Jul 30, 2010
Executives
W. Moreland - Chief Executive Officer, President and Director Jay Brown - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President and Treasurer Fiona McKone - Vice President of Finance
Analysts
Jonathan Atkin - RBC Capital Markets Corporation James Ratcliffe - Barclays Capital Simon Flannery - Morgan Stanley David Barden Jonathan Schildkraut. Brett Feldman - Deutsche Bank AG Jason Armstrong - Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
Richard Prentiss - Raymond James & Associates
Operator
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by.
Welcome to the Q2 2010 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to turn the conference over to Fiona McKone, Vice President of Finance.
Please go ahead, ma'am.
Fiona McKone
Thank you, Brandy. Good morning, everyone, and thank you all for joining us as we review our second quarter 2010 results.
With me on the call this morning are Ben Moreland, Crown Castle's Chief Executive Officer, and Jay Brown, Crown Castle's Chief Financial Officer. To aid the discussion, we have posted supplemental materials in the Investors section of our website at www.crowncastle.com, which we will discuss throughout the call this morning.
This conference call will contain forward-looking statements and information based on management's current expectations. Although the company believes that the expectations reflected in such forward-looking statements are reasonable, it can give no assurances that such expectations will prove to have been correct.
Such forward-looking statements are subject to certain risks, uncertainties and assumptions. Information about the potential factors that could affect the company's financial results is available in the press release and in the Risk Factor sections of the company's filings with the SEC.
Should one or more of these or other risks or uncertainties materialize or should underlying assumptions prove incorrect, actual results may vary significantly from those expected. Our statements are made as of today, July 29, 2010, and we assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statements whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
In addition, today's call includes discussions of certain non-GAAP financial measures, including adjusted EBITDA, recurring cash flow and recurring cash flow per share. Tables reconciling such non-GAAP financial measures are available under the Investors section of the company's website at www.crowncastle.com.
With that, I'll turn the call over to Jay.
Jay Brown
Thank you, Fiona, and good morning, everyone. Let me start with a few summary comments as highlighted on Page 3 of the presentation, and then I'll go through our results and outlook in greater detail.
I'm very pleased with our second quarter financial results as we significantly exceeded our expectations for adjusted EBITDA, reflecting the increased demand for wireless infrastructure, as evidenced by the 9% increase in Site Rental revenues from the second quarter of last year. In addition to a great quarter in Site Rental revenue, our Services business also performed very well.
Service revenues were up 39% and service gross margins were up 33% compared to the same quarter of last year. In addition, I believe the investments we made including the purchase of our common shares, the acquisition of land beneath our towers, and our agreement to acquire NewPath will enhance long-term recurring cash flow per share growth.
The acquisition of NewPath is expected to extend our ability to provide wireless infrastructure to our customers, beyond those areas served by traditional towers, and we'll increase our presence in this market to 44 DAS networks in operation or under construction. The combination of a strong year-to-date revenue growth and our expectations for the second half of 2010 allows us to increase our Site Rental revenue, Site Rental gross margin, adjusted EBITDA and recurring cash flow outlook for the full year of 2010.
With that, I'd like to take you through the results in greater detail for the quarter and the increase in our 2010 outlook. Turning to Slide 4, during the second quarter, we generated Site Rental revenue of $410 million, up 9% from the second quarter of 2009.
Similar to what we would expect in the balance of the year, the components of the 9% growth in Site Rental revenue from the second quarter 2009 to the second quarter 2010 were comprised of the following: 4% growth in the existing base of business through contracted escalators and the renewal of tenant leases net of any churn, and 5% growth attributable to the additional tenant equipment added to our site, reflecting the new leasing activity we have experienced. Site Rental gross margin, defined as Site Rental revenues less the cost of operation, was $294 million, up 12% from the second quarter of 2009.
We continue to maintain a disciplined approach to operating costs, resulting in over 94% of the growth in Site Rental revenue, finding its way to Site Rental gross margin. Adjusted EBITDA for the second quarter of 2010 was $280 million, up 13% from the second quarter of 2009.
It is important to note that these growth rates were achieved almost entirely through organic growth on assets that we owned as of April 1, 2009, as revenue growth from acquisitions was negligible. Turning to Slide 5.
Recurring cash flow, defined as adjusted EBITDA less interest expense, less sustaining capital expenditures, increased 18% to $155 million compared to $132 million in the second to quarter of 2009. Recurring cash flow per share also increased 18% to $0.54 compared to $0.46 in the second quarter of 2009.
Moving to the outlook for the third quarter of 2010 as shown on Slide 6, we expect Site Rental revenue of between $419 million and $424 million and adjusted EBITDA of between $284 million and $289 million. The sequential growth in adjusted EBITDA between the second quarter of 2010 and our outlook for the third quarter of 2010 is impacted by the following couple of items: We expect third quarter repairs and maintenance as a component of Site Rental operating expenses to increase by approximately $2 million from the second quarter of this year.
And commensurate with the increase in operating expenses related to repairs and maintenance, we would expect sustaining capital expenditures to also be approximately $2 million higher in the third quarter than in the previous two quarters of the year. Turning to the full year 2010 outlook on Slide 7.
Based on the strong results today and our expectations for the remainder of the year, we've increased the mid-point of our outlook for Site Rental revenues by $4.5 million, Site Rental gross margin by $7 million, adjusted EBITDA by $15.5 million and recurring cash flow by $20.5 million for the full year of 2010. Our revised 2010 outlook suggests annual Site Rental revenue growth of just over 8% and recurring cash flow growth of 17%, respectively.
Substantially, all of the anticipated growth is expected to come from the assets we owned at the beginning of 2008. As I mentioned before, we've made no significant tower acquisitions during the last two years.
Consistent with our past practice, our 2010 outlook doesn't include the anticipated benefit from expected future investment around our core business and we've not included NewPath in our outlook. Turning to the balance sheet as illustrated on Slide 8, total debt for last quarter annualized adjusted EBITDA as of June 30, 2010, was 5.6x compared to 6.1x in the same quarter last year.
Adjusted EBITDA to cash interest expense as of June 30, 2010, was approximately 2.8x. Both our adjusted EBITDA leverage and cash interest expense coverage ratio were comfortably within their respective debt covenant requirements.
As illustrated on Slide 9, the liability on settlement basis associated with our forward-starting interest rate swap due to be settled during 2011 was $372 million at June 30, 2010. As shown, we have also provided the sensitivities of these swaps to changes in interest rates.
Moving on to the investments and liquidity. The table on Slide 10 reflects our current debt balances and maturities.
As many of you have seen, yesterday we launched $1.55 billion offering to repay in full the $1.33 billion of Series 2006-1 notes outstanding, which have an anticipated refinancing date of November 15, 2011. Assuming the successful completion of this financing, we will have no maturities before March 2014.
Further, during the last six quarters, we will have refinanced over $6 billion of debt securities with an appropriate laddering of the maturities. This gives us tremendous flexibility as we focus on investing activities that we believe will enhance long-term recurring cash flow per share, which we believe is the best long-term measure of shareholder value creation.
To that end, as shown on Slide 11, during the second quarter of 2010, we spent just over $38 million to purchase our common shares with an average price of just over $37 per share. Since January of 2003, we've spent $2.4 billion buying back 92 million shares or potential shares at an average per share price of $25.59.
Without these purchases, our current share count would be nearly a third higher than what it is today. Also during the second quarter of 2010, we spent $55 million on capital expenditures including $31 million on land purchases as we accelerated our spending on our land lease purchase program.
Since the beginning of 2010, we have extended 620 land leases and purchased the land beneath 193 of our towers. We have had significant success with this program over the last several years.
In fact, today, 33% of our Site Rental gross margin is generated from towers on land that we own. As of today, we own or control for more than 20 years the land beneath the towers representing approximately 69% of our gross margin.
Further, the average term remaining on our ground leases is approximately 31 years. Having completed over 8,600 transactions, we believe this activity has resulted in the most secure land position in the industry based on land ownership and the final ground lease expiration.
We continue to believe this is an important long-term effort that provides a long-term benefit as it protects our margins and controls our largest operating expense. In summary, we had a great quarter, and I'm excited about the balance of 2010.
I'm pleased we were back to allocating capital in areas related to our core Tower business to enhance long-term growth rates and recurring cash flow per share. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Ben.
W. Moreland
Thanks, Jay, and thanks to all of you for joining us on the call this morning. As Jay just mentioned, we had a strong second quarter, exceeding our outlook for Site Rental gross margin, adjusted EBITDA and recurring cash flow.
In addition to continued growth of our Site Leasing business, our Services business continues to perform very well, posting the highest quarterly results in recent years due to the increased take rate we're delivering on the part of our customers. This success results from a diligent effort to capture more of the opportunities assisting our customers on locating or upgrading installations on our sites.
We have also benefited from an expanded range of service offerings over the past couple of years. This increase in services activity is attributable to the confidence our customers have in Crown Castle as regularly expressed in our customer surveys that consistently rank us as delivering the highest customer service in the industry.
This did not just happen by accident. I want to thank our employees who are involved in this effort for this tremendous result this quarter and for the year.
While the Services business is somewhat difficult to predict, it has evolved into a more stable contributor to our core Leasing business over the last two years. Moving past the summary for the quarter, I'd like to draw your attention to some of the important trends that are driving our business.
The trends underlying our business remain very positive, with the adoption of the mobile Internet and demand for data services driving our strong growth and operating results. As wireless data services become the carriers' most important growth segment, the carriers' are leasing more of our sites to support the growth in demand for wireless data services to capture the higher average revenue per user or ARPU.
Data revenue growth continues to be driven by customer demand and interest in smartphone category and by the proliferation of new devices with greater capabilities, together with significant increases and innovative applications and content. These overwhelming trends where reflected in the carriers' second quarter results, which showed not only growing data usage, but importantly, confirmed the fact that these investments in network improvements are profitable.
The iPhone has helped drive robust wireless data growth and ARPU improvements at AT&T. Specifically, more than 3.2 million iPhones where activated on the AT&T network in the quarter.
AT&T also reported very positive customer response with the iPad 3G, which launched at the end of April and attributed of the introduction of the iPad to 300,000 pre-paid adds. A little more than half of AT&T's post-paid subscribers now have integrated devices, and the ARPU from integrated devices continues to be 1.7x greater than the ARPU for non-integrated devices.
This data growth contributed to a 27% increase in wireless data revenues at AT&T versus the second quarter of 2009, and data, an increasing percentage of the carrier's overall revenue represented 31% of AT&T's second quarter wireless service revenues, up from 26% a year ago. Similarly, Verizon reported data revenue growth of 24% compared to last year and total data ARPU growth of 16% year-over-year, driven by the rapidly growing smartphone device category.
At the end of the second quarter, 35% of Verizon's retail post-paid subscriber base had smartphones or multimedia devices, up from 26% just two quarters ago. In addition, both AT&T and Verizon reported adding significant numbers of other connected machine-to-machine devices such as: e-readers, alarm monitoring systems, vehicle tracking devices, consumer electronics, smart grid solutions in medical alert devices and a host of other emerging products.
While these trends are very compelling, it is important to note that the adoption is still in the early stages, with less than 40% of wireless subscribers having a data-centric device, representing considerable upside to come. Furthermore, the carriers are still in the early phases of building out high-speed data networks, with Clearwire for example, only halfway through its planned 40,000 site build and Verizon still on schedule to launch 4G in the fourth quarter in selected markets.
We believe our increased 2010 outlook, which includes increased leasing activity in the second half of the year, reflects the launch and prelaunch activities of these coming 4G services and is consistent with the wireless carriers' recent comments on their expectations for a somewhat back-end loaded year, reflecting the launch of LTE. I should note that devices or loan are not the only ingredient to success.
Network quality remains a key factor in the acquisition and retention of subscribers resulting in carriers investing in their networks to ensure coverage and capacity to meet customer needs in order to remain competitive. To that end, both AT&T and Verizon reported significant increases in wireless capital expenditures in the first half of 2010 compared to the first half of 2009, driven by data capacity enhancements and 4G LTE network deployments.
Confirming the view that demand for wireless services will extend beyond just the legacy networks, we are very excited to see the announcement from Harbinger Capital Partners around their intention to build a wholesale 4G wireless network via a company called LightSquared. As recently announced, LightSquared expects their network to require 40,000 cell sites over the next five years.
As the largest owner of sites in the top 100 markets, Crown Castle looks forward to being a material participant in assisting LightSquared in accomplishing their ambitious deployment plan. This build-out is similar in scale to Clearwire's proposed network plan, which as noted earlier, is approaching 50% completion and still proceeding very well.
These new 4G network deployments, which are responses to the mobile Internet demand we are witnessing, along with the ongoing activity from the incumbent carriers, add confidence to our long-term growth prospects. As demand for data services continues unabated, network architecture is evolving.
Increasingly, we believe that distributed antenna systems will be an important complement to traditional tower installations. As such, we are excited to have entered into an agreement to acquire NewPath networks, which we expect to close later this quarter.
The acquisition of NewPath furthers our capabilities in DAS, enabling us to provide more wireless infrastructure for customers beyond those areas served by traditional towers, thereby augmenting our service offering in this growing market. Like the Tower business, the DAS business is a shared infrastructure model and is an important element of the network architecture going forward as carriers work to satisfy both coverage and capacity challenges that have become more acute with the growth and dependency on data services we have all come to expect.
NewPath is a leading provider of DAS networks with a strong reputation and demonstrated leadership in the market, and we look forward to them joining the Crown team. Similar to our existing customer base, NewPath has a high concentration of revenues from the leading wireless carriers with 75% of the revenues coming from the top four wireless carriers.
Following the acquisition of NewPath, we will have 44 DAS networks in operation or under construction. Based on existing and contracted networks under construction, we expect the acquisition of NewPath to be short and long-term accretive to our financial results.
So to wrap up, I'd like to reiterate a few points that we've made this morning. We're obviously very pleased with our results and believe they demonstrate the quality of our assets combined with our ability to execute for customers.
As always, we remain disciplined and focused on maximizing long-term recurring cash flow per share through opportunistic investments. These investments can take the form of share purchases, land purchases, tower acquisitions, and obviously, now, DAS networks.
Lastly, on a macro level, we are very excited about the trends we're seeing in wireless and our position to capture value from them. We have the most towers in the top 100 U.S.
markets and the highest level of customer service. We are focused on the U.S.
market, where the ability of the wireless carriers to make profitable investments is most apparent and barriers to entry remain high. We've had a great first half of the year, and we expect an even better second half as reflected in our increase in outlook for the balance of 2010.
With that, operator, can you please return the call over for questions.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Brett Feldman with Deutsche Bank.
Brett Feldman - Deutsche Bank AG
I hope we could talk about a little bit more about your outlook for the second half of the year. You obviously are expecting an increase in leasing activity.
Is there anyway we can quantify that? For example, is there anything that you could say about your backlog or the haste of commenced leases to help us get a better understanding of what's really behind that improved revenue guidance?
Jay Brown
Sure, Brett. Happy to take that question.
As we look at the first half of the year, I think we had talked about in our prior calls that we thought the year was going to be sort of 40:60. It looks like it's probably going to be closer to 1/3:2/3.
So about 2/3 of the activity we would expect for the full year will be in the second half. And I think, Ben's comments around what we're seeing with LTE and 4G launches are really driving a lot of that activity.
The carriers made a lot of comments, obviously, in the first quarter call about what they were spending their capital on in the first half of the year. A lot of those things, be it backhaul, fiber backhaul and the few other things that they mentioned really don't necessarily drive a lot of necessarily leasing activities on our assets.
And what we're both seeing and expecting would suggest a pickup in the activity that we saw in the first half going into the second half of the year.
Brett Feldman - Deutsche Bank AG
And based on the type of projects you just talked about, is this mostly amendment-related? Or are you also seeing an increase in new full site deployments?
W. Moreland
It's both, Brett. This is Ben.
We're seeing, obviously, a lot of amendments as we've talked about on prior calls. There has been a mix shift in the business gradually over the last two years where we're seeing a lot of amendment activity around data upgrades, whether it be 3G, legacy networks or 4G LTE applications.
So the proportion of that has increased. But that's not really the diminished -- the new activity we're seeing as well.
So fairly good cross-section of new activity. Obviously, when Clearwire's building out the markets that they're building out, you should expect that we're seeing a lot of Clearwire activity as we've talked about in the past.
We'd expect that to continue for the next few years. As we mentioned, they're about 50% through their, at least, stated objectives.
And then as we mentioned, it won't really be any significant financial contribution this year, but we are certainly, I guess, heartened to see the plans from LightSquared and would expect to participate in that materially.
Brett Feldman - Deutsche Bank AG
And to the extent you're seeing these 4G amendments, are they sort of living up to your expectations in terms of the increase in the size of the monthly lease? I think, for 3G, you saw maybe a 25% to 35% increase in the lease rate when an upgrade was there.
Is that still the ballpark for a 4G upgrade?
W. Moreland
Actually, as we've talked about before, 4G amendments, because of the configuration, on average are running lower than your original 3G upgrade. So I think that's pretty well true across the industry that the configurations are just typically lighter, and so the upgrade is less.
And so the -- without getting into the real specifics, as we've talked it about several times, the 4G upgrade is less than your typical initial 3G upgrade. But you sort of make it up in volume because we're doing a lot of them.
Jay Brown
I think, Brett, one of the other things that we've talked ourselves about is that if you look historically, we're probably seeing more activity with regards to 4G amendments and upgrade ahead of actually a product being available to consumers. And it's very difficult for us to know what is it going to look like once it gets launched and you actually have consumer demand on the devices.
For us to see this level of amendment, both in terms of the number of sites being touched and the amount of equipment being added long before any of this is really commercially available to consumer, is not usual. So while the initial licenses and amendments are a little less than what we've seen in 3G, most of the 3G activity, thankfully, was more commensurate with when devices were available.
So we'll have to -- we'll sort of have to see how the product develops and what the usage is like. And then watch as the carriers make adjustments as necessary once it gets out into the market.
Operator
And our next question comes from the line of Rick Prentiss with Raymond James.
Richard Prentiss - Raymond James & Associates
First, on the distributed antenna system, DAS, can you give us a thought about how big that piece of the business could become? Seems like a niche, but a pretty interesting, fast-growing niche.
So how big for the tower industry in general, and how big for you should we think of that becoming?
W. Moreland
Rick, the answer is, I don't know. I'm very intrigued and pleased with what I've seen both in terms of activity on our own account and then, obviously, what the NewPath team brings to the table and the engagements that they have secured over the last few years and the activity level that's just, I think, generally picking up.
And as I mentioned in my remarks, I think that's largely a result of all of our demand for data services that work in every little nook and cranny where towers can't necessarily reach or not sufficiently reach. And so a little bit of a change in the architecture is -- you may think you've got adequate voice coverage in a location, which is true, served by a traditional tower network, but when you try to load that up with devices and data demands, it's clearly insufficient.
And so we're seeing areas that are DAS opportunities that maybe previously you wouldn't have seen before under a different demand profile for the network. So how big it can be, I don't know.
We certainly will invest going forward as we see appropriate opportunities. And we have high expectations that there will be continued opportunities out there in the market.
It will almost certainly always be a reasonably small component of our business just given the size of the run rate of the Tower business today. It's just going to be.
If it turned out to be a $50 million EBITDA business, that would be tremendous, and we believe create value in that regard. But again, $50 million would be less than 5% of the total of the company.
That certainly doesn't diminish our enthusiasm, though, to make incremental investments that create value for the company and provide a sort of a solution provider element for customers as they see opportunities in these markets. And we are certainly well equipped to not only secure the networks, build them out but then maintain them and operate them with the expertise we have, as well as what NewPath will bring.
And then our -- as you know, our distributed offices around the country, and we've got district offices out there, basically around our tower footprint, which is expensive, and so we're pretty well set up to maintain and operate these systems and then further add to them over time in the coming years.
Richard Prentiss - Raymond James & Associates
Can you give us a thought about -- assuming it does close end of September, what might be coming into fourth quarter? Is it something -- couple of million, $5 million on the revenue EBITDA kind of line?
Just trying to gauge roughly what we're looking for?
W. Moreland
Well, given that you'd only have one quarter, it's not going to be that significant relative to a year where we do over $1.1 billion of EBITDA. So it'll come in the third and fourth quarter, and it'll be a few million dollars.
I think it's important -- let me give everyone a little more color around the NewPath investment and the way to think about it. The NewPath investment of the $150 million at closing and then, obviously, we will be on board for capital spending for the continuation of their build plan of networks that are under construction and our own, for that matter, the NewPath investment stands on its own based on existing networks on the air and contracted networks under construction.
So in a very draconian view, which we certainly don't subscribe to, if that's all there ever was, the investment stands on its own. And yet, we see tremendous opportunity and have high expectations for further investment and further engagements on new networks that obviously add value to that platform.
But the way we underwrote it, for obvious reasons, because as we think about allocating capital, we always look at sort of the opportunity cost to that dollar and what else we could've done with it, the existing book of business at NewPath results in the investment standing on its own.
Richard Prentiss - Raymond James & Associates
And then on LightSquared, we've been hearing that they've released 500 sites centering in the Baltimore, D.C. area.
I think they've got -- I think Denver and Phoenix are their initial market launches in mid-'11 and then it looks like Vegas and Baltimore, D.C. by the end of '11.
How much demand are you seeing from then already in the application process? And have you learned enough yet from them about what kind of backhaul are they are going to use?
Because Clearwire, obviously, was using microwave backhaul. Any sense of what LightSquared is thinking of from the standpoint of then your leasing?
W. Moreland
Yes, Rick, I -- as true to our custom, I'm just really not going to get into any specifics around our discussions with LightSquared or what their build plan may be or their launch plan. That's, obviously, up to them to decide how to disclose that to the Street.
We all saw their press release recently, and we were clearly gratified to see them with the public statements they made out there. But beyond that, I'm just not comfortable really describing any more detail of their build plan or backhaul plan or what our potential market share penetration of that would be.
Frankly, until there's more out there publicly from the customer, from the company, and until we get further into this down the road.
Operator
And our next question comes from the line of Jason Armstrong with Goldman Sachs.
Jason Armstrong - Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
On the current debt deal, you've got a great runway on the maturity side at this point now. Ben, I wonder if, stepping back, can you help us think through how this frees you up in terms of thinking differently about the business?
In some respects, you've been a little bit restrained over the last couple of years. In your mind, is having this behind you sort of allow you to be more aggressive either on the deal side or share repurchase activity?
Just how that shapes the thought process. And then if you just -- second question on land purchases.
They obviously accelerated in the quarter. How should we think about the outlook from here?
Is that something that continues to accelerate?
W. Moreland
Sure, Jason. Let me take the opportunity to acknowledge Jay and the whole finance team.
As he ran through quickly in his comments, if this finance thing get done, and we certainly think it will, we will have refinanced the entire balance sheet, over $6 billion, appropriately laddered out, level-loaded out the maturities schedule as you would think is appropriate, out as long as ten years, and one little piece out 20 years, with over $6 billion refinanced in six quarters. So in our view, a fantastic accomplishment.
Speaks to the quality of our ability to navigate and operate through the securitization market. Obviously, it would have been much easier to just sort of rip off high yield deals overnight, but we saved ourselves significant amounts of money in coupon by being diligent in working through the securitization process, which is, as most of you know, is a much more difficult process to go through, but it's something we've become quite good at, and I think it's, frankly, sort of a competency in the organization today.
W. Moreland
You're absolutely right, Jason. Having completed, knock wood, this last financing and completed the entire refinancing of the balance sheet and laddered it out properly, with an average coupon all in the vicinity of 6%, with that maturity schedule, in my mind, frees us up significantly in terms of flexibility.
And given all of our experiences in the last -- fourth quarter of 2008, when we saw credit markets evaporate, we all have become appropriately more conservative in how you think about the availability of credit markets. And can you, in fact, refinance debt when it's due.
With this last financing, that will be completed behind us for an extended period of time. In fact, the maturity schedule pretty much, you could almost cash flow now in any given year.
So I would say that, yes, as a management team, we will feel a big sigh of relief, have much more flexibly going forward. Also, if you noticed this financing that's out there today, has some excess proceeds in it, which will go a long way toward satisfying the swap liability in February, coming up in February the 11th.
So that, as well, will create some headroom in terms of liquidity freeing up. So your observation is spot on.
We will fell like we have a lot more flexibility and intend to use it. And those of you that sort of noticed this behavior this quarter, where we didn't buy a lot of stock but we contracted to spend $115 million on NewPath, you can rightfully assume that we made the diligent call after an appropriate amount of evaluation, that he wanted to put that capital to work in NewPath and thereby, not purchase shares in this particular quarter.
And that's consistent with our behavior that we've discussed over time where we'll constantly weigh the opportunities. But you should not read into that, that we're not a buyer of the stock.
It's just that opportunity was there. We needed to sort of save some cash for that.
Now that this financing gets done, I think you'll us feel significantly freed up and behave accordingly.
Jason Armstrong - Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
And then the last one, land leases?
Jay Brown
Yes, Jason, on your second question. We've done 8,600 deals today, which means we've touched nearly 40% of our sites in the U.S.
And I would characterize this as the majority of the activity still to come is really opportunistic. And both the opportunistic in terms of our ability to deploy capital and then get operating provisions in our leases that maybe make it easier for us to add tendance [ph](53:03:3) down the road.
I think for the full year this year, we'll probably end up spending somewhere in the neighborhood of $130 million to $140 million on our land purchase program. And then going into next year, I would expect that, that will be up next year.
Potentially in the neighborhood of $180 million to $200 million, as we've ramped back up our activity in the amount of land purchases. We had over the last year or so, when we had pulled back on CapEx, focused most of our efforts on just doing lease extensions.
And now that we've fixed the balance sheet, I would expect that we'll, hopefully, find some opportunities to deploy a little bit of capital along those lines. One thing that may be helpful, just expanding at some of the comments that I made earlier about the land purchase program, is that it's not necessarily margin enhancing for us to be buying these properties.
As we look back over these 8,600 transactions that we've done, the combination of the impact to the P&L and Site Rental operating expense as we extend the land lease and, therefore, have a greater amount of land lease expense, a little bit more in cash, but certainly more in the straight-line impact of doing those transactions, that almost entirely offset the reduction in rent that we see in the P&L from buying back the ground leases. So it's almost neutral to the income statement.
But certainly, gives us much greater control and predictability of the expense long term, as well as protecting the existing margins that are there today. So hopefully, that helps as you think about how to model it.
I would give you a similar guidance for the go-forward, but I wouldn't necessarily expect that the activity results in a reduction of rent, as much as it does keeps the amount of expense relatively stable.
W. Moreland
By the end of this year, Jay, we will have spent about $500 million, sort of life-to-date on this program for which you're not seeing a P&L benefit directly. Obviously, there's tremendous benefit in the portfolio composition as you ran through in your remarks in terms of the average maturity, number of sites that we control as a percentage of our gross margin and things like that.
Huge movement out to the right on that, but there's no direct financial P&L benefit from the approximately $500 million we spent life-to-date so.
Operator
The next question comes from the line of Simon Flannery with Morgan Stanley.
Simon Flannery - Morgan Stanley
Can you talk about the M&A environment as it currently stands for domestic towers? I think you've generally been fairly quiet thinking the multiples are up there.
Any changes in anything that you see you might like? And then, there's been a lot of talk about reconversion in the tower space, can you just update on about your thoughts about that and your thoughts on timing?
W. Moreland
Sure, Simon. On the M&A market, we see some things out there that we like.
And there's a lot for sale. And some of them are very expensive, and some of them are, we think, appropriate in sort of the range of where they're looking for.
Sometimes the challenge goes to the fact that we have we with a fairly mature tower portfolio with an obvious trading multiple range, become challenged, sort of get stopped out on multiples, where you may have a seller who has a very high-quality portfolio of sites that may have 50% of the revenue that we have on our typical site. And so you might convince yourself, from just an appropriate-return perspective, the sites are actually worth a higher multiple, but obviously, a lot less work per tower than our current trading multiple.
And therein lies the challenge because notwithstanding the prospective return on that investment, it becomes very challenging. And we've been pretty vocal about this, very challenging to do something that's immediately dilutive and trust me, you like it in three or four years.
That's just a very hard proposition, given the history that we've all sort of lived through. And then, obviously, there's a certain amount of that we may tolerate, but very little, because if our objectives are to continue to go recurring cash flow per share as much as we possibly can, obviously.
This year's guidance as we've just updated it is 17%. We've got some work left to do this year.
The year isn't over. And I hope we do better than that.
And maybe even approach 20%. But that's just sort of a pet project around here.
So the market, I'd say there are some things we see, some things we like, probably some things we're going to do. But it's the challenge with weighing that opportunity against sort of the current trade value where we are.
And notwithstanding the fact that you may be using some cash or you may be using debt. We don't think about it that way.
We think about it as a legitimate sort of all-in cost of capital evaluation. And we'll continue to make our best judgment on where those opportunities are, how you create additional value, and always contrast that, as you know, with just buying our own stock.
And that's the way we're going to continue to behave.
W. Moreland
Simon, on your second question related to REIT conversion. Our current projections would suggest that we won't burn our NOLs until 2016 or beyond that date.
So as we think about REIT conversion, which is really a tax planning opportunity so that we minimize the amount of leakage of cash flow in the business and don't end up in a double taxation position between ourselves and the investor, it looks like that REIT conversion and the planning for that is probably 2016 and beyond. I think I would make an important point here and ultimately, we determined for any multitude of reasons, that paying a dividend was beneficial ultimately to the value of the shares.
We could do that earlier and the benefit of that NOL would stay in place. And any tax -- any dividends that we did between now and that REIT conversion date, at least under current tax provisions, would be taxed as a C-Corp.
dividend, which would be much below ordinary income dividends, which would be the case if we were to REIT and then pay out dividends as a REIT. So I think there's some benefit to the tail here on our NOL, but wouldn't expect absolute REIT conversion probably until that NOL provision -- our NOL position either runs out or nears its end.
And we're five or six years, at least, away from that.
Simon Flannery - Morgan Stanley
Is the dividend something that is near-term or is that more tied two or three years?
Jay Brown
Yes, I think the steady payment of the dividend, we're probably still some period of time away. As we think about it, it's really an allocation of capital.
And we think, primarily, as you've heard us articulate for a long period of time and Ben's comments earlier about how we think about whether it's DAS or tower purchases or tower builds or the buyback of shares, we're trying to allocate the capital in a way that we believe maximizes recurring cash flow per share. So it doesn't look in the short term like that, that's going to be something we're going to want to do, but we'll continue watch it and evaluate it based on all of the factors in front of us.
W. Moreland
I think long-term, as we've said before, I think long-term, the REIT conversion designation for the Tower business is very positive. I think it's a terrific long-term structure to return a significant amount of the total return in the form of a predicable dividend.
And so I look forward to that day. Prior to that, I think we would have to see something very compelling to pay a dividend as a C Corp and have 20%, if that's what ultimately happens with C Corp dividends, 20% tax leakage between us and our shareholders.
Whereas, we could have taken that capital, that free cash flow and deferred that tax until ultimately, it's a single taxation in a REIT structure. So again, as Jay said, we'll watch it very carefully.
Certainly don't have quarreled at all with the REIT model, in fact, welcome it. But for us, I think we're still a few years out.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of David Barden with Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
David Barden
Just to maybe first, and I'm sorry if I didn't pickup on this, but just with respect to NewPath. Could you kind of outline how did you find these guys and if more companies like them were out there, which there presumably are, were for sale at these kinds of valuations, are you prepared to exercise some kind of DAS roll up of some of all these private providers?
Or is this some kind of a one-off? And I guess the second question would be, maybe Ben, I don't know, you've probably been following this, the Congress and the Senate seem increasingly creating a consensus that maybe auctioning off a 7 megahertz D-block is not their preferred option.
And rather, they seem to be creating some momentum behind carving out funding and creating the opportunity for public safety to build their own network, which would be an incremental network opportunity for the Tower sector and guys like T-Mobile and others would have find other opportunities. But have you kind of gotten any sense or maybe I'd love to hear your color on what you think the prospects are for a public safety network being an incremental opportunity?
W. Moreland
First of all, in NewPath, we've known NewPath since inception. In fact, one of the two founders of NewPath is a former Crown employee.
And so we've stayed close to them, been sort of admirers of what they have done as a competitor because we've been competing with them for several years. And really like the entrepreneurial spirit and the way at with which they have built their business.
And frankly, the concentration or amount of business they have secured from big four wireless carriers, which is obviously a certainly a real feather in their cap and credibility in our eyes in terms of how they've operated and conducted themselves, and think that they will fit very, very well with our team. And we're well along the way sort of in a integration plan, as you can imagine.
And I think they'll roll right in and really become the real nucleus of our DAS team where we will, obviously, contribute both our existing networks and employee base that we have working there, as a combined team, we're very optimistic. So for planning purposes right now, David, I guess, we would always take a capital-allocation approach to looking at anything that was on the market.
But we're going to be pretty pleased with this platform and the track record that both our team and their team bring together. I think make us pretty formidable competitors in this market.
And the real opportunity is on the growth and in further investment and getting engaged on new networks. And so while I'd never say never, if there were something else out there available, we'd certainly look at it.
This is certainly going to be our platform for the go-forward. On the D- block, I've been reading the same things with sort of some, I guess, cautious optimism that you could see a new network requirement come out of the public safety discussion.
I wouldn't have a probably any more developed opinion than many on this call given that we've seen the public safety initiative sort of stop and start, and be on and off again. And it's become very difficult to sort of rely on that for planning purposes for our company.
I think, we certainly all can acknowledge the need for a common platform around public safety. And it looks like there's some thought coalescing around that.
And we would certainly do whatever we could to facilitate that and be a strong partner however that gets built out. But I would certainly not say it's in our current planning horizon.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Jonathan Atkin with RBC Capital Markets.
Jonathan Atkin - RBC Capital Markets Corporation
I was curious about the Surpluses business and what drove the revenue and cash flow trends. It seems a little higher than in prior quarters.
And then on the revenue-enhancing CapEx on existing sites, is that something you expect to trend fairly flat going forward or is there any reason that would go up or down?
W. Moreland
Okay, hey, Jon. On the Services business, I'll just tell you that we are continuing to increase our take rate up materially, I might even say dramatically, over the last two years.
And that is a direct credit to the folks that are running that business for us and the folks that are executing that business in the field, dealing with our customers on a daily basis. Not only on new installations, which have been more of the traditional sort of bread and butter of that over time, but we're doing a lot of work on amendment activity as well.
And I mentioned briefly in my remarks, expanding the scope, and so we're even doing some site app and zoning work for folks. Really managing the whole front-end of their application process on our sites all the way to completion.
And so real credit to our team in that -- what I'd like to tell you -- I'd love to tell you that all the volume increase on the Service business is because of all the new leasing activity we're seeing. That would not be quite accurate.
It's really because of the take rate in terms of the percentage of time with somebody touching our site that we're actually engaged to manage that process, that installation process for them, has increased dramatically. And again, that's just a credit to our team and the way we operate with customers.
On the revenue-enhancing front, we are seeing that pleasantly trend down. And I'm kind of optimistic that we continue to get better at how we're spending capital to enhance sites, making very smart business decisions every single time around where you're enhancing sites and to what extent, as well as, I think, this is not -- I can't prove this, but we believe we're seeing the trend where we've taken a couple of passes through the portfolio generally on making improvements and feel like we're probably over the hump on improvements.
And so we've got some capacity in the portfolio that we're able to benefit from now, as we see applications come through. So I would not expected it to tick up.
And I've been pleasantly surprised to see that it looks like 2010 is going to be less than 2009 and maybe that continues.
Jonathan Atkin - RBC Capital Markets Corporation
On carrier portfolio, I'm wondering if you're finding that they're becoming more competitive with kind of stand-alone tower companies from a leasing attractives and standpoint? And do you think there may be asset sales over the next several quarters?
W. Moreland
I think there will be. I think there's some out there that are under consideration.
And obviously, we'll stay close to those situations, and I won't mention any by name. I'm certainly aware that as any prudent owner of a tower portfolio would do, they are out there.
Carrier towers, for the most part are out there actively being marketed for co-location opportunities. And that's completely appropriate.
And we compete at that level. So I certainly don't suggest anything otherwise.
And I think we'll see probably some asset sales here in the next sort of medium term. But that's just speculation at this point.
Jonathan Atkin - RBC Capital Markets Corporation
And then at LightSquared. Without getting into any kind of quantitative details, do you expect that you would be signing leases this year?
W. Moreland
We certainly hope so. We certainly hope so.
That's sort of the plan we're working under. But beyond that, and again, I don't think it would have really any material impact this year, and beyond that, we'll just wait and see how they further describe their deployment plans to the public going forward.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of James Ratcliffe with sponsored links, Barclays Capital.
James Ratcliffe - Barclays Capital
AT&T, in particular, has been talking a good bit about expanding of their WiFi coverage with Wi-Fi zones and heavy usage areas in major cities and the like. And I'm wondering how, if that's an opportunity for you in terms of infrastructure and actually in terms of WiFi antennas and towers?
And just how much exposure you have to in sort of dense urban environments like that versus more suburban rural environment?
W. Moreland
I would say to the WiFi question, I guess what I would say is, the way I think about it is, there's going to be offloading technologies. There already are.
That' what iPad's are, on WiFi a lot with them. So there's going to be offloading technologies that augment the capacity of these wireless networks from now on.
And I think over time, we'll have an increasing role in satisfying all of our desire to be untethered and have robust high-speed wireless access. But there's a limitation on what that ultimately can do, whether you're sitting in a restaurant or an airport.
And so you sort of go from there, really almost sort of in the continuum in my mind, you go from there to a DAS network which is outside connected directly to fiber. So high-speed, reasonably close proximity to the antennas, potentially in a residential area or a venue.
And so it really comes -- you sort of start with a continuum of what the architecture looks like. So you're sitting in your house, roaming on your own internal WiFi system or in a public location, and then you sort of get outside of that and then you need hand-off capability, mobile capability, and maybe that takes you into a DAS network.
Then you get out onto a more major artery where you have a lot more traffic and a lot more loading into the system, and that rolls you into sort of the traditional, terrestrial tower network. And so as we've studied this more and more, I've gotten very comfortable that it takes really all of these types of architectures to deliver the enormous amount of bandwidth and capacity that we're all requiring.
And it really looks a lot like the Internet adoption curve. And there's just no way that a, frankly, I think there were some pretty interesting industry data out recently where I think it's unlikely that the wireless spectrum and wireless networks that are built around that spectrum, will be able to satisfy all of our demands for wireless services.
And so it's really going to take all of that working together. And that's why we are comfortable that DAS is not, by any means in our view, a threat to the tower network.
It's merely complementary. And then I would say the very same thing about WiFi nodes and ultimately, even femtocells if you want to go down that path.
I think it really takes all those types of network architectures deployed to try to keep up with what we currently see and what you can expect to see in the future.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Jonathan Schildkraut with Evercore.
Jonathan Schildkraut.
In terms of the bond offering that you have out there, previously you've indicated your goals were kind of investment-grade. I'm wondering what your expectations are.
And then secondly, if you could just refresh us on your kind of view into some of international opportunities we're now seeing. Both of your kind of larger peers move into Latin America.
W. Moreland
Jonathan, on the first question, I'm just going to have to ask you to wait until we issue a subsequent press release. I really can't talk about the offering that we have in the market currently.
But as I spoke about, we believe we'll be successful there and, hopefully, once we are, we'll put out a press release and give you all the details and be happy to answer any specific questions about it once it's done. Historically, the securitizations have been investment-grade.
W. Moreland
In terms of international opportunities, Jonathan, we continue to look and study and see opportunities that are out there in the marketplace. And as yet, have not have something that we've been prepared to pursue aggressively enough to win in an auction, if you will.
That doesn't mean we won't in the future. So I'm not going to foreclose the opportunity.
And as you know, we have our business in Australia, so we have a view in an international market today. But I would say that we are very focused on the opportunities we see in the states.
From our perspective, it is the fastest-growing wireless market in the world. And it's not something you could have said a few years go.
We are, I think in the U.S., probably among the leaders, if not the leader, in terms of wireless technology today and where we're headed. The amount of investment that's being deployed in these networks and the incremental returns that the carriers are able to command from those investments, in my mind, make the U.
S. market somewhat unique.
Because that's not clearly not the case in some other markets that we have looked at. So I will not foreclose the opportunity.
We'll continue to remain educated and aware of what's going on. But as we sit here today, we are quite enthusiastic about what we see in the U.S.
market and the opportunity before us. And that is likely to be our -- where most of our effort continues to be focused.
Jonathan Schildkraut.
Ben, during your prepared comments you talked a little bit about the 4G rollouts relative to kind of what you had seen with some of the 3G activity, and that with 4G, this activity was kind of coming in front of maybe some of the devices and the consumer demand. And I think what we saw, at least two 3G is we saw an initial overlay and then kind of a lot of backfilling, which has been the incremental demand that's benefited the industry.
With the 4G build outs, are you anticipating the same type of activity or were trying to indicate that maybe with the initial rollouts, carriers were going a little bit deeper in terms of their initial overlays?
W. Moreland
Yes. No, thanks for the question clarification.
We are see exactly the pattern we've seen before where you have a network rollout and then you have significant backfill or augmentation going through a market as we pick up additional sites commensurate with subscribers to the network. We are absolutely seeing that already with some of those markets that haven't been launched.
And we would expect that to be a significant component going forward. And if you think about it, from the carriers perspective as they rollout, that's a very efficient thing to do.
Because obviously, you're trying to spread your marketing and your customer acquisition dollar. And so to go back and augment and add to a market that's already on the air, is a very efficient thing to do and a very significant component of what I think will be the next few years of 4G lease up.
And if you get out on some of the websites and look at the coverage maps out there, I thank you can see exactly what we're referring to. There's a long way to go in the market that's have already been deployed.
Jay Brown
With that, I think we're right at an hour end, so maybe we'll end the call there. I apologize.
I realize we only got to about half of the folks in the queue here with questions this morning. So Ben, myself, Fiona, we're in the office today, and if you'd like to give us a ring, will try to get back to you soon as we can.
I appreciate you joining us this morning on the call and look forward to talking to you on the third quarter call.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes the Q2 2010 Earnings Conference Call. If you'd like to listen to a replay of today's conference, please dial (303) 590-3030 or 1-800-406-7325, followed by a passcode of 4329036.
ACT would like to thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.