Hold these risky telcos for now

Article Excerpt

These two phone companies have limited growth prospects. But their high dividends seem safe for now. FRONTIER COMMUNICATIONS CORP. $8.03 (New York symbol FTR; Income Portfolio, Utilities sector; Shares outstanding: 993.8 million; Market cap: $8.0 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 2.1; Dividend yield: 9.3%; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www.frontier.com) sells Internet and traditional phone services to 7.4 million customers in 27 states. Its clients are mainly in rural and suburban areas. The company took its current form in July 2010 when it acquired 4 million traditional phone customers from Verizon Communications Inc. (also in this issue). In return, Verizon shareholders received 0.24 shares of Frontier for each Verizon share they held. That gave them 68% of Frontier. If you assume the transaction occurred at the start of 2009, Frontier’s revenue would have fallen 6.9%, to $5.65 billion in 2010 from $6.1 billion in 2009. If you exclude one-time items, such as costs to integrate the Verizon accounts, earnings fell 25.2%, to $324 million, or $0.33…