CenturyTel to buy Embarq for $5.8 billion

By Grant Gross, IDG News Service |  Business, CenturyTel, Embarq Add a new comment

CenturyTel has reached an agreement to acquire rival U.S. telecommunications carrier Embarq for US$5.8 billion, creating a company that operates in 33 U.S. states.

The deal, announced Monday, will be a stock-for-stock transaction, and Embarq shareholders would own about 66 percent of the combined company after the deal closes. Embarq shareholders would receive a 36 percent premium on the company's stock price as of Friday.

The combined company would have revenue of more than $8.8 billion, with Embarq revenue more than double that of CenturyTel's so far this year.

In addition to the $5.8 billion price tag, CenturyTel will also assume $5.8 billion in Embarq debt. Earlier this month, news reports said Embarq had hired J.P. Morgan Chase to look for buyers for the company. Embarq's operating revenue through Sept. 30 was $4.6 billion, down from $4.8 billion for the first nine months of 2007.

The merger will allow the combined company to be more competitive with other telecom carriers, officials with the companies said during a conference call. In addition, the combined company will be able to save about $400 million a year within three years, the companies said.

The acquisition "makes great strategic sense," said Glen Post, CenturyTel's chairman and CEO. "It diversifies our revenues and provides us with expanded networks, expertise and financial resources to build long-term shareholder value."

Post will remain CEO of the combined company, with Embarq CEO Tom Gerke serving as executive vice chairman. Eight of the new company's 15 board members will come from CenturyTel, with the rest coming from Embarq. The company will be based in Monroe, Louisiana, where CenturyTel is now located, but it will maintain a significant presence in Overland Park, Kansas, Embarq's home base, Post said.

Gerke said he had "substantial enthusiasm" for the deal. "Together, we'll be much stronger than operating alone," he said.

CenturyTel now provides voice, broadband and television services to rural areas and small cities in 25 U.S. states. The company on Monday reported operating revenue of $650 million for the third quarter of 2008, down more than 8 percent from the same quarter in 2007. Net income was $82.8 million, down more than 23 percent from a year ago.

Embarq was spun off from Sprint Nextel about two years ago. It offers home phone and broadband service to customers in 18 states. The company on Monday reported operating revenue of $1.5 billion for the third quarter of 2008, down about 4 percent from the third quarter of 2007. Net income was up nearly 2 percent, to $160 million.

The combined company will have about 8 million telephone customers, 2 million broadband customers, and 400,000 video customers.

The deal should be good for the two companies, said Jeff Kagan, an independent telecom analyst.

"There has been a lot of talk recently about Embarq wanting to be acquired," he said. "However, the financial crisis that is on the front page every day made finding a partner difficult. That may have lowered the price Embarq hoped to get. CenturyTel saw an opportunity and jumped in to acquire Embarq. Timing was on CenturyTel's side in this deal."

The acquisition will need approval from both companies' stockholders and from federal and state regulators. The companies expect the deal to close in the second quarter of 2009.

ITworld LIVE

BusinessWhite Papers & Webcasts

Webcast On Demand

Delivery Management -- Extending Lifecycle Management

Date: Wednesday, June 20, 2012, 1:00 PM EDT Siloed organizations continue doing the wrong things and doing things wrong, leading to increased costs, project delays, lower quality, and time-to-market delays. Providing a collaborative platform where the whole organization can prioritize, share and manage deliveries with more transparency can help the organizations make more informed decisions at all levels, and greatly improve communications and traceability between teams. Hear from application lifecycle management experts how to increase delivery efficiency and effectiveness with a new approach to Delivery Management.

Sponsor: IBM

White Paper

Gartner: Magic Quadrant for Midrange and High-End Modular Disk Arrays

This Magic Quadrant represents vendors that sell into the end-user market with branded midrange and high-end modular disk array storage systems that support block-access protocols. Despite rather gloomy macroeconomic conditions worldwide and ongoing geopolitical unrest in the Middle East, the midrange and high-end modular disk array storage market grew 8.2% from 3Q10 through 2Q11, compared with the same period the year before. Propelled by technological innovation and enhanced scalability, this continued growth in vendor revenue supports the observation that IT executives are willing to invest in modern midrange and high-end modular disk storage systems to improve operational efficiency, to support deployments of virtualized IT infrastructures, and to address the impact of unabated terabyte growth.Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.

White Paper

Seven Priorities for Integrated Network Management - How HP Intelligent Management Center Delivers an Enterprise-class Solution

This white paper describes the major requirements for network management solutions to help the organizations become more profitable, efficient and reliable.Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.

Webcast On Demand

Operational Analytics - Changing the Competitive Dynamics of the Business

Date/Time: June 5, 2012, 11:00 a.m., EDT, 4:00 p.m. BST / 3:00 p.m. UTC Please join us for this webcast, as Dr. Barry Devlin, Founder and Principal, 9sight Consulting, describes what operational analytics can do for your business and reviews an architectural approach that will enable you to make it a reality.

Sponsor: IBM

White Paper

The Total Economic Impact of the HP 3PAR Storage

Forrester Research provides an analysis of four HP 3PAR storage customer implementations to quantify the efficiency and cost savings achieved over legacy storage platforms. On average, HP 3PAR storage customers achieved a 10.4 month payback period with a 55 % ROI over a 3-year evaluation period and a significant reduction in CapEx and OpEx over that same period as a result of thin provisioning, maintenance costs avoided and labor productivity gains.Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.

See more White Papers | Webcasts

Ask a question

Ask a Question