Good morning, everyone. I'm Sebastiano Petty, and I cover the telecom, cable, and satellite space at JPMorgan. I'd like to welcome Chris Stansbury, CFO of Lumen Technologies. Chris, thanks for being here today.
Great to be here.
Chris, you joined Lumen in March 2022, just over three years ago, and alongside Kate, have instituted several strategic changes over that time while repositioning the company for growth. Take us through your three company-wide priorities, how some of those changes you've implemented have set the business up to return to long-term growth.
Yeah, I mean, the first would really be building the backbone for AI. When we arrived at Lumen, one of the things that attracted us was this tremendous asset base that was underutilized, which was the network. Not just the existing network, but the conduit and the availability to expand that network. With the explosion of AI, the data needs for the hyperscalers to train their models, and then ultimately, as large enterprise starts to consume it, there was a tremendous opportunity to monetize those assets. That really culminated in the $8.5 billion of deals that we signed last year. There are conversations that continue around that, as we've discussed in the past. That's really the first one. What ultimately changes the landscape and is very disruptive for the space is really the cloudification of telecom.
What that means, more simply, is the ability to deliver services digitally. Telecom, particularly in the enterprise space, has been known for a long time as being slow. It takes months to get services lit up. It is truck rolls. It is very slow. It is also infrastructure-heavy. Every service has its own infrastructure, its own set of ports. It is really difficult to scale. The economics of enterprise telecom have never been that attractive because it is really about putting in a new technology and then keeping customers on that technology for as long as you can, right? What that does is it really stifles innovation. Where we are today is in a position through an IT layer, a control center, where customers will be able to add services to what we call a fabric port. All that is, is it is one port for many services.
That's the innovation that we're bringing. The services that will come will vary greatly. It'll be everything from direct cloud on-ramps, which we can get into, to security services, to edge compute, et cetera, et cetera. It also allows us, frankly, to bring in services for others and lay those on top of those ports. It's a much more scalable model. It's a much more customer-friendly model where they can order and effectively provision on their own. Fewer truck rolls, faster to service, and very scalable. The last is really driving operational excellence. That's primarily around managing the big legacy base that we have. There are things that we can do, even for businesses that are in decline, to help manage those declines. Things like renewal motions and migration motions.
The reality is, is that declining base of revenue is actually in itself a tremendous asset because that's an installed base of customers that, as we start to light up new digital services, we can migrate them. Those are the big three. There really is a fourth, Sebastiano, which is the modernization and simplification efforts. Part of what unlocks our ability to do these things is finally integrating a set of networks that were never integrated. All across the enterprise telecom landscape, there's been a history of M&A. The efficiency that came from that was really just collapsing spans and layers. It was never a full IT integration. Today, Lumen runs four different networks that we plug together, and customers buy a little bit of each network as they're expanding their footprint. By the end of this year, it'll be one network.
That starts to unlock a lot of value as we go forward. That is the $1 billion of exit run rate savings that we expect by 2027. We are off to a great start there.
Great. I think that's a great intro. We'll cover a lot of those topics here in a moment. Starting with the PCF AI deals, no update on the remaining $3.5 billion tranche in the pipeline on the most recent earnings call. Just help us think about whether or not this is indicative of slower demand, given all the noise around cooling AI data center demand, or does it just speak to the complexity of the deals?
It really is the latter. I mean, the conversations that are taking place today are around new routes, where I think it's a real tell to what AI requires and what large enterprise will require. It's not so much about filling in gaps in the network. It's about taking nodes out of current pathways between city pairs. Today, we may be able to, we can get from city A to city B, but we might have to go through a third destination to get there. AI hates latency. That really is important when we talk about direct cloud connect. As enterprise starts to use AI to run their businesses, and that's starting to happen now on a much broader basis. You think about the amount of AI that's being used, for example, to write code. It's significant. Latency kills that.
These are complex deals because they're new routes, and it requires a lot of planning and alignment with the customers around that.
Great. I thought one of the bright spots from the first quarter call was the pretty significant EBITDA in the quarter. You reiterated the 2025 guide and expectations for continued margin expansion over time, just given the core connectivity business as that scales and the modernization and simplification efforts that you just touched upon. While you did note that there could be some upside to guidance, you also commented that you're watching the macro environment. I guess help us think about what's driving the strong start to EBITDA this year. What's coming in better than planned, I guess? Is it organic declines?
A few things. I mean, I would say that on the modernization and simplification, we're off to a great start. We've got to continue to push that, test it, and make sure that we're comfortable with what we're seeing on that side. Again, off to a great start. The other thing is, in the core business, we're seeing real improvements in churn. Some of that is because of the things that I think we've done as it relates to, again, back to that driving operational excellence, putting processes in place to try to create more customer stickiness so they're not leaving us. I think that's working. I also think there's some external factors. There's obviously been a real drive to return to office, particularly in places like public sector. That is driving needs to maintain services rather than disconnecting them.
I think that's helped as well. We have also seen really strong performance in wage growth. That's something that's obviously industry-wide, but we are a big player there. We should continue to outpace the growth of the market. That's a factor as well.
As you think about the cloud economics, has that also helped? Is that kind of early?
It's still early. Again, I think that's where, when we look at our economic modeling, we love the PCF deals. Again, it allows us to monetize an asset that has literally been dormant for 25 years since that conduit was put in the ground. It's given us really much-needed cash flow at a time in our transformation when it matters most. It's not how we save the company. The part that ultimately, I think, really propels our growth and our financial future is this cloudification of telecom. We're really at the early edges of that. As we start to talk more about things like cloud on-ramps, there's an enormous amount of interest. The questions that we're getting from enterprise is, how fast can I get it? We're obviously still building that out.
That is where we will start to see that growth impact us. Later this year, we are having an analyst day. It will be in September. We are going to unveil a lot more of that with the economic modeling around it in terms of when we expect that to happen. There is a lot going on inside the company, and we are really excited about it.
Great. I think cost-cutting program you talked about, maybe a good strong start there. You expect to achieve run rate cost savings of $250 million in- year, building to $1 billion exiting 2027. I guess it's tracking ahead of plan. Help remind us of some of the major efforts above and beyond the network side. There's also simplification efforts, right, if you're not mistaken?
Yeah. I mean, again, there's product simplification. If you think about some of the opening comments I made, where historically every service required its own set of technologies, that's complexity. That's cost. That's real estate. It's power. It's a whole bunch of things. Our ability to save on all of those buckets of cost as we simplify the product line and start to pivot to more of a digital portfolio, that starts to unlock a lot of that. There's a lot of IT backbone that drives all these different systems. It's the most tangled pot of spaghetti you've ever seen in your life. I think it would be true if you looked inside of any enterprise telecom provider. We're untangling it. In that, we find a lot. The thing that I think I'm most excited about is the rigor that is going into this.
I've been part of a lot of cost programs over the course of my career. I've never seen anything like this, where literally every project has got enormous rigor around what is driving the savings, what is the connectivity across projects, does one impact another positively or negatively. We did a review with the board this week of where we were on that timeline. The reality is the makeup of what we showed them a quarter or two ago versus the makeup of what's in there today continues to change because we continue to learn more. As we learn more, we find more. It's a really rewarding process. The team's just doing a tremendous job.
Great. You did touch on the better-than-expected disconnects and maybe some of the reasons why there. Do you think, you talked about maybe return to office is one thing, right? Maybe services are a little bit more sticky than they probably would have been otherwise. Do you think this pace or this level of improvement can persist? Just kind of given.
Cautiously optimistic. You never want to declare victory on something like that. If we look at those trends over the last number of quarters, they've continued to improve. That's encouraging. I think we need a little more time to make sure that that can stick. Again, even just engaging with a customer, because I got asked when I first came into this role, what's different in telecom? This is a truth, which is once you had a customer connected to a legacy service, the rule was to never speak to them again. If you spoke to them, they might wake up and turn it off. That is exactly the wrong mindset. Cannibalization on a flat business, you could argue, is that a good thing or a bad thing? If it's going to drive growth, it's a good thing.
Cannibalization on a business that's in decline is nothing but goodness. Because it's declining. It's going to zero. If you don't innovate and you don't create a pathway for customers to consume the next generation of products, you're just opening the door for everybody else to come after those customers and pick that up. We are very aggressive in our mindset about how we can create those migration pathways for customers, retain those customers, and ultimately upsell them with more new services. That's really where the fabric ports and the digitization of our portfolio will take us.
The public sector was very strong in the first quarter, growing 15% year- over- year, driven by large bookings in the quarter. I guess help us think about what's driving that strength and whether it's durable. I think on the call, you talked about waves, right? A big piece of that.
Yeah. There is a lot of activity going on on the selling side right now. If we look at just opportunity sets, I would say that the opportunity sets in the public sector space have grown over the last six months. That is a real positive for us. There were some installs that impacted revenue because of the state of California PCF deal that we announced a while ago. The reality is underlying that business, there is strength. The current administration is very focused on infrastructure improvements. I mean, I think every other day we are reading about issues at the FAA, for example, and the need to dramatically update those services. There is obviously a huge, huge effort for the U.S. to remain first in AI and investment around that. Lots of big infrastructure-type projects are being discussed as well.
All in all, I think the federal space is a very good space to be in right now. We'll see how that plays out over the coming quarters.
Real quick on that, lots of focus on DOGE's impact to the government and public sector trends across the underside enterprise space. Do you see that as, so I guess you see that as more of an opportunity at this point versus a threat?
Yeah. We really do. Again, the contracts that were signed kind of pre-DOGE, those installs continue. The bigger opportunity here, though, is that the things that we're working on to drive the use of AI, to make it easier to consume, to reduce latency, to reduce cost for large enterprise, and in this case, public sector, that's how we get to a better place. We can actually modernize the underlying infrastructure in the country, which is in deep need of investment, and at the same time, position ourselves to save an enormous amount of money. We feel we sit in a spot where the investment is needed because it's ultimately going to drive the efficiencies that come from AI. By the way, that's true in large enterprise as well, not just public sector.
This is where companies are starting to turn to very aggressively in how they start to light up AI.
You talked about, I guess on the forecast call, talked about some one-time headwinds related to the public sector this year driven to TDM transition. I guess that's now expected to come through in the second quarter, I think you talked about. Remind us, what's driving that? And could this perhaps be a longer-term opportunity?
I think it is a longer-term opportunity. I think it's linked to some of the things I just said on public sector, frankly. Look, if you look at the historical landscape in enterprise, right back to that core principle of never talk to a customer once you have them on a legacy service, we all buy and sell our networks to and from each other, everybody that's in the space, because none of us have footprint that can get from everywhere to everywhere. What historically has happened as those agreements and contracts near their end is there's a lot of re-rate activity. A couple of providers have been very, very aggressive around their re-rates to the point that, on a compound basis over a few-year period, we're talking 10,000-20,000% kind of increases. It's not good for the customer. It's definitely not customer-focused.
It's not good for the country because it's coming out of taxpayers' pockets. I think we're getting to the point where with our customers, we've come to an agreement on how we start to disconnect some of those services because it's not tenable anymore. In that, there's an opportunity around the modernization. I think we're well-positioned for that.
Great. Okay. On the call, sort of pivoting to waves here, on the call, you touched on lit demand coming from enterprises. I guess what's the latest, perhaps, on the pricing dynamics in that market? Has competition evolved in the last 12 months? Obviously, some of your competitors is a very big focus of this.
Yeah. Yeah. I actually love this question. I kind of want to run into it rather than away from it because this is the fundamental problem across the industry, but it's also our opportunity and why we're going to win. Every invention and new technology that has come into the enterprise space ultimately has faced commoditization and price pressure. I think for years, you and your peers would have appropriately said, hey, all this moves down into the right eventually. Everything converges to the mean. That's been true. It's been true because people have been playing this game that has failed, which is we're going to outscale those commodity pressures. Wrong. We are the poster child for that, given what we went through a couple of years ago around the debt because you can't outrun that problem.
If you look at some of our competitors who have invested in that space, they've got a leverage problem that is dramatically larger than ours was. They continue to double down on that strategy. That's great. Here's the problem. We can compete with that pricing. We have a very modern network. We're pulling a lot of fiber. We will continue to sell waves. Again, that's not how we're going to win. Here's how we win. If you think about those competitors, look at the metrics that they talk about today. They're talking about how many data centers they've connected. That's important. The data centers are important. The data centers, because there's been no innovation in the enterprise space, have become the de facto network.
The only way, as a customer, a large enterprise customer, you can get from your enterprise to Google, Microsoft, AWS, to consume cloud is through a data center paying really high cross-connect fees. What is a better way? What is a better value orientation for the customer? I can give you direct cloud connect from your enterprise through our network with much lower latency, which, oh, by the way, is an AI killer. We have addressed that. Much higher security because there are fewer hops. And you do not have to pay those cross-connect fees anymore. Yes, you have two choices. You can buy really cheap commoditized waves and then pay cross-connect fees. Or you can ride on Lumen's network and go direct cloud. It is about changing that value proposition and bringing new and better ways to customers that we think wins the day. That is where we are focused.
I guess this speaks to Kate's comments about perhaps dumb pipes on the call, I think. That's it?
That's it. I think there's been an assumption that dumb pipes is really all networking is. Therefore, it becomes a commodity. The reality is the underlying network itself can create a moat that we can build those digital services on top of. We think our network is well-positioned for that, not just because of its breadth, but there's been a lot of divestiture activity around things, for example, like wire centers. Those wire centers are where the equipment sits to give you direct cloud on-ramps. That real estate is really important real estate as you start to bring more services to customers. A lot of our competition has sold off those assets. The ability, even with investment, if they were to digitize, to compete is limited because the structure of their networks has limited their ability to do that.
We think there's a pivot here that's significant. That's what we're focused on.
Help us think about just, I guess, your competitiveness or the network. You did mention you are pulling a lot of fiber, continue to sell waves. Maybe any update in where you are in terms of network speeds on the lit side, timeline to 400?
Yeah. It is very clear that enterprise has shifted to 100 and really 400 gig waves. The fiber that we're pulling today is very expandable. We just ran a test. There was a press release around it where we did 1.2 TB over 1,800 mi. I mean, it's staggering. We are going to quickly see that continue to move as the equipment that powers that fiber continues to evolve. Speed is critical. Again, latency. There is a theme here. We are definitely seeing the trend and positioning ourselves for that explosion in growth as we go forward.
Are you seeing within the existing base migrations continue to move up towards those higher speeds?
Yes. I mean, if anything, I think we're seeing the lower speed waves start to stabilize and, frankly, decline. There's still some demand and some customers who will want those lower speed services. We're definitely seeing the pivot to higher speeds and the demands for that.
You kind of touched on this a moment ago. Kate was notably excited about Lumen's opportunity within the network ecosystem, direct fiber access, highlighted your recent partnership with Google there. I believe she said this is a $15 billion TAM and cited a huge amount of demand for that offering. Maybe you have touched on a lot of it. Just help us think about why you are best equipped to win in that market, I guess, this notion of total cost of ownership. I think it kind of came up on the call.
Yeah. We're really excited about it. This is disruption in a big way. It is estimated at a $15 billion kind of incremental TAM. It is important because this is a benefit not just to customers, but also to the cloud providers because the ability for a customer to ramp up more quickly and be consuming more of those products faster is enabled by these on-ramps. What positions us differently is, I mean, first, again, start with the network as a moat. A lot of super high-speed fiber, obviously, strong relationships with all the hyperscalers. We have not just the intra and intercity routes. Again, we have the physical real estate locations where the equipment can sit that allows us to connect directly to those clouds. There is also IP in there. I mean, we've talked previously about things like ExaSwitch, which is a routing technology.
Let's take it one step further. This really, I think, came out with the announcement with IBM last week where we also have another asset that was sitting there largely dormant, Edge Compute. The company invested heavily in Edge. They saw the opportunity for Edge before Kate and I arrived. In a very kind of enterprise telecom way, it was an inside-out rather than an outside-in approach, so an engineered solution that did not have a home of the customer. Now it does. The discussion that Kate had with Arvind at IBM Think was really that as customers are pulling data down, not just from one cloud, from many clouds and maybe their private cloud, they want to run AI applications across those data sets and then push the data back to where it needs to go.
Having the ability to pull that to the edge very quickly, use Lumen's Edge Compute network, do whatever work they need to do, and then push that data back, those are huge unlocks. Nobody else has that. They do not have the ExaSwitch capability. They do not have the direct cloud on-ramps. They do not have the infrastructure to support that. They do not have Edge Compute. This is not just a concept. It is real. Again, we still have to build it out. We have a significant advantage because of the assets that exist today.
Now, I guess, pivoting to the fiber, the separation of your mass markets business from the enterprise business, you did not comment on recent sale rumors during the 1Q call. Anything to share today, perhaps, with us? Maybe remind us why a separation makes sense, why is that in the best interest. While not necessarily touching on the deal specifically or the process, can you maybe touch on your notion of the core network versus last-mile considerations as you kind of think about a potential separation?
Yeah. Look, we've been very public now for a number of years that we've got two great businesses. And they both need investment. We could not be more proud of what the mass markets team has done with that fiber product. And they're killing it. They're doing really great work. That said, we have also said for years that at some point, the market would undergo consolidation. It needs to consolidate. The payback on investments like consumer fiber is a very long window. The only thing that makes sense to try to truncate that is consolidation. I think the other thing that really has played out is convergence. The bundle of fiber to the home with wireless is a real thing. We're never going to be a wireless company.
If you think about our right to win, if you will, we do not really have a right to win in that space. We have got a great asset that somebody else could acquire and, quite frankly, take much further because of convergence. At the same time, strategically, that would allow us to focus on all the things we have discussed so far in terms of expanding the disruption of enterprise telecom. The other big unlock here, when you think about it, is a fiber-only sale would be effectively today selling very little EBITDA because it is an investment mode. It would also be removing the obligation to spend almost $1 billion a year in CapEx. The free cash flow implications of a sale, not just on the initial closure, but on the ongoing investment requirements, free cash flow benefits are significant.
We have a strategic situation where convergence is real. The value of our asset is real. We have a right to win in enterprise. We can potentially find ourselves in a scenario where we dramatically improve free cash flow and fundamentally delever the company. I mean, if a transaction were to take place, we will be the most boring company at the credit conferences. I cannot wait for that moment. That is the opportunity. You touched on something super important. If you look at other transactions in the space, it has been across the board. We are going to take everything. We are going to take the copper footprint and the fiber footprint.
I think the only way that it works for us is if somebody's willing to buy only the fiber because that footprint that is all the long-haul fiber, the real estate that goes with that, the EBITDA that sits in consumer fiber, and quite frankly, sits on the business, the enterprise and wholesale side that rides on that is significant. The other deals that have taken place in the space, there's been a lot of EBITDA on that. That's not been the focus. That EBITDA has been attributed to the consumer fiber. It's not. In a lot of these deals, about half of that is EBITDA for the enterprise. That's valuable EBITDA to us. That's valuable real estate to us. That's valuable fiber long-haul for us to go expand our enterprise vision.
I think the only way it works is if it is fiber-only and we'll only do it if it's dramatically delivering and it significantly improves free cash flow.
As we think about that, does that entail then a, if you're just separating just the fiber but maintaining the network, I mean, is there wholesale kind of considerations or things like that that would probably come out of a deal?
I think it's complex. Again, I think we have to see where this goes. Certainly, given the complexity, I think there'd be kind of ongoing relationships to some extent. Again, we'll have to see how that plays out.
Great. I think in the first quarter, strong net adds once again in that business. The momentum is going, continues. I think it did not necessarily come up on the call. ARPU growth was quite strong there as well. I guess what has driven the reinvigoration, rejuvenation in that business over the last couple of quarters and months?
The team has been tremendously focused on driving not just the enablements, but also the penetration. I think they've done really great work. The other thing we said for a long time is that when we started these builds, we did not have the scale to really do marketing efficiently. Obviously, the bigger we get, that gets a little easier. Our ability to do more marketing has helped as well. Executionally, the team is just crushing it. Kate and I get weekly updates from all the businesses. That team, the leader of that team, has now come up with creative ways to tell us that they're on plan. He said, "It's another boring update." They will do something. Boring is good. Boring is good.
You talked about being the most boring company at the credit conference. As you think about, perhaps, on the other side of a transaction, help us think about your near-term priorities from a balance sheet perspective.
Yeah. We've been really clear. Look, when we did the debt deal, one of the things that we had to do to navigate through that was a super priority layer that for those that hold it, they love it. For those that don't hold it, they don't. We understand that. It is expensive. It is restrictive. That is the first place we'd go. I'd say that is our focus. Beyond that, there are tremendous opportunities. By the way, a lot of that sits in 2029 and 2030. I think as we go forward, we're starting to see more positive momentum. We would like to think that there are more positive upgrades coming. As those upgrades come, it allows us to refinance the structure that exists today. The goal really is to not just delever, but to also normalize the maturity curve and continue to simplify the structure.
While we do all those things, I think we'll see a dramatic reduction in our cost of capital and our interest expense. I think there's a lot of goodness there.
I think a great place to end it. Chris, thanks for joining us today. Thanks, everybody.
Thanks a lot.