Call Start: 02:05 January 1, 0000 2:44 AM ET
Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE:VZ)
Morgan Stanley European Technology, Media and Telecom Conference
November 15, 2023 02:05 AM ET
Company Participants
Tony Skiadas - Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Conference Call Participants
Simon Flannery - Morgan Stanley
Simon Flannery
Let me join Emmett in welcoming you all to Barcelona. It's great to have you here. There's plenty of coffee outside for those coming from the U.S. will make us through the day. It's my great pleasure to welcome to Barcelona, Tony Skiadas. Tony, congratulations on recently has been named the CFO of Verizon.
Tony Skiadas
Thank you.
Simon Flannery
We're delighted to have you here. I know you have some safe harbor comments
Tony Skiadas
Yes.
Simon Flannery
Just to get out of the way.
Tony Skiadas
Sure. So just some quick housekeeping. So, I just want to draw your attention to Verizon's safe harbor statement and SEC filings, which are located on Verizon's website, and we may make future comments that are subject to risks and uncertainties. So with that, we can go on.
Question-and-Answer Session
Simon Flannery
Great. Thank you. And for Morgan Stanley disclosures, please see the Morgan Stanley Research website/disclosures. So Tony, it's been a busy year at Verizon, you've had a lot of management changes in the spring time. So, perhaps for those who haven't been following this closely, could you just talk us through the reshuffle that happened in the spring and where are we today and what are, kind of, the early signpost of results from that?
Tony Skiadas
Sure. So, back in March, Hans made a bunch of changes. He was running the consumer business at the time and he decided to bring Sampath into the consumer role, he was running our Verizon business group, previously. And behind him, came Kyle Malady, who's been running the network for many years, in our business team. And then Joe Russo came behind him to, to run the network. And then I came behind Matt Ellis, as the CFO back in May. So, I've been in the role about six months now.
And, the focus of the team is very much aligned around growing service revenue, wireless service revenue, EBITDA and free cash flow growth, and within that framework, driving growth in mobility, broadband and private networks. And I think you've seen the progress so far, particularly on the mobility side with Sampath driving improvements in the consumer business and a lot of the changes he's made in recent months. And then Kyle's had very steady performance in our Verizon business group on mobility.
On broadband, we said we're comfortable with the 400,000 plus pace on broadband net adds, so that's continuing on and we have great momentum there, particularly on fixed wireless access. And then on private networks, we have early leadership there and we signed some big logos and see further opportunity down the road. And then in terms of my priorities for the team, clearly supporting the leadership team, and making sure we're narrowing the focus on operational performance and execution. That's extremely important to us, and you see that come through in our results the last couple of quarters.
Secondly, executing and delivering on the guidance that we gave out this year and we're on track with our guidance for 2023, including raising our free cash flow guide in the third quarter, for the full year of 2023. And then lastly, executing on our capital allocation priorities and those four priorities remain unchanged. So, good progress thus far, I'm very encouraged by what I see. Obviously, we have more work to do.
Simon Flannery
Great. That's a great summary. Maybe I come back to one of the things you were saying that you were talking about Sampath came into the consumer organization having run business, and he made a number of changes.
Tony Skiadas
Yes.
Simon Flannery
It seems like there was a lot of kind of decentralization driving accountability. Can you help us lift up to cover there a little bit?
Tony Skiadas
Sure. So, when Sampath came in, one of the things he wanted to do was go back to a regional model. We were running the consumer business centrally and we thought the best way, he thought the best way to do it was running it in a regional model. So, we moved to a regional model back in the middle of the year. And that's a model that is a lot closer to the customer. It's something we know how to execute. We ran Verizon wireless that way for many, many years and we're very successful. So, it's a model that gets us lot closer to the customer, gives us local execution as well.
Some of the other changes he made most recently are around the sales compensation as well and moving the sales compensation to individualized sales comp, we previously had a team concept. So, that was extremely important to incentivize the sales team in the right way and ensuring that we pay for sales performance there. So, those were two big changes. And the other big one in the middle of all that was, the introduction of myPlan, which is a big pricing go-to-market refresh for us and it's a great plan. It gives customers a lot of flexibility to choose their network and their perks, and that was a big deal for us and that was launched in May as well. So, a lot of great changes and good momentum thus far.
Simon Flannery
Right. And maybe, for those who are less familiar, if you could just explain the myPlan concept?
Tony Skiadas
Yes.
Simon Flannery
How it differed from the mix and match that you had before?
Tony Skiadas
Sure. Sure. So myPlan, allows you to choose your network options, and there's three different network options there. So, it gives the customer a lot of flexibility to choose the network and the level of service they want out of the network. And then also gives the customer options to choose their perks as well. So perks could be Walmart, Netflix, and hotspots and things like that, or Disney+ that give customers great value and choice, and at attractive rates that they can't get elsewhere.
So, and it gives customers a lot of flexibility to choose the network they want and the perks that they want and pay for what they want. So it's very flexible. Also gave us flexibility as well, as we've evolved the platform. We added a third tier, the ultimate unlimited tier as well. And, we were able to do that very quickly. So, the plan is very, very flexible. We can swap perks in and out, very easily. So, there's a lot of flexibility in the plan, and consumers get a lot of choice, which is extremely important for us.
Simon Flannery
And there's a new perk, which has just come out, I guess, $10 for Netflix plus Max. I mean, the question I've been getting is, what doesn't Verizon get a margin out of that? How do you think about pricing these?
Tony Skiadas
Sure. So the perks are $10 each and we do make margin on them. So, we have great value for customers. Obviously, you can't get a perk like that or any other perk for the rates that standalone in the marketplace, but we do make margin on those perks.
Simon Flannery
Right. So, you talked about the changes that Sampath made, a lot of momentum, you were noting just but presumably it's going to take some time for this flywheel to come through to get to that so sustained positive consumer net adds. Can you just talk us through how you're thinking about that?
Tony Skiadas
Sure. So, with the regional structure, clearly, it enhances our decision making and speeds to market and we're able to make decisions a lot quicker and pivot if we need. The goal with consumer has continued to be to show improvements in the profile. I think you see in the last couple of quarters, we've shown improvements both in the second quarter and in the third quarter on volumes. For the fourth quarter, we said we would see improvements year-over-year.
Last year, we did 41,000 postpaid phone net adds in the fourth quarter last year, we said we would see improvements this year, year-over-year. So, you can do the math there, but we're not going to specifically guide on 2024 volumes. But, rest assured, Sampath’s goal is to get the flat and to get the positive. So, he's got good momentum. Our offers coming out of the third quarter are resonating in the market. We had good gross add momentum coming out of the third quarter. That's continued into the early part of the fourth. We'll see where that goes, obviously, we have the holiday season in front of us. And as, a lot of the volumes come towards the last four or five weeks here in the quarter. So, we'll see where we end up, but we'd like the momentum we have at this point.
Simon Flannery
Is it more of a gross adds kind of you're solving for gross adds, solving for churn or a bit of both?
Tony Skiadas
A bit of both. So, we have good gross add momentum. We were positive gross adds coming out of the third quarter, but Sampath is also very focused, laser focused on keeping churn in check as well.
Simon Flannery
And can you characterize the competitive environment and the switching environment right now? You were always seeing these big headline promos around the iPhone launch around Black Friday, but how does this compare to prior years?
Tony Skiadas
I think from our standpoint, we said we're going to be very disciplined in the marketplace, and I think you've seen that the level of promotions that we've done has been pretty stable. In fact, the promo amortization that hits against revenue has flattened out throughout the year, which is a good sign for us. And like I said, we've been very disciplined and we see others doing things, but we think volumes are very important, but we're going to do it in a very disciplined way and we're not going to chase it.
Simon Flannery
Okay. That makes sense. So, you touched on it earlier, but one of the things that was nice to see was the increase in the free cash guidance?
Tony Skiadas
Yes.
Simon Flannery
And Emmett referenced the fall in CapEx. So, can you just talk about what was driving your confidence in raising the guidance? And historically, Verizon hasn't necessarily been focused on sharing a free cash flow target with us. So, you seem to have a lot of confidence.
Tony Skiadas
Yes. That was yes, that was the first, and that was one of the resistors in the past. But, yes, we had a good we had a good couple of quarters, and we had a strong third quarter on free cash flow, given the performance of the business, obviously, a lower upgrade rate that we saw over the last few quarters, the upgrades were down in the consumer business, in the high 30% range in the second quarter and in the high-20s in the third quarter. We continue to see that in the fourth quarter.
So, obviously that's a tailwind for cash flow. But given the discipline also that we've had in the marketplace with promotions and retention, and the operations of the business, we had strong EBITDA in the third quarter as well. We felt very comfortable raising the guide and we were comfortable raising the guide despite having higher interest costs coming through as well as our CapEx, we mentioned that we'd be at the upper end of the range. So, despite all of that, we were comfortable raising the guide by $1 billion to $18 billion plus for 2023.
Simon Flannery
And I think you said you have some price tailwinds coming into the fourth quarter?
Tony Skiadas
Yes. So, we've made a number of pricing program, or even the bundled on fixed wireless access. The most recent one was the legacy mix and match that we did in September, and that will provide a tailwind all these will provide a tailwind heading into the fourth quarter and into next year. And the legacy mix and match that we did in September provide about $100 million of incremental revenue in the fourth quarter and then a tailwind into next year as well. So, we feel good about the shape of service revenue heading into next year.
Simon Flannery
Do you think the industry has got to a new normal here where there is some ability to pass price along that I think 18 months ago, there was a concern about sort of stirring up the hornet’s nest or something that churn might be a spike, but it seems like the industry is a little bit and maybe the consumer is a little bit more accepting?
Tony Skiadas
Yes, we've done a lot of pricing changes in the last two years. So, in 2022, we did about $2 billion worth of price changes and in 2023 about $1 billion worth. And, we've been able this year to keep the churn very much in check. And some of that's to do with also, the myPlan construct as well and customers that resonating with customers and the offers in the marketplace. So, yes, I think, we've had good traction there. We'll look at opportunities next year. Obviously, I'm not going to telegraph what we're going to do, but if there's opportunities to take further actions, you'll see us do that.
Simon Flannery
Great. You talked about the low upgrade rate and we've seen that across the industry. What do you think is going on here? I think 70%ish of your base now has a 5G phone.
Tony Skiadas
Yes.
Simon Flannery
These phones aren't cheap and maybe if they're paid off, if you just keep them for a little while. But is this something that you expect to be sustained? And what do you think is driving it?
Tony Skiadas
Yes. So, a couple of things, Simon. I would say customers are hanging on to their phones longer. That that's something we're seeing, three, four years and the refresh cycle has elongated just by customer choice. So, that's maybe the first thing that we're seeing. The second thing we're seeing is we have 36 months device payment plans now in the market. So, customers will wait until the 36 months and maybe then some before they decide to upgrade and then their bill drops at the end of the 36 months as well.
So, and then there's the handset side of it too and the innovation around that. So, there's a few factors there that we see. We've seen lower upgrades throughout the year, post second quarter, third quarter and even into the fourth quarter year-over-year. We'll see where we go next year, but it's definitely come down quite a bit from where we were.
Simon Flannery
And that comes despite the industry growing at another healthy clip in 2023.
Tony Skiadas
Yes.
Simon Flannery
Any sense of how sustainable this is? And why is it remaining so strong when a lot of -- there was a lot of concern that we were going to be much slower this year, couple of million below where we are?
Tony Skiadas
Yes, we've seen good growth across the space and our goal is to continue to punch your own weight, and I think we haven't been doing that the last couple of years. We're doing more of that now. And with the changes we've made, we feel like we can continue to compete and get volumes at the right rate and be very disciplined about growing volumes.
Simon Flannery
And are you seeing anything in how many people taking multiple devices or different age cohorts, anything changed there?
Tony Skiadas
Nothing significant, Simon. I mean, I think we see the same family plans and things like that, but nothing significantly that we're seeing.
Simon Flannery
Okay. Anything you're picking up on the macro front, any change in consumer payment patterns or enterprise demand?
Tony Skiadas
Yes. Payment patterns have been very stable across both business and consumer. And I would say the payment patterns are very much in-line with pre-pandemic levels, our accounts receivable again continue to be strong. As you know, we have a high quality customer base. And you see that in some of our ABS filings. So, those have been very resilient. Certainly, we're not immune to any of the business pressures, tech pressures, etcetera, with layoffs and things. So, we're not immune to any of that. But we're very -- what we see right now is a very stable environment and we'll continue to keep an eye on it, but nothing significant at this point.
Simon Flannery
Right. I'd like to come on to fixed wireless if I could and perhaps just tie that into your spectrum position. So, update us on the rollout of mid-band 5G?
Tony Skiadas
Sure. So, we got the remaining spectrum, recently. So, we have the full complement of spectrum now. Our C-band is rolled out to about half, a little more than half of our cell sites. So, we still have a better work to do. So, just because we have all the spectrum doesn't mean the network is completely finished that we still have a couple of years of build to go. We're very pleased with the progress thus far. The customer experience on C-band has been great, as well as the churn benefits we've seen as well. So, we're very pleased with the progress thus far of the build, but we still have more to do.
Simon Flannery
And your average depth is 160 megahertz, which is one of the biggest globally, I would --
Tony Skiadas
Yes. So, we're putting a lot of capacity to use right now, and the bandwidth is tremendous and that's both for mobility and for fixed wireless access. We see great -- we've had great momentum with fixed wireless access. We did 384,000 fixed wireless access net adds in the third quarter. We have over 2.7 million now subs in our base, and we said that we would see about 4 million to 5 million by 2025. If you do the math, we're publically a little in front of that. We're not ready to give a new target yet, but --
Simon Flannery
It’s a great place to do it.
Tony Skiadas
Yes. We're not going to do, we're not going to guide on ‘24 right now. So, but we're very pleased with the progress and, our engineering team is way out in front of the demand. So, our internal targets are obviously much higher, but we're very pleased with the progress thus far. And we see -- the goal here is to build a long-term sustainable business with fixed wireless access.
Simon Flannery
And why do you think it's resonated so much? Because I think you and Timo will talk about net promoter scores that are some of the best of any product pretty competitive with fiber. What is it that people love so much about it?
Tony Skiadas
It's very simple. You plug it in and go. There's no install. So, it's simply plug it in, connect to the network, and you have it in the house. So, it's very simple, it resonates with customers, and, it's very simple to use, and that's been the goal with this is making sure that the customer experience is very easy for them and customers love it, and we have great NPS scores, what we've seen thus far. And like I said earlier, the churn rates are really good as well.
Simon Flannery
And it's fast enough, it seems like it's -- you don't, not everybody needs that gigabit circuit.
Tony Skiadas
It's fast enough and customers, it works for customers to stream multiple devices and gaming and whatnot, there's plenty of bandwidth there for multi-device use in the home.
Simon Flannery
So your, I think, footprint target had been about 50 million households. Is that still the right number to think about? And where are we today?
Tony Skiadas
Yes. So, we continue to build out the network and we were a little over 40 million right now. We'll continue to drive towards that number. Obviously, we talked about the POPs covered, which was our goal was around 250 million and we're well ahead of schedule there as well. We'll see where we end up ultimately, but the goal is to have the vast majority of the network covered with C-band.
Simon Flannery
And the big kind of pushback, particularly from your good friends on the cable side is that, you're going to face congestion as you have hundreds of gigs per month on these fixed wireless users. Any kind of answer to that?
Tony Skiadas
Sure. So, there are a lot of ways to design a network. We have the best network engineering team in the business and they know how to design networks and we ensure that when we roll this out, the quality is there for the customer, the experience they expect they get from us. So, and as I said earlier, the network team is way out in front of the demand curve here, in terms of what we see, in terms of growth and if we have more demand for fixed wireless access, that's a good problem. And we have plenty of ways to take pressure off the network, whether it's cell splitting or using millimeter wave, but there's options for us there. And that would be a good problem to have if that happens and the team is building where we see demand.
Simon Flannery
I think one of the surprises certainly for us, but perhaps for you as well was how well it's played in the business.
Tony Skiadas
Yes.
Simon Flannery
Not just SMB, but also in enterprise. Can you just expand on that? I think it's about 35% of your adds.
Tony Skiadas
Yes. I mean, Kyle and the team are doing the steady 100,000 and 135,000 fixed wireless adds and those are both on LTE and 5G. And, customers, it resonates with customers, it's very simple for businesses as well. You don't have to run wires. So, customers like the product. They like the security and the reliability of Verizon network and that's something that's very important for business customers. And that's both on LTE, which has been very good and also on C-band. And even if it's for backup, it's still -- it's low usage, high margin. So, customers, the business customers, it definitely resonates with them and it keeps things very simple for them as well, no wires.
Simon Flannery
And you can give them a nationwide solution.
Tony Skiadas
Absolutely. Absolutely. We're able to do this nationwide for them whether you think of branches or stores. We're starting to see adoption there as well, as we roll it out.
Simon Flannery
One of the topics in Barcelona all every year I think has been convergence. And it always I found it was much more of a feature here than perhaps in the US, but it does seem like certainly this wireless plus broadband bundle is pretty powerful. So perhaps just talk about what you're seeing in terms of selling either with Fios or with fixed wireless. What's that doing to your wireless business?
Tony Skiadas
Sure. We're not seeing a ton of demand for converged products. Only about 10% of our subscribers have a converged bundle today. 10% of wireless.
Simon Flannery
10% of wireless. Okay.
Tony Skiadas
10% wireless. Yes. Have a converged bundle today. So it's not -- we're not seeing that huge demand that others have seen elsewhere. We've competed our goal is to compete on the strength of our products, and we feel no one gives better options than we do. From our standpoint we've competed on broadband for a long time with Fios. So, we have almost 20 years of history with Fios, so we know what that looks like as well. We have great assets and we have, owners economics with fiber at scale, both for wireless and for broadband.
Service has no limitations. When we say unlimited, it's truly unlimited and we don't provide free lines or surprises to customers. So, but when convergence happens, we're ready, we'll be ready to go.
Simon Flannery
And you're seeing churn benefits when you do have people in the bundle?
Tony Skiadas
Yes. The churn benefits are significant. We see about 30 basis points churn when we have a betterment of churn with the convert bundle. So that's, we're very happy with those results.
Simon Flannery
Yes. And you'd recently lowered the discount on FWA that you haven't seen much of impact from that.
Tony Skiadas
Not at all. We lowered the discount by $10 back in July and we had another strong quarter on fixed wireless access. So the demand is still there and we feel very comfortable with the value proposition and we have -- we've also created couple of tiers as well for pricing and speed as well. So we're very pleased with the momentum of fixed wireless access even despite the pricing change.
Simon Flannery
Great. Maybe you can give us an update on the TracFone integration and the prepaid market. I think it continues to be a drag on subscribers, although I think your messaging is we're hopefully past the worst, but where do we go from here?
Tony Skiadas
Yes. So, you know, the value segment is the right long-term play for us, as we said, we've seen a couple of shifts in the marketplace and things we've had to do there. From an integration standpoint, we still have we still have more work to do on the integration and the brand rationalization.
Simon Flannery
And there was a hope that it could serve as a [farm team] (ph) if you like for your post-paid business. Are you starting to see any impact on that side yet?
Tony Skiadas
Slowly, but we still have more work to bear in terms of pre to post migrations.
Simon Flannery
So, the value segment was one, wholesale was another and monetizing a network. So, how are things with the cable companies?
Tony Skiadas
Yes, so Simon I know we have talked about this a lot and we have – we don’t talk about our commercial agreements and let alone the commercial agreements we have with the cable companies. As we said previously, we're very happy with the arrangements that we have, it's very important business for us. That base of business is consistent with our strategy, as you mentioned to monetize the network and that business is accretive, it's growing and it's very profitable for us, but that's about all I can say about the wholesale arrangements.
Simon Flannery
Okay. So Fios has been a strong feature of your wireline footprint for what 2005 something like that pushing 20 years now and looks pretty prescient at this point, although I know I and others were looking for the return with Doreen back in the day. But, where do you go from here? You see some of your peers going out of region, we've got the beat program coming up, you've been doing 500, 550 a year in terms of hedging out, but what's as the guy with the check book here, what are you going to allow the network folks to do?
Tony Skiadas
Yes. So we're going to continue to as we said for this year in 2023, we're going to open up about 500,000 open for sale with Fios. So we'll be at about 18 million total open for sale with Fios. We had another great quarter with 71,000 broadband net adds again with Fios.
So the product continues to be the gold standard and we're very pleased. And as you said, it's 18 years of running. So we're very pleased with the progress there. You're not going to see us do fiber outside the ILEC footprint. So that's something we've been very clear on. We think, where we're deploying is where we can get a return and we're very comfortable with the work we're doing and you'll continue to see us do that as well next year.
In terms of, beef funding and things like that, we'll participate, again within the allied footprint where it makes sense and where it makes economic sense to do so, but you're not going to see us going outside the footprint with fiber. So we're very comfortable with the profile that we have with Fios.
Simon Flannery
And I'm guessing relative to say AT&T or some of the other allies, you probably don't have as big a beat kind of opportunity in the Northeast would be my guess.
Tony Skiadas
Yes, I can't speak for them, but I would tell you that we'll work it inside of our footprint and again where it makes sense to do so.
Simon Flannery
So business wireline, a lot of legacy product sets there. Just get us updated on the top line trends. Are we at any point -- at any closer to getting that to sort of bottom and start moving in the right direction?
Tony Skiadas
Yes. So we're still in the middle innings on the business wireline part of the equation. So as customers continue to transition their services off of legacy products. So still work to do there around the product portfolio. Obviously, we see customers stepping into more mobility and fixed wireless access and private 5G network. So we hope that trend continues, but we're still seeing declines in the top line of business wireline.
In terms of the work we're doing to improve the margin profile, Kyle and the team just recently signed a deal with HCL to help us with our managed services portfolio. So that'll give us some good savings and a good partnership over time on the managed services front.
And then on the deal front, the team continues to deemphasize low margin deals and we have margin thresholds and if we don't meet those thresholds, we walk away. And we've been a lot more disciplined with that as well. But we're still fighting through. The wireless piece still hasn't overtaken yet the wireline side. So we still have work to do there.
Simon Flannery
So if we think about 5G use cases more broadly, we've talked about fixed wireless, you're mentioning private networks a couple of times. Are those sort of the biggest ones for Verizon right now?
Tony Skiadas
In terms of what we're seeing coming down the pipe, yes, we have good traction and a lot of customers interested, we've signed with the NFL, we've signed with the Cleveland Clinic and BlackRock. So we have private 5G deals with all of them.
And those customers are very satisfied with the services they have with the security, the bandwidth, the reliability. The private 5G network, it starts out perhaps as a WiFi replacement and then we can add on to it with services like robotics and automation for factories and manufacturing and logistics and the like. So, the early returns are good. We still have, it's still early days for private 5G, but we do see a growth opportunity there as customers continue to adopt those networks.
Simon Flannery
So you're going to see it in complex campuses like hospitals or stadiums.
Tony Skiadas
Yes, we do -- we use -- we have it in the NFL stadiums right now and the coach to coach communication so we're very happy with that progress and we would hope to see more.
Simon Flannery
Great. Emmett, teed up AI, can you help us talk about -- I think you've been using AI for a long time, but where do you see the opportunities for telcos and for Verizon.
Tony Skiadas
Sure. So a few places that we see AI in our business, first on the consumer side, particularly in customer care, to continue to support our employees in serving customers and making it a lot easier for them to work with our customers day in and day out. We use AI to put the power in their hands and so they don't have to use multiple screens and multiple logins to work with a customer.
If you think about the network, we use AI in the network to continue to optimize and look at billions of data points to continue. Those are two use cases that we're very comfortable with, as well as with myPlan. So myPlan, we use AI with myPlan and helping customers choose their network and give them some recommendations upfront. So, early use cases that are very promising and we're looking at more as well to make us more efficient.
Simon Flannery
So we've seen a pretty decent improvement in your productivity in the past year or two here. Is that something that you state still see any potential going forward, you mentioned the HCL deal.
Tony Skiadas
Yes. So we have a cost program to take $2 billion to $3 billion out by 2025, and we're on track with that program. And we said that, approximately $2 million to $3 million would fall to EBITDA this year in 2023, and we're very much on track with that program.
As I mentioned earlier, we did the deal with HCL, with managed services on the business side. On the consumer side, Sampath’s done a number of things in customer care, and we're doing a big customer care transformation on the consumer side.
And then in our Verizon, global services team, a lot of work being done with IT platform transformations and the IT stack, as well as work we're doing in supply chain and sourcing to get us more efficient. So a lot of work there, but we're on track with the work that we're doing.
Simon Flannery
And what are you seeing on the cost pressure inflation side? Has that I mean, the CPI came in better yesterday, but have you seen that subside a little bit?
Tony Skiadas
It has subsided a bit though. Obviously, we're not immune to it, but it has subsided a bit. It's not significant in our results.
Simon Flannery
Okay. So let's talk about the CapEx a little bit more. You mentioned the guidance come down from last year and you were very clear about this $10 billion 5G envelope and it sort of played out pretty much as expected. So, you still feel comfortable dropping another couple of billion next year?
Tony Skiadas
Yes. So, we said this year for 2023, we were at 18 in the quarter to 19 in a quarter billion, and we said we'd be at the upper end of the range. So if you want to call that 19 for argument's sake. And then next year, we said our CapEx would be $17 billion to $17.5 billion for 2024 and that's an all in number.
And that includes the continued rollout of C-band. So we continue to see the work continuing on C-band and that's probably the biggest thing there. We'll also, as we mentioned earlier with Fios, we'll continue to deploy, open for sale, for Fios in terms of what might come down inside of that envelope. So, LTE spend as traffic continues to move on to the 5G network, we won't need to spend as much on LTE, you'll see that come down as well as One Fiber. So One Fiber program is coming to a conclusion, so that spend will also come down year-over-year. But as we said, the CapEx is moving back to a BAU level and historical levels of capital intensity for us.
Simon Flannery
I think that there's a lot of investors who kind of scarcely believe telcos going to come down to a new base level and that it's going to stay there. But do you see anything in the horizon?
It doesn't seem like there's a lot of spectrum options or any other kind of?
Tony Skiadas
Yes. We're happy with the spectrum position we have. We did a generational investment in C-band in the last couple of years, so we're very happy. We don't see anything right now on the horizon with spectrum, but obviously, we still have work to do with our C-band deployment.
Simon Flannery
And you're not ready to build 6G just yet?
Tony Skiadas
No, not at all.
Simon Flannery
Great. I know you're not going to give us ‘24 guidance, but perhaps just with the free cash flow, just give us the piece parts, what are the various levers that we should be thinking about?
Tony Skiadas
Sure. As you said, we're not going to guide on ‘24, but in terms of qualitative aspects, I would say on the tailwind side, we said we continue to drive the team towards an improving EBITDA profile. So that's the first thing I would point out. The second thing I would point out is around we just talked about CapEx and CapEx getting back down to BAU level of 17% to 17.5%, so that number is out there. And then also, we continue to strive for improvements in working capital.
And then, some of the headwinds that we would face next year on the interest side with the rising rate environment, as well as the capitalized interest that ceases now that we have full access to the C-band spectrum, so that's one aspect.
And then the other is on the tax front and under current, US tax law, the bonus depreciation provisions continue to phase out and we'll phase out in a more meaningful way next year. So we see a headwind with that and we'll see how that plays out. And then lastly, the one wild card is the level of upgrades and what that might do, we'll see how that plays out as well.
Simon Flannery
Okay. Yes, that makes sense. On the interest, I guess you've still maintained a fairly significant level of floating rate debt, And I know our economists are forecasting the Fed is going to start cutting rates next year, so you should benefit from that if indeed we do start to see the Fed coming back in.
Tony Skiadas
Hopefully, yes. Our fixed portfolio structure has been in place for a while. We're very comfortable with it. You saw us do $2.6 billion debt tender, over the summer in August and a good chunk of that, the vast majority was floating rate debt, so the goal here is to continue to delever, and that's probably the best defense against a rising rate environment.
Simon Flannery
And I think another thing that maybe isn't appreciated enough is the tenor of your debt and your peers' debt that over the years, you've taken out a lot of long term debt. So where do we stand on weighted average maturities right now?
Tony Skiadas
Yes, weighted average maturities is about 14 years and as we said, we've made good progress on delevering this year. And as we said on the earnings call, we don't see any obstacles to delevering next year. We continue to focus on generating strong cash flow, so we can delever in a meaningful way in 2024.
Simon Flannery
Okay. Yes, you won't have the C-band kind of –
Tony Skiadas
We don't have the spectrum clearing next year, so that's largely behind us. So as well as some of the other puts and takes I gave you.
Simon Flannery
So, you highlighted the sort of four priorities for capital allocation, perhaps just recap them and sure.
Tony Skiadas
Sure. So our first priority is to invest in the business and, you see us doing that with our C-band investments. Our second priority is, our commitment to the dividend. And back in September, the board approved a dividend increase for the 17th consecutive year, and we're very, very proud of the raising the dividend once again. And then our third capital allocation priority is to continue to have a strong balance sheet. And as I just mentioned, we continue to make good progress on delevering and getting back to our stated goals of 1.75 to 2 times leverage. And once we satisfy those three priorities, we said we would consider buybacks when the leverage metric gets down to 2.25 times. So we've made good progress this year and we continue to focus on delevering and making meaningful progress next year.
Simon Flannery
So we've got to wait a little while for buybacks to kick in. So have attractive free cash yield.
Tony Skiadas
We continue to generate strong free cash flow, and we continue to pay down debt. That's the goal.
Simon Flannery
Great. Well, we're almost out of time here. Perhaps just update us on lead sheet cables. It seems like a lot of the test results have come back, showing limited concern, but I'd love to get your latest on that.
Tony Skiadas
Sure. And just for background, I mean, we take -- as we said previously, we take the matter very seriously. We're going to -- we're doing a fact based and a science based approach. As we mentioned, between the Environmental Protection Agency, New York State and our own independent testing, all of that testing of our sites, concluded that the lead levels that were found were below the remediation levels that are acquired by each of the applicable states.
The other thing I would point out is we've done a review of our network and that review suggested that we have approximately 280,000 route miles of aerial cable. And of that, about approximately 3% is lead sheet cable. So that's a very small percentage of our copper network. We continue to work very proactively with the EPA and with other regulatory bodies on next steps. And as we said previously, we'll keep everybody updated as we learn more.
Simon Flannery
Great. Well, Tony, thanks so much for your time.
Tony Skiadas
Thank you so much, Simon.