In This Article:
-
Revenue: $266 million for Q1 2025, up 9% year-over-year.
-
Adjusted EBITDA: $111 million, up 23% year-over-year.
-
Adjusted EBITDA Margin: 42%.
-
Consolidated Cash and Restricted Cash: $565 million at quarter end.
-
GCI Leverage: 2.8 times as defined by its credit agreement.
-
GCI Credit Facility Undrawn Capacity: $292 million net of letters of credit.
-
Total Principal Amount of Debt: $3.7 billion at quarter end.
-
Capital Expenditures (CapEx): $49 million in Q1 2025, net of grant proceeds.
-
Expected Net CapEx for 2025: $250 million.
-
Decline in Wireless Subscribers: 400 wireless subs over the last year.
-
Decline in Cable Modem Customers: 5,000 cable modem customers over the last year.
Release Date: May 07, 2025
For the complete transcript of the earnings call, please refer to the full earnings call transcript.
Positive Points
-
Liberty Broadband Corp (NASDAQ:LBRDA) reported GCI's best quarter ever with revenue of $266 million and adjusted EBITDA of $111 million, up 9% and 23% respectively over the prior year.
-
The acquisition of Liberty Broadband by Charter was approved by shareholders and is expected to close by June 30, 2027, indicating a clear path forward for the company.
-
GCI successfully connected Bethel, the largest community in western Alaska, with fiber from Anchorage, providing transformational broadband services to the area.
-
GCI refinanced its senior credit facility, extending maturity to attractive rates, which provides good liquidity and no meaningful maturity until October 2028.
-
The company is preparing contingency plans for potential Supreme Court rulings on the Universal Service Fund, showing proactive risk management.
Negative Points
-
GCI experienced a decline of 400 wireless subscribers and 5,000 cable modem customers, primarily due to the termination of the ACP program in 2024.
-
A fiber break on a third-party network disrupted traffic for GCI's consumer and enterprise customers, with consumer services experiencing degraded service until repairs are completed.
-
The company faces competition from Starlink, which is impacting its market share in certain areas.
-
Capital expenditures are elevated in 2025 and expected to remain high in 2026 due to build-out requirements under the Alaska plan, impacting cash flow.
-
The company is still working through the SEC process for the GCI spinoff, which could delay strategic initiatives.
Q & A Highlights
Q: A number of cable companies are reimagining their strategies due to competitive intensity. How does GCI plan to address its strategy and pricing in the Alaskan market? Are there any changes in consumer behavior due to macroeconomic uncertainties? A: Ronald Duncan, President, CEO, and Founder, responded that GCI is experiencing a relatively flat market with some competition from Starlink. The company sees steady growth in consumer wireless services. GCI's strategy focuses heavily on enterprise services, which constitute the majority of its revenue. On the consumer front, GCI is evaluating its pricing and product mix to enhance customer retention, although it hasn't faced the same level of competition as companies in the lower 48 states.