Better Buy: Amaysim Australia Ltd or TPG Telecom Ltd?

With government intervention in supply lines, rapidly approaching 5G, and a hotbed of competition, the Telecommunications Services sector of the ASX is an interesting place at the moment.

| More on:

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

With government intervention in supply lines, rapidly approaching 5G, and a hotbed of competition, the Telecommunications Services sector of the ASX is an interesting place at the moment.

a woman

Amaysim Australia Ltd Capital Raising and results

Amaysim Australia Ltd (ASX: AYS) shares entered a trading halt on 22 February and will stay there until 28 February as the company issues new equity to existing shareholders. The Amaysim share price is currently down 40% on its high of $1.57 traded this time last year.

A challenger brand in telecommunications and energy with a market cap of around $200M, Amaysim is seeking to raise $50.6M from retail and institutional shareholders with the intention of restructuring debt and investing in expansion activities.

After debt restructuring, $17.6M will be used to invest in marketing, a new energy product suite, and upgrading the technology stack to support growth.

The top, middle and bottom line for Amaysim's interim results released 26 February are as follows:

  • Net revenue down 5.6% to $263M
  • Underlying EBITDA up 32.2% to $29.2M (up 11.3% to $23.5M under previous accounting standards)
  • Net loss after tax $4.8M

At the segment level, Energy profit increased by 27% and compensated for an 8% lower profit in mobile. Looking forward, Management forecasts operating EBITDA between $44-$48M (under the new accounting standards) for the FY19 full year indicating a tempered second half.

TPG Telecom Ltd's strategic frustrations

TPG Telecom Ltd's (ASX: TPM) share price has reflected the repeated strategic frustration the business has faced. First, in partnering with out of favour Chinese equipment provider Huawei to roll out the 5G network. And, expression of preliminary concern by the ACCC around the proposed merger with Vodafone Hutchison Australia. The final decision from the regulator is due on 28 March 2019.

As announced yesterday, 26 February, if the Vodafone merger is scuttled by the ACCC, TPG Telecom will be looking at a circa $228M impairment due to write-offs from the 5G kerfuffle.

Is Amaysim's strategy TPG Telecom's competition problem?

Amaysim has busily divested from the fixed line Broadband business in the past half year with a view to focus on mobile services.

Among other issues, the ACCC is considering whether fixed line Broadband and mobile plans may become increasingly substitutable products, particularly as 5G services arrive. That substitution could push Vodafone and TPG into more direct competition.

Amaysim is basing its strategy, and appeal to the market for capital, on the assumption that fixed-line broadband is not a requisite for packaging services to households. If the ACCC agrees that mobile substitute for fixed line broadband, TPG's merger plans could be sunk.

Foolish Takeaway

TPG's challenges could push short term damage to results and lessen the effectiveness of one of Telstra Corporation Ltd's (ASX: TLS) primary competitors as the 5G transition moves ahead.

Personally, I like the decisive action being taken by the Amaysim team, raising a quarter of their market cap and looking to combine telecommunications and energy into a complementary, customer friendly offering. The commoditization of mobile services makes the cross-sell with traditional 'household utilities' like energy a believable proposition.

Amaysim's share price may also follow the entitlement offer's discounts to cheaper territory. The potential upside certainly appeals to my inner small to mid-cap thrill seeker.

Motley Fool contributor David Fulham has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia owns shares of and has recommended Telstra Limited. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended TPG Telecom Limited. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on Technology Shares

a man wearing spectacles has a satisfied look on his face as he appears within a graphic image of graphs, computer code and technology related symbols while he concentrates on a computer screen
Technology Shares

Top ASX 200 tech shares to buy right now: Morgans

It’s time to jump on some leading players in the tech sector, according to one broker.

Read more »

A young woman sits on her lounge looking pleasantly surprised at what she's seeing on her laptop screen as she reads about the South32 share price
Technology Shares

These ASX tech shares are buys: Goldman Sachs

Goldman Sachs speaks very highly about these tech shares.

Read more »

A young woman holds an open book over her head with a round mouthed expression as if to say oops as she looks at her computer screen in a home office setting with a plant on the desk and shelves of books in the background.
Technology Shares

Xero share price dips 3% amid Silicon Valley Bank fallout

Xero has been caught up in the Silicon Valley Bank collapse.

Read more »

A worried man holds his head in his hands
Technology Shares

These ASX tech shares have exposure to the Silicon Valley Bank collapse

The second-largest banking collapse in US history occurred last week.

Read more »

asx share price resignation represented by man kicking miniature man through the air
Technology Shares

Novonix shares will soon be booted out of the ASX 200. What might this mean for investors?

ASX 200 share Novonix will soon be just an All Ords share.

Read more »

Technology Shares

Is the new leaner, meaner Xero stock a buy right now?

Is this tech stock a buy after announcing major cost reductions?

Read more »

A young woman with her mouth open and her hands out showing surprise and delight as uranium share prices skyrocket
Technology Shares

Why is the Xero share price racing 11% higher today?

Investors have been fighting to get hold of Xero's shares on Thursday.

Read more »

A woman wearing yellow smiles and drinks coffee while on laptop.
Technology Shares

The ASX 200 tech shares I'd be thrilled to buy at a 20% discount

I’d love to go shopping for these tech names if they heavily dipped.

Read more »