Liberty Latin America Ltd
F:1LL
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Liberty Latin America Ltd
F:1LL
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Liberty Latin America Ltd
Liberty Latin America is a broadband and mobile communications company that sells internet, pay TV, home phone, and wireless service in parts of Latin America and the Caribbean, plus some enterprise telecom services. It owns and runs the local networks that carry data and voice traffic, so it is not just a reseller; it is the infrastructure provider behind the service. Its main customers are households, small and medium-sized businesses, and larger companies that need internet access, mobile plans, TV packages, and network services. The company makes money mainly from monthly subscription and usage fees, along with business contracts for connectivity and communications services. What makes the business model distinctive is that it combines network ownership with consumer and business service sales in markets where building and maintaining fixed and mobile telecom infrastructure is a key barrier to entry. That gives Liberty Latin America a practical role in the region’s communications backbone, with revenue tied to keeping customers connected through its own networks and service bundles.
Liberty Latin America is a broadband and mobile communications company that sells internet, pay TV, home phone, and wireless service in parts of Latin America and the Caribbean, plus some enterprise telecom services. It owns and runs the local networks that carry data and voice traffic, so it is not just a reseller; it is the infrastructure provider behind the service.
Its main customers are households, small and medium-sized businesses, and larger companies that need internet access, mobile plans, TV packages, and network services. The company makes money mainly from monthly subscription and usage fees, along with business contracts for connectivity and communications services.
What makes the business model distinctive is that it combines network ownership with consumer and business service sales in markets where building and maintaining fixed and mobile telecom infrastructure is a key barrier to entry. That gives Liberty Latin America a practical role in the region’s communications backbone, with revenue tied to keeping customers connected through its own networks and service bundles.
Results: Liberty Latin America said Q1 2026 was ahead of its internal plan, with $1.1 billion of revenue and $405 million of adjusted OIBDA, both down 1% on a rebased basis but better than management expected.
Cash flow: Adjusted free cash flow before partner distributions improved by $40 million year over year to negative $64 million, helped by lower capital spending and stronger operating cash flow.
Jamaica: The business said Jamaica is recovering faster than expected after Hurricane Melissa, with reconnections picking up and management now more confident about the pace of fixed-network recovery and free cash flow.
Capital return: LLA announced an intent to distribute $500 million of 9% preferred equity to shareholders and said it repurchased shares in Q1 for the first time since the first half of 2024.
AI and costs: Management said it is leaning into AI to drive further cost savings and has named a person to lead the AI transformation, while also saying energy costs are manageable at about 2% of revenue.
Market position: The company highlighted strong postpaid growth in several markets, stable or improving fixed trends in Puerto Rico and Panama, and continued demand in Liberty Networks from carriers and hyperscalers.