Indonesia towers - Back to growth path

Telco NS EW RK 802 6th Aug, 2024

Indonesian towercos are on road to recovery with better organic growth

Over the past 2-3 years, organic growth has been slow for Indonesian towercos. This has mainly been due to two reasons: 1) spectrum refarming of 3G sites to 4G sites, and 2) site relocations from the ISAT IJ (Buy) and Hutch 3 Indonesia (H3I, unlisted) merger. We believe that Indonesian towercos have gone through the worst and are out of the woods. We expect tenancies, and therefore earnings, to improve for Indonesian towercos.

Recently, ISAT and TLKM IJ (Buy) posted their 1H24 results (Fig. 1 and 2, respectively). We note that both the operators no longer have any 3G BTS (base transceiver station). In the same manner, EXCL IJ (Buy) (which has not released its 1H24 results – Fig. 3) has only 377 3G BTS left (-64% q-q, -70% y-y). We expect EXCL to completely shut down its 3G network by end-2024.

Previously, operators could improve their network quality simply by refarming spectrums that were used for 3G with 4G, thereby increasing their 4G data capacities with or without very limited tower site additions. Given that operators no longer have (or have minimal) 3G BTS left, we can conclude that spectrum refarming of 3G sites to 4G sites is over, and operators will have to install new sites (both towers and fiber) to improve their 4G network quality. With 3G shutdown complete, we see evidence of a resurgence in organic growth within the tower sector, given that all the three operators had an all-time high number of BTS as of 1H24 (1Q24 for EXCL).

 

Fig. 1: TSEL BTS

TSEL1Q221H229M22FY221Q231H239M23FY231Q241H24Q-QY-Y
Total BTS247,930255,107260,815265,194258,932228,377233,052247,472257,349265,9043%16%
- 3G BTS only               51,439               50,011               49,993               49,632               41,444                        -                    -                    -  
- 4G BTS only             146,164             154,704             160,376             165,120             168,108             178,945             183,621             197,838         207,671         216,3784%21%
- 5G BTS only                   118                   193                   263                   284                   288                   420                   537                   654                710                7161%70%
Source: Company data, Verhana research

 

Fig. 2: ISAT BTS

 ISAT 1Q221H229M22FY221Q231H239M23FY231Q241H24q-q %y-y %
 BTS      206,481     198,567     187,669     180,123      198,757       215,486       221,425      229,521       235,119          240,4702%12%
 - 3G BTS only         37,520        26,013        15,103          3,121             425                  -                    -                    -                       -    
 - 4G / 5G      120,082     123,901     127,557     137,037      152,245       166,626       172,205      179,160       183,850          188,3212%13%
Source: Company data, Verdhana research

 

Fig. 3: EXCL BTS

EXCL1Q221H229M22FY221Q231H239M23FY231Q24q-q %y-y %
Total BTS137,588148,671147,467146,023148,768151,487158,225160,124163,1062%10%
BTS - 2G49,14956,00355,30453,13653,13653,13653,65354,07454,8231%3%
BTS - 3G4,5664,2211,989      1,2551,252      1,2261,1641,057377-64%-70%
BTS - 4G83,87388,44790,17491,63294,38097,125103,408104,993107,9063%14%
Source: Company data, Verdhana research

 

Fig. 4 shows that organic growth for tower companies have picked up in 2024 (we have used a conservative projection for TOWR IJ [Buy], which has not released its 1H24 numbers). Excluding MTEL IJ (Buy), which due to rent discounts in 2023 and a low base effect (whereby previously [before its IPO] non-Telkomsel (TSEL, unlisted) operators were excluded from renting most of its sites) has seen strong growth, both TOWR and TBIG IJ (Buy) have seen a recovery in organic growth1H24 additional sites and tenants for both companies are on track to outpace total additional sites and tenants in FY23In fact, TOWR and TBIG have seen more additional tower sites in 1H24 than they did in FY23. Our conservative 2Q24F tenancy growth for TOWR is due to the impact from IOH relocations/or cancellations, which have translated into lower tenancy growth vs growth in the number of towers. We believe going forward, this should (gradually) reverse (i.e., tenancy vs tower growth should be similar, ultimately resulting in higher co-locations when tenant growth exceeds tower adds).

 

Fig. 4: Tower sites and tenants

 Tower Sites 1Q222Q223Q224Q221Q232Q233Q234Q231Q242Q24QoQYoY2024 Adds2023 Adds 
 TBIG            20,871          21,265          21,553          21,870          21,880          22,026       22,175       22,357       22,838       23,2112%5%              854                      487
 TOWR           29,011          29,263          29,708          29,794          29,757          29,792       29,915       30,558       31,049       31,5402%6%              982                      764
 Mitratel           28,577          28,787          35,051          35,418          36,439          36,719       37,091       38,014       38,135       38,5811%5%              567                   2,596
 Total         101,815        102,671        109,668        110,440        111,436        111,899     112,543     114,291     115,384     116,6941%4%           2,403                   3,851
 Gross Tower Tenants  1Q22  2Q22  3Q22  4Q22  1Q23  2Q23  3Q23  4Q23  1Q24  2Q24 QoQYoY2024 Adds2023 Adds 
 TBIG           39,557          40,291          40,691          40,884          41,010          41,428       41,572       41,227       41,810       42,1771%2%              950                      343
 TOWR           54,580          54,716          55,029          53,967          53,820          53,771       54,249       54,284       54,170       54,5201%1%              236                      317
 Mitratel           45,917          46,716          53,192          54,824          56,135          57,536       58,522       60,227       60,608       61,3781%7%           1,151                   5,403
 Total         140,054        141,723        148,912        149,675        150,965        152,735     154,343     155,738     156,588     158,0751%3%           2,337                   6,063
Source: Company data, Verdhana research

 

We reiterate that the worst is over for TOWR, as Fig. 5 shows that revenues from ISAT have gradually recovered (+4% y-y in 1Q24). As ISAT’s site relocation ends, in order to improve network quality, ISAT will have to install new sites (both towers and fiber) going forward, in our view.

 

Fig. 5: Tower revenue split

Source: Company data, Verdhana research

 

TOWR remains our top pick in the Indonesia tower space, as it is the most profitable tower company in Indonesia (while also being the most inexpensive). The company has the lowest cost of funds among towercos, meaning that it can offer much more competitive pricing for mobile operators. It is also the only tower company in Indonesia with significant fiber assets, thereby providing the company with additional sources of growth. After all, we expect increasing data traffic for both mobile (MBB) and fixed (FBB) broadband services.

 

Fig. 6: FY24F EV/EBITDA x

Source: Company data, Verdhana research

 

Valuations and risk

TOWR – Our DCF-based TP of IDR1,780 for TOWR assumes a risk-free rate of 6.2%, a discount rate of 7.4% and a terminal growth rate of 2.5%. We assign a WACC of 9.0% to reflect rising interest rates. At our TP, the stock would trade at 13.4x 2024F EV/EBITDA. Downside risks include adverse macroeconomic developments, irrational competition leading to lower rental rates, lower-than-projected tower renewal rental rates, slower organic growth, higher opex trends and/or co-los, and/or difficulties in securing new sites to accommodate telecom operators' network expansions as well as consolidation of cellular operators.

TBIG – We derive our TP of IDR2,300 based on a DCF-based model, assuming a risk-free rate of 6.2%, cost of debt (after tax) of 5.3% (6.0% earlier), cost of equity of 14.4%, equity risk premium of 7.4%, WACC of 8.2% (8.7% earlier), a terminal growth rate of 2.5%, and beta of 1.1x. Downside risks include adverse macroeconomic developments, irrational competition leading to lower rental rates, lower-than-projected tower renewals, slower organic growth, higher opex trends and/or co-los, and/or difficulties in securing new sites to accommodate telecom operators' network expansions.

MTEL – Our TP of IDR820 is based on DCF, assuming a risk-free rate of 6.2%, equity risk premium of 7.44%, beta of 1.0x, and a terminal growth rate of 2.5%. At our TP, the implied FY24F EV/EBITDA is 11.2x (compared to 8.6x at the current price). Risks are adverse macroeconomic developments that would reduce operators’ network expansions (either build-to-suit / B2S or co-lo), irrational rental price competition, a higher tower rental churn rate, difficulties in securing new sites to accommodate B2S, and/or higher opex increases.

INVESTMENT RATINGS
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Indonesia Research Team


Nicholas Santoso (nicholas.santoso@verdhana.id),

Erwin Wijaya (erwin.wijaya@verdhana.id), and

Raymond Kosasih (raymond.kosasih@verdhana.id)