Time Warner Cable sees weaker second quarter
Time Warner Cable Inc, the second largest U.S. cable operator, said on Friday it is seeing slowing customer growth in the current quarter across all its products when compared with the first quarter.
Chief Executive Glenn Britt told investors at a conference that the rate at which it is adding subscribers in the current period is more similar to the weak growth it saw in the December quarter when its additions dropped off significantly.
The U.S. cable TV industry has been hurt by a combination of a weak economy and competition from satellite TV and phone companies.
Time Warner Cable's growth recovered last quarter, outperforming analyst expectations, helped by the publicity around a U.S. government mandated digital switch-over which was originally set for Feb. 17. But last month it warned that it had started to see slower customer additions again. Britt said this was still continuing.
He said that it is not yet clear if the New York cable company would see a renewed bounce in the current quarter even though the digital switch has been delayed till June 12.
He said its local advertising sales had stopped getting worse though he added, It really is bad.
Time Warner Cable, which was formally separated from Time Warner Inc (TWX.N) in March, borrowed more than $9 billion to help pay out a $10.9 billion dividend to shareholders.
Britt said the company would concentrate on using its growing free cash flow to pay down some of the debt by March to ensure that it retains investment grade status.
If the company achieves its target to reduce the debt to around 3.25 times its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, investors will likely focus on its capital allocation strategy including returning cash to shareholders through a dividend or share buybacks.
If we can't find some great investment to make we should figure out ways to give it back to shareholders, said Britt. But he declined to be comment on his preferred method of returning cash to investors.
(Reporting by Yinka Adegoke; Editing by Derek Caney)
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