As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 17, 1999. UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20549 -------------------- FORM 10-Q (Mark One) [X] QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 or 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 For the quarterly period ended March 31,1999 OR [ ] TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 or 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 For the transition period from to Commission File No. 0-15279 GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter) STATE OF ALASKA 92-0072737 (State or other jurisdiction of (I.R.S. Employer incorporation or organization) Identification No.) 2550 Denali Street Suite 1000 Anchorage, Alaska 99503 (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code) Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (907) 265-5600 Former name, former address and former fiscal year, if changed since last report Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (l) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes X No . The number of shares outstanding of the registrant's classes of common stock, as of April 30, 1999 was: 45,952,568 shares of Class A common stock; and 4,055,437 shares of Class B common stock. 1 INDEX GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. FORM 10-Q FOR THE QUARTER ENDED MARCH 31, 1999
PAGE NO ------- Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Statements.................................................3 PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION Item l. Consolidated Balance Sheets as of March 31, 1999 (unaudited) and December 31, 1998.......................................5 Consolidated Statements of Operations for the three months ended March 31, 1999 (unaudited) and 1998 (unaudited)........................................7 Consolidated Statements of Stockholders' Equity for the three months ended March 31, 1999 (unaudited) and 1998 (unaudited)........................................8 Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the three months ended March 31, 1999 (unaudited) and 1998 (unaudited)....................................................9 Notes to Interim Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements..............................................................10 Item 2. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.....................................19 Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk.............................................................36 PART II. OTHER INFORMATION Item 1. Legal Proceedings..........................................................36 Item 6. Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K...........................................37 Other items are omitted as they are not applicable. SIGNATURES................................................................................................38
2 CAUTIONARY STATEMENT REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS Certain statements in this quarterly report on Form 10-Q constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1996 ("Securities Reform Act"). These statements may be preceded by, followed by, or include the words "believes," "expects," "anticipates," or similar expressions. For those statements, the Company claims protection of the safe-harbor for forward-looking statements contained in the Securities Reform Act. Such forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other important factors that could cause the actual results, performance and achievements of the Company, or industry results, to differ materially from future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such statements. The reader is cautioned that important factors, such as the following risks, uncertainties, and other factors, in addition to those contained elsewhere in this document, could affect future results of the Company, its long-distance telecommunication services, local access services, Internet services and cable services and could cause those results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements: - Material adverse changes in the economic conditions in the markets served by the Company; - The efficacy of the rules and regulations to be adopted by the Federal Communications Commission ("FCC") and state public regulatory agencies to implement the provisions of the 1996 Telecom Act; the outcome of litigation relative thereto; and the impact of regulatory changes relating to access reform; - The Company's responses to competitive products, services and pricing, including pricing pressures, technological developments, alternative routing developments, and the ability to offer combined service packages that include local, cable and Internet services; the extent and pace at which different competitive environments develop for each segment of the Company's business; the extent and duration for which competitors from each segment of the telecommunications industry are able to offer combined or full service packages prior to the Company being able to do so; the degree to which the Company experiences material competitive impacts to its traditional service offerings prior to achieving adequate local service entry; and competitor responses to the Company's products and services and overall market acceptance of such products and services; - The outcome of negotiations with Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers ("ILECs") and state regulatory arbitrations and approvals with respect to interconnection agreements; and the ability to purchase unbundled network elements or wholesale services from ILECs at a price sufficient to permit the profitable offering of local exchange service at competitive rates; - Success and market acceptance for new initiatives, many of which are untested; the level and timing of the growth and profitability of new initiatives, particularly local access services, Internet (consumer and business) services and wireless services; start-up costs associated with entering new markets, including advertising and promotional efforts; successful deployment of new systems and applications to support new initiatives; and local conditions and obstacles; - Uncertainties inherent in new business strategies, new product launches and development plans, including local access services, Internet services, wireless services, digital video services, cable modem services, and transmission services; - Rapid technological changes; - Development and financing of telecommunication, local access, wireless, Internet and cable networks and services; - Future financial performance, including the availability, terms and deployment of capital; the impact of regulatory and competitive developments on capital outlays, and the ability to achieve cost savings and realize productivity improvements; 3 - Availability of qualified personnel; - Changes in, or failure, or inability, to comply with, government regulations, including, without limitation, regulations of the FCC, the Alaska Public Utilities Commission ("APUC"), and adverse outcomes from regulatory proceedings; - The cost of the Company's Year 2000 compliance efforts; - Uncertainties in federal military spending levels and military base closures in markets in which the Company operates; and - Other risks detailed from time to time in the Company's periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These forward-looking statements (and such risks, uncertainties and other factors) are made only as of the date of this report and the Company expressly disclaims any obligation or undertaking to disseminate any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statement contained in this document to reflect any change in the Company's expectations with regard to those statements or any other change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based. Readers are cautioned not to put undue reliance on such forward looking statements. 4 PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION ITEM 1. CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(Unaudited) March 31, December 31, ASSETS 1999 1998 - --------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------- ----------------- (Amounts in thousands) Current assets: Cash and cash equivalents $ 6,169 12,008 ----------------- ----------------- Receivables: Trade 39,019 38,890 Income taxes 2,262 4,262 Other 379 412 ----------------- ----------------- 41,660 43,564 Less allowance for doubtful receivables 1,384 887 ----------------- ----------------- Net receivables 40,276 42,677 Prepaid and other current assets 2,547 2,212 Deferred income taxes, net 1,978 1,947 Inventories 1,611 1,878 Notes receivable 628 650 ----------------- ----------------- Total current assets 53,209 61,372 ----------------- ----------------- Property and equipment in service, net 316,071 199,827 Construction in progress 4,654 119,395 ----------------- ----------------- Net property and equipment 320,725 319,222 ----------------- ----------------- Other assets: Cable franchise agreements, net of amortization 194,017 195,308 Other intangible assets, net of amortization 45,065 45,391 Deferred loan and senior notes costs, net of amortization 9,577 9,877 Transponder deposit (note 5) 9,100 9,100 Notes receivable 1,522 1,432 Other assets, at cost, net of amortization 3,777 4,414 ----------------- ----------------- Total other assets 263,058 265,522 ----------------- ----------------- Total assets $ 636,992 646,116 ================= ================= See accompanying notes to interim condensed consolidated financial statements.
5 (Continued) GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS (Continued)
(Unaudited) March 31, December 31, LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY 1999 1998 - --------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------- -------------- (Amounts in thousands) Current liabilities: Current maturities of long-term debt (note 3) $ 1,836 1,799 Current maturities of obligations under capital leases 527 511 Accounts payable 26,736 27,550 Accrued interest 3,694 8,072 Accrued payroll and payroll related obligations 7,013 6,555 Accrued liabilities 3,662 3,197 Subscriber deposits and deferred revenues 5,983 5,300 --------------- -------------- Total current liabilities 49,451 52,984 Long-term debt, excluding current maturities (note 3) 354,338 349,858 Obligations under capital leases, including related party obligations, excluding current maturities 1,536 1,675 Deferred income taxes, net of deferred income tax benefit 33,246 38,275 Other liabilities 3,229 3,317 --------------- -------------- Total liabilities 441,800 446,109 --------------- -------------- Stockholders' equity (note 6): Common stock (no par): Class A. Authorized 100,000,000 shares; issued and outstanding 45,950,745 and 45,895,415 shares at March 31, 1999 and December 31, 1998, respectively 172,746 172,708 Class B. Authorized 10,000,000 shares; issued and outstanding 4,055,290 and 4,060,620 shares at March 31, 1999 and December 31, 1998, respectively; convertible on a share-per-share basis intoClass A common stock 3,432 3,432 Less cost of 286,554 Class A common shares held in treasury at March 31, 1999 and December 31, 1998 (1,607) (1,607) Paid-in capital 5,725 5,609 Notes receivable issued upon stock option exercise (741) (637) Retained earnings 15,637 20,502 --------------- -------------- Total stockholders' equity 195,192 200,007 --------------- -------------- Commitments and contingencies (notes 5 and 6) Total liabilities and stockholders' equity $ 636,992 646,116 =============== ============== See accompanying notes to interim condensed consolidated financial statements.
6 GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS (Unaudited) Three Months Ended March 31, 1999 1998 -------------- -------------- (Amounts in thousands except per share amounts) Revenues (note 4) $ 61,338 58,152 Cost of sales and services 27,870 27,315 Selling, general and administrative 23,538 20,334 Depreciation and amortization 10,298 8,066 -------------- -------------- Operating income (loss) (368) 2,437 Interest expense, net 6,960 4,944 -------------- -------------- Net loss before income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle (7,328) (2,507) Income tax benefit 2,807 891 -------------- -------------- Net loss before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle (4,521) (1,616) Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, net of income tax benefit of $245 344 --- -------------- -------------- Net loss $ (4,865) (1,616) ============== ============== Basic loss per common share: Loss before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle $ (0.10) (0.03) Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle --- --- -------------- -------------- Net loss $ (0.10) (0.03) ============== ============== Diluted loss per common share: Loss before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle $ (0.10) (0.03) Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle --- --- -------------- -------------- Net loss $ (0.10) (0.03) ============== ============== See accompanying notes to interim condensed consolidated financial statements.
7 GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31, 1999 AND 1998
Notes Shares of Common Class A Class B Class A Receiv- (Unaudited) Stock Common Common Shares Held Paid-in able Retained (Amounts in thousands) Class A Class B Stock Stock in Treasury Capital Issued Earnings --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Balances at December 31, 1997 45,279 4,063 $ 170,322 3,432 (1,039) 4,425 --- 27,299 Net loss --- --- --- --- --- --- --- (1,616) Tax effect of excess stock compensation expense for tax purposes over amounts recognized for financial reporting purposes --- --- --- --- --- 10 --- --- Shares issued under stock option plan 56 --- 170 --- --- 80 --- --- Stock offering issuance costs --- --- (15) --- --- --- --- --- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Balances at March 31, 1998 45,335 4,063 $ 170,477 3,432 (1,039) 4,515 --- 25,683 ======================================================================================= Balances at December 31, 1998 45,895 4,061 $ 172,708 3,432 (1,607) 5,609 (637) 20,502 Net loss --- --- --- --- --- --- --- (4,865) Tax effect of excess stock compensation expense for tax purposes over amounts recognized for financial reporting purposes --- --- --- --- --- 8 --- --- Class B shares converted to Class A 6 (6) --- --- --- --- --- --- Shares issued and issuable under stock option plan --- --- --- --- --- 54 --- --- Shares issued under officer stock option agreements and notes issued upon officer stock option exercise 50 --- 38 --- --- --- (104) --- Warrants issued --- --- --- --- --- 54 --- --- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Balances at March 31, 1999 45,951 4,055 $ 172,746 3,432 (1,607) 5,725 (741) 15,637 ======================================================================================= See accompanying notes to interim condensed consolidated financial statements.
8 GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS (Unaudited) Three Months Ended March 31, 1999 1998 ------------- ------------- (Amounts in thousands) Cash flows from operating activities: Net loss $ (4,865) (1,616) Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash provided (used) by operating activities: Depreciation and amortization 10,298 8,066 Amortization charged to selling, general and administrative 430 115 Deferred income tax (benefit) expense (3,052) 1,969 Deferred compensation and compensatory stock options 172 168 Bad debt expense, net of write-offs 497 115 Write-off of unamortized start-up costs 589 --- Warrants issued 54 --- Other noncash income and expense items 20 (26) Change in operating assets and liabilities (note 2) (3,956) (14,342) -------------- -------------- Net cash provided (used) by operating activities 187 (5,551) -------------- -------------- Cash flows from investing activities: Purchases of property and equipment, including construction period interest (9,882) (28,167) Restricted cash investment --- 13,152 Purchases of other assets (391) (1,275) Notes receivable issued (89) (30) Payments received on notes receivable 15 95 -------------- -------------- Net cash used in investing activities (10,347) (16,225) -------------- -------------- Cash flows from financing activities: Long-term borrowings - bank debt and leases 4,884 24,027 Repayments of long-term borrowings and capital lease obligations (490) (443) Stock offering issuance costs --- (15) Payment of debt issuance costs (7) (1,078) Note receivable issued upon stock option exercise (104) --- Proceeds from common stock issuance 38 170 -------------- -------------- Net cash provided by financing activities 4,321 22,661 -------------- -------------- Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents (5,839) 885 Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period 12,008 3,048 -------------- -------------- Cash and cash equivalents at end of period $ 6,169 3,933 ============== ============== See accompanying notes to interim condensed consolidated financial statements.
9 GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES NOTES TO INTERIM CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited) (1) General (a) Business General Communication, Inc. ("GCI"), an Alaska corporation, was incorporated in 1979. GCI and its direct and indirect subsidiaries (collectively, the "Company") offer long-distance telephone service between Anchorage, Fairbanks, Juneau, and other communities in Alaska and the remaining United States and foreign countries. Cable television services are offered throughout Alaska and facilities-based competitive local access services are offered in Anchorage, Alaska. The Company provides services to certain common carriers terminating traffic in Alaska, interstate and intrastate private line services, Internet services, managed services to certain commercial customers and sells and services dedicated communications systems and related equipment. Private network point-to-point data and voice transmission services between Alaska, Hawaii and the western contiguous United States are offered and the Company owns and leases capacity on two undersea fiber optic cables used in the transmission of interstate private line, switched message long-distance and Internet services between Alaska and the remaining United States and foreign countries. (b) Organization The consolidated financial statements include the accounts of GCI, its wholly-owned subsidiary GCI, Inc., GCI, Inc.'s wholly-owned subsidiary GCI Holdings, Inc., GCI Holdings, Inc.'s wholly-owned subsidiaries GCI Communication Corp., GCI Communication Services, Inc. and GCI Cable, Inc., GCI Communication Services, Inc.'s wholly-owned subsidiary GCI Leasing Co., Inc., GCI Transport Company, Inc., GCI Transport Company, Inc.'s wholly-owned subsidiaries GCI Fiber Co., Inc. and Fiber Hold Company, Inc. and GCI Fiber Co., Inc.'s and Fiber Hold Company, Inc.'s wholly owned partnership Alaska United Fiber System Partnership. (c) Net Loss Per Common Share Shares used to calculate net loss per common share consist of the following (amounts in thousands):
Three Months Ended March 31, 1999 1998 ----------- --------- Weighted average common shares outstanding 49,636 49,190 Common equivalent shares outstanding --- --- ----------- --------- 49,636 49,190 =========== =========
Common equivalent shares outstanding of 493,000 and 862,000 are anti-dilutive at March 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively, and are not included in the diluted net loss per share calculation. Weighted average shares associated with outstanding stock options totaling 2,380,000 and 3,748,000 at March 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively, have been excluded from the diluted loss per share calculations because the options' exercise price was greater than the average market price of the common shares. 10 (Continued) GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES NOTES TO INTERIM CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited) (d) Cumulative Effect of a Change in Accounting Principle In April 1998, the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) issued Statement of Position ("SOP") 98-5, "Reporting on the Costs of Start-Up Activities". SOP 98-5 provides guidance on the financial reporting of start-up costs and organization costs and requires costs of start-up activities and organization costs to be expensed as incurred. SOP 98-5 is effective for financial statements for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 1998. Management of the Company adopted SOP 98-5 in the first quarter of 1999 resulting in the recognition of a one-time expense of $344,000 (net of income tax benefit of $245,000) associated with the write-off of unamortized start-up costs. Pro forma first quarter 1998 net loss and net loss per common share approximate amounts reflected in the accompanying interim condensed consolidated financial statements. (e) Reclassifications Reclassifications have been made to the 1998 financial statements to make them comparable with the 1999 presentation. (f) Other The accompanying unaudited interim condensed consolidated financial statements have been prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles for interim financial information and with the instructions to Form 10-Q and Article 10 of Regulation S-X. Accordingly, they do not include all of the information and footnotes required by generally accepted accounting principles for complete financial statements. The interim condensed consolidated financial statements include the consolidated accounts of General Communication, Inc. and its wholly owned subsidiaries (collectively, the "Company") with all significant intercompany transactions eliminated. In the opinion of management, all adjustments (consisting of normal recurring accruals) considered necessary for a fair presentation have been included. Operating results for the three-month period ended March 31, 1999 are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected for the year ended December 31, 1999. For further information, refer to the financial statements and footnotes thereto included in the Company's annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1998. 11 (Continued) GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES NOTES TO INTERIM CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited) (2) Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows Supplemental Disclosures Changes in operating assets and liabilities consist of: Three-month periods ended March 31, 1999 1998 ------------- ------------ (Amounts in thousands) Increase in receivables $ (96) (3,910) Decrease in income tax receivable --- (2,861) Increase in prepaid and other current assets (335) (373) (Increase) decrease in inventory 267 (411) Decrease in accounts payable (814) (3,443) Increase (decrease) in accrued liabilities 465 (582) Increase in accrued payroll and payroll related obligations 458 997 Decrease in accrued interest (4,378) (4,109) Increase in deferred revenues 683 327 Increase (decrease) in other liabilities (206) 23 ------------- ------------ $ (3,956) (14,342) ============= ============
No income taxes were paid and no income tax refunds were received during the three-month periods ended March 31, 1999 and 1998. Interest paid totaled $12,890,000 and $10,767,000 during the three-month periods ended March 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. (3) Long-term Debt On January 27, 1998, the Company, through Alaska United Fiber System Partnership ("Alaska United"), closed a $75,000,000 project finance facility ("Fiber Facility") to construct a fiber optic cable system connecting Anchorage, Fairbanks, Valdez, Whittier, Juneau and Seattle as further described in note 5. Borrowings under the Fiber Facility totaled $66,108,000 at March 31, 1999. In April 1999, borrowings under the Fiber Facility totaled $75,000,000, the maximum amount available under the Fiber Facility agreement. (4) Industry Segments Data The Company's reportable segments are business units that offer different products. The reportable segments are each managed separately because they manage and offer distinct products with different production and delivery processes. The Company has four reportable segments as follows: Long-distance services. A full range of common-carrier long-distance services are offered to business, government, other telecommunications companies and consumer customers, through its networks of fiber optic cables, digital microwave, and fixed and transportable satellite earth stations. Cable services. The Company provides cable television services to residential, commercial and government users in the State of Alaska. The Company's cable systems serve 26 communities and areas in Alaska, including the state's three largest urban areas, Anchorage, Fairbanks and 12 (Continued) GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES NOTES TO INTERIM CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited) Juneau. Anchorage cable plant upgrades in 1998 enabled the Company to offer digital cable television services and retail cable modem service (through its Internet services segment) in Anchorage, complementing its existing service offerings. The Company plans to expand its product offerings as plant upgrades are completed in other communities in Alaska. Local access services. The Company introduced facilities based competitive local exchange services in Anchorage in 1997. The Company has announced plans to ultimately provide similar competitive local exchange services in Alaska's other major population centers, as access is allowed by the Alaska Public Utilities Commission. Internet services. The Company began offering wholesale and retail Internet services in 1998. Deployment of the new undersea fiber optic cable (see note 5) allows the Company to offer enhanced services with high-bandwidth requirements. Services provided by the Company that are included in the "Other" segment in the tables that follow are managed services, product sales and cellular telephone services. Included in the Other segment are the results of insignificant business units described above which do meet the quantitative thresholds for determining reportable segments. None of these business units have ever met the quantitative thresholds for determining reportable segments. Also included in the Other segment are corporate related expenses, including marketing, customer service, management information systems, accounting, legal and regulatory, human resources and other general and administrative expenses. The Company evaluates performance and allocates resources based on (1) earnings or loss from operations before depreciation, amortization, net interest expense, income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle, and (2) operating income or loss. The accounting policies of the reportable segments are the same as those described in the summary of significant accounting policies included in the Company's annual report on Form 10-K at December 31, 1998. Intersegment sales are recorded at cost plus an agreed upon intercompany profit. All revenues are earned through sales of services and products within the United States of America. All of the Company's long-lived assets are located within the United States of America. Summarized financial information concerning the Company's reportable segments follows for the quarters ended March 31, 1999 and 1998 (amounts in thousands):
Long- Local Distance Cable Access Internet Services Services Services Services Other Total ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1999 ---- Revenues: Intersegment $ 1,902 613 660 --- --- 3,175 External 37,542 15,062 3,714 1,969 3,051 61,338 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total revenues 39,444 15,675 4,374 1,969 3,051 64,513 ========================================================================
13 (Continued) GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES NOTES TO INTERIM CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited)
Long- Local Distance Cable Access Internet Services Services Services Services Other Total ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Earnings (loss) from operations before depreciation, amortization, net interest expense, income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle $12,859 8,673 (230) (1,782) (9,339) 10,181 ======================================================================== Operating income (loss) $ 9,288 4,282 (1,040) (2,034) (10,613) (117) ======================================================================== 1998 ---- Revenues: Intersegment $ --- 317 --- --- --- 317 External 38,651 14,201 1,013 903 3,384 58,152 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total revenues $38,651 14,518 1,013 903 3,384 58,469 ======================================================================== Earnings (loss) from operations before depreciation, amortization, net interest expense and income taxes $14,290 7,136 (1,361) 377 (9,936) 10,506 ======================================================================== Operating income (loss) $12,117 3,512 (2,428) 242 (11,003) 2,440 ========================================================================
A reconciliation of total segment revenues to consolidated revenues follows:
Quarters ended March 31, 1999 1998 ------------- -------------- Total segment revenues $ 64,513 58,469 Less intersegment revenues eliminated in consolidation (3,175) (317) ------------- -------------- Consolidated revenues $ 61,338 58,152 ============= ==============
14 (Continued) GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES NOTES TO INTERIM CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited) A reconciliation of total segment earnings from operations before depreciation, amortization, net interest expense, income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle to consolidated net loss before income taxes and cumulative change in accounting principle follows:
Quarters ended March 31, 1999 1998 ------------- -------------- Total segment earnings from operations before depreciation, amortization, net interest expense, income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle $ 10,181 10,506 Less intersegment contribution eliminated in consolidation (251) (3) ------------- -------------- Consolidated earnings from operations before depreciation, amortization, net interest expense, income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle 9,930 10,503 Depreciation and amortization 10,298 8,066 ------------- -------------- Consolidated operating income (loss) (368) 2,437 Interest expense, net (6,960) (4,944) ------------- -------------- Consolidated net loss before income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle $ (7,328) (2,507) ============= ==============
A reconciliation of total segment operating income (loss) to consolidated net loss before income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle follows:
Quarters ended March 31, 1999 1998 ------------- -------------- Total segment operating income (loss) $ (117) 2,440 Less intersegment contribution eliminated in consolidation (251) (3) ------------- -------------- Consolidated operating income (loss) (368) 2,437 Interest expense, net (6,960) (4,944) ------------- -------------- Consolidated net loss before income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle $ (7,328) (2,507) ============= ==============
(5) Commitments and Contingencies Deferred Compensation Plan The Company's non-qualified, unfunded deferred compensation plan provides a means by which certain employees may elect to defer receipt of designated percentages or amounts of their compensation and provides a means for certain other deferrals of compensation. The Company may, at its discretion, contribute matching deferrals equal to the rate of matching selected by the Company. Participants immediately vest in all elective deferrals and all income and gain attributable thereto. Matching contributions and all income and gain attributable thereto vest over a six-year period. Participants may elect to be paid in either a single lump sum payment or annual installments over a period not to exceed 10 years. Vested balances are payable upon termination 15 (Continued) GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES NOTES TO INTERIM CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited) of employment, unforeseen emergencies, death and total disability. Participants are general creditors of the Company with respect to deferred compensation plan benefits. Compensation deferred pursuant to the plan totaled $118,000 and $0 during the three-month periods ended March 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. Satellite Transponders The Company entered into a purchase and lease-purchase option agreement in August 1995 for the acquisition of satellite transponders to meet its long-term satellite capacity requirements. The launch of the satellite in August 1998 failed. The Company did not assume launch risk and the launch has been rescheduled for the first quarter of 2000. The Company will continue to lease transponder capacity until the delivery of the transponders on the replacement satellite. The balance payable upon expected delivery of the transponders during the first quarter of 2000, in addition to the $9.1 million deposit previously paid, totals approximately $43.5 million. Self-Insurance The Company is self-insured for losses and liabilities related primarily to health and welfare claims up to predetermined amounts above which third party insurance applies. A reserve of $555,000 was recorded at March 31, 1999 to cover estimated reported losses, estimated unreported losses based on past experience modified for current trends, and estimated expenses for investigating and settling claims. Actual losses will vary from the recorded reserve. While management uses what it believes is pertinent information and factors in determining the amount of reserves, future additions to the reserves may be necessary due to changes in the information and factors used. Litigation and Disputes The Company is from time to time involved in various lawsuits, legal proceedings and regulatory matters that have arisen in the normal course of business. While the ultimate results of these matters cannot be predicted with certainty, management does not expect them to have a material adverse effect on the financial position, results of operations or liquidity of the Company. Cable Service Rate Reregulation Effective March 31, 1999, the rates for cable programming services (service tiers above basic service) are no longer regulated. This regulation ended pursuant to provisions of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 and the regulations adopted pursuant thereto by the Federal Communications Commission ("FCC"). Federal law still permits regulation of basic service rates. However, Alaska state law provides that cable television service is exempt from regulation by the Alaska Public Utilities Commission ("APUC") unless 25% of a system's subscribers request such regulation by filing a petition with the APUC. At March 31, 1999, only the Juneau system is subject to APUC regulation of its basic service rates. No petition requesting regulation has been filed for any other system. (The Juneau system serves 8.3% of the Company's total basic service subscribers at March 31, 1999.) Juneau's current rates have been approved by the APUC and there are no other pending filings with the APUC, therefore, there is no refund liability for basic service at this time. 16 (Continued) GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES NOTES TO INTERIM CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited) Undersea Fiber Optic Cable Contract Commitment The Company signed a contract in July 1997 for construction of the undersea portion of a fiber optic cable system connecting the cities of Anchorage, Juneau, and Seattle via a subsea route. The total system is expected to cost approximately $125 million. Subsea and terrestrial connections extended the fiber optic cable to Fairbanks via Whittier and Valdez. Construction efforts began in September 1998 and were completed in early February 1999. Commercial services commenced in February 1999. Pursuant to the contract, the Company has paid $86.3 million through December 31, 1998 and $424,000 during the three-month period ended March 31, 1999, and will pay the remaining balance in installments in April 1999. Approximately $39.4 million of proceeds from the 1997 public offerings (see the Company's December 31, 1998 annual report on Form 10-K), net of the $9.1 million paid in 1997, were contributed to Alaska United. In January 1998, the Company secured $75 million in bank financing to fund the remaining cost of construction and deployment, of which $66.1 million was outstanding at March 31, 1999 (see note 3). Year 2000 In 1997, the Company initiated a plan to identify, assess and remediate Year 2000 issues within each of its significant computer programs and certain equipment which contain micro-processors. The plan is addressing the issue of computer programs and embedded computer chips being unable to distinguish between the year 1900 and the year 2000, if a program or chip uses only two digits rather than four to define the applicable year. The Company has divided the plan into two major phases. The first phase, including team formation, inventory assessment, compliance assessment and risk assessment, were completed during 1998. The second phase, including resolution/remediation, validation, contingency planning and sign-off acceptance, was in progress at December 31, 1998. Systems which have been determined not to be Year 2000 compliant are being either replaced or reprogrammed, and thereafter tested for Year 2000 compliance. The plan anticipates that by mid-1999 the conversion, implementation and testing phases will be completed. The current budget for the total cost of remediation (including replacement software and hardware) and testing, as set forth in the plan, is approximately $4.0 million. The Company is in the process of identifying and contacting critical suppliers and customers whose computerized systems interface with the Company's systems, regarding their plans and progress in addressing their Year 2000 issues. The Company has received varying information from such third parties on the state of compliance or expected compliance. Contingency plans continue to be developed in the event that any critical supplier or customer is not compliant. The failure to correct a material Year 2000 problem could result in an interruption in, or a failure of, certain normal business activities or operations. Such failures could materially and adversely affect the Company's operations, liquidity and financial condition. Due to the general uncertainty inherent in the Year 2000 problem, resulting in part from the uncertainty of the Year 2000 readiness of third-party suppliers and customers, the Company is unable to determine at this time whether the consequences of Year 2000 failures will have a material impact on the Company's operations, liquidity or financial condition. 17 (Continued) GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES NOTES TO INTERIM CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited) (6) Subsequent Event The Company issued 20,000 shares of convertible redeemable accreting preferred stock ("Preferred Stock") on April 30, 1999. Proceeds totaling $20 million (before payment of costs and expenses) will be used for general corporate purposes, to repay outstanding indebtedness, and to provide additional liquidity. The Company's amended Senior Holdings Loan facilities limit use of such proceeds. The Preferred Stock contains a $1,000 per share liquidation preference, plus accrued but unpaid dividends and fees. Dividends are payable semi-annually at the rate of 8.5% of the liquidation preference. Prior to the four-year anniversary following closing, dividends are payable, at the Company's option, in cash or in additional fully-paid shares of Preferred Stock. Dividends are payable only in cash following the four-year anniversary of closing. Mandatory redemption is required 12 years from the date of closing. The Company may redeem the Preferred Stock after the four-year anniversary of its issuance, and must redeem the Preferred Stock upon the occurrence of a triggering event. The holders may convert the Preferred Stock into Class A common stock of the Company at any time after the four-year anniversary of the issuance of the Preferred Stock, at a price of $5.55 per share. At any time subsequent to the third anniversary following closing, and assuming the stock is trading at no less than two times the conversion price, the Company may require immediate conversion. The Preferred Stock, subject to lender approval, is exchangeable in whole or in part, at the Company's option, into subordinated debt with terms and conditions comparable to those governing the Preferred Stock. The Preferred Stock is senior to all other classes of the Company's equity securities, and has voting rights equal to that number of shares of common stock into which it can be converted. Holders of the Preferred Stock shares will have the right to vote on all matters presented for vote to the holders of common stock on an as-converted basis. Additionally, the Preferred Stock offering requires as long as the Preferred Stock shares remain outstanding and unconverted, the holders of it will have the right to vote, as a class, and the Company must obtain the written consent of holders of a majority (or higher as required by Alaska law) of that stock to take certain actions, some of which require shareholder approval necessitating amendment of the Company's Articles of Incorporation. With the issuance of the Preferred Stock shares, the holders of that stock may recommend one individual to the Company's Board of Directors ("Board"). Under the terms of the Preferred Stock offering, the Board will expand its size from the present nine to ten seats and, upon qualification, appoint that individual to that new seat to serve until the next shareholder meeting. At that shareholder meeting, the individual would be required to stand for election to complete the term of the class of directors to which the individual was assigned. The offering also provides that the Board include the individual recommended by those holders on the subsequent Board slate for election of directors and actively to seek the election of that individual to the Board. The offering further provides that, should the holders of common stock of the Company not elect that individual, the holders of the Preferred Stock Shares will have the right to appoint an observer at the meetings of the Board. The offering also provides that these rights of the holders of Preferred Stock shares relating to the Board seat and observer are to remain effective so long as any of the Preferred Stock shares remain outstanding. 18 PART I. ITEM 2. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS The following discussion and analysis should be read in conjunction with the Company's Interim Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements and the notes thereto. See - Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Statements. OVERVIEW The Company has experienced significant growth in recent years through both strategic acquisitions and growth in its existing businesses. The Company has historically met its cash needs for operations through its cash flows from operating activities. Cash requirements for acquisitions and capital expenditures have been provided largely through the Company's financing activities. Long-distance services. The Company's provision of interstate and intrastate long-distance services to residential, commercial and governmental customers and to other common carriers (principally MCI WorldCom and Sprint) accounted for approximately 92.7% of the Company's total long-distance services revenues during the first quarter of 1999. Factors that have the greatest impact on year-to-year changes in long-distance services revenues include the rate per minute charged to customers and usage volumes, usually expressed as minutes of use. These factors in turn depend in part upon economic conditions in Alaska. The economy of Alaska is dependent upon the natural resource industries, in particular oil production, as well as tourism, government and United States military spending. The Company's long-distance cost of sales and services has consisted principally of the direct costs of providing services, including local access charges paid to Local Exchange Carriers ("LECs") for the origination and termination of long-distance calls in Alaska, fees paid to other long-distance carriers to carry calls that terminate in areas not served by the Company's network (principally the lower 49 states, most of which calls are carried over MCI WorldCom's network, and international locations, which calls are carried principally over Sprint's network), and the cost of equipment sold to the Company's customers. During the first quarter of 1999, local access charges accounted for 44.4% of long-distance cost of sales and services, fees paid to other long-distance carriers represented 31.1%, satellite transponder lease and undersea fiber maintenance costs represented 11.8%, telecommunications equipment accounted for 1.9%, network solutions and outsourcing costs represented 5.2% and other costs represented 5.6% of long-distance cost of sales and services. The Company's long-distance selling, general, and administrative expenses have consisted of operating and engineering, customer service, sales and communications, management information systems, general and administrative, legal and regulatory expenses. Most of these expenses consist of salaries, wages and benefits of personnel and certain other indirect costs (such as rent, travel, utilities, insurance and property taxes). A significant portion of long-distance selling, general, and administrative expenses, 23.9% during the first quarter of 1999, represents the cost of the Company's advertising, promotion and market analysis programs. 19 (Continued) Long-distance services face significant competition from AT&T Alascom, Inc., long-distance resellers, and from local telephone companies that have entered the long-distance market. Revenues derived from other common carriers increased 3.5% in the first quarter of 1999 as compared to the first quarter of 1998. The number of active long-distance residential, commercial and small business customers decreased 2.5% in the first quarter of 1999 as compared to the same period of 1998, and increased 4.4% as compared to the fourth quarter of 1998. The Company believes its approach to developing, pricing, and providing long-distance services and bundling different business segment services will continue to allow it to be competitive in providing those services. Other common carrier traffic routed to the Company for termination in Alaska is largely dependent on traffic routed to MCI WorldCom and Sprint by their customers. Pricing pressures, new program offerings and market consolidation continue to evolve in the markets served by MCI WorldCom and Sprint. If, as a result, their traffic is reduced, or if their competitors' costs to terminate or originate traffic in Alaska are reduced, the Company's traffic will also likely be reduced, and the Company's pricing may be reduced to respond to competitive pressures. The Company is unable to predict the effect on the Company of such changes, however given the materiality of other common carrier revenues to the Company, a significant reduction in traffic or pricing could have a material adverse effect on the Company's financial position, results of operations and liquidity. Services included in the Other segment as described in note 4 to the accompanying interim condensed consolidated financial statements are included in the Long-distance Services segment for purposes of this Management's Discussion and Analysis. Cable services. During the first quarter of 1999, cable revenues represented 24.6% of consolidated revenues. The cable systems serve 26 communities and areas in Alaska, including the state's three largest population centers, Anchorage, Fairbanks and Juneau. The Company generates cable services revenues from three primary sources: (1) programming services, including monthly basic or premium subscriptions and pay-per-view movies or other one-time events, such as sporting events; (2) equipment rentals or installation; and (3) advertising sales. During the first quarter of 1999 programming services generated 86.1% of total cable services revenues, equipment rental and installation fees accounted for 8.6% of such revenues, advertising sales accounted for 4.0% of such revenues, and other services accounted for the remaining 1.3% of total cable services revenues. The primary factors that contribute to year-to-year changes in cable services revenues are average monthly subscription and pay-per-view rates, the mix among basic, premium and pay-per-view services, and the average number of subscribers during a given reporting period. The cable systems' cost of sales and selling, general and administrative expenses have consisted principally of programming and copyright expenses, labor, maintenance and repairs, marketing and advertising and rental expense. During the first quarter of 1999 programming and copyright expenses represented approximately 46.1% of total cable cost of sales and selling, general and administrative expenses. Marketing and advertising costs represented approximately 8.5% of such total expenses. Cable services face competition from alternative methods of receiving and distributing television signals and from other sources of news, information and entertainment. The Company believes its cable television services will continue to be competitive based on providing, at reasonable prices, a greater variety of programming and other communication services than are available off-air or through other alternative delivery sources and upon superior technical performance and customer service. 20 (Continued) Local access services. The Company generates local access services revenues from four primary sources: (1) business and residential basic dial tone revenues; (2) business private line and special access revenues; (3) reciprocal access revenues from the incumbent LEC serving Anchorage; and (4) business and residential features and other charges, including voice mail, caller ID, distinctive ring, inside wiring and subscriber line charges. Effective March 1999 the Company expects to transition to the "bill and keep" cost settlement method for termination of traffic on its and other's facilities. Local exchange services revenues totaled $3.7 million representing 6.0% of consolidated revenues in the first quarter of 1999. The primary factors that contribute to year-to-year changes in local access services revenues are the average number of business and residential subscribers to the Company's services during a given reporting period and the average monthly rates charged for non-traffic sensitive services. Operating and engineering expenses represented approximately 4.4% of total local access services cost of sales and selling, general and administrative expenses during the first quarter of 1999. Marketing and advertising costs represented approximately 6.5% of such total expenses, customer service and general and administrative costs represented approximately 50.4% of such total expenses, and local access cost of sales represented approximately 38.7% of such total expenses. The Company expects that it will continue to generate operating losses from local exchange services during 1999. The Company's local access services face significant competition from ATU and AT&T Alascom, Inc. The Company believes its approach to developing, pricing, and providing local access services will allow it to be competitive in providing those services. Internet services. The Company began offering Internet services in several markets in Alaska during 1998. The Company generates Internet services revenues from three primary sources: (1) access product services, including commercial Dial-in Access ("DIAS"), Internet Service Provider ("ISP") DIAS, and retail dial-up service revenues; (2) SchoolAccess(TM) DIAS and server revenues; and (3) network management services. Internet services revenues totaled $2.0 million representing 3.2% of total revenues in the first quarter of 1999. The primary factors that contribute to year-to-year changes in Internet services revenues are average monthly subscription rates, the number of additional premium features selected, and the average number of subscribers to the Company's services during a given reporting period. Operating and general and administrative expenses represented approximately 68.5% of total Internet services cost of sales and selling, general and administrative expenses during the first quarter of 1999. Internet cost of sales represented approximately 24.2% of such total expenses and marketing and advertising represented approximately 7.3% of such total expenses. Significant new marketing campaigns were introduced in February and March 1999 featuring bundled residential and commercial Internet products. Additional bandwidth was made available to the Company's Internet segment resulting from completion of the Alaska United Project (see the Company's December 31, 1998 annual report on Form 10-K). The new Internet offerings are coupled with the Company's long-distance and local services offerings and provide free basic Internet services if certain long-distance or local services plans are selected. Value-added premium Internet features are available for additional charges. The Company competes with a number of Internet service providers in its markets. The Company believes its approach to developing, pricing, and providing Internet services will allow it to be competitive in providing those services. Other services, other expenses and net loss. Telecommunications services revenues reported in the Other segment as described in note 4 to the accompanying interim condensed consolidated financial statements have been attributable to corporate network management contracts, telecommunications equipment sales and 21 (Continued) service, other miscellaneous revenues (including revenues from prepaid and debit calling cards, the installation and leasing of customers' very small aperture terminal ("Vsat") equipment, and fees charged to MCI WorldCom and Sprint for certain billing services), and costs associated with PCS wireless communications services. The Company began developing plans for PCS service deployment in 1995 and subsequently conducted a technical trial of its candidate technology. The Company has invested approximately $2.2 million in its PCS license at March 31, 1999. PCS licensees are required to offer service to at least one-third of their market population within five years or risk losing their licenses. Service must be extended to two-thirds of the population within 10 years. The Company continues to reevaluate its wireless strategy and expects that such strategy will allow retention of the PCS license pursuant to its terms. Depreciation and amortization and interest expense on a consolidated basis is expected to be higher in 1999 as compared to 1998 resulting primarily from additional depreciation on 1998 and 1999 capital expenditures, additional outstanding long-term debt and a reduction in the amount of capitalized construction period interest following placement of the Alaska United undersea fiber optic cable into service in early February 1999. As a result, the Company anticipates recording net losses in 1999. RESULTS OF OPERATIONS The following table sets forth selected Statement of Operations data as a percentage of total revenues for the periods indicated and the percentage changes in such data as compared to the corresponding prior year period: (Underlying data rounded to the nearest thousands)
Three Months Ended Percentage March 31, Change 1999 vs. (Unaudited) 1999 1998 1998 ---- ---- ---- Statement of Operations Data: Revenues Long-distance services 66.2% 72.4% (3.6%) Cable services 24.6% 24.4% 6.3% Local access services 6.0% 1.7% 270.0% Internet services 3.2% 1.5% 122.2% --------------------------------------- Total revenues 100.0% 100.0% 5.3% Cost of sales and services 45.4% 47.0% 2.0% Selling, general and administrative expenses 38.4% 35.0% 15.8% Depreciation and amortization 16.8% 13.9% 27.2% --------------------------------------- Operating income (loss) (0.6%) 4.1% (116.7%) Net loss before income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle (11.9%) (4.3%) (192.0%) Net loss before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle (7.4%) (2.8%) (181.3%) Net loss (7.9%) (2.8%) (206.3%)
22 (Continued)
Three Months Ended Percentage March 31, Change 1999 vs. (Unaudited) 1999 1998 1998 ---- ---- ---- Other Operating Data (1): Cable operating income (2) 17.2% 15.5% 18.2% Local operating loss (3) (56.8%) (320.0%) 34.4% Internet operating income (4) 0.0% 33.3% 100.0% - ----------------------------- (1) Includes customer service, marketing and advertising costs. (2) Computed as a percentage of total cable services revenues. (3) Computed as a percentage of total local access services revenues. (4) Computed as a percentage of total Internet services revenues.
THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31, 1999 ("1999") COMPARED TO THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31, 1998 ("1998") Revenues. Total revenues increased 5.3% from $58.2 million in 1998 to $61.3 million in 1999. Long-distance revenues from commercial, residential, governmental, and other common carrier customers decreased 4.3% from $39.3 million in 1998 to $37.6 million in 1999. The long-distance revenue decline in 1999 was largely due to the following: - 1.2% decrease in interstate minutes of use to 156.7 million minutes off-set by a 5.92% increase in intrastate minutes of use to 34.8 million minutes; - 2.5% reduction in the number of active residential, small business and commercial customers billed from 87,800 at March 31, 1998 to 85,600 at March 31, 1999; and - 6.9% reduction in the Company's average rate per minute on long-distance traffic from $0.173 per minute in 1998 to $0.161 per minute in 1999. The decrease in rates resulted from the Company's promotion of and customers' enrollment in new calling plans offering discounted rates and length of service rebates, such new plans being prompted in part by the Company's primary long-distance competitor, AT&T Alascom, reducing its rates and entry of LECs into long-distance markets served by the Company. The decrease in long-distance revenues was partially off-set by the following: - New revenues in 1999 totaling $575,000 from the lease of three DS3 circuits on Alaska United facilities within Alaska, and between Alaska and the lower 48 states; and - 3.5% increase in revenues from other common carriers (principally MCI WorldCom and Sprint), from $14.4 million in 1998 to $14.9 million in 1999. Cable revenues increased 6.3% from $14.2 million in 1998 to $15.1 million in 1999. Programming services revenues increased 7.35% to $13.0 million in 1999 resulting from an increase of approximately 2,500 basic subscribers served by the Company, an increase of $1.78 in revenue per average basic subscriber per month and increased pay-per-view and premium service revenues. New facility construction efforts in the summer of 1998 resulted in additional homes passed which contributed to additional subscribers and revenues in 1999. Other factors included facility upgrades which allowed the introduction of digital cable services in Anchorage in the fourth quarter of 1998, increased promotional and advertising efforts in the fourth quarter of 1998 and the first quarter of 1999, and increases in basic and premium service rates in certain locations in the second quarter of 1998. Advertising sales revenues increased 23.6% to $607,000 in 1999 due to increased promotion of the Company's advertising and ad insertion capabilities. Equipment rental and 23 (Continued) installation revenues increased 19.6% to $1.3 million in 1999 due to increased equipment rentals and installation services provided by the Cable services industry segment. Local access services revenues increased from $1.0 million in 1998 to $3.7 million in 1999. At March 31, 1999 approximately 31,500 lines were in service and approximately 1,800 additional lines were awaiting connection. Internet services revenues increased from $903,000 in 1998 to $2.0 million in 1999. The Company had approximately 20,500 active residential, commercial and small business retail dial-up subscribers to its Internet service at March 31, 1999. Cost of sales and services. Cost of sales and services totaled $27.3 million in 1998 and $27.9 million in 1999. As a percentage of total revenues, cost of sales and services decreased from 47.0% in 1998 to 45.4% in 1999. The decrease in cost of sales and services as a percentage of revenues is primarily attributed to changes in the Company's product mix due to the continuing development of new product lines (local access services and Internet), and reduced long-distance cost of sales as a percentage of long-distance revenues. The overall margin improvement was partially offset by increased cable services cost of sales as a percentage of cable services revenues. The decrease in long-distance cost of sales and services as a percentage of revenues is primarily attributed to avoidance of access charges resulting from the Company's distribution and termination of its traffic on its own network instead of paying other carriers to distribute and terminate its traffic. Partially offsetting the 1999 decrease as compared to 1998 was a refund received in the first quarter of 1998 totaling approximately $1.1 million from a local exchange carrier in respect of its earnings that exceeded regulatory requirements. The Company expects margins to widen as increasing amounts of traffic are carried on its own facilities. Cable cost of sales and services as a percentage of revenues is less as a percentage of revenues than are long-distance, local access and Internet services cost of sales and services. Cable services rate increases did not keep pace with increases in programming and copyright costs in 1999. Programming costs increased on most of the Company's offerings and the Company incurred additional costs on new programming introduced in 1998. Local access services cost of sales and services totaled 52.5% and 86.3% as a percentage of the 1999 and 1998 local access services revenues, respectively. Internet services cost of sales and services totaled 21.1% and 46.7% as a percentage of the 1999 and 1998 Internet services revenues, respectively. The Company's local access operations commenced in 1997 and Internet services operations commenced in 1998. Fluctuations in cost of sales and services as a percentage of revenues are expected to occur as new product lines mature. Selling, general and administrative expenses. Selling, general and administrative expenses increased 15.8% from $20.3 million in 1998 to $23.5 million in 1999, and, as a percentage of revenues, increased from 35.0% in 1998 to 38.3% in 1999. The 1999 increase resulted from: - Internet services operating, engineering, sales, customer service and administrative cost increases, from $96,000 in 1998 as compared to $1.2 million in 1999. The Company gradually introduced its Internet services through the third quarter of 1998 and increased advertising efforts in the fourth quarter of 1998 and first quarter of 1999. The increase in costs was necessary to provide the operations, engineering, customer service and support infrastructure necessary to accommodate expected growth in the Company's Internet services customer base. 24 (Continued) - Local access services operating, engineering, sales, customer service and administrative cost increased from $2.2 million in 1998 as compared to $3.1 million in 1999. The Company initiated local access services in September 1997. The increase was necessary to provide the operations, engineering, customer service and support infrastructure necessary to accommodate the growth in the Company's local access services customer base. - Increased long-distance sales, advertising, telemarketing, carrier relations, business development and rural services costs totaling $3.1 million in 1998 compared to $4.8 million in 1999. Increased selling costs were associated with the introduction of various marketing plans and other proprietary rate plans and cross promotion of products and services. - Increased allowance for doubtful accounts receivable. Depreciation and amortization. Depreciation and amortization expense increased 27.2% from $8.1 million in 1998 to $10.3 million in 1999. The increase is attributable to the Company's investment in $58.4 million of facilities placed into service during 1998 for which a full year of depreciation will be recorded during 1999, the $117.3 million of facilities placed into service in the first quarter of 1999 for which 11 months of depreciation will be recorded during 1999 and the $7.0 million of facilities placed into service in the first quarter of 1999 for which a partial year of depreciation will be recorded during 1999. Facilities placed into service during the first quarter of 1999 consist primarily of the Alaska United undersea fiber optic cable completed in early February 1999. Interest expense, net. Interest expense, net of interest income, increased 42.9% from $4.9 million in 1998 to $7.0 million in 1999. This increase resulted primarily from increases in the Company's average outstanding indebtedness resulting primarily from construction of new long-distance and Internet facilities, expansion and upgrades of cable television facilities, and investment in local access services equipment and facilities. During 1998 interest expense was offset in part by capitalized construction period interest. During 1999 the Company will experience a significant reduction in the amount of construction period interest capitalized due to the completion of the Alaska United undersea fiber optic cable which was placed into service in early February 1999. Income tax benefit. Income tax benefit increased from $891,000 in 1998 to $3.1 million in 1999 due to the Company incurring a larger net loss before income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle in 1999 as compared to 1998. The Company's effective income tax rate increased from 35.5% in 1998 to 38.6% in 1999 due to the increased net loss and the proportional amount of items that are nondeductible for income tax purposes. In conjunction with the 1996 Cable Companies acquisition, the Company incurred a net deferred income tax liability of $24.4 million and acquired net operating losses totaling $57.6 million. The Company determined that approximately $20 million of the acquired net operating losses would not be utilized for income tax purposes, and elected with its December 31, 1996 income tax returns to forego utilization of such acquired losses under Internal Revenue Code section 1.1502-32(b)(4). Deferred tax assets were not recorded associated with the foregone losses and, accordingly, no valuation allowance was provided. At March 31, 1999, the Company has (1) tax net operating loss carryforwards of approximately $55.8 million that will begin expiring in 2008 if not utilized, and (2) alternative minimum tax credit carryforwards of approximately $2.0 million available to offset regular income taxes payable in future years. The Company's utilization of remaining net operating loss carryforwards is subject to certain limitations pursuant to Internal Revenue Code section 382. Tax benefits associated with recorded deferred tax assets are considered to be more likely than not realizable through taxable income earned in carryback years, future reversals of existing taxable temporary differences, and future taxable income exclusive of reversing temporary differences and carryforwards. The 25 (Continued) amount of deferred tax asset considered realizable, however, could be reduced in the near term if estimates of future taxable income during the carryforward period are reduced. The Company estimates that its effective income tax rate for financial statement purposes will be approximately 38% in 1999. The Company expects that its operations will generate net income before income taxes during the carryforward periods to allow utilization of loss carryforwards for which no allowance has been established. FLUCTUATIONS IN QUARTERLY RESULTS OF OPERATIONS The following chart provides selected unaudited statement of operations data from the Company's quarterly results of operations during 1999 and 1998:
First Second Third Fourth Total (Unaudited) Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Year ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 1999 (Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts) ---- Revenues Long-distance services $ 40,593 40,593 Cable services 15,062 15,062 Local access services 3,714 3,714 Internet services 1,969 1,969 ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Total revenues 61,338 61,338 Operating loss (368) (368) Net loss before income taxes and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle (7,328) (7,328) Net loss before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle (4,521) (4,521) Net loss $ (4,865) (4,865) ======================================================================= Basic loss per share: Loss before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle $ (0.10) (0.10) Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle --- --- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Net loss $ (0.10) (0.10) ======================================================================= Diluted loss per share: Loss before cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle $ (0.10) (0.10) Cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle --- --- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Net loss $ (0.10) (0.10) =======================================================================
26 (Continued)
First Second Third Fourth Total (Unaudited) Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Year ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 1998 (Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts) ---- Revenues Long-distance services $ 42,034 45,838 44,478 42,306 174,656 Cable services 14,201 14,041 14,484 14,914 57,640 Local access services 1,014 2,048 2,744 4,102 9,908 Internet services 903 1,014 1,060 1,614 4,591 ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Total revenues 58,152 62,941 62,766 62,936 246,795 Operating income 2,437 1,447 1,730 3,230 8,844 Net loss $ (1,616) (2,066) (2,076) (1,039) (6,797) ======================================================================= Basic net loss per share $ (0.03) (0.04) (0.04) (0.02) (0.14) ======================================================================= Diluted net loss per share $ (0.03) (0.04) (0.04) (0.02) (0.14) =======================================================================
Revenues. Total revenues for the quarter ended March 31, 1999 ("first quarter of 1999") were $61.3 million, representing a 2.5% decrease from total revenues in the quarter ended December 31, 1998 ("fourth quarter of 1998") of $62.9 million. The decrease in long-distance services revenues resulted primarily a one-time $1.6 million product sale in the fourth quarter of 1998. Partially offsetting this decrease were additional revenues associated with a 4.4% increase in the number of active long-distance residential, small business and commercial customers billed from 81,900 at December 31, 1998 to 85,600 at March 31, 1999. The Company's long-distance average-rate-per-minute remained constant at $0.16 during 1999 as compared to 1998. Revenues from other common carriers (principally MCI WorldCom and Sprint) increased from $14.6 million in the fourth quarter of 1998 to $14.9 million in the first quarter of 1999. Long-distance revenues have historically been highest in the summer months as a result of temporary population increases attributable to tourism and increased seasonal economic activity such as construction, commercial fishing, and oil and gas activities. Cable television revenues, on the other hand, are higher in the winter months because consumers spend more time at home and tend to watch more television during these months. Local service operations are not expected to exhibit significant seasonality. The Company's ability to implement construction projects is also hampered during the winter months because of cold temperatures, snow and short daylight hours. Cost of sales and services. Cost of sales and services decreased 6.1% from $29.7 million in the fourth quarter of 1998 to $27.9 million in the first quarter of 1999. The decrease in cost of sales and services resulted primarily from a one-time $1.3 million product cost of sale in the fourth quarter of 1998. As a percentage of revenues, the first quarter of 1999 cost of sales and services was 45.4% as compared to 47.2 % for the fourth quarter of 1998. The decrease in the cost of sales and services as a percentage of revenues is primarily due to the growth of the Company's new product lines and avoidance of access charges resulting from the Company's distribution and termination of its traffic on its own network instead of paying other carriers to distribute and terminate its traffic. Selling, general and administrative expenses. Selling, general and administrative expenses increased $500,000 in the first quarter of 1999 from $23.0 million in the fourth quarter of 1998. As a percentage of revenues, first quarter of 1999 selling, general and administrative expenses were 38.4% as compared to 36.5% for the fourth quarter of 1998. Net loss. The Company reported a net loss of $4.9 million for the first quarter of 1999 as compared to a net loss of $1.1 million during the fourth quarter of 1998. In addition to the impact of factors described above, the increased net loss was attributable to increased depreciation and interest expense incurred during the first quarter of 1999 as compared to the fourth quarter of 1998 due to the placement of the Alaska United 27 (Continued) undersea fiber optic cable into service in early February 1999. During the fourth quarter of 1998, capitalized construction period interest served to reduce interest expense. Interest capitalization ceased when the Alaska United undersea fiber optic cable was placed into service. LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES The Company's first quarter of 1999 ("1999") cash flows from operating activities totaled $187,000, net of changes in the components of working capital. An additional source of cash during 1999 was long-term borrowings of $4.9 million. The Company's expenditures for property and equipment, including construction in progress, totaled $9.9 million and $28.2 million in 1999 and the first quarter of 1998 ("1998"), respectively. Uses of cash during 1999 also included repayment of $490,000 of long-term borrowings and capital lease obligations and purchases of other assets totaling $391,000. Net receivables decreased $2.4 million from December 31, 1998 to March 31, 1999. The decrease resulted from a $2.0 million reclassification of income tax receivable to long-term deferred tax asset as the Company has utilized all net operating losses against income taxes paid in prior periods, therefore refundable amounts are now included in long-term deferred tax asset and will be realized as future taxable income is generated. Working capital totaled $3.8 million at March 31, 1999, a $4.6 million decrease from the working capital of $8.4 million as of December 31, 1998. The decrease in working capital is primarily attributed to the investment of current assets in long-term capital assets. The Holdings $200,000,000 ($150,000,000 as amended) and $50,000,000 credit facilities mature June 30, 2005. The Holdings Loan facilities were amended in April 1999 (see below) and bear interest, as amended, at either Libor plus 1.00% to 2.50%, depending on the leverage ratio of Holdings and certain of its subsidiaries, or at the greater of the prime rate or the federal funds effective rate (as defined) plus 0.05%, in each case plus an additional 0.00% to 1.375%, depending on the leverage ratio of Holdings and certain of its subsidiaries. $106.7 million were drawn on the credit facilities as of March 31, 1999 and December 31, 1998. On April 13, 1999, the Company amended its Holdings credit facilities. These amendments contain, among other things, provisions for payment of a one-time amendment fee of 0.25% of the aggregate commitment, an increase in the commitment fee by 0.125% per annum on the unused portion of the commitment, and an increase in the interest rate of 0.25%. The amended facilities reduce the aggregate commitment by $50 million to $200 million, and limit capital expenditures to $35 million in 1999, $35 million in 2000 with no limits thereafter (excluding amounts to be paid for purchased satellite transponder facilities). The amended facilities require that Holdings receive $20 million in proceeds from a GCI preferred stock issuance by May 31, 1999 (see below). Holding's credit facilities and GCI, Inc.'s senior notes contain restrictions on the operations and activities of the Company, including requirements that the Company comply with certain financial covenants and financial ratios. Under the amended Holding's credit facility, Holdings may not permit the ratio of senior debt to annualized operating cash flow (as defined) of Holdings and certain of its subsidiaries to exceed 3.5 to 1.0 through March 31, 1999 (3.0 to 1.0 from April 1, 1999 through December 31, 1999), total debt to annualized operating cash flow to exceed 7.0 to 1.0 from closing of the amendments to June 30, 1999 (6.25 to 1.00 from July 1, 1999 through March 31, 2000), and annualized operating cash flow to interest expense to exceed 1.5 to 1.0 from closing of the amendments to September 30, 1999 (1.75 to 1.0 from October 1, 1999 through December 31, 1999). Each of the foregoing ratios decreases in specified increments during the life of the credit facility. The credit facility requires Holdings to maintain a ratio of annualized operating cash flow to debt service of Holdings and certain of its subsidiaries of at least 1.25 to 1.0, and annualized 28 (Continued) operating cash flow to fixed charges of at least 1.0 to 1.0 (which adjusts to 1.05 to 1.0 in April, 2003 and thereafter). The senior notes impose a requirement that the leverage ratio of GCI, Inc. and certain of its subsidiaries not exceed 7.5 to 1.0 prior to December 31, 1999 and 6.0 to 1.0 thereafter, subject to the ability of GCI, Inc. and certain of its subsidiaries to incur specified permitted indebtedness without regard to such ratios. On January 27, 1998 Alaska United closed a $75 million project finance facility ("Fiber Facility") to construct a fiber optic cable system connecting Anchorage, Fairbanks, Valdez, Whittier, Juneau and Seattle. The Fiber Facility bears interest at either Libor plus 3.0%, or at the lender's prime rate plus 1.75%. The interest rate will decline to Libor plus 2.5%-2.75%, or, at the Company's option, the lender's prime rate plus 1.25%-1.5% after the project completion date and when the loan balance is $60,000,000 or less. Alaska United is required to pay a commitment fee equal to 0.375% per annum on the unused portion of the commitment. $66.1 million was borrowed under the facility at March 31, 1999. The Fiber Facility is a 10-year term loan that is interest only for the first 5 years. The facility can be extended an additional two years at any time between the second and fifth anniversary of closing the facility if the Company can demonstrate projected revenues from certain capacity commitments will be sufficient to pay all operating costs, interest, and principal installments based on the extended maturity. The Fiber Facility contains, among others, covenants requiring certain intercompany loans and advances in order to maintain specific levels of cash flow necessary to pay operating costs, interest and principal installments. The Fiber Facility also contains a guarantee that requires, among other terms and conditions, Alaska United complete the project by the completion date and pay any non-budgeted costs of the project. All of Alaska United's assets, as well as a pledge of the partnership interests' owning Alaska United, collateralize the Fiber Facility. Construction of the fiber facility was completed and the facility was placed into service on February 4, 1999. The project was completed on-budget. The Company will use approximately one-half of the Alaska United system capacity in addition to its existing owned and leased facilities to carry its own traffic. One of the Company's large commercial customers signed agreements in February and March 1999 for the immediate lease of three DS3 circuits on Alaska United facilities within Alaska, and between Alaska and the lower 48 states. The lease agreements provide for three year terms, with renewal options for additional terms. The Company continues to pursue opportunities to lease additional capacity on its system. The Company's expenditures for property and equipment, including construction in progress, totaled $9.9 million and $28.2 million during 1999 and 1998, respectively. The Company anticipates that its capital expenditures in 1999 may total as much as $35 million. Planned capital expenditures over the next five years include those necessary for continued expansion of the Company's long-distance, local exchange and Internet facilities, the development and construction of a PCS network, and continued upgrades to its cable television plant, and approximately $43.5 million for satellite transponders. Sources of funds for these planned capital expenditures are expected to include internally generated cash flows and borrowings under the Company's credit facilities described above. The Company's ability to invest in discretionary capital and other projects will depend upon its future cash flows and access to borrowings under its credit facilities. Management anticipates that cash flow generated by the Company and borrowings under its credit facilities will be sufficient to fund capital expenditures and its working capital requirements. Should cash flows be insufficient to support additional borrowings, such investment in capital expenditures will likely be reduced. The Company entered into a purchase and lease-purchase option agreement in August 1995 for the acquisition of satellite transponders to meet its long-term satellite capacity requirements. The launch of the 29 (Continued) satellite in August 1998 failed. The Company did not assume launch risk and the launch has been rescheduled for the first quarter of 2000. The Company will continue to lease transponder capacity until the delivery of the transponders on the replacement satellite. The balance payable upon expected delivery of the transponders during the first quarter of 2000, in addition to the $9.1 million deposit previously paid, totals approximately $43.5 million. The Company issued 20,000 shares of convertible redeemable accreting preferred stock ("Preferred Stock") on April 30, 1999. Proceeds totaling $20 million (before payment of costs and expenses) will be used for general corporate purposes, to repay outstanding indebtedness, and to provide additional liquidity. The Company's amended Senior Holdings Loan facilities limit use of such proceeds. The Preferred Stock contains a $1,000 per share liquidation preference, plus accrued but unpaid dividends and fees. Dividends are payable semi-annually at the rate of 8.5% of the liquidation preference. Prior to the four-year anniversary following closing, dividends are payable, at the Company's option, in cash or in additional fully-paid shares of Preferred Stock. Dividends are payable only in cash following the four-year anniversary of closing. Mandatory redemption is required 12 years from the date of closing. The Company may redeem the Preferred Stock after the four-year anniversary of its issuance, and must redeem the Preferred Stock upon the occurrence of a triggering event. The holders may convert the Preferred Stock into Class A common stock of the Company at any time after the four-year anniversary of the issuance of the Preferred Stock, at a price of $5.55 per share. At any time subsequent to the third anniversary following closing, and assuming the stock is trading at no less than two times the conversion price, the Company may require immediate conversion. The Preferred Stock, subject to lender approval, is exchangeable in whole or in part, at the Company's option, into subordinated debt with terms and conditions comparable to those governing the Preferred Stock. The Preferred Stock is senior to all other classes of the Company's equity securities, and has voting rights equal to that number of shares of common stock into which it can be converted. Holders of the Preferred Stock shares will have the right to vote on all matters presented for vote to the holders of common stock on an as-converted basis. Additionally, the Preferred Stock offering requires as long as the Preferred Stock shares remain outstanding and unconverted, the holders of it will have the right to vote, as a class, and the Company must obtain the written consent of holders of a majority (or higher as required by Alaska law) of that stock to take certain actions, some of which require shareholder approval necessitating amendment of the Company's Articles of Incorporation. With the issuance of the Preferred Stock shares, the holders of that stock may recommend one individual to the Company's Board of Directors ("Board"). Under the terms of the Preferred Stock offering, the Board will expand its size from the present nine to ten seats and, upon qualification, appoint that individual to that new seat to serve until the next shareholder meeting. At that shareholder meeting, the individual would be required to stand for election to complete the term of the class of directors to which the individual was assigned. The offering also provides that the Board include the individual recommended by those holders on the subsequent Board slate for election of directors and actively to seek the election of that individual to the Board. The offering further provides that, should the holders of common stock of the Company not elect that individual, the holders of the Preferred Stock Shares will have the right to appoint an observer at the meetings of the Board. The offering also provides that these rights of the holders of Preferred Stock shares relating to the Board seat and observer are to remain effective so long as any of the Preferred Stock shares remain outstanding. The long-distance services, local access services, cable services, Internet services and wireless services industries are experiencing increasing competition and rapid technological changes. The Company's future results of operations will be affected by its ability to react to changes in the competitive environment and by 30 (Continued) its ability to fund and implement new technologies. The Company is unable to determine how competition, technological changes and its net operating losses will affect its ability to obtain financing. The Company believes that it will be able to meet its current and long-term liquidity and capital requirements, including fixed charges, through its cash flows from operating activities, existing cash, cash equivalents, short-term investments, credit facilities, and other external financing and equity sources. NEW ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS SFAS No. 133. In June 1998, the Accounting Standards Board issued SFAS No. 133, "Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities," effective for years beginning after June 15, 1999. SFAS No. 133 establishes accounting and reporting standards requiring that every derivative instrument, including certain derivative instruments imbedded in other contracts, be recorded in the balance sheet as either an asset or liability measured at its fair value. SFAS No. 133 requires that changes in the derivative's fair value be recognized currently in earnings unless specific hedge criteria are met. Special accounting for qualifying hedges allow a derivative's gains or losses to offset related results on the hedged item in the income statement and requires that a company must formally document, designate and assess the effectiveness of transactions that receive hedge accounting. Management of the Company expects that adoption of SFAS No. 133 will not have a material impact on the Company's year-end 2000 financial statements. EITF 98-14. In March 1999, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") Emerging Issues Task Force ("EITF") issued EITF Issue 98-14, "Debtor's Accounting for Changes in Line-of-Credit or Revolving Debt Arrangements". EITF Issue 98-14 establishes guidelines regarding unamortized costs associated with a modified line-of-credit or revolving-debt arrangement and requires a debtor to compare the new and old borrowing capacities upon the modification of line-of-credit or revolving-debt arrangements. If the new borrowing capacity is equal to or greater than the old borrowing capacity, the debtor should defer and amortize any unamortized deferred costs over the term of the new arrangement. If the new borrowing capacity is less than that available under the previous arrangement, the debtor should amortize fees paid to the creditor and third-party costs over the new term, any unamortized costs from the old arrangement should be written off in proportion to the decreases in borrowing capacity, with remaining unamortized costs attributable to the old arrangement amortized over the term of the new arrangement. Management of the Company expects that adoption of EITF Issue 98-14 will result in a charge to interest expense of approximately $470,000 in the second quarter of 1999 resulting from the amended Holdings Loan Facilities agreements' reduced borrowing capacity. YEAR 2000 COSTS Many financial information and operational systems in use today may not be able to interpret dates after December 31, 1999 because such systems allow only two digits to indicate the year in a date. As a result, such systems are unable to distinguish January 1, 2000 from January 1, 1900, which could have adverse consequences on the operations of an entity and the integrity of information processing. This could result in a system failure or miscalculations causing disruptions of operations, including, among other things, a shut down in a company's operations, a temporary inability to process transactions, send invoices or engage in similar normal business activities. This potential problem is referred to as the "Year 2000" or "Y2K" issue. State of readiness. The Company has undertaken various initiatives to evaluate the Year 2000 readiness of the products and services sold by the Company ("Products"), the information technology systems used in the Company's operations ("IT Systems"), its non-IT systems, such as power to its facilities, HVAC systems, building security, voice mail and other systems, as well as the readiness of its customers and suppliers. The Company has identified eight Year 2000 target areas that cover the entire scope of the Company's business 31 (Continued) and has internally established teams committed to completing an 8-step Compliance Validation Process ("CVP") for each target area. Each team is expected to fully complete this process on or before September 1, 1999. The table below identifies the Company's target areas as well as the 8-step CVP with its expected timeline. Team activity is currently focused towards the process of completing Phase 2.
----------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------- Year 2000 Target Areas Compliance Validation Process ----------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. Business Computer Systems PHASE 1 2. Technical Infrastructure 1. Team Formation Completed 1st quarter 1997 3. End-User Computing 2. Inventory Assessment Completed 4th quarter 1998 4. Switching and Head-end Equipment 3. Compliance Assessment Completed 4th quarter 1998 5. Logistics 4. Risk Assessment Completed 4th quarter 1998 6. Facilities 7. Customers ------------------------------- ------------------------------------ 8. Suppliers/Key Service Providers PHASE 2 5. Resolution/Remediation Expected completion 2nd quarter 1999 6. Validation Expected completion 3rd quarter 1999 7. Contingency Plan Expected completion 3rd quarter 1999 8. Sign-Off Acceptance Expected completion 4th quarter 1999 ----------------------------------------------- ------------------------------- ------------------------------------
In 1997, the Company established a corporate-wide Year 2000 task force to address Y2K issues. This effort is comprehensive and encompasses software, hardware, electronic data interchange, networks, PC's, facilities, embedded chips, century certification, supplier and customer readiness, contingency planning, and domestic and international operations. The Company is currently on schedule and is more than 75% complete as of March 31, 1999. The Company has tested, replaced or upgraded most of its critical business applications and systems and has begun the century testing phase for these critical technology systems. The target date to repair or replace the remaining critical business information systems is June 30, 1999. The Company is assessing its telephone and cable systems and equipment and the target date to complete equipment and facilities efforts is also June 30, 1999. The Company has prioritized its third-party relationships as critical, severe or sustainable, has completed the assessment phase for third parties, has requested a Y2K contract warranty in many new key contracts and is developing contingency plans for critical third parties, including key customers, suppliers and other service providers. An assessment of its key customers showed that no significant impact to the Company is expected due to customer Y2K problems. The Company continues to evaluate other telecommunication companies which purchase the Company's services. With respect to the Company's relationships with third parties, the Company relies both domestically and internationally upon various vendors, governmental agencies, utility companies, telecommunications service companies, delivery service companies and other service providers. Although these service providers are outside the Company's control, the Company has mailed letters to those with whom it believes its relationships are material and has verbally communicated with some of its strategic customers to determine the extent to which interfaces with such entities are vulnerable to Year 2000 issues and whether products and services purchased from or by such entities are Year 2000 ready. Over 400 companies have been contacted directly by mail, by telephone, through on-site visits or through inquiry of their Y2K Internet web sites to determine their state of readiness. Responses vary from confirmation that the supply of products or services provided to the Company will continue without 32 (Continued) interruption or delay through the year 2000, to providing their plans for making their products or service delivery systems Y2K compliant. The Company is currently evaluating the sufficiency of the responses received from these third parties. The Company intends to complete follow-up activities, including but not limited to site surveys, phone surveys and mailings, with significant vendors and service providers as part of the Phase 2 validation. Costs to address year 2000 issues. Costs related to the Y2K issue are expensed as incurred and are funded through the Company's operating cash flows and its credit agreements. Through March 31, 1999, the Company has expensed incremental remediation costs totaling $1.4 million, with remaining incremental remediation costs estimated at approximately $2.6 million. Management must balance the requirements for funding discretionary capital expenditures with required year 2000 efforts given its limited resources. The Company has not deferred any critical information technology projects because of its Year 2000 program efforts, which are being addressed primarily through a dedicated team within the Company's information technology group. Time and cost estimates are based on currently available information and could be affected by the ability to correct all relevant computer codes and equipment, and the Y2K readiness of the Company's business partners, among other factors. At this time, the Company does not possess information necessary to estimate the potential financial impact of Year 2000 compliance issues relating to its vendors, customers and other third parties. Risk of year 2000 issues. If necessary modifications and conversions by the Company are not made on a timely basis, or if key third parties are not Y2K ready, Y2K problems could have a material adverse effect on the Company's financial condition, results of operations and liquidity. However, the Company is focusing on identifying and addressing all aspects of its operations that may be affected by the Year 2000 issue and is addressing the most critical applications first. Although the Company considers them unlikely, the Company believes that the following several situations, not in any particular order, make up the Company's most reasonably likely worst case Year 2000 scenarios: - Disruption of Electrical Power Supplies Resulting from Extended Regional Power Failure(s). The Company's major switching and information systems are protected by emergency standby electrical generators in the event of short-term power outages. If electrical supplies from regional electric utilities are disrupted for longer periods of time, the Company may be required to power-down its electronic switching, head-end and computer equipment. The Company is closely monitoring electrical utilities that provide service to the Company for their Year 2000 readiness. Based on their progress reports and completion of assessments, the Company believes that there will be no significant impact on its operations in the major communities served by the Company. Many of the electrical companies serving smaller rural communities employ equipment that is manual or controlled by non date-effecting equipment, however they may experience outages if they do not receive fuel from their suppliers. - Disruption of a Significant Customer's Ability to Accept Products or Pay Invoices. The Company's significant customers are large, well-informed customers, mostly in the telecommunications and oil and gas industries, who are disclosing information to their vendors that indicates they are well along the path toward Year 2000 compliance. These customers have demonstrated their awareness of the Year 2000 issue by issuing requirements of their suppliers and indicating the stages of identification and remediation which they consider adequate for progressive calendar quarters leading up to the century mark. The Company's significant customers, moreover, are substantial companies that the Company believes would be able to make adjustments in their processes as required to cause timely payment of invoices. - Disruption of Supplies and Materials. In early 1998 the Company began an ongoing process of surveying its vendors with regard to their Year 2000 readiness and is now in the process of assessing and cataloging 33 (Continued) their responses to the survey. The Company is hopeful of receiving adequate responses from remaining critical vendors and many non-critical vendors by June 30, 1999. The Company expects to work with vendors that show a need for assistance or that provide inadequate responses, and in many cases expects that survey results will be refined significantly by such work. Where ultimate survey results show that the need arises, the Company will arrange for back-up vendors before the changeover date. Supplies and materials necessary for invoicing and other functions will be acquired in bulk prior to December 31, 1999 to provide an adequate inventory to bridge up to three months of vendor supply chain disruptions. - Disruption of the Company's Administrative and Billing IT Systems. The Company has completed an upgrade of its current financial software systems to state-of-the-art systems and such process has required Year 2000 compliance in the various invitations for proposals. Year 2000 testing is occurring as upgrades proceed and, in addition, will occur after all upgrades are completed at the end of the first quarter of 1999. The Company's billing and information systems continue to be assessed and remediated. System processes have been prioritized so that critical date-sensitive systems and functionality are remediated first. Non-critical systems and functionality are remediated following critical systems. The Company's efforts are proceeding on-target and on-budget. Accordingly, the Company believes that, after assessment and remediation, if any disruptions do occur, such will be dealt with promptly and will be no more severe with respect to correction or impact than would be an unexpected billing or information system error. - Disruption of the Company's Non-IT Systems. The Company continues to conduct a comprehensive assessment of all non-IT systems, including among other things its switching and head-end systems and operations, with respect to both embedded processors and obvious computer control. For some systems, upgrades are already scheduled and it is expected that the Phase 1 assessments will highlight by the end of the second quarter of 1999 any further remediation needs. Considering the nature of the equipment and systems involved, the Company expects that the timing of assessment to be such that it will be able to complete any remediation efforts on a reasonably short schedule, and in any case before arrival of the Year 2000. The Company also believes that, after such assessment and remediation, if any disruptions do occur, such will be dealt with promptly and will be no more severe with respect to correction or impact than would be an unexpected breakdown of well-maintained equipment. - De-Listing of Company as a Vendor to Certain Customers. Several of the Company's principal customers have required updated reports in the form of answers to extensive multiple-choice surveys on the Company's Year 2000 compliance efforts. According to these customers, failure to reply to the readiness survey would have led to de-listing as a service supplier at the present time, resulting in possible disqualification to bid on procurements requiring service delivery in the future. The Company has responded to these reports on a timely basis. The Company has not been disqualified as a supplier to any customers. Several significant customers have scheduled monitoring meetings during 1999. Contingency plans. The Company is in the process of developing specific contingency plans for potential Year 2000 disruptions. The aforementioned 8-step Compliance Validation Process includes contingency planning by each team and such plans, as developed, will be carefully reviewed by the Company. The Company is developing contingency plans for its most critical areas, but details of such plans will depend on the Company's final assessment of the problem as well as the evaluation and success of its remediation efforts. Future disclosures will include contingency plans as they become available. ALASKA ECONOMY The Company offers telecommunication and video services to customers primarily throughout Alaska. As a result of this geographic concentration, the Company's growth and operations depend upon economic conditions in Alaska. The economy of Alaska is dependent upon the natural resource industries, and in particular oil production, as well as tourism, government, and United States military spending. Any deterioration in these markets could have an adverse impact on the Company. Oil revenues over the past 34 (Continued) several years have contributed in excess of 75% of the revenues from all segments of the Alaska economy and are expected to account for 73% in 1999. The volume of oil transported by the TransAlaska Oil Pipeline System over the past 20 years has been as high as 2.0 million barrels per day in 1988. Over the past several years, it has begun to decline. Market prices for North Slope oil declined to below $10 per barrel in 1998, well below the average price per barrel used by the State of Alaska to budget its oil related revenues. Oil companies and service providers have announced cost cutting measures to offset a portion of the declining revenues. Oil company and related oil field service company layoffs reportedly will result in a reduction of oil industry jobs by at least 39 percent in 1999. The effects of low oil prices will impact the state of Alaska's economy, and is expected to particularly hurt state and local government and oil service companies. As much as half of the drilling fleet that worked on the slope in 1998 could be idle during 1999. Oil field service and drilling contractors cut operating costs to adjust for decreasing production and exploration. The Company, as an outsourcing services provider to the oil industry, reduced its outsourcing work force by 8 employees in February 1999. Since oil revenues to the state of Alaska are expected to fall significantly short of budgeted revenues, (estimated at $1.04 billion for the coming budget year), the Governor of the state of Alaska has announced his intention to implement cost-cutting and revenue enhancing measures. The State of Alaska maintains surplus accounts that are intended to fund budgetary shortfalls and would be expected to fund a portion of the revenue shortfall. BP Amoco announced in April 1999 its intention to purchase ARCO for $26.8 billion. BP Amoco and ARCO together reportedly hold approximately 75 percent of the ownership of the Alaska North Slope oil fields and in the company that operates the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System. Alaska law stipulates that no single company can hold drilling leases to more than 500,000 onshore state-owned acres. The BP Amoco-ARCO combination would control about 860,000 acres, however the companies have reportedly said they will give up 360,000 acres to comply with Alaska laws. Realignment of operations following the acquisition reportedly will result in the layoff of 400 positions in Alaska. No assurance can be given that oil companies doing business in Alaska will be successful in discovering new fields or further developing existing fields which are economic to develop and produce oil with access to the pipeline or other means of transport to market, even with the reduced level of royalties. The Company is not able to predict the effect of declines in the price of North Slope oil or the acquisition of ARCO by BP Amoco on Alaska's economy or on the Company. 35 (Continued) SEASONALITY Long-distance revenues have historically been highest in the summer months as a result of temporary population increases attributable to tourism and increased seasonal economic activity such as construction, commercial fishing, and oil and gas activities. Cable television revenues, on the other hand, are higher in the winter months because consumers tend to watch more television, and spend more time at home, during these months. The Company's local access services revenues are not expected to exhibit significant seasonality. The Company's Internet access services are expected to reflect seasonality trends similar to the cable television segment. The Company's ability to implement construction projects is reduced during the winter months because of cold temperatures, snow and short daylight hours. INFLATION The Company does not believe that inflation has a significant effect on its operations. PART I. ITEM 3. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITIATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK The Company's Senior Holdings Loan carries interest rate risk. Amounts borrowed under this Agreement bear interest at either Libor plus 1.0% to 2.5%, depending on the leverage ratio of Holdings and certain of its subsidiaries, or at the greater of the prime rate or the federal funds effective rate (as defined) plus 0.05%, in each case plus an additional 0.0% to 1.375%, depending on the leverage ratio of Holdings and certain of its subsidiaries. Should the Libor rate, the lenders' base rate or the leverage ratios change, the Company's interest expense will increase or decrease accordingly. As of March 31, 1999, the Company had borrowed $106.7 million subject to interest rate risk. On this amount, a 1% increase in the interest rate would cost the Company $1,067,000 in additional gross interest cost on an annualized basis. The Company's Fiber Facility carries interest rate risk. Amounts borrowed under this Agreement bear interest at either Libor plus 3.0%, or at the Company's choice, the lender's prime rate plus 1.75%. The interest rate will decline to Libor plus 2.5%-2.75%, or at the Company's choice, the lender's prime rate plus 1.25%-1.5% after the project completion date and when the loan balance is $60,000,000 or less. Should the Libor rate, the lendors' base rate or the leverage ratios change, the Company's interest expense will increase or decrease accordingly. As of March 31, 1999, the Company had borrowed $66.1 million subject to interest rate risk. On this amount, a 1% increase in the interest rate would cost the Company $661,000 in additional gross interest cost on an annualized basis. PART II. OTHER INFORMATION ITEM 1. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS Information regarding pending legal proceedings to which the Company is a party is included in Note 5 of Notes to Interim Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements and is incorporated herein by reference. 36 ITEM 6. EXHIBITS AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K (a) Exhibits: Exhibit 10.72 - Consent and First Amendment to Credit Agreements dated November 14, 1997 * Exhibit 10.73 - Second Amendment to $200,000,000 Amended and Restated Credit Agreement * Exhibit 10.74 - Second Amendment to $50,000,000 Amended and Restated Credit Agreement * Exhibit 10.75 - Third Amendment to $200,000,000 Amended and Restated Credit Agreement * Exhibit 10.76 - Third Amendment to $50,000,000 Amended and Restated Credit Agreement * Exhibit 10.77 - General Communication, Inc. Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement * Exhibit 10.78 - Revised Qualified Employee Stock Purchase Plan of General Communication, Inc. * Exhibit 10.79 - Statement of Stock Designation * Exhibit 27 - Financial Data Schedule * (b) Reports on Form 8-K filed during the quarter ended March 31, 1999 - None --------------------- * Filed herewith. 37 SIGNATURES Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized. GENERAL COMMUNICATION, INC.
Signature Title Date - -------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------- ------------------ /s/ President and Director May 14, 1999 - -------------------------------------- (Principal Executive Officer) ------------------ Ronald A. Duncan /s/ Senior Vice President, Chief Financial May 14, 1999 - -------------------------------------- Officer, Secretary and Treasurer ------------------ John M. Lowber (Principal Financial Officer) /s/ Vice President, Chief Accounting May 14, 1999 - -------------------------------------- Officer ------------------ Alfred J. Walker (Principal Accounting Officer) 38