Telecom Argentina S.A.

NYSE:TEO Stock Report

Market Cap: US$5.4b

Telecom Argentina Past Earnings Performance

Past criteria checks 0/6

Telecom Argentina has been growing earnings at an average annual rate of 10.1%, while the Telecom industry saw earnings growing at 17% annually. Revenues have been growing at an average rate of 36% per year.

Key information

10.12%

Earnings growth rate

10.12%

EPS growth rate

Telecom Industry Growth6.72%
Revenue growth rate36.03%
Return on equity-2.08%
Net Margin-2.04%
Next Earnings Update11 May 2026

Recent past performance updates

Recent updates

Seeking Alpha Nov 14

Telecom Argentina: Caught Between Macro Hope And Fundamental Reality

Summary Telecom Argentina S.A.'s rally is largely a macro trade—Argentina got "less risky," not the company fundamentally better... yet. Q3 '25 and 9M '25 results show a real, but limited, operational recovery: ARPU is rising, but the customer base continues to shrink, and FX still crushes the bottom line. Valuations look more realistic now than at the start of the year, even after the broader Argentina equities rally, with TEO trading around ~5x EV/EBITDA, making a neutral stance more reasonable. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Mar 28

Telecom Argentina: Acquisition Setback And Overvaluation Hold Back Progress

Summary Telecom Argentina’s fundamentals improved in 2024, particularly in financial leverage, driven by the macroeconomic recovery. Valuations remain stretched, though less irrational than a few months ago. The Argentine government's block of the TMA acquisition significantly hampers the company’s growth prospects and synergies. Telecom Argentina’s last year's stock price surge largely reflects an already priced-in recovery scenario. Despite improvements, there’s little margin of safety, with continued downside risk for TEO stock in 2025. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Nov 27

Telecom Argentina: Milei's Rally Has Made Valuations Excessively Irrational

Summary Telecom Argentina has benefited significantly from Javier Milei's election, with shares jumping triple-digits due to improved FX rates and economic outlook. Despite these gains, TEO's valuation is extremely high, trading at 39.5x cash flow compared to the industry average of 8.2x. However, the company is not out of the woods, as it still faces potential liquidity challenges with significant debt maturing in 2024-2025, which will require external funding and debt renegotiation. I maintain an underweight stance on TEO, anticipating a valuation-driven pullback despite the positive economic changes under Milei's government. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Oct 27

Telecom Argentina: Improvements Don't Justify Its Premium Valuation

Summary Telecom Argentina has faced challenges in recent years due to the Argentine debt crisis and increased competition in the telecommunications industry. The company has managed to offset some costs despite extreme inflation levels in Argentina, and its leverage situation has improved. The valuation of Telecom Argentina remains elevated compared to its peers in Latin America, as indicated by the high multiples in forward P/E, EV/EBITDA, and Price/Cash Flow ratios. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Nov 10

Telecom Argentina reports Q3 results

Telecom Argentina press release (NYSE:TEO): Q3 net loss of P$163,498 million in 9M22 (vs. an income of P$1,876 million in 9M21). Revenue of P$470.96B -12.2% in constant currency vs. 9M21.
Seeking Alpha Oct 17

Telecom Argentina Has Improved And Is Much Cheaper Now

Summary TEO is one of the largest Argentinian telecommunication carriers. The company has seen its profits collapse because real ARPU fell off a cliff after the Argentinian crisis period of 2018-2021. Even though the Argentinian economy has been recovering, real ARPU has continued falling. I believe this might be tied to market dynamics. Although the company is posting accounting losses, its cash flow dynamics are much stronger, thanks to reduced CAPEX. I believe TEO can survive a period of under-profitability and that it can benefit substantially in a context of recovering ARPU. Telecom Argentina (TEO) is an integrated telecommunications carrier with established positions in fixed, mobile, broadband and cable. Last December I wrote an introductory article on the company with a hold rating. The main reason for the rating was the Argentinian government's attempt to fix the prices of telecommunication services in a context of rampant inflation. Also, the company was spending more than previously on fixed investments, something I considered problematic going forward. Finally on the negatives, TEO is leveraged both financially and operationally. On the positive side, TEO is almost profitable in a context where the price charged for telecommunication services has fallen to historic lows. Part of that fall is tied to global industry trends, but another portion is tied to Argentina's either stagnant or contracting economy for the past ten years. Any sort of recovery on pricing power, which is inevitably tied to the recovery of the Argentinian economy, will greatly increase the company's profitability. In this article, I review the situation with data from the 20-F annual report for FY21, along with quarterly reports for Q1 and Q2 of FY22. The company is presenting operational losses on an accounting basis, but it is doing much better on a cash basis, based on much lower capital expenditures than before. Although the government's attempt to fix prices was thwarted in court, TEO has been unable to recover pricing power and revenue is falling in real terms. The company has also leveraged more by paying dividends. With the stock down 25% since December, TEO now presents a wider margin of safety, trading at 10 times FCF. Still, the situation is risky and future profitability depends significantly on Argentinian economic recovery and industry dynamics improving. I believe current prices can be considered a limit or ceiling, with investors purchasing below them. Note: Unless otherwise stated, all information has been obtained from TEO's filings with the SEC. Previous report This is a short summary of the initiation coverage article on TEO, for a more detailed explanation, please refer to that article. TEO is one of the biggest, if not the biggest player, in Argentinian telecommunications. The company holds a consolidated position in fixed, mobile, broadband and cable, with market shares between 30% and 35% in all of them. That means, although the company is not dominant, it is one of the significant players. No other competitor has the same market share across all markets. The telecommunications industry gives TEO most of its characteristics. It is a low moat business, where competitors usually pair each other's prices and where customers change between providers repeatedly. Churn rates for TEO are generally between 1% and 2% per month. This means revenue per customer is mostly outside of TEO's control, and depends on exogenous factors like the income level of Argentinians. A report from S&P Global shows that revenue per customer in the telecommunications industry is heavily affected by the income level of the country. Low moat and high rivalry is generated by enormous fixed investments that become sunk when installed, pushing competitors into fights for volume that destroy prices. In turn, high fixed investments coupled with high rivalry usually mean low returns on capital. TEO enhances its returns on equity by leveraging on debt. Data by YCharts Fortunately, even in this context, TEO has been able to provide good returns on equity and remain operationally profitable consistently. Some things changed after 2017 though, because the company escalated its operations significantly, issued debt and invested in infrastructure for 4G and FTTH. When the Argentinian economy entered into a significant crisis in 2018 that lasted at least until 2021, TEO's revenue per customer collapsed (second chart below). Data by YCharts TEO's ARPU based on the CCL dollar rate (Own, based on TEO's 20-F reports filed with the SEC) It is true though that in general the telecommunications industry has lost ARPU globally for decades. This has been the case in the US, according to Statista, and in most regions, according to Telcoverager. The difference at the Argentinian level is the degree and the speed of the fall, and how much it differs from other countries in Latin America. Trading at a price close to 80% below its all time-high, TEO seemed an interesting opportunity waiting for an Argentinian recovery. The main thesis was that an increase in disposable income would allow the company to recover ARPU back to regional levels. ARPU recovery would then generate a windfall given TEO's operational leverage. Two things worried me though. First, I was not sure the new level of PP&E, CAPEX and depreciation seen after 2017 would not be permanent. If that was the case, then TEO would carry more depreciation than before, reducing future profitability. Second, the government had declared telecommunication services essential, therefore allowing an agency to set all kinds of regulations and, above all, to fix prices. When services like utilities were 'essentialized' in the beginning of the 2000s, contracts were breached, profitability was destroyed and the industry fell in disgrace. I was worried the same would happen with telcos. Data by YCharts Latest developments Since my last article, three important reports have been published by TEO: the 20-F report for FY21, and quarterly reports for Q1 and Q2. They show a continuing trend down in terms of revenue, that translates into operating losses, albeit the accounting should be adjusted a little. The company has also continued returning capital to shareholders in the form of dividends. Most importantly, courts have put a limit on the government's desire to excessively regulate telcos. Courts stop the 'essentialization' In June 2021, TEO obtained an injunction in the Court of Appeals, suspending the articles of the new regulation that affected the company's ability to define prices. This was an important first step, given that TEO and other telcos had not been able to increase prices since August 2020, under a context of inflation above 45%. The regulatory battle is explained in TEO's quarterly report for 2Q22 under the headings Rates Regulation and Regulatory Issues. The Court of Appeals ruling is not definite though, with the final decision awaiting at the Supreme Court. The final ruling may take years considering the Court's parsimony. However, my opinion is that these regulatory risks are now lower, because the government's attitude has changed. Even if the Court ruled that the services are essential and therefore the government gains wide regulatory rights, I believe TEO would be protected. To begin with, October 2022 is not the same as August 2020. Income has recovered, and people are not 100% dependent on data to communicate, as was the case during the pandemic. Today, mobile internet ARPU is $2.5 per month, not a sum that would spark protests against the government if it raised a little bit. The government is also trying to entice foreign investments, and show itself as more pro-market. Continuing or escalating a regulatory war with telcos (the canon of fixed investments with high regulatory risk) is not the way to attract other investments. Therefore I believe the regulatory risks are now lower, albeit not completely out of the picture. Still, revenues are down Even though TEO and other telcos were allowed by courts to increase prices since June 2021, the company has not been able to maintain revenues on a real basis, that is, to increase prices above inflation. Revenues have fallen 13% in real terms comparing FY21 with FY19, and 11% in real terms comparing 1H22 with 1H21. That last data point is particularly important. During 1H21, TEO was unable to increase prices, therefore it is surprising that even with price adjustments allowed, 1H22 revenues are lower in real terms. This shows that there are other barriers to higher profitability. One such barrier might be that the Argentinian market is not ready for an increase in real prices of telecommunication services yet. However, as shown in the S&P Global report, telco service prices and income are very correlated, and Argentinian income has been growing for a year and a half now. Another explanation is that TEO's competitors are strained, and therefore need to squeeze prices. This is difficult to judge because neither Claro nor Movistar are public companies. Rather, they are subsidiaries of public companies, America Movil (AMX) and Telefonica (TEF) respectively. A final explanation is that the competitive dynamics are still tied to lower and lower prices, in a sort of gridlock between the main competitors. These dynamics could change, with carriers increasing real prices together, therefore competing, but at a higher profitability level. Depreciation is exaggerated With both operational and financial leverage, the continued fall in real revenues implies a greater fall in operating income. TEO posted operating losses for FY21, and for both quarters of 1H22. Albeit the loss of profitability is real, because recurrent expenses have kept in line with inflation, it is not as bad as accrual accounting shows. On a cash basis, TEO is profitable, which makes a great difference when considering the company a safe investment or not. The reason is that depreciation does not represent neither the historic nor the current capital expenditures. In a business like TEO's, depreciation can account for one third or more of expenses. As the chart below shows, current capital expenditures are more in line with the situation prevalent before 2017 and for most of TEO's history. This on its own is a good signal. But depreciation lags CAPEX, leaving a huge gap, currently of $600 million, or AR$94 billion, on a TTM basis. This means that although TEO is showing operational losses, its FCF is actually higher by an important margin. TEO's FCF is also improved by the fact that CAPEX is financed by equipment manufacturers (like Huawei or Cisco) but TEO charges its customers every month. The company has significant negative working capital. Data by YChartsData by YCharts This situation is very positive for two reasons. First, that the business is able to generate cash is important for liquidity and solvency reasons. Even if we believe the Argentinian economy will recover, TEO has to survive in order to profit from that recovery. FCF helps with that. Second, we can predict that depreciation will continue falling, following CAPEX. This means TEO has an accrual helper in profitability recovery. Even if revenues continue falling in real terms, if depreciation falls faster, TEO will increase its operating income. Of course, that is not real, cash based profitability, but it helps with market participants that may not study the financials and only look at accrual numbers. Data by YCharts TEO continues returning capital In 2018, TEO started a policy of leveraging by taking debt and returning equity to shareholders in the form of dividends. In the chart below, the process can be seen up to 2020, when FX restrictions were established forbidding companies from purchasing foreign currency to pay dividends. Data by YCharts However, TEO has actually continued with this policy, at an aggressive level, but that does not show up in financial statements nor in platforms like YCharts above. The accounting treatment of these dividends is particular. TEO paid dividends in 2020, 2021 and 2022. It has not used cash (unavailable because of the FX controls) but government bonds (called Global Bonds) that trade in both pesos and dollars. TEO has been purchasing and then distributing these bonds, using pesos, and shareholders can sell them for dollars. This generates a lot of accounting shenanigans. First, the dividends do not show up in the cash flow statements, because they are paid with bonds. Second, the exchange rate used for trading these bonds is not the same as the rate used to mark them in the balance sheet. For example, if the bond costs $100, it trades at AR$30 thousand, a rate of AR$300 per dollar. However, when these bonds are held in the balance sheet, they are valued at a rate of AR$150, meaning the company absorbs fair value losses on them even if their dollar price remains constant. Third, and most important, it is not clear exactly how much is distributed. The distributions are announced in nominal value for the bonds, but these are distressed Argentinian government bonds trading at a steep discount of as much as 80%. For example in June 2022 TEO announced a distribution of nominal value for $514 million, or $0.24 cents per share ($1.2 per ADS). However, the recorded distribution in the equity statements is AR$31 billion, which implies a rate of AR$56 per dollar, when the official rate was AR$125 and the financial rate was AR$300 in June 2022. It does not make sense either if the discounted value of the bonds is used for the equity statement. For example, in June 2022 the bonds traded at $30 per $100 of face value, meaning that a distribution of $514 million nominal corresponded to $145 million effective, which should have been translated to AR$18 billion in the balance sheet, not AR$31 billion. Even though the actual figures are unclear, TEO is returning capital, with instruments that can be traded for dollars. Debt is high but more manageable now The goal of paying dividends and taking debt is to leverage the company. In my opinion this signals management's belief in the future of the company, otherwise they would not leverage as much. Readers should consider that only 30% of TEO's stock is publicly traded, with the rest being held by three large owners that have signed commitments not to sell the stock. They would not want to destroy their own wealth. TEO owes about $2 billion in dollars, and about $200 million in Argentinian pesos and UVAs, an inflation adjusted unit. Most of its debt carries fixed or hedged interest rates. Only $300 million is exposed to rate variations. In terms of maturities, the company does not provide a schedule, which is strange given its size and that it is a common feature of financial statements, but I have calculated the following, in millions. 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2029 $130 $345 $360 $560 $150 $185 That is, the maturity schedule has improved significantly compared to the one in December 2021. Particularly, the first maturity heavy year is 2024, after the Argentinian elections of 2023, which allows the company to (maybe) enjoy better refinancing rates if the market likes the new government. In terms of financing costs, I believe the best is to ignore TEO's treatment of this subject entirely. TEO's financial statements are occluded by the treatment of peso devaluation and inflation. In my opinion, the best is simply to consider the dollar interest amount of TEO's debt. As of 2Q22, TEO's debt generates $130 million in interest expenses yearly. The peso portion of interest is negligible because real interest rates in Argentina are negative. Of course this simplification leaves out the fact that TEO's revenues are peso denominated, therefore a sudden devaluation can make the company's dollar reported profits fall significantly. This risk is particularly strong for a discrete jump of the exchange rate, like the ones that occured in 2018 and 2019. Since 2020, the government has followed a more predictable crawling peg policy. Dollar to Argentinian peso exchange rate, log scale (TradingView) Financial model Finally, I provide a financial model to evaluate TEO's future. First, I assume that pesos can be converted to dollars at the official rate for imports, and debt payments. These transactions are allowed under the current regulatory regime. Earnings have to be converted at the financial rate for distribution purposes. Therefore operating and financial costs are translated at the official rate, and then after tax profits are translated at the financial rate. I also assume that the official rate will be devalued approximately following inflation, as has been the case under the crawling peg policy initiated in 2020. The financial rate is a floating market that is not intervened and therefore it fluctuates more, sometimes appreciating (like in 2021) others depreciating (like in 2022).
Seeking Alpha Aug 10

Telecom Argentina reports 1H results

Telecom Argentina press release (NYSE:TEO): 1H net income of P$31,879M for the period ended June 30, 2022 (+P$34,621M vs. 1H21). Revenue of P$264.58B (-10.4% Y/Y). Operating Income before Depreciation and Amortization amounted to P$80,846M in 1H22 (-19.5% vs. 1H21), while our operating margin before D&A was 30.6%.
Seeking Alpha Dec 11

Telecom Argentina Is Trading Above Its Earning Potential

TEO's stock suffered after the Argentinian crisis, inflation and price control of its services. However, if the situation improves, it is not clear TEO will return to the profitability it enjoyed before 2017. The reason is it has to pay more fixed costs than it did before the crisis and the Argentinian borrowing wants instituted price control over the industry. In addition, risky borrowing before the Argentinian crisis has left the company in a less than optimal financial condition.
Seeking Alpha Oct 21

Buying Telecom Argentina At A Steep Discount And Securing 20%+ Dividends (Or More)

Telecom Argentina has plummeted almost 90% since 2018. Cablevision Holding owns a 39.1% stake in Telecom Argentina and trades at a price that offers an additional 60% discount on the already-depressed TEO's price. Dividend yield when exposed to TEO through CVHSY is currently well above 20% and could average up to 35% in the future. CVHSY can easily be a ten-bagger if some reasonable conditions are met.
Seeking Alpha Aug 03

Don't Expect A Quick Recovery For Telecom Argentina

The pandemic had, and still has, a significant negative impact on the business performance of Telecom Argentina. Shares are trading near decade lows. The Argentinian economic situation was already bad before the pandemic, but things have gotten worse with rising unemployment and falling GDP. Significant sovereign debt challenges remain for Argentina. Negotiations with the IMF about the sovereign debt, scheduled in Q1 2022, will be crucial. The inflation adjusted top line will show a significant year-over-year decline again in the upcoming Q2 2021 earnings report. Things may stabilize somewhat after that, but growth will remain elusive.

Revenue & Expenses Breakdown

How Telecom Argentina makes and spends money. Based on latest reported earnings, on an LTM basis.


Earnings and Revenue History

NYSE:TEO Revenue, expenses and earnings (ARS Millions)
DateRevenueEarningsG+A ExpensesR&D Expenses
31 Dec 258,328,814-170,0062,542,0240
30 Sep 256,001,992-513,4761,902,5590
30 Jun 255,232,139-334,6701,698,9730
31 Mar 254,452,372-4,4631,407,0430
31 Dec 245,442,9581,331,8051,764,3300
30 Sep 245,057,043424,2521,642,2590
30 Jun 244,791,903539,4271,539,6750
31 Mar 244,626,611422,3811,506,8120
31 Dec 235,898,611-738,3061,947,1520
30 Sep 234,333,607-3,1151,430,4840
30 Jun 233,656,615-580,4521,231,6650
31 Mar 232,961,829-579,0421,005,1800
31 Dec 226,030,998-1,718,9662,031,1600
30 Sep 221,414,799-376,640461,7130
30 Jun 221,237,748111,745383,6240
31 Mar 22975,45260,467290,3560
31 Dec 212,581,04352,559754,7490
30 Sep 21674,005-5,463192,8230
30 Jun 21600,020-15,499167,1110
31 Mar 21506,0883,244140,6550
31 Dec 20886,765-16,803255,1200
30 Sep 20421,9809,187120,1620
30 Jun 20392,345-13,266112,0560
31 Mar 20352,753-3,876113,6480
31 Dec 19487,067-9,034138,6550
30 Sep 19298,8022,22368,4840
30 Jun 19283,69114,57053,3220
31 Mar 19274,452-2,37815,7070
31 Dec 18351,94811,08993,3310
30 Sep 18214,769-6,53017,6890
30 Jun 18167,87010,31013,4720
31 Mar 18110,55020,30515,7740
31 Dec 17102,53114,9697,0640
30 Sep 1738,1125,3454,2410
30 Jun 1735,5625,1225,6130
31 Mar 1732,9364,7298,4430
31 Dec 1660,40510,4574,2050
30 Sep 1627,7393,2527,3650
30 Jun 1625,1362,9586,5670
31 Mar 1622,6352,8295,8690
31 Dec 1520,1252,4735,1530
30 Sep 1518,6672,9534,4660
30 Jun 1517,0662,5674,0940

Quality Earnings: TEO is currently unprofitable.

Growing Profit Margin: TEO is currently unprofitable.


Free Cash Flow vs Earnings Analysis


Past Earnings Growth Analysis

Earnings Trend: TEO is unprofitable, but has reduced losses over the past 5 years at a rate of 10.1% per year.

Accelerating Growth: Unable to compare TEO's earnings growth over the past year to its 5-year average as it is currently unprofitable

Earnings vs Industry: TEO is unprofitable, making it difficult to compare its past year earnings growth to the Telecom industry (11.1%).


Return on Equity

High ROE: TEO has a negative Return on Equity (-2.08%), as it is currently unprofitable.


Return on Assets


Return on Capital Employed


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Company Analysis and Financial Data Status

DataLast Updated (UTC time)
Company Analysis2026/05/06 18:48
End of Day Share Price 2026/05/06 00:00
Earnings2025/12/31
Annual Earnings2025/12/31

Data Sources

The data used in our company analysis is from S&P Global Market Intelligence LLC. The following data is used in our analysis model to generate this report. Data is normalised which can introduce a delay from the source being available.

PackageDataTimeframeExample US Source *
Company Financials10 years
  • Income statement
  • Cash flow statement
  • Balance sheet
Analyst Consensus Estimates+3 years
  • Forecast financials
  • Analyst price targets
Market Prices30 years
  • Stock prices
  • Dividends, Splits and Actions
Ownership10 years
  • Top shareholders
  • Insider trading
Management10 years
  • Leadership team
  • Board of directors
Key Developments10 years
  • Company announcements

* Example for US securities, for non-US equivalent regulatory forms and sources are used.

Unless specified all financial data is based on a yearly period but updated quarterly. This is known as Trailing Twelve Month (TTM) or Last Twelve Month (LTM) Data. Learn more.

Analysis Model and Snowflake

Details of the analysis model used to generate this report is available on our Github page, we also have guides on how to use our reports and tutorials on Youtube.

Learn about the world class team who designed and built the Simply Wall St analysis model.

Industry and Sector Metrics

Our industry and section metrics are calculated every 6 hours by Simply Wall St, details of our process are available on Github.

Analyst Sources

Telecom Argentina S.A. is covered by 10 analysts. 4 of those analysts submitted the estimates of revenue or earnings used as inputs to our report. Analysts submissions are updated throughout the day.

AnalystInstitution
Rodrigo VillanuevaBofA Global Research
Fernan GonzalezBTG Pactual
Carlos Palhares SequeiraBTG Pactual