2013 | 2014 | ||||||
Price: | 40.10 | EPS | $0.00 | $0.00 | |||
Shares Out. (in M): | 299 | P/E | 0.0x | 0.0x | |||
Market Cap (in $M): | 9,182 | P/FCF | 0.0x | 0.0x | |||
Net Debt (in $M): | 3,236 | EBIT | 0 | 0 | |||
TEV (in $M): | 12,419 | TEV/EBIT | 0.0x | 0.0x | |||
Borrow Cost: | NA |
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For those that want the document with formated tables, I posted the write up here too. (Often my tables do not see to format well on the VIC.)
cablebeach did a great write up on ADT last November. Still I believe he did not address what I think is the most relevant part of the short thesis. He is right about the high valuation, but did not address the serious risk of the cable providers ramping up in order to compete in the property security space. ADT will see pressure on its margins and its market share, which will worsen its ROIC and drive multiple contraction.
Most of us know what ADT does. It is the main provider of residential security systems in theUSwith about 25% market share in a very scattered field of competitors, overwhelmingly small players. The next largest competitor has less than 5% of the market. 90% of revenues are classified as recurring and 10% comes from installation. 55% of sales are in house while the other 45% is generated through a network of dealers. Once in a while ADT also purchases a number of alarm customers from other outside sources too.
The industry grows unit volume at about 1% to 2% a year. Penetration is about 20% of all housing units in theUS. Although, before stating that the runway is the other 80%, the addressable market is a lot smaller. For one, about 25% of all household units are rental units that do not have alarm service and will likely never install the service. Also in the condo market alarms have less penetration. In addition alarms are not very prevalent in poorer areas. In general thieves go where the money is.
The long thesis is that ADT is a great business as represented by its high EBITDA margins in a slowly growing market on a unit basis. There is nothing that should stop ADT from garnering more market share in its fragmented market. The feeling is also that ADT has significant pricing power in excess of inflation with a long runway. ADT is also looked at favorably because it seems to pay little in taxes. Lastly long investors believe a secular change is taking place in the industry towards more complex monitoring services that will drive up ARPU and profits.
On first sight this is an attractive story but it is my belief that it is way too optimistic. This is a story where investors are looking in the rear view mirror rather than through the windshield. New, large and well capitalized competitors that have a strategic advantage are aggressively entering the market at prices significantly below those of ADT. This will drive lower margins for ADT and impact its pricing power significantly. Actually, ADT is at a cost disadvantage compared to these competitors. In short, my thesis is that ADT is trading at multiples that are at the higher end of the range at exactly the time it is about to face a significant new and powerful competition.
So what about the competition …
Well the current new competition I am talking about is mainly Comcast, Time Warner Cable and AT&T. These are the front runners, but I believe more players will enter the market, as they did in the past.
The large cable players have been ramping up operationally in the security business in a big way. From their perspective it makes sense to enter this market:
Actually, it seems bundling services is going to be even more important in the future than it is now. For example John Malone believes that the TV landscape and bundling of TV content is going to struggle long-term. He believes the TV content bundle will break apart and that different sales/media channels/business models will emerge. I would recommend that you check out the following interviews with John Malone at http://www.cnbc.com/id/100637283.
In addition, from talking to someone at Dish, they are seeing disturbing trends in viewership especially among young viewers. Their surveys see young viewers still watching as much content as the rest of us, but they watch it through different channels. The share of TV time amongst that group is in fast decline. And it gets worse the younger they get. Currently 30 year olds watch more TV than 25 year olds and 25 year olds more than 20 year olds, etc. The younger they are the less they rely on TV. Also 30 year olds currently still watch as much TV as they did 10 years ago and so on. So you get the fear they have in TV land. It also points out that TV is losing in value in the cable companies offering, but increases the value of broadband especially and the rest of the service bundle in general.
Now lets compare the different service offerings.
ADT
According to the ADT sales rep, soon ADT will change its offerings. Today, June 8, 2013, if you go on the site you will see three offerings, QuickConnectPlus, Pulse Choice and Pulse Premier Lite. Soon there will be five plans.
I have no idea when the installation rebates are going to disappear, but they might not for some time. They have been available for some time now and it seems to be a strategy by ADT to bring their installation pricing down to the level of the cable providers, which offer in general equal or more generous installation packages at lower prices. Installation is the typical switch and bait game and a great way to confuse things for the consumer.
So here are the basic packages for ADT
ADT Traditional – Installation $299 ($200 rebate) for net of $99 |
ADT Pulse Remote and Control – $349 ($200 rebate) for net of $149 |
ADT Video Lite – $499 ($250 rebate) for net of $249. |
ADT Video – $999 ($250 rebate for net of $749) |
1 security system 2 sensors 1 motion detector 1 key fob 1 siren |
1 security system 2 sensors 1 motion detector |
1 security system 2 sensors 1 motion detector 1 lamp module 1 indoor video camera |
1 security system 2 sensors 1 motion detector 1 lamp module 2 indoor video cameras 1 touch screen. |
Time Warner Cable – Intelligent Home
Time Warner Cable only services its own customers with Intelligent Home. Where the competitors offer different service levels Time Warner has one level of service. In short, if you install the equipment, you can have it all for one monthly price. Time Warner Cable offers $39.95 per month all included if you are signed up with Time Warner Cable for broadband. Then if you sign up for a second service you get the monthly service for $33.95. If you have a triple play, meaning TV, Broadband and VOIP, the price of the security service goes down to $28.95 per month.
Compare that with the monthly fees of ADT, going from $35.99 a month for basic all the way to $57.99.
Here is an overview of the monthly costs for ADT versus TWC.
|
ADT Traditional |
ADT Traditional Cell phone |
ADT Pulse Remote |
ADT Pulse Control |
ADT Pulse Video Lite |
ADT Pulse Video |
Monthly Cost ADT |
$35.99 |
$39.99 |
$47.99 |
$49.99 |
$55.99 |
$57.99 |
Similar TWC One Service |
$39.95 |
$39.95 |
$39.95 |
$39.95 |
$39.95 |
$39.95 |
Similar TWC Plan 2 Services |
$33.95 |
$33.95 |
$33.95 |
$33.95 |
$33.95 |
$33.95 |
Similar TWC Plan 3 Services |
$28.95 |
$28.95 |
$28.95 |
$28.95 |
$28.95 |
$28.95 |
Below are the current Time Warner Installation packages.
The Ultra installation package at $699 is significantly cheaper than the ADT Video installation package which even after rebate is $749, with a pre rebate price of $999. And still TWC’s package contains significantly more value.
The Premier package is better than ADT’s Video Lite, with a current post rebate cost for ADT of $249 and a pre rebate price of $499 with the TWC full price being $399. Btw, when mentioning the ADT rebate, the TWC person said he would gladly match the offer.
The Select package is cheaper than ADT’s for similar items. ADT’s has a pre rebate cost listed of $349 for its Pulse Control package with a post rebate cost of $149, where TWC offer $99 for this installation package.
TWC Ultra $699 Installation |
TWC Premier $399 Installation |
TWC Select $99 Installation |
1 Indoor Camera 1 Outdoor/Night Camera 4 Window/Door Sensors 1 Motion Detector 1 Key fob 1 Touch Screen 1 Thermostat 1 Light Module |
1 Indoor Camera 4 Window/Door Sensors 1 Motion Detector 1 Key fob 1 Touch Screen |
2 Sensors 1 Touch Screen 1 Motion Detector |
ADT Traditional – Installation $299 ($200 rebate) for net of $99 |
ADT Pulse Remote and Control – $349 ($200 rebate) for net of $149 |
ADT Video Lite – $499 ($250 rebate) for net of $249. |
ADT Video – $999 ($250 rebate for net of $749) |
1 security keypad 2 sensors 1 motion detector 1 key fob 1 siren |
1 security keypad 2 sensors 1 motion detector |
1 security keypad 2 sensors 1 motion detector 1 lamp module 1 indoor video camera |
1 security keypad 2 sensors 1 motion detector 1 lamp module 2 indoor video cameras 1 touch screen. |
Also TWC requires only a 18 month contract where ADT wants 36 months.
In short, TWC has in general cheaper installation costs than ADT, but also has lower monthly service charges and a lower contract period.
Comcast – Xfinity Home
Comcast offers three levels of service. All require a three year commitment. One is required to have at least Xfinity Broadband service.
Anyway when comparing plans, Preferred can best be compared to ADT’s Pulse Video and the cheaper ADT plans.
So Comcast is about 20% cheaper when it comes to the basic plan and about $16 to $18 per month cheaper than ADT’s similar plans. If one compares the Preferred service to ADT’s Remote and Control plans Preferred is still $8 to $10 a month cheaper.
Still as part of the plays, Comcast also discounts the home security service monthly fee further in case one purchases more than just Comcast Broadband. If one adds one more service it offers a monthly discount of $10 monthly for the first 6 months. In case one purchases TV, VOIP, Broadband, and Xfinity home security service, the monthly $10 discount is valid for $24 months. So in case of two services the average monthly price paid over 36 months then becomes $38.28. In case one purchase broadband, TV and VOIP, the average monthly cost becomes $33.28.
Here is an overview of the monthly costs for ADT versus Comcast.
|
ADT Traditional |
ADT Traditional Cell phone |
ADT Pulse Remote |
ADT Pulse Control |
ADT Pulse Video Lite |
ADT Pulse Video |
Monthly Cost ADT |
$35.99 |
$39.99 |
$47.99 |
$49.99 |
$55.99 |
$57.99 |
Similar Comcast Plan |
$29.95 |
$29.95 |
$39.95 |
$39.95 |
$39.95 |
$39.95 |
Similar Comcast Plan Post Rebate 2 Services |
$29.95 |
$29.95 |
$38.28 |
$38.28 |
$38.28 |
$38.28 |
Similar Comcast Plan Post Rebate 3 Services |
$29.95 |
$29.95 |
$33.28 |
$33.28 |
$33.28 |
$33.28 |
Comcast Preferred Installation Package Cost installed is $99 |
Comcast Premier Installation Package Cost installed is $399 |
1 Touch Screen Controller 3 Window/Door Sensors 1 Motion Detector 1 Wireless Keypad |
1 Touch Screen Controller 3 Window/Door Sensors 1 Motion Detector 1 Wireless Keypad 2 Indoor/Outdoor Cameras 1 Thermostat 2 Lighting/Appliance Controllers |
ADT Traditional – Installation $299 ($200 rebate) for net of $99 |
ADT Pulse Remote and Control – $349 ($200 rebate) for net of $149 |
ADT Video Lite – $499 ($250 rebate) for net of $249. |
ADT Video – $999 ($250 rebate for net of $749) |
1 security keypad 2 sensors 1 motion detector 1 key fob 1 siren |
1 security keypad 2 sensors 1 motion detector |
1 security keypad 2 sensors 1 motion detector 1 lamp module 1 indoor video camera |
1 security keypad 2 sensors 1 motion detector 1 lamp module 2 indoor video cameras 1 touch screen. |
Comcast’s installation packages are significantly more competitive than those of ADT. Let’s start with the Comcast Premier installation which is $399 and comparable in value offered to that of ADT Pulse Video at a post rebate price of $749. Comcast’s Preferred installation is $99 and comparable to that of Pulse Remote and Control at a post rebate cost of $149.
So across the board Comcast is a better value. On the installation package cost it does very well and on the monthly fee it is significantly cheaper than ADT.
AT&T.
AT&T does not offer a discount for signing up with Uverse, but offered $100 off the installation cost and the first month free.
Their basic package which they call Simple Security is $29.99 and can be compared to the other basic packages, like ADT’s Traditional Package. It is about $6 cheaper on a monthly basis than ADT in case one has a landline and in case of no landline, the cost of the basic package with AT&T is about $10 cheaper monthly.
Then there is the Smart Security package. So AT&T's Smart package is $39.99 to start. Then in case one wants water detection it is an additional $4.99 a month, in case one wants the energy solution that’s another $4.99 a month, the door solution is another $4.99 a month and video adds another $9.99 a month.
Here is the cost for similar services from AT&T
|
ADT Traditional |
ADT Traditional Cell phone |
ADT Pulse Remote |
ADT Pulse Control |
ADT Pulse Video Lite |
ADT Pulse Video |
Monthly Cost ADT |
$35.99 |
$39.99 |
$47.99 |
$49.99 |
$55.99 |
$57.99 |
AT&T |
$29.99 |
$29.99 |
$29.99 |
$54.96 |
$64.95 |
$64.95 |
As you can see, AT&T is really competitive up to the point we get to ADT’s Pulse Control package at which point its price escalates above that of ADT. Now as you will see later, AT&T makes up for that with the Smart Installation package which is a lot more competitive than ADT’s.
Regarding equipment, AT&T the Simple Security installation package post the $100 rebate is more competitive than ADT’s after the $200 rebate. On the Smart Security Package then AT&T is certainly more competitive than ADT. The Smart package can be compared to the ADT Video package when one adds 2 cameras. If one adds 2 video cameras to the Smart package at $200 total, then the total cost is still only $349 while ADT Video is $749. All for a package that has way more value than ADT’s.
AT&T Simple Security ($149 - $49 after $100 current rebate) |
AT&T Smart Security ($249 - $149 after $100 current rebate) |
1 keypad 4 window/door sensors 1 key fob 1 siren |
1 keypad 4 window/door sensors 1 key fob 1 siren And an addition 3 items to be chosen from
|
ADT Traditional – Installation $299 ($200 rebate) for net of $99 |
ADT Pulse Remote and Control – $349 ($200 rebate) for net of $149 |
ADT Video Lite – $499 ($250 rebate) for net of $249. |
ADT Video – $999 ($250 rebate for net of $749) |
1 security keypad 2 sensors 1 motion detector 1 key fob 1 siren |
1 security keypad 2 sensors 1 motion detector |
1 security keypad 2 sensors 1 motion detector 1 lamp module 1 indoor video camera |
1 security keypad 2 sensors 1 motion detector 1 lamp module 2 indoor video cameras 1 touch screen. |
So overall, I would say that AT&T’s monthly fees on the low end as well as installation fees are a better deal than ADT. On the higher end the monthly fees are not as competitive, but the installation packages are way cheaper than ADT’s. At least $400 difference in value, which represents about $11 a month on a 36 month contract.
Apples to Apples comparison
So I decided to compare similar packages from all four providers. The installation package I requested was the following:
The system had to be able to provide me with video and basic protection.
Here is a comparison of the total cost:
|
ADT |
TWC (1 service) |
TWC (2 services) |
TWC (3 services) |
Comcast (1 Service) |
Comcast (2 Services) |
Comcast (3 Services) |
AT&T |
Installation Package |
$1,219.00* |
$899.90 |
$899.90 |
$899.90 |
$868.90 |
$868.90 |
$868.90 |
$349.98** |
Relevant Package Price |
$55.99 |
$39.95 |
$33.95 |
$28.95 |
$39.95 |
$38.28 |
$33.28 |
$49.98 |
Total cost after 36 months |
$3234.64 |
$2,338.10 |
$2,122.10 |
$1,942.10 |
$2,307.10 |
$2,246.98 |
$2,066.98 |
$2,149.26 |
Average Total Cost Per Month (36) |
$89.85 |
$64.95 |
$58.95 |
$53.95 |
$64.09 |
$62.42 |
$57.42 |
$59.70 |
Total cost after 72 months |
$5,250.28 |
$3,776.30 |
$3,344.30 |
$2,984.30 |
$3,745.30 |
$3,625.06 |
$3,265.06 |
$3,948.54 |
Average Total Cost Per Month (72) |
$72.92 |
$52.45 |
$46.45 |
$51.45 |
$52.02 |
$50.35 |
$45.35 |
$54.84 |
*The base price for ADT was $1,419, but ADT offered me a $200 rebate offer.
** After $100 rebate from AT&T.
Lets now take a look at a basic package, similar to Traditional by ADT. I took the prior package, but removed the video cameras.
|
ADT |
TWC (1 service) |
TWC (2 services) |
TWC (3 services) |
Comcast (1 Service) |
Comcast (2 Services) |
Comcast (3 Services) |
AT&T |
Installation Package |
$919.00* |
$699.02 |
$699.02 |
$699.02 |
$669.00 |
$669.00 |
$669.00 |
$149.99** |
Relevant Package Price |
$39.99 |
$39.95 |
$33.95 |
$28.95 |
$29.95 |
$29.95 |
$29.95 |
$29.99 |
Total cost after 36 months |
$2,358.64 |
$2,137.22 |
$1.921.22 |
$1,741.22 |
$1,747.20 |
$1,747.20 |
$1,747.20 |
$1,229.63 |
Average Total Cost Per Month |
$65.52 |
$59.37 |
$53.37 |
$48.37 |
$48.53 |
$48.53 |
$48.53 |
$34.16 |
Total cost after 72 months |
$3,798.28 |
$3,575.42 |
$3,143.42 |
$2,783.42 |
$2,825.40 |
$2,825.40 |
$2,825.40 |
$2,309.27 |
Average Total Cost Per Month (72) |
$52.75 |
$49.66 |
$43.66 |
$38.66 |
$39.24 |
$39.24 |
$39.24 |
$32.07 |
*The base price for ADT was $1,419, but they have a $200 rebate offer.
** After $100 rebate from AT&T.
Looking at the “Average Cost Per Month” rows one sees how out of touch ADT’s pricing is. Does anyone think that ADT will be able to maintain that pricing against an onslaught of the likes of TWC, Comcast and AT&T and still maintain or gain market share?
Coverage Cable Companies
Now one of the arguments made is that TWC and Comcast do not cover the whole country while ADT does. Well TWC and Comcast cover about 2/3rd of the country. AT&T seems to be interested in covering the whole country independent of Uverse.
There are about 114 million households in theUS. Of that 60% or 68.4 million pay for cable. 30% or 34.2 pay for satellite. The other 10% does not pay. At the end of 2012 TWC had 14.7 million residential consumer relationships and about 0.6 million business relationships. At the end of 2012 Comcast passed 53.2 million homes in 40 states plus theDistrict of Columbiawith more than 22 million consumers. Together TWC and Comcast have 53% of the market in the cable market. In short all three have plenty of coverage to have a huge impact on ADT. And that assumes that the other cable or satellite companies won’t jump in too.
Cable companies want size.
ADT has about a $25% market share with $3 billion in recurring revenues. That would make for a market of $12 billion a year. Now for sure the security market size is smaller as ADT is in general at the high end for ARPU. TWC and Comcast, nor AT&T do not enter markets for small $. Just the VOIP revenue for Q1 2013 for TWC was $519 million or about $2 billion annualized. TWC is interested in this market as they believe they can gain market share and make this a business of size. If it was just to add another $100 million to the top line they wouldn’t have bothered. If they want to make the security business of the same sizes as VOIP it would have to capture 18.35% of the market.
More Competition
I believe that other providers will enter the market, although my thesis does not rely on it. In addition there is a push for self monitored systems. The idea is that you as the owner get warned yourself, not through a 24/7 monitoring station. When an incident happens, a number of people are contacted at the same time. So you might have your phone turned off, but your wife/friends/family are still getting the texts stating there is something going on. I haven’t figured out if this is a trend of the future. It has some weaknesses for sure. My main worry is one of liability? So a friend ignores an incident signal, a burglar kills the resident and his relatives sue the friend afterwards? I struggle with this whole concept of self monitoring, but who knows. It doesn’t matter though if I am wrong, because in case self-monitoring happens it is just as bad for the future of ADT as they are for Comcast or TWC. Verizon has a plan for about $9 a month and Lowe’s too is selling a similar product. Comcast offered me a self-monitored plan for $14 a month.
Competitive Advantage
In his December write-up sandman898 makes an argument that ADT has some kind of competitive advantage. I must respectfully disagree there. To me the moat seems to be about an inch wide. Especially against these new competitors they are at a disadvantage when it comes to scale, sales and marketing, and installation costs. ADT has about 6.4 million customers, Comcast has 22 million, TWC has 15 million. And Comcast and TWC both deliver multiple services from cable and broadband to VOIP. All services that are more technically difficult to operate than a security alarm service. Lastly Comcast, TWC, nor AT&T have a problem properly underwriting its customers, something that was mentioned to often be a problem for small operators.
In its basic form an alarm is a service that sends a signal to a remote center which then calls the police and the owner. If it was more complicated the field would not be full of small mom and pop operators.
Regarding the social proof of saving $10 by not using ADT, I can’t agree with that argument. If that argument was that powerful ADT would already have a lot more marketshare. Also since ADT has only a 25% marketshare in a market that has 20% penetration I find it hard to assume there are many streets and neighborhoods exclusively using ADT.
More than 50% of ADT customers are off contract
More than 50% of ADT customers are off contract. I assume that is the case for the whole industry at this time. All households the cable operators can reach out too cheaply.
The installation cost and its impact on ADT’s cash flow
The shift to lower installation pricing, what ADT calls retaining ownership, ends up in increase Subscriber System Assets, has a significant impact on the financial statements.
First regarding the term retaining ownership. Yes on paper ADT is the owner of the equipment, but the consumer maintains functional ownership of the equipment. What is ADT going to do? Call the consumer to see if they can setup an appointment where they can go and rip out depreciated equipment that has no value to ADT? I spoke to two ADT reps to clarify this issue and they both had never seen an instance where ADT retrieved equipment. As one rep said, “disassembling an alarm system is not like unplugging and sending back a cable box and we can’t force our way into the property”.
Now the impact is that there is a larger cash layout upfront, which leads to more depreciation and higher EBITDA. So be careful with using EBITDA as the valuation method over the next few years as the quality of the EBITDA is going to deteriorate.
Also lowering installation costs while increasing the monthly subscriber fee does help the first 36 months when you are under contract, but after the 36 months are over you have to lower your pricing in order to match the competition or you will drive your attrition numbers up. Any alarm company will give you a great deal if it does not have to subsidize installation. Btw. I do not believe ADT is going to be able to increase its monthly pricing as an offset for higher installation subsidies.
Also, the same argument can be made around the ARPU increase because of the change from landlines to cell phone connections. Switching from landline to cell phone added $4 a month to the ARPU, but that’s just a pass through from expenses with no additional margin.
Increased installation costs also increases the risk of the business. If I use $1,360 in SAC per new unit, that gets me $36.11 per month and the cost to serve per unit is about $13.28 per unit monthly. That gets me to a cost of $49.39 a month per unit. Some plans have a lower revenue per month, some higher, so it takes ADT about 36 months to get its money back. If in month 37 the consumer leaves, ADT’s ROIC will be close to 0%. Basically the more upfront subsidies you offer, the worse the risk profile becomes. And the business clearly is moving towards increased installation subsidies.
The evolution of the Subscriber Acquisition Costs is not good.
|
TTM Q4 2011 Dealer |
TTM Q1 2012 Dealer |
TTM Q2 2012 Dealer |
TTM Q4 2012 Dealer |
TTM Q1 2013 Dealer |
TTM Q2 2013 Dealer |
SAC Per Unit |
$ 1,212 |
$ 1,233 |
$ 1,245 |
$ 1,255 |
$ 1,267 |
$ 1,254 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
TTM Q4 2011 Direct |
TTM Q1 2012 Direct |
TTM Q2 2012 Direct |
TTM Q4 2012 Direct |
TTM Q1 2013 Direct |
TTM Q2 2013 Direct |
SAC Per Unit |
$ 1,115 |
$ 1,113 |
$ 1,120 |
$ 1,157 |
$ 1,201 |
$ 1,250 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SAC Per Unit |
FY 2012 Direct Channel |
Q1 2013 Direct Channel |
Q2 2013 Direct Channel |
|
|
|
Sales and Marketing |
$ 517 |
$ 535 |
$ 534 |
|
|
|
Commissions |
$ 274 |
$ 299 |
$ 292 |
|
|
|
Installation Cost |
$ 821 |
$ 860 |
$ 981 |
|
|
|
Gross SAC |
$ 1,612 |
$ 1,694 |
$ 1,807 |
|
|
|
Installation Revenue |
$ (455) |
$ (431) |
$ (447) |
|
|
|
Net SAC |
$ 1,157 |
$ 1,263 |
$ 1,360 |
|
|
|
Especially the Direct SAC per unit is increasing consistently and seems to be accelerating over the last few quarters. Installation revenue is slightly decreasing while installation cost is increasing. Based on my apples to apples comparison, if ADT wants to bring its net installation cost to the consumer in line with that of TWC and Comcast it would have to take down per unit installation revenue by $200 to $300. The difference with AT&T’s $769 and $869.
ADT experience
So as part of my scuttle butt I did call ADT as well as the other providers a lot about pricing and making it sound as if I was installing a system. So Friday morning the ADT rep calls me and asks if I am ready to move forward. Upon which I make up an excuse saying that I went with another provider because of price. This was the instant reply of the rep, “Comcast … right?” At which point I say yes and give him a soft apology, saying “you did great work, but Comcast was just a lot cheaper.” Again rep “I know, I know. You aren’t the first one I lost to Comcast.”
Maybe I was the second one or the third, but given the rep’s frustrated reaction it seems he has lost a fair amount of business to Comcast. Why otherwise would his first reaction be “Comcast … right?”.
Attrition and Depreciation
Attrition is important and has been going up. For every customer that disconnects you have to find a new one, either a resale or new customer. Every 1% attrition represents about $30 million in recurring revenue that needs to be replaced. This also has an impact on depreciation. ADT depreciates 58% of the subscriber system assets in the first 5 years, 25% in the next 5 years and 17% over the last 5 years and the intangible assets, which basically is the business purchased from the dealers, are depreciated 67% in the first 5 years, 22% in the second five years and 11% in the last five years. For an easy calculation I assume that approximately 50% of ADT's business is direct and 50% is dealer. This gives me a weighted average depreciation period of 7.58 year which points to an attrition rate of 13.1%. Actual unit attrition currently runs at 17% indicating a 5.9 year average effective life. ADT points to recurring revenue attrition which is 13.9% in Q2 2013. They say that the customers cancelling are lower ARPU customers so one needs to us recurring revenue attrition. I disagree and believe that one should use the unit attrition numbers when thinking about depreciation. After all, the life of the equipment is not related to the ARPU a consumer pays. Independent of the ARPU, ADT has to depreciate the equipment. So based on the current unit attrition rate of 17% ADT seems to be under depreciating its subscriber assets and intangibles by about 28%.
So either the unit attrition rate comes down again to the 13% rate long term or at some point ADT will have to adjust its depreciation and accelerate its depreciation schedule. Naturally this does not have much of an impact on the FCF, but it does mean that the current income statement net income might be too high.
My believe is that this attrition rate will stay high or increase. Even if ADT takes its pricing down, it still is going to be fighting an uphill battle, Vonage style, against the cable companies. And high attrition means lower average effective life per unit, resulting in lower ROIC.
Market Cap and EV
Market Cap and EV |
|
Number of shares |
229,000,000 |
ADT |
$40.00 |
Marketcap |
$9,160,000,000 |
Cash |
($209,500,000) |
Deferred Income Tax Asset |
($102,000,000) |
Debt |
$3,227,000,000 |
Deferred Tax Liabilities |
$321,000,000 |
EV |
$12,396,500,000 |
Comments:
Using the income statement for the valuation.
Income Statement Levered |
Q2 2013 |
Minus 5% ARPU |
Minus 10% ARPU |
Minus 15% ARPU |
Recurring Revenue T6M |
$1,500 |
$1,425 |
$1,350 |
$1,275 |
Installation Revenue T6M |
$130 |
$130 |
$130 |
$130 |
Total Revenue T6M |
$1,630 |
$1,555 |
$1,480 |
$1,405 |
Cost of Revenue T6M |
$677 |
$677 |
$677 |
$677 |
SG&A T6M |
$582 |
$582 |
$582 |
$582 |
Operating Income T6M |
$371 |
$296 |
$221 |
$146 |
Interest Expense T6M |
$60 |
$60 |
$60 |
$60 |
Income Before Tax T6M |
$311 |
$236 |
$161 |
$86 |
Tax (35%) T6M |
$109 |
$83 |
$56 |
$30 |
Net Income T6M |
$202 |
$153 |
$105 |
$56 |
Annualized NI |
$404 |
$307 |
$209 |
$112 |
Market Cap |
$9,180 |
$9,180 |
$9,180 |
$9,180 |
Valuation Multiple |
22.7 |
29.9 |
43.9 |
82.1 |
|
|
|
|
|
Income Statement Unlevered |
Q2 2013 |
Minus 5% ARPU |
Minus 10% ARPU |
Minus 15% ARPU |
Recurring Revenue T6M |
$1,500 |
$1,425 |
$1,350 |
$1,275 |
Installation Revenue T6M |
$130 |
$130 |
$130 |
$130 |
Total Revenue T6M |
$1,630 |
$1,555 |
$1,480 |
$1,405 |
Cost of Revenue T6M |
$677 |
$677 |
$677 |
$677 |
SG&A T6M |
$582 |
$582 |
$582 |
$582 |
Operating Income T6M |
$371 |
$296 |
$221 |
$146 |
Interest Expense T6M |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Income Before Tax T6M |
$371 |
$296 |
$221 |
$146 |
Tax (35%) T6M |
$130 |
$104 |
$77 |
$51 |
Net Income T6M |
$241 |
$192 |
$144 |
$95 |
Annualized NI |
$482 |
$385 |
$287 |
$190 |
EV |
$12,417 |
$12,417 |
$12,417 |
$12,417 |
Valuation Multiple |
25.7 |
32.3 |
43.2 |
65.4 |
In the above table I valued the company just using the income statement. Some comments:
So I stuck to ARPU decline instead of taking a mix of ARPU declines and unit declines. Trying to get to a scenario that predicts unit and price declines and run that through a pro-forma income statement would have just been more confusing and had little benefit. Now if you assume that ARPU goes down by 3% and ADT losses a net 2% of subscribers, that number is pretty close to my minus 5% ARPU decline number. Or you can assume flat ARPU and 5% net loss in subscribers.
It all comes down to how well ADT will hold up to the new competition. I think we all agree that when Comcast, TWC and AT&T entered this business it had to be worth their while. In order for this business to make a dent all three need to capture real market share, which I am sure they are all planning on doing. And they have shown us they can do so with broadband and VOIP. For example TWC’s VOIP business has revenues of about $2 billion a year currently. In order for TWC to match that with Intelligent Home it has to end up with a market share of 18.35% or 4.7 million units. So does anyone believe that in a market in which units expand by 1% to 2% a year at best, with the new competitors aggressively courting market share, that ADT will be shielded to the point ADT might lose almost no customers nor see a decline in ARPU? Especially since its total average monthly cost is significantly higher than that of the competition?
Steady State Free Cash Flow
ADT makes a Steady State Free Cash Flow argument, meaning how much free cash flow would be generated in case ADT wanted to keep its recurring revenue flat. They assume they replace the attrition by replacing 100% of the direct sales and then buy as much from dealers as is needed to maintain recurring revenue. The numbers they show are huge, close to $950 million using ADT’s Q2 2013 number. Btw. ADT calculations can be found in their Q2 2013 slide presentation on page 8 and page 11 of the Q2 2013 earnings release.
Now the way I calculate the adjusted SSFCF I get to a much smaller number. I started with the 6 month trailing numbers, then annualize and deduct the necessary capex. My adjusted SSFCF number is $587 million. I have three scenarios below. One is based on the inputs ADT used. The next one is the same calculation but assuming that no increase in prices would have taken place over the last 12 months and the 3rd one assumes what would have happened in case the recurring revenue declined by 5% over the last 12 months. The numbers do not look pretty. In case we had had a 5% decrease in recurring revenue the adjusted SSFCF would have been negative $266 million. In case of no price increase the adjusted SSFCF would have been $244 million. ADT throws a number of $953 million at us.
A large difference is made by the fact that I use a post tax number. In my world, taxes need to be paid. That’s why in ADT’s situation they end up as deferred. Anyway, in a steady state scenario, the gap between the GAAP Income Statement tax rate and the cash tax rate would disappear. After all, it is the combination of upfront cash outlays and growth that drives that gap. When we go steady state, that growth goes away. In short, one can’t go steady state and assume that ADT’s cash tax rate will stay low.
In addition, in a steady state, many of the other operating cash flow changes, like working capital would become neutral over time.
As you look at the multiple below, you can see that ADT isn’t cheap on a steady state basis. I for one would not be interested in paying 20 times plus for a steady state business. And you can see what happens to the multiple if prices start going down.
Steady State Free Cash Flow Unlevered |
With Price Increase |
No Price Increase |
5% Price Decline |
Net Income Unlevered T6M |
$241 |
$209 |
$162 |
Depreciation and Amortization T6M |
$459 |
$459 |
$459 |
Amortization Deferred SAC T6M |
$60 |
$60 |
$60 |
Amortization Deferred SAR T6M |
$(65) |
$(65) |
$(65) |
Adjusted Net Operating Cash Flow T6M |
$695 |
$663 |
$616 |
Annualized Adjusted Net Operating Cash Flow |
$1,390 |
$1,325 |
$1,232 |
Capex Subscriber Assets (TTM) |
$471 |
$471 |
$471 |
Capital Expenditures (TTM) |
$76 |
$76 |
$76 |
Dealer Accounts Required To Maintain Recurring Revenue (TTM) |
$256 |
$534 |
$951 |
Total Capex TTM |
$803 |
$1,081 |
$1,498 |
Adjusted Steady State FCF |
$587 |
$244 |
$(266) |
EV |
$12,397 |
$12,397 |
$12,397 |
Multiple |
21.1 |
50.7 |
(46.6) |
Comments:
Recurring Monthly Revenue valuation
I use an RMR of $250 million and an EV of $12.4 billion to get a current RMR valuation of 50.
What do I think ADT is worth?
I believe it’s worth a lot less than $40 per share. It all depends on what multiple we think its worth given the new scenario and that’s naturally a personal decision. Using my own expectations, being a mix of higher installation subsidies, lower ARPU and at best equal, but probably declining units, I assume a fair value at this time of $24 to $26 a share. Assuming my 5% decline in ARPU scenario, which I believe to be pretty benign, and putting a 15 multiple on that NI, I get to $20.
One last point
Even if you think I am wrong, you can’t be guaranteed to be right yourself … so should ADT be selling for its current multiple given the increased risk profile?
After all, ADT was just drafted into the major leagues and it is going to find out that the majors are a lot harder to compete in. Now I am not saying ADT does not belong in the majors, just that its old competition was from the minor leagues, while Comcast, TWC and AT&T are used to playing in the majors and no one is sure how well ADT will hold up.
Risk
The cable companies mess up the roll out and do not get traction. Since each run more than 15 million customers they should be able to get the operations right.
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