Telecom Tycoons Feel Pain From Rising Mobile Woes

Telecom Tycoons Feel Pain From Rising Mobile Woes · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- Billionaires who built their fortunes rolling out wireless networks when debt cost almost nothing are seeing their wealth crimped by higher borrowing costs and caution among money managers on the outlook for the industry.

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Altice founder Patrick Drahi’s wealth has dropped almost 18% to $4.4 billion this year, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, while Rakuten Group Inc.’s Hiroshi Mikitani’s fortune has shrunk 69% since 2021 after a push into mobile increased the firm’s losses. Charles Ergen has seen his riches shrink nearly 80% in less than three years as Dish Network Corp. tries to transition from pay-TV to wireless services.

A spokesperson for Altice declined to comment, while spokespeople for Rakuten and Dish didn’t reply to requests for comment.

The latest sting for the sector came this week when US underlying inflation numbers came in hotter than expected, leading traders to push back their expectations for a Federal Reserve rate cut to December. It’s a potential blow for operators who hoped to refinance borrowings at a lower cost this year.

Instead, wireless now trails only real estate as the biggest source of distressed debt globally after the pile swelled to $35.3 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg News. That’s up more than 80% since early January.

Annual returns from the industry’s junk bonds have also turned negative in the US as pricing shifts to reflect the realization that a monetary policy pivot is on hold for now. When operators do come to the market there, investors have been demanding high coupons, with six of the 10 costliest high-yield deals this year issued by firms with links to mobile.

The stumbles in wireless highlight wider troubles across telecommunications, media and technology. Communications is the worst-performing junk sector in the US this year, Bloomberg Intelligence credit analyst Stephen Flynn wrote in a note this week, with several members of the index burdened with high leverage and facing large maturity walls.

Drahi’s Altice group has been the poster child for the industry’s travails recently. Last month, the businessman’s lieutenants told creditors of its French operations that they would have to take a hit in the restructuring of the €24.3 billion debt pile. The fall in the firm’s bond prices since then helped send the total level of distressed debt globally last week to the highest level since the middle of January.