'When we break down annual US wireless capex by carrier, it becomes clear that 2022 should be a record year (or close to it) for telecom providers,' wrote the financial analysts at Credit Suisse.

Mike Dano, Editorial Director, 5G & Mobile Strategies

January 28, 2022

6 Min Read
Amid 5G capex spike, tower cos diverge on strategy

All of the big 5G providers in the US – and even some small ones – have promised to spend heavily on their networks this year. And that's stoking plenty of excitement – but not necessarily conformity – among the nation's big cell tower owners.

"I can't think of another time in the history of our business where we've had four well-capitalized carriers with spectrum and the desire to deploy network. So we're certainly riding the wave of that," Crown Castle CEO Jay Brown said this week during his company's quarterly conference call, according to a Seeking Alpha transcript of the event.

But Crown Castle's plans to invest in the future differ significantly from rivals like American Tower and SBA Communications.

A spike in capex

Dish Network, Verizon, T-Mobile and AT&T have all spent billions of dollars on new spectrum licenses during the past year or so. And now all of them are planning to significantly increase spending on their 5G networks to put that spectrum to use.

Consider:

  • Verizon spent a total of $53 billion on spectrum licenses last year, and recently said it would spend up to $23.5 billion on maintaining and upgrading its network this year, up from around $20.3 billion last year.

  • AT&T spent a total of around $37 billion on spectrum licenses in the FCC's recent C-band auction last year and Auction 110 this year. This week the operator said it would raise its capital investments to a total of $24 billion in 2022, up from around $21.6 billion in 2021.

  • T-Mobile executives recently said the operator expects to shift some of the capital expenses (capex) it had planned to make in 2023 into 2022, in order to expand T-Mobile's network. The operator hasn't yet outlined its 2022 capex plans.

  • Finally, Dish spent $281 million on its open RAN 5G network buildout during its recent third quarter. The company expects to increase that spending through the first quarter of 2022.

All that capex spending isn't lost on cell tower executives like Crown Castle's Brown. After all, tower companies typically charge rent for each square foot of space operators use for their networking equipment, including the new equipment they'll need to put new spectrum licenses into action. "They've got a significant amount of spectrum to be deployed, and they have the capital to be able to deploy that," Brown said of the nation's top mobile network operators.

"We expect to continue seeing elevated domestic leasing activities through the balance of this year and well into 2022," SBA CEO Jeffrey Stoops said during his company's recent quarterly conference call, according to a Seeking Alpha transcript of the event.

Some financial analysts agree. "When we break down annual US wireless capex by carrier, it becomes clear that 2022 should be a record year (or close to it) for telecom providers," the financial analysts at Credit Suisse wrote in a recent note to investors.

Figure 2: US wireless capex is set to expand in 2022 Click here for a larger version of this image. Credit Suisse financial analysts expect capex in the US wireless industry to reach almost $40 billion across the nation's top mobile operators in 2022. The firm's estimates only cover wireless capex and not fiber spending. (Source: Credit Suisse, which used company data and Visible Alpha consensus estimates for its figures.)

Click here for a larger version of this image.
Credit Suisse financial analysts expect capex in the US wireless industry to reach almost $40 billion across the nation's top mobile operators in 2022. The firm's estimates only cover wireless capex and not fiber spending.
(Source: Credit Suisse, which used company data and Visible Alpha consensus estimates for its figures.)

Divergent strategies

However, that's where the agreement ends among tower company executives. Where they diverge is in how to invest the money they're making.

Specifically, one company (Crown Castle) is betting on further network densification via small cells in the US, another (American Tower) is betting on a broad shift to data centers, and still another (SBA) is looking toward international markets for further growth.

And each company is touting the success of its plans.

"I'm convinced that this period is one of the most important proof points for the small cell business model," Crown Castle's Brown said of his company's investment into small cells.

Although Crown Castle has come under fire for an early bet on small cells, Brown said the company's recent small cell deals with T-Mobile and Verizon validate its strategy. He said the company currently operates around 55,000 small cells but now has official orders for another 50,000 new ones.

However, the financial analysts at Raymond James pointed out that some of Crown Castle's small cell buildout deals stretch out for the next five years. As a result, "any major inflection in new [small cell] nodes deployed by carriers may still be a few years out," they argued in a recent note to investors.

As Crown Castle doubles down on small cells, American Tower is pursuing data centers. Just a few months ago, the company said it will spend $10.1 billion to buy CoreSite Realty, one of the nation's biggest operators of data centers. The move highlighted the tower company's belief in the potential importance of data centers in general to future telecommunications networks. Indeed, American Tower officials said the most important element of the transaction involves "the convergence of wireline and wireless networks amid accelerating global 5G deployments."

But that's not a strategy Crown Castle is interested in. "I don't see a need to own data centers. I don't see how it relates, frankly, to the edge data centers that will ultimately be needed as wireless networks ultimately expand. So I don't see owning or operating large data centers as a part of our business model, and it's frankly not something we're interested in doing," CEO Brown said this week.

Finally, SBA is essentially working to replicate the model it built in the US in other international markets. For example, CEO Stoops said the company is watching South American spectrum auctions with interest, hoping that operators there will eventually use that spectrum to upgrade to 4G and 5G in the same way they have in the US. SBA owns cell towers in South Africa and a wide range of other international countries.

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Mike Dano, Editorial Director, 5G & Mobile Strategies, Light Reading | @mikeddano

About the Author(s)

Mike Dano

Editorial Director, 5G & Mobile Strategies, Light Reading

Mike Dano is Light Reading's Editorial Director, 5G & Mobile Strategies. Mike can be reached at [email protected], @mikeddano or on LinkedIn.

Based in Denver, Mike has covered the wireless industry as a journalist for almost two decades, first at RCR Wireless News and then at FierceWireless and recalls once writing a story about the transition from black and white to color screens on cell phones.

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