3.5GHz spectrum increasingly valuable in 5G
The commercialisation of its wireless network in the in the Marche and Emilia-Romagna regions of Italy is the primary driver of forecasts and underpins our base case DCF valuation of €2.8 per share (down from €3.1 following the reduction in our EBITDA forecast). Along with the pace of expansion of this wireless network, there are a number of other initiatives that could have a significant impact on GO’s valuation. In summary:
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The success of its new partnership with Enel Open Fibre, which could be extended beyond Perugia to other cities in Italy.
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The possibility of greatly enhancing the footprint of its wireless network by participating in spectrum tenders.
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Option value associated with Spectrum ownership.
Since our last update it is the value of GO’s spectrum in a wider context that requires greater attention given wider developments in the industry. When GO first acquired its spectrum, there was little interest by the industry in the 3.5GHz frequencies and GO secured 42MHz of spectrum in this frequency band for a relatively low price. However, with the explosion of mobile data, the lower frequencies currently used by mobile service providers are rapidly becoming saturated and mobile operators are looking to higher frequencies to satisfy capacity demands as the industry moves towards the gigabit technologies offered in a 5G environment.
Intel, Qualcomm and Huawei have all started producing chipsets that support 3.5GHz frequency for tablet and smartphone reception, which are now being incorporated across a spectrum of equipment, including smartphones (Sony, Samsung and ZTE phones using Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 chipset are expected to be on the market in the coming months). Furthermore, regulators across Europe (Ofcom, ITU) have now identified three key bands that will enable 5G in Europe – 700MHz, 24.5-27.5Ghz and, critically for GO, 3.4-3.8GHz.
This opens up a number of new possibilities for GO longer term, from wholesaling its spectrum to telecoms operators, to potentially even adding its own mobile offering to its fixed wireless broadband services. It also makes GO a more attractive target for one of the larger operators looking to secure 5G spectrum.
Assessing the actual value of GO’s spectrum is at this stage highly speculative. However, there is an interesting reference case in the UK. Hutchinson 3’s UK arm recently acquired UK Broadband for €350m (£250m plus £50m deferred investment). At an implied value per subscriber of €23k (UK Broadband has only 15k subscribers, mainly in London), the acquisition is largely ascribed to its ownership of 208MHz of nationwide spectrum holdings between 3.5 and 3.7HGz range, giving a significant boost to 3UK’s capacity in this band. Hutchinson’s acquisition is a lower-risk and cheaper route to securing spectrum than relying on the spectrum auctions – scheduled for later in 2017 in the UK. Via UK Broadband, Hutchinson secures the spectrum for only 3c per MHz per population compared to the 43c it paid for its 800MHz of 4G spectrum in 2013. As a benchmark, this indicates a potential spectrum value of €8m (assuming the UK Broadband takeover value per MHz per population), up to €122m (using the price Hutchinson paid for its spectrum in 2013). This is in addition to the value of GO’s wireless subscriber network and installed base of 37.7k subscribers.
For GO, the question has now become how and when, rather than if it can leverage its frequencies beyond wireless broadband services with a mobile offer. Irrespective of its eventual commercial strategy, owning exclusive access to these frequencies in the valuable Marche and Emilia-Romagna regions in Italy has put GO on the map of mobile operators looking to secure capacity for 5G mobile services.
On the other hand, it complicates GO’s own plans to bid for additional 3.5GHz spectrum to widen its wireless footprint to other regions, as these auctions are likely to be hotly contended now. In early 2015, AGCOM announced its intention to release an additional 200MHz of spectrum in the 3.6GHz frequency band. The government was keen to add services in areas of the country that currently have poor or no reception (digital divide areas). The auctions, which have already been subject to delays (they were originally expected last year), are likely to be delayed further as the regulator reassesses its strategy in light of the 5G standards that are being recommended.