Fear is high that a Frontier Communications Corp (NASDAQ:FTR) dividend cut is coming. It’s price is down, it’s yield (12.4%) seems unsustainably high, and short-interest is among the highest in the S&P 500. However, to a large extent, Frontier does have the ability to control its cash flows and sustain its dividend in the near- and mid-term.
The real challenge is that Frontier’s business exists in an anemically eroding marketplace. And if you are attracted to Frontier because of its big dividend yield, then you may want to consider the bonds instead. Many of Frontier’s high-yield bonds offer big interest payments, and they’re far safer than the stock (plus the bonds might get a nice price bump if Frontier’s dividend actually does get cut).
Frontier Faces Challenges
Frontier faces big challenges. For starters, the company provides voice, video and data services to customers dispersed across the US, often in smaller rural markets where the big boys (Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE:VZ) and AT&T Inc. (NYSE:T)) are generally not interested.
The company’s financial wherewithal is being stretched increasingly thin considering the high costs of maintaining its dispersed and neglected networks, its balance sheet debt obligations, and its equity investor’s demands for dividends.
Also, potential increased competition from wireless service providers is threatening. And as further evidence of the challenges facing Frontier, short-interest has recently exceeded 19%, making it one of the most “bet against” stocks in the S&P 500.
Further still, the following chart shows the company’s free cash flows (the money from operations left over after capital expenditures) has recently been negative.
And considering all of these challenges, many investors are left wondering if the big dividend is safe, or if it is heading for a big dividend cut.
Follow Frontier Communications Parent Inc. (NASDAQ:FYBR)
Follow Frontier Communications Parent Inc. (NASDAQ:FYBR)
Frontier’s Dividend Is Sustainable (For Now)…
Frontier Communications Corp (NASDAQ:FTR)’s dividend is sustainable in the short- and mid-term, if the company wants to sustain it. For example, Frontier can skimp on network capital expenditures in the short- and mid-term at the expense of disgruntled customers (remember, Frontier is the only provider in many of the areas it serves). However, Frontier may likely be able to sustain the dividend without further sacrificing services and capital expenditures. As the following graphic shows, the company has plans to strengthen itself in the coming years via cost synergies.
Additionally, Frontier’s cash flows may not be as dire as a basic free cash flow calculation (see earlier FCF chart) suggests. In particular, adjusted free cash flow (and the dividend), as shown in the following chart, is much less stressed.
(For reference, Adjusted Free Cash Flow is defined as free cash flow, as described above and adding back interest expense on incremental debt and dividends paid, prior to the company’s ownership of the CTF operations, on debt incurred and preferred stock issued to finance the Verizon Acquisition).
Also worth noting, the government has a vested interest in supporting Frontier. In particular, the government wants Frontier to keep providing phone and data services in certain dispersed and underserved areas, and that’s why Frontier receives multiple government subsidies. For example, in 2015, $500 million, or 9%, of Frontier’s total revenues were derived from federal and state subsidies for rural and high-cost support, commonly referred to as USF (2015 10-K, p.22).
Frontier’s Bonds Are Better Than Its Stock
As the following table shows, Frontier currently has a variety of high yield bonds outstanding.