Verizon signals flat capex for 2015

Oct. 22, 2014
As communications technology vendors look for an increase in carrier capital expenditures (capex) in 2015, it appears their gaze should be directed elsewhere than Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE, NASDAQ: VZ). The service provider’s chief financial officer, Fran Shammo, indicated to attendees on an analyst call October 21 he expects the company to hold 2015 capex to near 2014 levels.

As communications technology vendors look for an increase in carrier capital expenditures (capex) in 2015, it appears their gaze should be directed elsewhere than Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE, NASDAQ: VZ). The service provider's chief financial officer, Fran Shammo, indicated to attendees on an analyst call October 21 he expects the company to hold 2015 capex to near 2014 levels.

Verizon has projected its capex will be about $17 billion in 2014. Shammo did not provide official guidance on the October 21 call, held to discuss the company's third quarter 2014 results. However, in answer to a question from Morgan Stanley's Simon Flannery, Shammo said the company hopes to improve its ratio of capex to revenue next year.

"As far as whole dollars go, we said around the $17 billion mark [for 2014] and I'll give you some more guidance in January. But I don't anticipate that that will change pretty materially going into the next year," Shammo said.

For the recently concluded quarter, Verizon spent $4.1 billion in capex, bringing the total so far this year to $12.6 billion. This represents an $817 million (6.9%) increase versus the first nine months of 2013. Wireless accounted for $2.5 billion of the quarter's capex, and $7.8 billion of the capex spent so far this year.

Wireline capex of $4.2 billion through the first nine months represents a 6.1% decline from 2013 levels.

For more information on high-speed transmission systems and suppliers, visit the Lightwave Buyer's Guide.

About the Author

Stephen Hardy | Editorial Director and Associate Publisher

Stephen Hardy has covered fiber optics for more than 15 years, and communications and technology for more than 30 years. He is responsible for establishing and executing Lightwave's editorial strategy across its digital magazine, website, newsletters, research and other information products. He has won multiple awards for his writing.

Contact Stephen to discuss:

  • Contributing editorial material to the Web site or digital magazine
  • The direction of a digital magazine issue, staff-written article, or event
  • Lightwave editorial attendance at industry events
  • Arranging a visit to Lightwave's offices
  • Coverage of announcements
  • General questions of an editorial nature

Sponsored Recommendations

State of the Market: AI is Driving New Thinking in the Optical Industry

Dec. 5, 2024
The year 2024 marked an inflection point for AI. In August, OpenAI’s ChatGPT reached 200 million weekly active users. Meanwhile, McKinsey reported that 72% of ...

Optical Transceivers in the Age of AI: Impacts, Challenges, and Opportunities

Jan. 13, 2025
Join our webinar to explore how AI is transforming optical transceivers, data center networking, and Nvidia's GPU-driven architectures, unlocking new possibilities in speed, performance...

Linear Pluggable Optics – The low-power optical interconnects for AI and Hyperscaled data centers.

Dec. 23, 2024
This LightWave webinar discussion will review the important technical differentiators found in this emerging interconnect field and how the electro/optic interoperability and ...

Getting ready for 800G-1.6T DWDM optical transport

Dec. 16, 2024
Join as Koby Reshef, CEO of Packetlight Networks addresses challenges with three key technological advancements set to shape the industry in 2025.