it keep this dividend up?".  Purely the fact that the yield is so high (ie the Share Price is so low) could be read as the Market feeling that this dividend stream will not last for long. I think that the market has it wrong.


Under the NBN Telstra eventually decommissions its copper network and utilizes the NBN to provide services to its customers. Clearly Telstra loses the income that it was making on those copper lines but receives compensation for that from the Government. I can only assume that after the long and hard bargaining that was conducted (and the political imperative of the Government to lock in a deal at a particular point in time), Telstra achieved a deal that they felt would be reasonable for their future (otherwise they would not have done the deal). So, in many ways, Telstra becomes one of many Telecommunications providers in the Australian market. As is always the case in this type of situation their job will be to achieve and hold a significant market share by differentiating themselves. I firmly believe that the pie will grow over coming years.


The NBN is going to take several (eight?) years to fully implement. Over that time Telstra will continue to generate (reducing) revenue from their copper infrastructure. Furthermore, their capital costs of upgrading and maintaining the copper will reduce. I would imagine that much new infrastructure that perhaps would have been built will now not be built (why build something that is going to be superseded in a few short years). The capital that would have been spent on this can now be redirected to other longer term profit generating projects. It's an interesting formula but it seems to me that Telstra have several years of the continuation of huge cash flows ahead, during which time they can reshape the Company for the long term.


The removal of the Universal Service Obligation (USO) from Telstra is significant. It happens essentially immediately and removes one of the significant imposts upon Telstra. I believe that that was a very important part of the deal that was done with the Government. There should be a significant expense saving here that takes place virtually immediately.


Telstra have the best wireless network in Australia. Under the deal they will now be able to bid for 4G spectrum to maintain their leadership here. The world is changing. We are now at the point of simply expecting that we can access our internet anywhere, anytime on any device that we choose - the iPad and similar devices will add enormously to this growth. Furthermore, we have become quite accepting of the fact that we pay a premium (over fixed services) for this service. I believe that this will be a big driver of future profits for Telstra. This will no doubt be an area of large capital investment by Telstra.


Under the deal Telstra now get to keep their Foxtel.


The weak horse in the stable is probably Sensis.


In the end, I believe that the reshaped Telstra has every chance of reshaping itself into a leaner and cleaner organization that will continue to generate great profits long into the future. I don't see the dividends being cut. I'm happy with a grossed up yield of 12.5% (who wouldn't be?).


Of course I could be wrong. Telstra could stumble, they might cut their dividend and their share price might fall. That could happen to any company. Our job as investors is to make our own decisions about where we risk our money (there is always risk). 


A yield of 12.5% gives me a big moat.


What thinks you?






8 comments:

  1. As I understand it, the $11bn includes "lease its network of pits, pipes and ducts to facilitate construction of the new fibre network."

    http://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/industry-sectors/with-its-shares-soaring-telstra-says-the-nbn-deal-provides-a-certain-growth-path/story-e6frg9hx-1225882462722

    Presumably once the fibre is in their ducts, they have an ongoing income stream.

    I thought I saw an article on whirlpool where the other telcos were complaining that this was effectively a subsidy to Telstra which would give them an unfair advantage. Sorry can't locate the article at the moment.

    I agree it is an unfair advantage, but bought TLS on the strength of it.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Forrest, I think your analysis is right on the money. The major recent change has been the resolution of the ongoing Telstra-NBN dispute. With the government desperate to get the issue off the table prior to the election, it appears that NBN has been forced to pay something very near the Telstra asking price for access to their "last mile" facilities.

    I suspect this will have a double benefit for Telstra. First is the obvious one - $11bn is big biccies in anybody's language, and will do their cash flow no harm at all. And secondly, it locks NBN into a high-capital-investment model. There have been some suggestions recently that NBN could achieve their goal of FTTH for substantially less than the famous $43bn. With a quarter of that outlaid up front, that looks harder. The result is that NBN has much less wriggle room to reduce prices dramatically. When we combine that with the rapid decline seen in wireless costs, at the same time as performance is improving, Telstra's competitive position could remain strong for many years to come.

    Cheers, Ciabatta

    ReplyDelete
  3. Well forrest, I think that telstra's upside is limited whereas its risks are boundless and the return is not guaranteed so whats to like about it?

    I sold telstra on a very small gain and am glad to be rid of it, never again - owning telstra is a game that someone else can play.

    cheers rog

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hello Forrest,
    As Ciabatta says "Your analysis is right on the money".
    My reservations at the moment are, however, with matters that Telstra does not control or influence. These are:
    The price of Telstra and a lot of other major Australian stocks are heavily reliant on offshore markets. If for whatever reason they have a squeeze on funds in Europe or the USA then the least of their concerns is to liquidate some Australian stocks. Probably with price no object.
    The Future Fund is overweight in its Telstra holding and no doubt will sell down at some stage.
    If you look at the daily turnover of Telstra stock for a movement of just a few cents it would seem that the big boys are at play. Don't know if they know any more than the average shareholder, but with the weight of dollars behind them they surely can influence things.

    Regards,
    Mulgoaman

    ReplyDelete
  5. Mulgoaman Hi,I absolutely agree with you,big boys are always inside,you and I have no control over that.I had been playing Telstra stock for well over 3 years,what I suggest you to do is change your strategy on this stock and do not ignore tls,this is the best stock we can have incomparision with the rest of the world.I will explain why later.Moon.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Moon Goundar-moon_247365days@yahoo.co.nzAugust 29, 2010 at 3:18 PM

    Rog Goodday,Tls is my favourate stock for last 3 year or so.I want to give a small advise to you,donot panic over political events and ignore Telstra,go back and see the fundamentals of Tls and the ratio of performance,I would say the new CEO is the man.I remember an old saying,"do as the romans does",you know the past CEO,ALWAYS GOES against the government,like putting ant-ads etc etc.You hve a democratically elected govt,you have to respect them and follow the rule,you dont say you are the big and no one can break us,you know,if you big it is very easy to break.I am very big but no I act so small and mint money in Tls on regular basis.

    My friend consider taking few shares and I will tell you secret later!!!!!!!!! Moon.

    ReplyDelete
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