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Home / Business

Sky launching broadband, issuing cheap shares to raise $157m

Chris Keall
By Chris Keall
Technology Editor/Senior Business Writer·NZ Herald·
20 May, 2020 09:21 PM7 mins to read

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Sky chief executive Martin Stewart. Photo / Jason Oxenham

Sky chief executive Martin Stewart. Photo / Jason Oxenham

Sky is issuing cheap shares to beat its cash-crunch, plans to enter the broadband market and is mulling a move into mobile phone plans.

LATEST: How Sky's big moves leave NZ Rugby with two big headaches

The pay-TV provider is raising $157 million with a deeply discounted rights issue. New shares will be 12c - a 63.6 per cent discount on Wednesday's closing price of 33c.

Despite recovering from an all-time low of 19c on March 23, the stock is still down 73 per cent for the year.

READ MORE:
• Sky broadband? CEO could take fight to Spark's turf
• Sky bond yield spikes, analysts tip capital raising
• Hong Kong investor still sees gold in Sky TV

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Shares were in a trading halt ahead of the announcement and will remain suspended until the placement is filled.

Sky also said it would offer broadband from next year to "reward customer loyalty".

"Sky will then focus on the hundreds of thousands of New Zealand homes that are fibre ready through the ultra-fast broadband scheme but not yet connected," chief executive Martin Stewart said.

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Sky could use broadband as a loss-leader to bring more people onto its pay-TV or streaming plans, or upsell them to more expensive deals - just as Spark now uses its sports streaming service as a loss-leader to spruik its broadband.

SKY_SHARE
SKY_SHARE

In an investor presentation, Sky said it will partner with an as-yet-unnamed existing provider to minimise the cost of the new service. There was no immediate word if that would be UFB wholesaler Chorus or a retail provider.

READ MORE:
• Coronavirus: Sky TV boss Martin Stewart's half-million dollar haircut

Sky also said it was considering a move into the mobile service as a MVNO - or mobile virtual network operator, which would imply that it would sell a rebadged version of Spark, Vodafone or 2degrees' service. Any such move would happen when 5G rollouts had progressed further.

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There have been rumours of Sky launching its own broadband service - to hit back at Spark on its own turf - since February. Stewart did nothing to squelch them as he told the Herald that UFB fibre wholesaler Chorus could be a "fantastic" partner.

Sky also said today that a $200m banking facility, which had been set to shrink to $150m by July next year has now been extended to July 2023, conditional on the equity raising.

Analysts have been tipping the likelihood of a capital raise, even before the Covid-19 crisis cleared Sky's sports calendar.

In a March note to investors, Jarden questioned if Sky is generating enough cash to support the business and said it may struggle to access additional finance as its $200m bank facility, which is already drawn to $90m, shrinks to $150m in July 2021.

SkyTV
SkyTV

But Sky also said today that the banking facility has now been extended to July 2023, conditional on the equity raising.

The yield on a $100m bond set to mature in May next year has been spiking sharply.

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Sky said today that proceeds of the $157m capital raise will initially be applied to pay down debt.

The $0.12 per share-placement offer will comprise of a fully underwritten $9m institutional placement and fully underwritten $148m pro-rata nonrenounceable accelerated entitlement offer, at a ratio of 2.83 for 1. The underwriters are Goldman Sachs and Forsyth Barr.

Revised guidance

Sky also offered a carrot to investors this morning, saying its board would assess the possible commencement of dividends in 2022.

In March, the company cancelled its earlier guidance for June-year revenue of $750m to $770m and earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation between $170m and $190m.

It now expects revenue of $730m to $750m and ebitda of $155m to $175m in the year ended June 30. For the following year, revenue could fall to $610m to $640m and earnings to $100m to $130m.

Sky noted that its customer numbers, including Lightbox (which it wholesales back to previous owner Spark on a bulk basis), exceeded one million at April 30, and that viewership during the lockdown month of April was about 10 per cent higher than the year before.

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Streaming customers had increased by about 8.6 per cent since mid-March, but satellite subscriptions fell by 1 per cent because of the inability to connect new customers.

Advertising in April fell by $1.4m or 36 per cent from a year earlier, and ongoing reductions in advertising could be expected as covid impacts continue to be felt across the country, Sky said.

Commercial revenue fell by $3.1m, or 68 per cent, in April as pubs, clubs and hotels were shut. Sky noted that it proactively stopped charging some customers.

Stewart said the firm had been proactive in reducing costs during the recent Covid-19 shutdown and expected cost reductions of between $80m and $95m in the coming financial year.

"There is potentially an additional pool of up to $135m to $155m of costs, which Sky expects it can selectively target to reduce costs, depending on the level of live sport during full-year 2021," the company said in its investor presentation.

"For some sports contracts Sky has a reasonable expectation of a negotiated reduction in sports programming rights costs broadly proportionate to the content delivered," the company said - implying it would not now pay full whack for its $400m, five-year Sanzaar deal.

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Bundled deals?

Spark moved in on Sky's turf last year as it launched Spark Sport. With Sky Broadband, Sky will be able to offer a similar across-the-board service - although it will enter a crowded market where Spark already has just under 700,000 fixed-broadband customers, Vodafone NZ just over 400,000, Vocus (owner of Orcon and Slingshot) 225,000 and TrustPower and 2degrees just over 100,000 - followed by close to 80 smaller players.

Having had its proposed merger with Vodafone knocked back on fears that Sky would offer some content or deals only to the merged company's customers, Sky will have to watch its step around any deals that bundle broadband with content deals.

However, analysts have already noted that Spark's foray into content - and, specifically, sports content and deals like free Rugby World Cup passes to new customers - gives Sky potentially more wiggle room in that department.

The broadband deal will add to the complexity of an already multi-layered series of alliances that sees Sky provide the core content for Vodafone NZ's Vodafone NZ, and Sky's recent purchase of Lightbox from Spark.

Sky also said this morning that it plans to "develop and grow an international rugby content business and become the online destination for fans globally, through RugbyPass."

Sky bought RugbyPass - which owns key rugby rights for most of the world outside Super Rugby and Six Nations countries - last year in a deal worth up to $60m. It recently announced the amicable departure of RugbyPass founder and CEO Tim Martin.

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RugbyPass has millions of visitors per month to its articles and highlights, but at the time of the purchase, Martin told the Herald that only around 20,000 were paying the US$15/month subscription for streaming video - although he saw scope to lift that to the single-digit millions given the number of ex-pats and other rugby fans in countries were RubyPass offers its full service.

However, over the quarter just gone, RugbyPass subscribers declined 1.5 per cent amid Covid-19 disruption.

Spark and Vodafone declined to comment.

Spark shares were down 0.44 per cent to $4.52 in midday trading.

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