Verizon to Acquire Frontier

Verizon Graphic

Graphic provided by Verizon

Press release from Verizon:

 Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE, NASDAQ: VZ) and Frontier Communications Parent, Inc. (NASDAQ: FYBR) today announced they have entered into a definitive agreement for Verizon to acquire Frontier in an all-cash transaction valued at $20 billion. This strategic acquisition of the largest pure-play fiber internet provider in the U.S. will significantly expand Verizon’s fiber footprint across the nation, accelerating the company’s delivery of premium mobility and broadband services to current and new customers. It will also expand Verizon’s intelligent edge network for digital innovations like AI and IoT.

The combination will integrate Frontier’s cutting-edge fiber network into Verizon’s leading portfolio of fiber and wireless assets, including its best-in-class Fios offering. Over approximately four years, Frontier has invested $4.1 billion upgrading and expanding its fiber network, and now derives more than 50% of its revenue from fiber products. Frontier’s 2.2 million fiber subscribers across 25 states will join Verizon’s approximately 7.4 million Fios connections1 in 9 states and Washington, D.C. In addition to Frontier’s 7.2 million fiber locations, the company is committed to its plan to build out an additional 2.8 million fiber locations by the end of 2026.

“Connectivity is essential in nearly every part of our lives and work, and no one delivers better than Verizon,” said Verizon Chairman and CEO Hans Vestberg. “Verizon offers more choice, flexibility and value, and we continuously look for ways to provide the best product and network experience to our customers as we bolster our position as the provider of choice.”

Vestberg added: “The acquisition of Frontier is a strategic fit. It will build on Verizon’s two decades of leadership at the forefront of fiber and is an opportunity to become more competitive in more markets throughout the United States, enhancing our ability to deliver premium offerings to millions more customers across a combined fiber network.”

“Less than four years ago, we set out an ambitious plan to Build Gigabit America, the digital infrastructure this country needs to thrive for generations to come,” said Nick Jeffery, President and CEO of Frontier. “Today’s announcement is recognition of our progress building a best-in-class fiber network and delivering reliable, high-speed broadband to millions of customers across the country. It’s also a vote of confidence for the future of fiber. I am confident that this delivers a significant and certain cash premium to Frontier’s shareholders, while creating exciting new opportunities for our employees and expanding access to reliable connectivity for more Americans.”

Customer and Strategic Benefits:

  • Extends Verizon premium offerings and experience to Frontier’s consumer and small business customers. Frontier customers and those previously outside Verizon’s fiber footprint are expected to gain more choice and access to Verizon’s premium mobility, home internet, streaming and connected home offerings, alongside premium business products like Verizon Business Complete.
  • Creates market-leading broadband network with superior scale and distribution. Frontier’s consumer fiber network, one of the largest and fastest-growing nationally, can be immediately and seamlessly integrated upon closing directly into Verizon’s award-winning Fios network, meeting existing Fios standards. Today, Verizon and Frontier have approximately 10 million fiber customers across 31 states and Washington D.C. with fiber networks passing over 25 million premises, and both companies expect to increase their fiber penetration between now and closing.
  • Unites Frontier’s premium broadband offering with Verizon’s premium mobile offering. Combined Mobile and Home Internet customers show increased loyalty and have an improved rate of churn by approximately 50% for postpaid mobility, which is expected to improve Verizon’s mobility economics.
  • Increases reach across more markets. Verizon will gain access to Frontier’s high-quality customer base in markets highly complementary to Verizon’s core Northeast and Mid-Atlantic markets. Frontier’s footprint offers substantial room for increased penetration in both fiber and mobility services and Verizon is well positioned with stores throughout Frontier’s territory.
  • Aligns with Verizon’s long-term strategic plan. The acquisition of Frontier is consistent with Verizon’s core strategy of growing and strengthening customer relationships. This transaction is expected to expand Verizon’s share of the nationwide broadband market, building upon Verizon’s two decades of leadership at the forefront of fiber.

Substantial Financial Benefits:

  • Accretive to Verizon’s earnings. The transaction is expected to be accretive to Verizon’s revenue and Adjusted EBITDA growth rates upon closing.
  • Drives significant cost synergies. Verizon expects to realize at least $500 million in run-rate cost synergies by year three from benefits of increased scale and distribution and network integration.
  • Maintains Verizon’s financial strength, flexibility and consistent capital allocation approach. Following the closing of the transaction, Verizon will continue to have a strong balance sheet and liquidity profile. The company will maintain its capital allocation priorities, characterized by prudent investment in the business, a commitment to maintaining an industry-leading dividend and continued debt reduction.

Additional Transaction Details:

Under the terms of the agreement, Verizon will acquire Frontier for $38.50 per share in cash, representing a premium of 43.7% to Frontier’s 90-Day volume-weighted average share price (VWAP) on September 3, 2024, the last trading day prior to media reports regarding a potential acquisition of Frontier. The transaction is valued at approximately $20 billion of enterprise value.

The transaction has been unanimously approved by the Verizon and Frontier Boards of Directors. The transaction is expected to close in approximately 18 months, subject to approval by Frontier shareholders, receipt of certain regulatory approvals and other customary closing conditions.

Verizon Reaffirms Full-Year 2024 Guidance:

  • Total wireless service revenue growth2 of 2.0 percent to 3.5 percent.
  • Adjusted EBITDA growth3 of 1.0 percent to 3.0 percent.
  • Adjusted EPS3 of $4.50 to $4.70.
  • Capital expenditures between $17.0 billion and $17.5 billion.
  • Adjusted effective income tax rate3 in the range of 22.5 percent to 24.0 percent.
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27 Please improve the conversation by disagreeing thoughtfully and backing your claims with facts
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The Real Guest
Guest
The Real Guest
1 year ago

That’s a step in the wrong direction…

I can’t stand Verizon..

It should say Verizon to “reacquire” Frontier…

Verizon preceded Frontier…

Anonymous
Guest
Anonymous
1 year ago
Reply to  The Real Guest

This is very interesting in that all of Del Norte County was served by Verizon which then sold the network to Frontier. Prior to Verizon, the county was served by GTE.

CsMisadventures
Guest
CsMisadventures
1 year ago
Reply to  The Real Guest

Also…Frontier has fiber? Not here. Maybe other states. And their idea of “broadband” is DSL speed at best. People I know that have Frontier would rather have cell service as they’re more expensive for rural service than Verizon or AT&T, if they can even get a signal. So….will their bills get lowered? Yeah….wishful thinking and all that.

Anonymous
Guest
Anonymous
1 year ago

Frontier is currently constructing a fiber network throughout all of Del Norte County. The work began prior to the announcement of the sale to Verizon. (In wonder if such a sale was “in the works” when Frontier decided to build a fiber network in order to sweeten the sale.)

will ge
Member
will ge
1 year ago
Reply to  The Real Guest

I’m with ya. Not a fan of Verizon.

Apopa
Guest
Apopa
1 year ago

Long term strategic plan? That says rate increase to me.

Paul Modic
Guest
Paul Modic
1 year ago

Beware: Verizon wants to abandon their landlines and there’s lots of issues with landlines around here.
My landline went dead Saturday, I got on a chat with Frontier’s bots, they ended the “conversation” with a series of odd proverbs wishing me a fulfilling life and other platitudes, but were no help connecting me to anyone who might know what the problem was.
Yes, I am a copper dinosaur, I could lose my flip phone but I can’t lose my landline, until now, it’s gone, what to do? (I had already checked the box on the side of the house, plugged a dialup phone into the slot, and nothing, so the problem was with the phone company, not my equipment.)
What next? I waited until Monday and when uptown I headed over to the Frontier operations center. The office, where we used to go to pay our bills back in the Continental Telephone days, was deserted and dead-looking but I gave a few raps on the wall of glass anyway.
I went past a No Trespassing sign into the parking lot, knocked on a metal door, went past another No Trespassing sign into the yard and knocked on another door. A man came to the door, listened to my problem, and invited me into his office. He got on his computer, located my place, and began studying the area and the phone lines. (He used to be the guy they sent out but now was an engineer, he said.)
Another friendly guy walked by the door, the first guy called him over, and JV listened to my plea. He went back into the nerve center, a huge room where all the wires and switches were humming, and said he’d found some connection had melted, or something, where my line was.
“We’re waiting for the part,” he said. “Nothing is delivered quickly around here.”
“Amazon comes fast,” I said.
“Well, yeah, only that,” he said.
He got on the phone to New York, was put on hold, then miraculously got someone and explained the situation to them. “They’re moving your number to another switch,” he said. “It should be working soon.”
I went home, checked the phone, and found it was no longer dead, but the “dial tone” I was hearing was very loud, and I still couldn’t dial a number. An hour later I checked it again and this time the tone was very faint, and I still couldn’t dial out. I went back uptown, told JV the status update, and he said they’d probably have to send a guy out to the house the next day.
That sounded good to me, as I had heard on Redheaded Blackbelt about the people way out in the sticks, in places like Whitethorn and Whale Gulch, who had been having lots of trouble keeping their land lines working, and were frustrated when no one came out to fix them. (One person in Petrolia had made seven appointments for a new installation in her next door rental, Frontier broke all of them, and she finally gave up.)
A few hours later a call came through, the I.D. said “Contel,” and I answered with an excited “You did it!”
“Yeah, I found a guy who…” JV explained, and I was back in business with a dial tone on my landline. (Now I can get messages on my machine, with the flip phone the “In Box” is full, and it would be a hassle to wade back through it and remove all the mostly spam messages, one by one.)
So the lesson is go right to the source. Us plucky dinosaurs are lucky to have those nice guys in the bald brotherhood, up there at Frontier with all the antiquated wires and switches, who seem like they really like helping the customer. (Of course, being a mile away from the office makes all the difference, I wonder if those folks way out in the hills, who were airing their complaints on RHBB last January, ever got their phone lines working?)

Anonymous
Guest
Anonymous
1 year ago
Reply to  Paul Modic

Any future problems should be reported to the CPUC and TURN (The Utility Reform Network) should be as well.

DHW
Guest
DHW
1 year ago
Reply to  Anonymous

Have you ever looked at or tried to file a report or complaint on the SPUS website? It has been a couple of years since I atempted to but I found their process Un-user friendly to do so.
Good luck with that avenue of ‘reform’.

Apopa
Guest
Apopa
1 year ago
Reply to  Anonymous

Cpuc is under the table with Verizon. Just a bunch of fat cats who make the rules as they go.
A good ballot measure would be to vote them out!

A Friend of Dorothy
Guest
A Friend of Dorothy
1 year ago
Reply to  Paul Modic

Years ago when Verizon owned the lines in sohum our copper phone lines went out in our area of Ettersburg and it was the antiquated switching boxes along the road that were the problem. We couldn’t call 911 for a number of months during fire season. The Verizon technicians had no new replacement parts and cannibalized old equipment to replace the faulty parts and then ran out of used parts. Verizon was telling everyone to get a cell phone saying we had service in the area which we didn’t. I was told copper is dead. I kept calling to complain and finally got a disgruntled employee who gave me the number to the executive office. I put it on flyers all over town and said to call the executive office over and over. That got their attention and fixed the problem in fact Verizon had a retired engineer familiar with the old system design a new one. Problem solved. I wouldn’t be surprised if Verizon tries to abandon the copper lines again.

pharmstheproblem
Guest
pharmstheproblem
1 year ago

Pretty sure it was Verizon before Frontier, and ever since the change it’s been crap service. Phone lines have been on the ground across the main road since Dec. Service has not been dependable for years.

Ernie Branscomb
Guest
Ernie Branscomb
1 year ago

The trees on Blue Rock road have been laying in the phone cable for several years now. The pole is bent over and the guy wire has uprooted. A tree on my property, that I need to remove, is the only thing holding the cable up.

Apopa
Guest
Apopa
1 year ago

Before that it was GTE up to the border.

I am a robot
Guest
I am a robot
1 year ago

I have had a verizon account & cell phone for 23 years. In all that time I have NEVER been able to make a cell call from my house until I hooked up with 101 netlink for wifi.

Anonymous
Guest
Anonymous
1 year ago
Reply to  I am a robot

I became a Verizon Wireless customer because Verizon purchased Cal North Cellular in 2005. Verizon grandfathered my Cal North rate “for life” so my monthly Verizon bill is $14.95 plus taxes. Wonder if they will still honor this rate.

Can you hear me ???
Guest
Can you hear me ???
1 year ago

Contel was sold to GTE, which was sold to Verizon, which was sold to Frontier, and our landlines have gotten worse & worse over the years…

The reason Verizon sold it’s landline portion to Frontier is because Verizon wanted to get out of the landline service in order to concentrate wireless service

I can’t rely on my landline to work when I need to call 911 (I’m a heart patient who has had be be flown out to a regional trauma center), and my cell signal via US Cellular is just about non existent…

I’ve been told by a retired telco guy who used to work here in Laytonville that a main problem is all the old “concentrator” boxed we see along the roadsides.

So, will this put Verizon back in charge of providing landline service..?

This is an example of how deregulation ends up biting us in the ass… we USED to have VERY reliable telephone service back when it was ‘Ma Bell’…

Frontier touts state of the art communications but that fancy stuff is for folks ‘back east’ (Frontier is out of Ohio), not for us where we have 3rd world telco service, at best…

Why is such widespread mediocrity now acceptable..? Because mega companies have shifted to web only customer service which removes human accountability

Last edited 1 year ago
Permanently on Monitoring
Guest
Permanently on Monitoring
1 year ago

Starlink.

melanopsin
Member
1 year ago

Or another satellite internet provider.
Subsidized for those with no other choice.

Last edited 1 year ago
thetallone
Guest
thetallone
1 year ago

And support fascist Elon Musk, pay $650 for the equipment and have a much larger monthly bill than a landline. Hardly a solution for low income folks. Oh, and put a bunch more space junk in orbit with polluting rockets.

Last edited 1 year ago
Permanently on Monitoring
Guest
Permanently on Monitoring
1 year ago
Reply to  thetallone

Huge areas with “no signal”, like highway 20 between Williams and to the top of the hill before Highway 53…

Verizon fails in many ways and places…

Musk owns part of Starlink and Space-X, but not the whole thing…

Early investor, not owner, same for Tesla and Solar City…

melanopsin
Member
1 year ago

Only US Cellular works here. Line of sight to top of Pratt…

No line of sight to cell tower == no signal == no service

Radios require power.

Many endpoints are too far for wired DSL. Many endpoints are without line-of-sight to any cell tower.

Yes, fiber goes through Petrolia, however unlike wires, fiber cannot be tapped.

melanopsin
Member
1 year ago
Reply to  thetallone

subsidize…

light pollution is also a concern. Also one big CME and they’re all space junk, regardless of e-hardening.

Cellphone access brings RF pollution.

laura cooskey
Member
1 year ago
Reply to  thetallone

Wow, i hope you see this. I want to ask you, how much is it monthly for Elon’s Starlink? Because my Frontier landline just went up to $133 a month. That’s a 70% increase in just over 3 years.

melanopsin
Member
1 year ago
Reply to  laura cooskey

https://www.starlink.com/residential

key points:

“plug it in” — i.e., when your power goes off, so does Starlink. Power Consumption Average: 75 – 100 W

Equipment is $299, then $120/month for basic service:

https://www.pcmag.com/explainers/how-much-does-starlink-cost

Last edited 1 year ago
Brat30
Guest
Brat30
1 year ago

“all-cash transaction”……..20 billion dollars………damn…..

Brat30
Guest
Brat30
1 year ago

Verizon is 1 of the better services I’ve never had one issue with them! Not even 1 thing for almost 10 years. ?