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América Móvil - Q3 2023

October 18, 2023

Transcript

Operator (participant)

Good morning. My name is Daisy, and I'll be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the América Móvil Third Quarter 2023 Conference Call and Webcast. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press Star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press Star followed by two. Thank you. Now, I will turn the call over to Ms. Daniela Lecuona. To begin, Head of Investor Relations, please go ahead.

Daniela Lecuona (Head of IR)

Thank you so much. Good morning, everyone. We're very happy to host this call this morning to discuss our third quarter financial and operating results. We have in the room Mr. Daniel Hajj, our CEO, Mr. Carlos García Moreno, CFO, and Mr. Oscar Von Hauske, COO.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Hi, good morning. Thank you, Daniela. Thank you for being in this third quarter financial and operating report, and Carlos is gonna make a summary of the results.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Okay. Thank you, Daniel. Good morning, everyone. Well, buoyed by strong US economic data, particularly on employment levels and recently also on consumer spending and lingering inflation concerns, 10-year dollar interest rates shot up by approximately 80 basis points over a 10-week span in the third quarter to 4.6% at the end of September, driving another bout of dollar strengthening. By the end of the quarter, there was practically no hope that interest rates would decline in the latter part of the year, and there was instead preoccupation that the Fed was still not done raising interest rates. As you can see in the market, the rates have continued to go up till today, and they are about to, you know, close to reaching 5% on the 10-year tenor.

We added nearly 3 million wireless subscribers in the third quarter, of which 2 million were postpaid clients, 1.2 million in Brazil, 460,000 in Austria, which includes IoT devices from A1 Digital, 104,000 from Colombia, and 93,000 from Mexico. On our prepaid platform, we had net additions of 950,000 clients during the period. Eastern Europe led with 210,000 clients, followed by Brazil with 193,000, Colombia with 173,000, Argentina with 93,000, and Mexico with 81,000. In the Fixed Line segment, we gained 223,000 broadband accesses, with 65,000 each from Argentina and Brazil. Voice lines and Pay-TV units decreased by 160,000 and 58,000, respectively.

At the end of September, our subscriber base totaled 306 million wireless subscribers, of which 119 million were postpaid clients. Additionally, we have 73 million fixed line RGUs, which includes 32 million broadband accesses, 13 million Pay-TV clients, and 29 million landlines. Year-on-year, our postpaid base increased 3.7%, prepaid at 0.7%, and fixed broadband access 3.2%, with fixed voice lines falling 2.6%, as you can see in this line. Third quarter revenue, which two hundred and four billion pesos, a 3.3% year-on-year reduction in Mexican peso terms, with service revenue falling 4.3%.

As has been the case throughout several quarters, these figures reflect the appreciation of the Mexican peso versus all other currencies in our regions of operations, reducing the Mexican peso value of our international revenue. At constant exchange rates, service revenue growth expanded 3.8% and EBITDA 5%, which reflects, among other things, the effect of tower sales in Mexico and Peru that took place in the period and one-off events in Austria. Correcting for these, adjusted EBITDA was up 3.9%, just about the same rate as service revenue, as you can see on this slide. On the fixed line platform, service revenue remained on trend, increasing 2.2% year-on-year, having risen from the 0.2% pacing in the second half of last year, whereas on the mobile platform, it grew 4.8%.

Brazil attained a positive fixed line service revenue growth of 0.1%. In Mexico and Colombia, fixed-line revenue decelerated, remaining stable in Austria and surging in Eastern Europe to 31% and in Central America to 5%. In both cases, it was the most rapid pace in at least one year. The slowdown in Mexico from 5.6% to 3.6% had to do with corporate network services. In fact, broadband revenue actually accelerated to 8.2%, which is its best showing in a decade. In several countries, Brazil, Peru, Colombia, and Central America, we had among the highest, if not the highest, net broadband addition in the past three years.

Others, including Mexico, Austria, Peru, and Central America, posted their most rapid growth and revenue growth in at least one year, as can be seen in the chart, with Brazil and Eastern Europe sustaining strong growth rates. This led to our consolidated broadband revenue expanding at the fastest rate in more than two years, which was 6.4%. On the mobile platform, revenue growth decelerated in Mexico from 6.4% to 4.6%, picked up in Central America to 9.5% from 8.8%, with Brazil adjusting to a normal pace after a hump. following the incorporation of all mobile clients in the second quarter of 2022. This is something that you can see here on the slide.

But going back to fixed, it's important to note that revenue from corporate network services has been gaining share within our revenue base. This quarter, it became the second most important revenue line within the fixed line platform after broadband services, with the consolidated view rising 6.5%. It already accounts for 19% of fixed line services overall, with this year reaching 39% in Austria, 30% in Eastern Europe, and 25% in Mexico. Our operating profit stood at MXN 4.2 billion in the quarter, a 6.7% year-on-year reduction in Mexican peso terms, which partly stems from the EBITDA decline mentioned before, but also from a 17% increase in depreciation of rights of use associated with our leases.

Most of this effect had to do with successful renegotiation a year before, or certain lease agreements in Brazil that reduced Claro's obligations to our tower company. Our comprehensive financing cost overall, 30 billion pesos, including an MXN 8.8 billion peso net interest expense, which was 2.9% lower than that registered a year before. On the other financial expenses, there is a MXN 4.7 billion pesos charge associated with the partial impairment of our stake in Claro Chile, our joint venture with Liberty Latin America. Pursuant to the fair value of the new JV, which on the IFRS rules, had to be defined within a year after its closing.

Finally, our comprehensive financing costs also include a MXN 12 billion foreign exchange loss in this quarter, resulting principally from a 3.8% depreciation of the Mexican peso versus the dollar in the third quarter. Net income amounted to MXN 2 billion. It was equivalent to MXN 0.03 per share or $0.04 per ADR. Year to date, our net income total MXN 58 billion. Through September, our net income total MXN 58 billion, 2.9% lower than that registered a year before. Capital expenditures came in at MXN 100 billion in the 9 months to September, where our distributions to shareholders reached MXN 34 billion. This includes share buybacks in the amount of MXN 7.7 billion and dividends of MXN 16 billion, and were partly funded by MXN 3.7 billion in dividend income.

To cover all of these expenditures, but also labor obligations in the amount of MXN 10 billion, we resorted to our operating cash flow, MXN 114 billion, and to net financing in the amount of MXN 12 billion in the quarter, in the period, with MXN 5 billion coming in, mostly from the payment of an earn-out on the sale of TracFone. As of September, our net debt excluding leases total MXN 33.9 billion and was equivalent to 1.4 times LTM EBITDA. As you can see on the chart, it was fairly flat ratio. It was 8 billion pesos higher than at the end of December. Okay, well, thank you. And I will probably flow back to Daniel for the Q&A session. Thank you, Carlos.

We can start.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. As a reminder, if anyone would like to register a question, please press Star followed by one on your telephone keypad. When it's your turn to ask a question, please ensure you are unmuted locally, and if you would like to withdraw your question, please press Star followed by two. So that's Star followed by one on your telephone keypad to register a question. Our first question today comes from Vitor Tomita from Goldman Sachs. Vitor, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Vitor Tomita (VP of Equity Research)

Hello, good morning, all, and thanks for taking our questions. Two questions from our side. The first one is on capital allocation. Given your healthy leverage position and cash flows, even considering your increased CapEx budget, do you have any plans to, in any way, further increase cash deployments? So maybe by further increasing CapEx on fiber or by further increasing equity stakes in specific businesses, as you did in Austria, or by carrying out further M&A, or even by increasing buybacks following the recent decline in share prices and seeing that you already seem to have increased buybacks a bit on the third quarter. The second question from our side would be on corporate networks. You highlighted that there was an increase in relevance of corporate networks in your global revenue mix.

Could you give us a bit more color on which types of corporate offerings have been driving that growth, and on what their economics and margin profile is like compared to the more traditional consumer-focused telecom offerings? Thank you very much.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Thank you. Thank you, Vitor. Well, on the allocation of resources, there's really nothing we're looking at on the M&A front, as we have mentioned before. I think we are not looking at increasing anything more our CapEx, certainly this year. I think we will make some comments later regarding our budget for next year. But as regards to the distributions, as you point out, we have been accelerating our buybacks. I've been reiterating on various calls that our free cash flow is very cyclical, and we basically tend to get most of our free cash flow in the last 3-4 months of the year.

So that's typically when we would want to increase our share buybacks. If you look at the distribution or share buyback so far this year, we spent about $100 million in the first quarter, $60 million in the second quarter, $272 million in the third quarter. And so far, these months, we've increased an additional $70 million. So basically, $350 million between the end of June and then until so far in October, no? So, and still to go. Obviously, in addition to this, we have already paid $100 million of dividends, and we have another payment of the same magnitude that we will be affecting in the middle of November.

So again, we can say something on CapEx budget for next year.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

What we discuss and we have been saying in the last year is that we have a budget of $24 billion for three years. That's 2023, 2022, 2023, and 2024. And so we are on that budget. We increase a little bit the CapEx this year. We haven't finished our budget for next year, but I think we are gonna accomplish with that. So, what we increased this year, maybe we're gonna reduce that the next year. So that's more or less what we're thinking. We don't have anything extra on CapEx for 2024. So we are on budget, and we think we can do that, no? On the corporate networks, I think that's a segment that we're doing well. We're increasing in all the countries.

Óscar can talk a little bit about what are the new products and the products. What we're looking is to have and to manage the networks of the customers, and that's more or less what we're aiming for, and Óscar can tell you a little bit more on that.

Oscar Von Hauske (COO)

Yeah. Thank you, Daniel. As you say, the first step is how do we manage the network of the customers? And there is the SD-WAN technology that allow us to do this in a easiest way. So when we move the customer to SD-WAN, we're trying to bring security, cloud services, as well, bundle in the services. And as well, we are offering what we call horizontal solutions. We are selling data lake as a services. We are selling AI as a services in our cloud. We develop what we call cloud broker, that we are agnostic at the type of cloud that the customer wants. If the customer want a hyperscaler or one our cloud, they have a dashboard that could manage both clouds in a easy way.

As well, we are getting into the private wireless network. I'm talking about vertical solutions for mining, for retail, for manufacturing, and has been well received in the market. We've, we see a big opportunity in this, in this segment because improves the efficiency of the customers, brings productivity. You know, we are all on digital transformation, and these products support that evolution. That's why we see that market has a very good trend in the near future.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

So overall, in summary, we're not offering only the classic connectivity products; that is, broadband or fixed or wireless or prepaid or postpaid or-

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Right.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

We're offering all these new services to all the B2B customers.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Another is that we are fully convergent, so in our offering, we offer as well mobile and fixed all together to the customers.

Vitor Tomita (VP of Equity Research)

Very clear. Thank you very much.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Thank you.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Our next question is from Eduardo Rebelo from UBS. Eduardo, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Eduardo Rebelo (Analyst)

Hi, everyone. Thank you very much for taking our question. I would like to know if you could provide an update on Mexican regulatory environment, discuss the preponderance revision, and there is an additional regulatory risk for AMX, particularly on the concession, given what happened in airports. And another one, if you could discuss also the spectrum prices, if you see any additional risk there, too. Thank you very much.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Well, on the regulatory side, I think, to make a little history, we have been having 10 years of having these regulatory measures. 10, 10 years, accomplish all the measures that the IFETEL has been putting us. And not too much to say, only I think that we expect and we think that these regulatory measures should relax in the future. At the end of the day, what the markets need is investment, and what the customer wants is quality, price, good coverage, that you attend the customer in a good way. So all these things, you cannot put measures on that. So that's what is happening in the last 10 years.

And, I think, in Mexico, in a lot of our products, we have the preference of our customers, and, we hope that the IFETEL take a very deep revision on what is happening on the market and relax the measures that we have. So that's more or less, we don't know nothing more on that, but we hope that, we have that.

Eduardo Rebelo (Analyst)

Sure. That's clear. Thank you very much.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Our next question is from Walter Piecyk from LightShed. Walter, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Walter Piecyk (Partner and Analyst)

Thanks. Hey, Daniel. And if I look at Mexico, obviously you had good unit growth, and ARPU was also very strong in 2021 and 2022. Obviously, maybe somehow the pandemic had some impact on that, but this quarter there shows a little moderation there. Is that just kind of coming out of the pandemic, or is there economic issues that we need to think about in terms of Mexico? Obviously, ARPU is still growing, and service revenue is still growing, wireless service revenue specifically. I'm just curious, kind of what are your thoughts on some of the moderation of that growth and how we should think about that going in the future quarters?

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Well, I think what you're saying is right. It's moderation. We're still growing our revenues in Mexico. I think the moderation is more on the prepaid than on the postpaid. So maybe it has to be a little bit with this acceleration of the economy. I don't know. We don't know exactly what we need, but I can tell you that we have a very good 5G network, good coverage. We're working very hard on a control cost platform all around. And I think also could be a little bit on the market, no? Our competitors could be doing some promotions. So I still feel very comfortable on what we're doing in the mobile products.

By far, we have the best perception to the customers in terms of coverage, quality, and price, attention, digitalization. So all these things will help us a lot on how the customer is taking the decision. As I said, the moderation that we're having is more on the prepaid side than on the postpaid side. So that's what we have been seeing, no? On the prepaid side, yeah, Carlos-

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

And just to add something there, Walter. It's the ARPU growth in Mexico was 1.5%, year-over-year.

Walter Piecyk (Partner and Analyst)

Mm-hmm.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

But if you look at postpaid, it was, it was actually stronger. It was at 3.1%. So this is what Daniel said, the moderation was a little bit more on the prepaid side, and the postpaid, it remains quite firm, not very different from what we have seen in previous quarters.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

And you said also-

Walter Piecyk (Partner and Analyst)

And you think that-

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

And, uh-

Walter Piecyk (Partner and Analyst)

Daniel, apologies. You said that with that—you think if you just looked at prepaid, you think that might be more the promotions of the competitors may be impacting prepaid than necessarily some sign of, you know, the economy-

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yes

Walter Piecyk (Partner and Analyst)

reducing the usage of some of those? Yep.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yes, I think so. That's, that's what I think.

Walter Piecyk (Partner and Analyst)

Okay.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yes. Mm-hmm.

Walter Piecyk (Partner and Analyst)

Okay. Just a similar question. If you look at the equipment revenue line, that actually looked stronger. Meaning, like, if you do the math on it, it looks like maybe people in Mexico are buying more expensive phones. Is there anything you can tell? I mean, because that's- that would suggest that the economy is pretty good, that people are buying or upgrading phones. Just curious on any thoughts you have on your equipment revenue line and why that might show-

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yeah, I think on the equipment revenue-

Walter Piecyk (Partner and Analyst)

—you know, some decent growth?

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yeah, I think on the equipment revenue, we're doing good. What is happening is not only Telcel, the ones, I think, we have been having a lot of imports of handsets, and this has been decelerating a little bit. Some brands does not like, like, let's say Samsung does not like that Samsung phones will come not through their office in Mexico, through other countries. So I think that's a little bit on that, and I think they are cutting and reducing these imports. So that's why you are seeing that there is more sales on equipment this month.

Walter Piecyk (Partner and Analyst)

Got it. Just one final question. There's a line on the cash flow statement that I believe you call payments of lease liabilities. This is where some of the payments, I think, primarily to tower companies, exist. I'm just curious how we should think about that going forward. Are there normal escalators that should take that. For this quarter, I think the number was MXN 9.7 billion. I'm just curious if that's that line item on the cash flow statement, is that something that should grow at a similar rate that it has in recent years? Which I think is about 10% or is there any opportunity to moderate as you've kind of completed a lot of the 5G deployment in a lot of these markets?

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yeah, I think you are right. I don't think in 5G we're gonna need the same amount of towers that we need in 3G or 4G. The new towers should be more on coverage than on capacity, and that's more or less what we have been seeing. So I think that will moderate as the in the future.

Walter Piecyk (Partner and Analyst)

Great. Thank you very much.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Thank you. Thanks.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Our next question today comes from Marcelo Santos, from JP Morgan. Marcelo, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Marcelo Santos (Analyst)

Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I have two. The first question is about Colombia. If you could please comment on the competitive environment on the fixed market. We saw that you started adding broadband subscribers again, so it was a very strong result, so a comment there would be very helpful. And the second question is, if you could provide us an update on the joint venture with Liberty Latin America and Chile, and the outlook on, on potential capital injections that operation might need. Thank you very much.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yes, yeah, as you mentioned, in Colombia, broadband, on the third quarter, we did pretty good. And what we did is that we really changed the way that we go to the market. We did a renegotiation focus in the areas that we have a lot of competition. So we start winning share on both areas. We upgrade the network, and as you know, we are building fiber as well in Colombia. So we believe the third quarter is the trend that we are gonna see in the next quarters in fixed broadband. And as well, we improve all the quality of services to the customers, time to deliver, time to repair.

So we really focus on the third quarter to really change all the structure to go to market for fixed broadband in Colombia. And on Chile, well, I think Chile is a very important market for us. And we have a program, a synergy program, since we get together with Liberty, and we're doing well. We're advancing our synergies and our revenues and sales are going much better. So we think that we're gonna really focus on creating value on Chile, and that's more or less, we are still think that Liberty will be our partner in the future. We hope so. It's a very good partner. And we're focusing to really get everything, all the cost control, reducing expenses, and moving in the market.

We're also putting more coverage, better quality, and, we're really focusing in making Chile a much stronger company for the future. So that's more or less what we're doing there.

Marcelo Santos (Analyst)

So, could we say that it's on track? You think it's on track or it's above expectations versus what you hoped?

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

No, I think we're on track. We don't have a synergy program for 6 months. I think we have a synergy program for 2 years, very strong, very focused, and we're on track, and we're doing very well. We are happy the way the company is evolving. We're growing. We have been losing some customers in peaks. In the last quarter, we're growing the customers. So we are improving and improving and improving every day.

Marcelo Santos (Analyst)

Great. Thank you very much.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Our next question is from John Ho, from Mizuho. John, please go ahead. Your line is open.

John Ho (Analyst)

Hey, good morning, and thank you for taking my question. Just to get further clarification from the previous question regarding the joint venture in Chile, has América Móvil contributed any more capital during third quarter for the Chile operations? And then, one thing to note, the joint venture partner, Liberty, did admit on its 2Q call that América Móvil has been making most of the contributions to date. Are we to expect that going forward? And more from the perspective of América Móvil's plans, you know, right now the I know you mentioned in that your previous statements, sir, that you said the JV is 50/50, and you like Liberty, but considering América Móvil has been making most of the contributions and what you've been doing, would you look to assume control in the future?

Would that be a possibility? And lastly, would it be possible to get the Chilean JV's management, maybe increase communication regarding what's going on there? Because, since for bondholders, since the JV has been closed last October, you know, communication's been very, you know, low, so we'd like to see an increase if we can get it, if possible. Thank you.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Well, thank you. Let me begin with the last part of your comment or question. I think we have heard some of these comments to the effect that maybe the company should improve a little bit its visibility that it provides to the market. We are already talking to the partners so that together we can see to it that from here on we can provide a bit more color than is strictly necessary from the perspective of the guidelines of the bonds. But we can provide a bit more color on the operations themselves, okay?

So I think we will be tending to your comments and those of other investors to make sure that you have a clearer view of the developments of the Chilean operation, okay? Which I think we-

John Ho (Analyst)

We would appreciate that, and I thank you for that.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Yeah. Yeah. So, I would expect that probably before the end of this month, we can provide the financial statements for the through September. And that, in the context of this release, that we can provide also more color, more information on the actual operations. In terms of the... I think what it's very important, what Daniel mentioned to the effect that, you know, this is a 50/50 joint venture, and the partners needed to agree on a business plan, okay? Which we did at the beginning of the year. The business plan, as he mentioned, is not for a year, it's a medium-term business plan. And we are focused on executing on it.

I think the execution has been fine. As Daniel mentioned, you know, on the operational side, it's very clear. We are beginning to get some of the synergies that we expected. First quarter, or even first half of the year, there were some one-offs because of when you get these companies together, there's always one-off expenses. There's people that leave the company, et cetera. But we don't have many, most of that... I mean, most of that is really behind us. So I'd say that in agreeing a business plan, we have also agreed on what it takes to execute this business plan, and that requires also some funding.

So we have put in place the appropriate mechanism that should see to it that the company gets the funding that it needs in the time that it's required. That's basically what we have, okay? At this time, it's only mechanism provide for this financing throughout the period. At some point, you know, at this point, have not envisioned any change in stakeholdings, and there have not been any change as of today on any of the stakeholdings. So that's all what we can say on this matter.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

One more thing on Chile. I think we have—I haven't mentioned that, but we're very happy in América Móvil with the management that we have there. As Carlos said, we have to structure and take out some people and put other ones, but right now we feel that the management that we have there is in place, working and focusing on executing that. So that's also something that we are happy on that, no?

John Ho (Analyst)

Has there been any other further capital in the 3Q results for América Móvil to VTR? I mean, to the joint venture?

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

No, there hasn't been any capital raise at the level of VTR, so there hasn't been any equity provided. And as I said, and I don't think we can go beyond that, I think there's been financing or mechanisms that have been put in place to ensure that the company gets the funding it's required to execute its business plan. That's it. At this point, we're not envisioning any capital contributions. That's that.

John Ho (Analyst)

Okay. Thank you.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Thank you.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Thank you.

Thank you. Our next question is from Soomit Datta, from New Street Research. Soomit, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Soomit Datta (Partner and Analyst)

Yeah. Hi. Hi, guys, a couple from me, please. One, just on the group prospects for service revenue and in EBITDA, your medium-term guidance or your 2022, 2024 guidance has seen EBITDA running ahead of service revenues. The guide, I think, is 4%-6% versus 2.5%-4%. So service revenues and EBITDA run rate is similar today. I just wondered, do you still see the opportunity essentially for margin expansion? Do you see the opportunity for EBITDA run rate to come in ahead of service revenues as we look forward? That's the first question, please. And then the second one, if I could, on Mexico. I think you have been resistant to increasing prices over the last few quarters.

I just wondered how you're looking into 2024. Do you still think that's the right strategy, or is there room to consider lifting prices, or do market conditions not allow for that? Thank you very much.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

On the first question, I think, the revenues that we're having, the service revenues that we're having, are running, as Carlos says, 3.9%, 3.8%, and the EBITDA is going and increasing 3.9%, taking all that one-offs and everything. So I think we have a very good platform. We're very focused on controlling costs and expenses. In every country, it's a little bit different. In every country, you have managed to increase a little bit and pass through the inflation to some prices to some segments, and other ones, no. We can't, we haven't done that, done that. But in every country, we have a big platform controlling costs, controlling expenses, and digitalize more, reducing people.

We have a very focused controlling cost strategy on the company. So that's something on that. In countries where competition allow us to do that, then we can pass through a little bit on that. The second question, can you repeat that?

Soomit Datta (Partner and Analyst)

It was a question on Mexico and on a similar theme, price increases. I just wondered how you're looking at the outlook for potential price increases. On the fixed side, we know your competitors have moved up prices, and you have not. I just wondered, broadly across wireless and fixed, do you see the opportunity to increase prices at all in Mexico?

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Well, we still don't know. At this time, we are not thinking to increase prices at this moment, and we are focusing. We're putting a lot of fiber. I think we have 16 million home passes on fiber and giving to all our customers the chance to move from copper to fiber and have new customers with fiber. So we are focusing. 76%, yeah. We have 76% of our customers connected with fiber, and we're gonna follow that. So, I don't know, and I cannot tell you what we're gonna do in 2024, but, until the end of this year, we haven't had any.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Okay. At least for the fixed. We haven't increased any prices all this year.

Soomit Datta (Partner and Analyst)

Okay, thank you.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Thank you. Another question? Hello?

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Hi, Daisy, can you hear us?

Operator (participant)

Apologies, I was muted. We have a question from César Medina from Morgan Stanley. César, please go ahead. Your line is open.

César Medina (Analyst)

Great. Thank you so much for taking my question. I have two related questions. The first one is, you know, what is your read on the stock performance today after the printing, down 6%? And then related to that, if I hear all the commentary around, it seems the following: service revenue is going well, you have room for margin expansion, CapEx is on a positive trend, it's not lower. So is there room to increase or like to start a discussion of increasing shareholder remuneration, given that two-year yields are like north of 5%? Thank you.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Okay, César, well, you're asking for a question of what we think about.

César Medina (Analyst)

Yes.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

I'll tell you what I think. I think, you know, there's a lot of stress today in the market. As you see, 10-year interest rates have been climbing sharply the last day, the last couple of days. They are now, last time I saw, at 4.90, that's the highest level they've been in, you know, since all of these rates for which since rates started to rise. So they are now close to 5%. This, in spite of the Fed having been saying that they probably didn't need to raise rates once again, because the market was doing the work for them. So, you know, my read is that there's a lot of stress in the market.

That means that it's a risk off, and when people want to go to the risk, often they sell but what is liquid. And I don't think that, you know, sometimes maybe they're more utilized as a proxy for other things, given the liquidity. That's my take. I think it has less to do with the actual results. It has more to do with the move to the risk, given stress in the market.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yeah, and in my view, I think, as Carlos says, he gives his view. My view is that the results were consistent with what the market thinks, and I think the fundamentals are okay, and the business in América Móvil is growing and it's okay. So, that's my view on that.

César Medina (Analyst)

No, no, no, I'm—I'm with you. So this is why I was just flagging, you know. If you look at margin trends, revenue trends, is there scope for you to evaluate, perhaps increase in shareholder remuneration?

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yeah. So again, that takes us back to one of the prior questions that we were saying. We typically tend to pace with share buybacks with materializes mostly the last third of the year. I had already said that since July, we have had a significant deployment of resources in share buybacks. We have had since end of June till today, $350 million in share buybacks, and we're still not done. And obviously, we still have another big payment of dividends, $800 million or less than we—in U.S., that will be made in November.

But certainly, share buybacks, you know, we can continue with them because this is the time when we can get the funding leverages where we want it to be, and the cash flow is coming in as we expect it to.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Thank you.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Our next question is from Andrés Ortiz, from BTG. Andrés, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Andrés Ortiz (Analyst)

Hello, thank you for taking my question. I would like to ask question related to margins in Mexico. Last year, we saw good expansion throughout the year, and this year has been quite volatile, with the first quarter posting a margin, quite a large margin contraction and happening again this quarter. So what's your view on the sustainable level of margins in Mexico going forward? That will be my first question. Thank you.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

We're checking a little bit.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Well, yeah, I mean, I have here the adjusted margins. I think that maybe you have to look at the adjusted margins because we have done from time to time some tower sales. So that has had an impact on the margin. So if you look at adjusted margins in 3Q22, where it was 41.0%. In the second quarter of 2023, it was 40.9%. And we did have a reduction from 40.9% to 40.0% in this quarter. But they've been, I don't see much volatility.

I think, margins have stayed in the 40%-41% range, adjusted margin, for the last 5 quarters.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yeah, and the growth is 5.9, second quarter, 5.1, and this quarter, 3.6. So it's more or less, the growth is there, and, it's not - I don't think it's volatile. It's more, more or less following the increase on revenues, no?

Andrés Ortiz (Analyst)

Understood. And what, what should we think going forward, given the, the possible increase in minimum wage or gain of 20% on your, on your labor costs and, and the possibility to, to see the labor week reduced by one day? How should we, could we, could this impact the, the operations in Mexico?

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Well, we already have that increase at the beginning of the year, so it's part of the cost that we're having. As I told you, we have been focusing a lot on taking care about the cost to have a very good cost control in all the operations. It's not only in Mexico, the increase in salaries, it's all around Latin America, and we're focusing on that, being more efficient, being more digital. I see this number, I think in América Móvil, in 2019, we have 190,000 Let me tell you. We have 94,000 people in 2020, 186,000 in 2021, 181,000 in 2022, and in August, we have 176,000 people.

So the reduction, we're not hiring people, we're being more efficient, and we're training more our people. So all of that is giving us that control of the costs, no? So the reduction on retraining the people has been for the last four years, no?

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

I'd just like to stress again, though, that regarding Mexico and sometimes other countries, it's important to normalize from the effect of extraordinary things like the tower sales. Okay, because they have been important in Mexico last year, they've been important this year, and I think you have to correct for that, because the volatility in the margins you're referring to has to do with the tower sales.

Andrés Ortiz (Analyst)

Understood. Thank you very much.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Our next question is from Alejandro Azar, from GBM. Alejandro, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Alejandro Azar (Analyst)

Hi, good morning, Daniel, Carlos. I'm sorry I joined a little bit late, but I was wondering if you guys mentioned something about the Verizon earn-out that I believed the deadline was September of this year. Could you give us some color on that, if it's possible? Thank you.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Sure, hello. We did get a payment for the earn-out. It was MXN 3.5 billion, MXN 3.3 billion pesos. In the quarter is part of the MXN 5.5 billion that we mentioned here in the case. So there was a slide there that we will be happy to provide you this slide.

Alejandro Azar (Analyst)

Thank you.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Mention in the free cash flow.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Thank you.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Our next question is from Phani Kanumuri, from HSBC. Phani, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Phani Kanumuri (Analyst)

Thanks everyone for taking my question. My first question is on Brazil. It seems that you're growing very well in Brazil, and ARPU is up nearly 12%.

Jesús Romo (Analyst)

We don't hear. Can you speak a little bit louder?

Phani Kanumuri (Analyst)

Can you hear me?

Jesús Romo (Analyst)

We don't hear you, please. Yes, a little bit louder.

Phani Kanumuri (Analyst)

Can you hear me now?

Jesús Romo (Analyst)

Yes.

Phani Kanumuri (Analyst)

Okay. My first question is regarding Brazil. It seems that you're doing really well in Brazil and your mobile ARPU is up nearly 12% year-on-year in the third quarter. Is it driven more by price increases or more by volume increases? And how do you expect this trend to go going forward? That's my first question.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Well, I think on Brazil, we're doing well in market share. We're doing well, as Oscar has mentioned, and Carlos mentioned also, we are starting to grow in broadband again, reducing the losses in TV, improving like 1.1 million subscribers in postpaid. So we are doing very well in Brazil. The synergies that we have and the control cost that we have, also, we have a pass-through on part, not on all our products, but in part of our products, I think at the middle of beginning or middle of this year. So in Brazil, we are doing okay, improving, growing revenues and controlling costs. So that's what we're seeing in Brazil.

Phani Kanumuri (Analyst)

Thank you. So the second question that I had is on the Mexico Corporate segment. The revenue growth has decelerated this quarter. Is it because it's a more of a lumpy quarter, or, what is driving that revenue growth deceleration in the Corporate segment in Mexico?

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Yeah, well, as I mentioned before, in Mexico, we are doing exactly the same, selling those products as the one security, outsourcing of the networks, cloud services, vertical solutions. So we are doing pretty well in Mexico, addressing those markets. And it's growing around 12%, the revenues in corporate. So you know, when you look at Mexico, corporate is growing, broadband as well is growing 8.5%. So I think, we are doing well in Mexico, and we, we will, we, we feel that we continue with that. We have the base of the network. We did the right investments in the network, not only in fiber, we, we reskill the people to sell these new set of products. So we, we bring people with experience in cloud services, in vertical solution.

I think we see this market trend very pretty optimistic.

Phani Kanumuri (Analyst)

Thanks for answering my question.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Okay, one question, one comment on what Oscar said. Because the issue with our corporate networks revenue, which we mentioned, it's been gaining shares. It's becoming more important in most operations, but it can be sometimes volatile.

Jesús Romo (Analyst)

Yes.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Sometimes you get a new contract and you book all the revenues at once. But if you look at the full nine months of this year, so we raise also the volatility, you have the increase in revenues 10.3%. So the year to September corporate network revenue in Mexico is 10.3% larger than the prior year. Okay?

Jesús Romo (Analyst)

Yeah.

Phani Kanumuri (Analyst)

Yeah, thanks, everyone.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Our next question is from Andrés Cardona, from Citi. Andrés, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Andrés Cardona (VP of Equity Research)

Good morning, Daniel. Good morning, Carlos. Thanks for the preliminary comments about 2024 CapEx program. Let me ask you about 2023 net working capital, if you can comment about what do you expect for the full year, and if there was any event that explained, It's lower reversion on the third quarter. Thanks a lot.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

I mean,

Operator (participant)

Working capital.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Ah, working capital. It is the reversion on working capital?

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yes.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Can you explain again? We don't hear.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yeah.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

We don't understand.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Andrés, I don't know if this is the question, but basically, what we've been saying for a long time is that our cash flow is very cyclical because of working capital. So the first several months of the year, we require a lot of working capital, and then we get it back, typically the last third of the year, let's say. So typically, when we have a, you begin having a reversion working capital, because we're beginning to get back the working capital that we contributed in the first half of the year.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Our next question is from Till Moewes, from Schroders. Till, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Till Moewes (Analyst)

Hello, and thanks for taking my question. It's about Guatemala. You've been fighting to get to a more balanced market share there, and I was wondering where you stand currently in the process? How long do you think, the remainder is going to take, and what additional measures, if any, shall we expect?

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

I think in Guatemala, we're doing well. We are investing. We just get the 700 frequencies. We have a little bit lack of coverage in some in wireless, and with the 700 frequencies, I think we can get a little bit more coverage on that. We can give better quality and attend more customers there. In the fixed, we are putting more fiber. We're changing a little bit more copper for fiber, giving more speeds to the customers. So we are doing there. We are not being so aggressive. We're not reducing prices.

And just the only thing that we're doing in Guatemala is we are being more focused on quality, better service, more speeds in the fixed, and changing our copper to fiber. And do the convergence also in the corporate side, we are doing also good, so we are improving our operations in Guatemala.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

You know, on the fixed line side, we have been improving on the service revenue growth. It had been negative, and now we are, we're in positive, but it's been an improvement quarter to quarter for the last four quarters that we can see.

Till Moewes (Analyst)

Okay. Thank you.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Thank you.

Till Moewes (Analyst)

Another question, if I may. In Mexico City, Megacable is increasing its penetration, and I was wondering, what do you think does it mean for the competitive landscape there?

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Megacable? Yeah, Megacable, they are building fiber in Mexico. Some of them is overlapping the cable networks. Some of them is a greenfield. But to be honest, we have a great platform in Mexico. We have 16 million home passes with fiber. As Daniel mentioned, we have 76% of the customers already connected with fiber. Let me add that, we've been doing very well to bundle with the streaming platforms as HBO, Netflix, Claro Video. So we, we, we bundled the broadband with this streaming, and has been very well received in the market. So, I agree, Megacable is growing with fiber, but I think we have the right network to compete. So we already have fiber.

I think we have a good proposition in the market to compete with the other competitors, not only with Megacable.

Till Moewes (Analyst)

All right. Thank you.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Our next-

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Yes.

Operator (participant)

Question is from Jesús. Our next question is from Jesús Romo, from GlobalData. Jesús, please go ahead.

Jesús Romo (Analyst)

Good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. I have a few questions regarding the Mexican operation. I wonder if you could provide additional color on the deceleration in Mexico for me, corporate network services, you know, a bit of color what's happening there or some context. And what's guiding the broadband revenue, given that, you know, you do mention this quarter, what's wrong with the revenue over there? And the second question is for wireless. Just a bit of color of what's guiding postpaid in Mexico and ARPU growth in Mexico. Thank you.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Well, I'm gonna start with wireless. I think what wireless is driving a little bit better ARPU and growth is our 5G network. I think we have more coverage, better quality, and we are really the only one that has been investing in Mexico in 5G. So customers are using that network, using more data, and sometimes upgrading their plan to have more data. So that's more or less what we're seeing there. And in the fixed side, in corporate. Well, as you know, the corporate market, it's a totally different market than the mass market. The negotiations takes many months to really get the projects. In some quarters, we won very large projects, and in other quarters, we don't. But what we see is that we have a great pipeline in place.

So, you know, this kind of selling is a, a different approach. You need to go to the customer to show a business case of the efficiency, the cost reduction, the productivity, and it takes a while to convince the, the customer. Sometimes we want a very large project, and some quarters we don't. But what we have is a very good pipeline that we are followed, so that we're—that's why we are optimistic on those, on this market.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Just to repeat what we said before. If you look at the nine months to September, corporate networks revenue in Mexico increased 10% year-on-year. Okay, so it's when you look at long enough periods, then you can make a reasonable opinion.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yeah. But what is important is to have a good pipeline of, of opportunities, right?

Jesús Romo (Analyst)

Thank you. Very clear.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Yeah.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Our last question is from Alejandro Lavín, from Santander. Alejandro, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Alejandro Lavín (Analyst)

Hi. Good morning. Thank you all for taking the questions. Thank you for the call. I just have a quick question on Argentina. You're seeing good growth there, so could you please expand on what kind of opportunities you're seeing there in over the medium term, and how do you balance that versus the current macro environment and effects depreciation? Thank you.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

Yeah, we know what is happening in Argentina with the macro environment. But where we're seeing good opportunities is in the fixed line. We have been running the wireless for a long time. We have a decent market share. We're growing, we're doing well, and we start maybe 4 years ago-

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Four years.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

- in putting fiber and, and it's given very good returns, this fiber. So, we have, like 1.2 million broadband subscribers in Argentina right now, and, that's where we see good opportunities in all the fixed platforms is where-

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Pay-TV and, yes.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

All fixed, Pay-TV, fixed and broadband is where we see that. Yes.

Alejandro Lavín (Analyst)

Okay. Thank you.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Thank you. Thank you very much.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. This is all the time we have for the Q&A session today, so I'd like to hand back to management for any closing remarks.

Daniel Hajj (CEO)

No, just thank. Thank you, all of you, for being in the call.

Carlos García Moreno (CFO)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you everyone for joining today's call. You may now disconnect your lines, and have a lovely day.