Regulatory Filings • Oct 17, 2022
Regulatory Filings
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Milano, 17 ottobre 2022 – Tim rende noto che in data 14 ottobre u.s. l'agenzia di rating S&P Global Ratings ha modificato il giudizio di rating da livello BB- outlook negative a livello B+ outlook negative.
Allegato il giudizio dell'agenzia di rating
Research Update:
October 14, 2022
Visibility on TIM's operating turnaround and planned deleveraging from 2023 have reduced.
Since we downgraded TIM to 'BB-/Negative' in March 2022, the macroeconomic environment has worsened. We believe slower GDP growth, booming inflation and energy costs, and increasing unemployment could hit TIM's retail and business-to-business operations as demand elasticity from customers with lower-than-average discretionary incomes contracts, or because enterprises scale back or delay their project spending. Moreover, we believe rising interest rates and jittery debt markets are currently an additional hurdle considering the €8 billion of maturities the company has over the next 24 months.
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SECONDARY CONTACT
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over the next 24 months. We believe TIM has sufficient available cash and undrawn facilities to cover its liquidity uses over the next 24 months from June 30, 2022. However, it faces €8 billion of debt maturing over the next 24 months in a rising interest rate environment with more challenging debt markets. In our view, upcoming maturities will test TIM's ability to proactively tap the debt markets to maintain an adequate liquidity buffer and keep its cost of debt in check. We are mindful that the company will face the compounding effects of fierce competition, rising energy and interest expenses, sizeable capex to roll out its fiber network (albeit partly offset by about €2 billion of cash grants as part of Italy's national recovery and resilience plan over 2024 and 2027), and completion of a massive organic restructuring plan.
Negative reported FOCF after leases and high adjusted leverage in 2022 and 2023 continue to weigh on the rating. In our base case for TIM, we continue to expect S&P Global Ratings-adjusted debt to EBITDA will stay elevated at about 5.2x in 2022 and 5.0x in 2023, with substantial negative FOCF (after leases). In line with management's slightly revised guidance at the second-quarter earnings release, we now forecast a high-single-digit organic EBITDA decline in 2022 (from low-double-digit in our previous base case). Italy remains a competitive market, which will weigh on TIM's domestic revenue and EBITDA, alongside higher-than-expected costs associated with football broadcasting, the launch of some digital companies (fueling revenue growth, but at a lower margin than the more traditional telecommunications activities), and the corporate reorganization and restructuring that are further pressuring Italian operations and earnings. We note early signs of cooling competition, with all players having increased prices for some consumer offerings during second- and third-quarter 2022. That said, while TIM's subscriber contraction, churn rate, and average revenue per user (ARPU) improved during second-quarter 2022, we have yet to see if this will translate into a more structural shift alleviating competitive pressure. Capex to sales will remain elevated in 2022 at 26%-27% and there will be one-off cash outflows associated with the acquisition of Oi Mobile in Brazil (about €1.2 billion) and 5G spectrum in Italy and Brazil (about €2.2 billion). This will weigh on TIM's adjusted leverage in 2022, which we forecast at about 5.2x, with negative reported FOCF of about €675 million. In 2023, a planned EBITDA recovery--although still below 2021 levels--combined with lessening capex intensity toward 24%-26% of sales, should translate into still-negative but improving reported FOCF after leases of about €275 million, and still-high but strengthening adjusted leverage toward 5.0x.
We have not yet incorporated TIM's strategic separation plan in our forecasts. Our base case for TIM continues to focus on the current integrated group and does not factor in the strategic plan to separate its activities into a service company (ServiceCo), on which it would refocus, and a network company (NetCo), to be disposed of, with proceeds used to reduce ServiceCo debt. At this stage, we understand the plans remain tentative given only a memorandum of understanding was signed in May 2022 related to the TIM and Open Fiber network integration project and no binding offer has been received. Moreover, on Oct. 10, 2022, TIM communicated that CDP Equity, Macquarie, and Open Fiber have requested an extension of the initial timeline, also considering the new government's nomination will only be effective by the end of October. If such a plan goes ahead, TIM's final capital structure will depend on the financial parameters of the NetCo separation (including asset valuation, use of proceeds, and full deconsolidation or sale of minority interests) and the eventual sale of other assets, for instance, a minority stake in TIM's enterprise business. For more details see "Credit Impact Of Telecom Italia's Structural Separation Plan Still Unclear," published July 12, 2022, on RatingsDirect.
The negative outlook reflects downside risks stemming from the combination of materially negative reported FOCF after leases in our 2022-2023 forecasts, still-challenging conditions in the domestic telecom market, heavy debt maturities, and a worsening macroeconomic environment. Operational, investment, and refinancing risks could further widen the company's FOCF deficit, potentially compromising its ability to deleverage.
We could lower the rating if we forecast more negative reported FOCF after leases, a diminishing chance of sustainable EBITDA stabilization, or any emerging liquidity concerns. This could stem from a return to unsustainable mobile competition that depresses ARPU or causes a spike in customer attrition, or from longer-term fixed-line deterioration under wholesale pressure from Open Fiber and retail pressure from Iliad. We could also lower the rating if TIM is materially affected by tougher refinancing conditions and is unable to consistently maintain adequate liquidity.
We could revise the outlook to stable if we expect FOCF to debt will strengthen toward 5% on a stronger-than-expected EBITDA rebound amid easing competition in the domestic market and continued strong performance from the Brazilian subsidiary. A stable outlook would also require the company to proactively address upcoming maturities with no difficulty in accessing the debt markets and a limited hit from rising interest rates on its interest burden, cash flow, and adjusted leverage. Furthermore, we would expect TIM to maintain S&P Global Ratings-adjusted debt to EBITDA of currently less than 5.5x.
Telecom Italia (TIM) is the incumbent telecom operator in Italy and the market leader in voice and data services on fixed-line and mobile networks for retail and wholesale operators. At Dec. 31, 2021, the company had about 8.6 million fixed-line retail customers and about 30.5 million wireless customers in Italy. It also has operations in Brazil through its 66.7% stake in TIM Participações S.A. (TIM Brazil). For full-year 2021, Italy contributed about 82% and Brazil 18% to the group's revenue.
competition in the Italian fixed and mobile markets, a lower-than-expected contribution from the football streaming partnership with DAZN, and delays to the government's voucher scheme, although partly offset by an expanding contribution from the Brazilian unit.
| --Fiscal year ended Dec. 31-- | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bil. € | 2020a | 2021a | 2022e | 2023f | 2024f |
| Revenue | 16 | 15.1 | 14.8-15.0 | 15.0-15.2 | 15.4-15.6 |
| Revenue growth (%) | (12) | (6) | (2)-0 | 0-2 | 2-3 |
| EBITDA | 7.2 | 6 | 5.5-5.7 | 5.7-5.9 | 6.0-6.2 |
| EBITDA margin (%) | 44.9 | 39.8 | 37-38 | 38-39 | 39-40 |
| Funds from operations (FFO) | 6.1 | 4.5 | 3.8-4.0 | 4.1-4.3 | 4.5-4.7 |
| Capital expenditure | 3.5 | 3.6 | 3.4-3.6 | 3.2-3.4 | 3.1-3.3 |
| Free operating cash flow (FOCF) | 3.2 | 1.3 | 0.7-0.9 | 1.2-1.4 | 1.6-1.8 |
| --Fiscal year ended Dec. 31-- | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bil. € | 2020a | 2021a | 2022e | 2023f | 2024f |
| Debt | 30.4 | 27.8 | 29.3-29.5 | 29.2-29.4 | 28.2-28.4 |
| Debt to EBITDA (x) | 4.2 | 4.6 | c. 5.2 | c. 5.0 | c. 4.6 |
| FFO to debt (%) | 20.1 | 16.4 | 13-14 | 14-15 | 15.5-16.5 |
| FOCF to debt (%) | 10.5 | 4.7 | 2-3 | 4-5 | 6-7 |
*All figures adjusted by S&P Global Ratings. a--Actual. e--Estimate. f--Forecast.
We assess TIM's liquidity as adequate. This reflects our view that the group's sources of liquidity cover its uses by more than 1.2x over the next 12 months started July 1, 2022.
In our base-case forecast, we estimate TIM's liquidity sources at about €15 billion over the next 12 months. These include:
We estimate TIM's liquidity needs over the next 12 months at about €8.4 billion. These include:
incumbent telecom operator.
*All debt amounts include six months of prepetition interest.
| Issuer Credit Rating | B+/Negative/B | |
|---|---|---|
| Business risk: | Satisfactory | |
| Country risk | Moderately high | |
| Industry risk | Intermediate | |
| Competitive position | Satisfactory | |
| Financial risk: | Highly leveraged | |
| Cash flow/leverage | Highly leveraged | |
| Anchor | b+ | |
| Modifiers: | ||
| Diversification/Portfolio effect Neutral (no impact) | ||
| Capital structure | Neutral (no impact) | |
| Financial policy | Neutral (no impact) | |
| Liquidity | Adequate (no impact) | |
| Management and governance | Fair (no impact) |
| Issuer Credit Rating | B+/Negative/B | |
|---|---|---|
| Comparable rating analysis | Neutral (no impact) |
Downgraded
| To | From | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Telecom Italia SpA | ||||
| Issuer Credit Rating | B+/Negative/B | BB-/Negative/B | ||
| Senior Unsecured | B+ | BB | ||
| Recovery Rating | 3(50%) | 3(50%) | ||
| Telecom Italia Capital S.A. | ||||
| Senior Unsecured | B+ | BB | ||
| Recovery Rating | 3(50%) | 3(50%) | ||
| Telecom Italia Finance S.A. | ||||
| Senior Unsecured | B+ | BB | ||
| Recovery Rating | 3(50%) | 3(50%) |
Certain terms used in this report, particularly certain adjectives used to express our view on rating relevant factors, have specific meanings ascribed to them in our criteria, and should therefore be read in conjunction with such
criteria. Please see Ratings Criteria at www.standardandpoors.com for further information. A description of each of S&P Global Ratings' rating categories is contained in "S&P Global Ratings Definitions" at
https://www.standardandpoors.com/en_US/web/guest/article/-/view/sourceId/504352 Complete ratings information is available to subscribers of RatingsDirect at www.capitaliq.com. All ratings affected by this rating action can be found on S&P Global Ratings' public website at www.standardandpoors.com. Use the Ratings search box located in the left column. Alternatively, call one of the following S&P Global Ratings numbers: Client Support Europe (44) 20-7176-7176; London Press Office (44) 20-7176-3605; Paris (33) 1-4420-6708; Frankfurt (49) 69-33-999-225; or Stockholm (46) 8-440-5914
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