Another Billionaire Wants a Place in Space

Another Billionaire Wants a Place in Space

When the two richest people in the world are throwing money at the satellite business, it takes a brave billionaire to join the fray. Telecoms tycoon Patrick Drahi isn’t short of courage — but he may be too late to the contest.

Satellites have suddenly become hot property. The new low-Earth-orbit (LEO) devices can provide high-speed web-surfing to areas that lack fixed-line or mobile internet coverage, creating a commercial opportunity that has enticed Tesla Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. entrepreneurs Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos. These deep-pocketed entrants, who can afford to take a long-term view, are intensifying the pressure on this fragmented and capital-intensive industry to consolidate.

Step forward Drahi. Paris-listed Eutelsat Communications SA said in September it rejected a 2.8 billion euros ($3.2 billion) takeover approach from the mogul. The proposal contained an ungenerous 23% top-up on the three-month average share price, which was still below Eutelsat’s pre-Covid . There’s been radio silence since. Eutelsat is nevertheless trading above the informal bid: Investors anticipate a deal.

It’s not hard to see why. Eutelsat would suit the Drahi formula of a debt-funded acquisition followed by cost-cutting. It’s a mature company exposed to the shrinking business of satellite television. The valuation is low, at less than 6 times forecast earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (Ebitda) prior to Drahi’s ambition leaking  (Iridium Communications Inc., a U.S. peer, trades at 18 times). Yet strong cash flow supports high dividends. Even after jumping, the shares yield 7%.

Moreover, a stake in London-based venture OneWeb offers some strategic exposure to the LEO theme.

A deal to take Eutelsat private could clearly stack up just to run the asset for cash. Now, add on the possibility of consolidation. The obvious partner would be Luxembourg-based SES SA, a fellow satellite-television player. Combining would help them counter the disruptive force of streaming video more efficiently.

There’s a playbook for this: private equity’s 2019 bid for Inmarsat Plc, which operates high-orbit satellites for moving connections like planes and ships. A four-headed consortium swooped in after stock-market investors convulsed at the company’s 2018 decision to cut its dividend to fund more capital expenditure. The deal has had a rocky ride, given the pandemic hit to aviation, but if the central investment thesis was to front-run consolidation, the logic has been vindicated.

Earlier this month, Viasat Inc. — another company specializing in high-altitude satellites — agreed to pay $4 billion for Inmarsat, comprising $850 million in cash and the rest in shares. Add assumed net debt and the cost rises to $7.3 billion, or 10 times Inmarsat’s expected Ebitda for 2021. That’s roughly where faster-growing Viasat trades. 

Of course, the negative reaction to that deal — a 20% fall in Viasat’s share price, cutting the being paid to around $3.3 billion — makes it look like the market doesn’t support consolidation. But the drop followed the shares’ unusual rally ahead of the announcement, perhaps anticipating a disposal instead of an acquisition. It should be no surprise that public-market shareholders are showing their usual caution toward the purchase of a leveraged and capex-hungry peer. The transaction nevertheless reinforces Viasat’s core competence and has the support of its main shareholder.

Since the Inmarsat consortium put only about $2.5 billion of equity into the original takeover and likely took a dividend from a $700 million overdue partner payment, it’s a lucrative outcome for private equity.

Could Drahi repeat the trick with Eutelsat? Maybe. But Eutelsat ought to be able to cut costs by itself. And if participating in consolidation is its destiny, it shouldn’t need Drahi to be the middleman.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Chris Hughes is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering deals. He previously worked for Reuters Breakingviews, as well as the Financial Times and the Independent newspaper.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

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