Company Description
Telecom Argentina S.A. is an information sector company classified in the telecommunications resellers industry. According to its regulatory filings and investor communications, the company operates under the legal name Telecom Argentina S.A. and maintains listings on Bolsas y Mercados Argentinos (BYMA) and the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) through its American Depositary Shares (ADS), which are referenced in its glossary of terms and press materials. Telecom Argentina states that its ADS are listed on the NYSE and that its ticker symbols on BYMA and NYSE remain unchanged following recent brand-related changes.
In its financial reporting, Telecom Argentina uses International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and applies inflationary accounting in accordance with IAS 29. The company regularly publishes unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements, including statements of financial position, income, comprehensive income, changes in equity and cash flows, along with an operating and financial review and prospects section. These reports present results in millions of Argentine pesos in current currency, restated by inflation, and include detailed notes on concepts such as RECPAM (inflation adjustment gain or loss), capital expenditures (CAPEX), fixed and intangible assets, and other technical accounting items.
Business activities and service areas
Based on its published results and segment information, Telecom Argentina generates revenues from several telecommunications and related service categories. These include mobile services, internet services, cable television services, fixed telephony and data services, and revenues from equipment and handsets. The company reports mobile subscribers in Argentina and Paraguay, broadband accesses, pay TV subscribers, and fixed lines in service, and provides metrics such as average revenue per user (ARPU) and churn rates for these lines of business.
Telecom Argentina reports that mobile services represent a significant portion of its service revenues, with mobile internet revenues accounting for the vast majority of mobile service revenues in the periods described. Internet services revenues are associated with broadband accesses, where the company discloses the proportion of customers with higher-speed connections. Cable TV services revenues are linked to pay TV subscribers, and the company provides information on subscriber evolution and ARPU in constant currency. Fixed telephony and data services generate additional revenues, and the company also reports revenues from the sale of equipment and handsets.
Brands, segments and geographic footprint
In a current report to the Argentine Securities and Exchange Commission, Telecom Argentina states that it is consolidating its commercial brands under the name Personal. This consolidation covers several business segments identified by the company: connectivity (under Personal Fibra and Personal Móvil), entertainment (Personal Flow), digital finance (Personal Pay), smart home solutions (Personal Smarthome and Tienda Personal), and technology solutions for enterprises and governments (Personal Tech). The company clarifies that this change affects commercial brands only and does not alter its corporate structure or its status in the financial markets, and that Telecom Argentina S.A. remains the legal corporate name.
Telecom Argentina’s disclosures also reference operations and subsidiaries in Argentina and Paraguay, including mobile operations under the Personal brand in Paraguay (Núcleo). The company’s glossary of terms lists various controlled and associated entities, including companies involved in telecommunications, audiovisual content, and technology-related activities, as well as foreign subsidiaries such as Telecom Argentina USA Inc. and Nucleo S.A.E. The company also reports on the consolidation of Telefónica Móviles Argentina S.A. (TMA) as a controlled company, presenting separate references to Telecom (excluding TMA) and TMA within its segment analysis.
Financial reporting and inflationary environment
Telecom Argentina’s financial communications emphasize the impact of Argentina’s inflationary environment on its reported figures. The company notes that its financial statements are prepared in constant currency, restated using the national consumer price index (CPI) published by INDEC. It provides tables showing CPI variation and explains that comparative figures for prior periods are restated to the current measurement unit. The company also highlights the effect of inflation and exchange rate movements on its financial results, including RECPAM, net financial results, and the relationship between inflation and the depreciation of the Argentine peso.
In its consolidated income statements, Telecom Argentina reports revenues, operating costs, employee benefit expenses, interconnection and transmission costs, programming and content costs, bad debt expenses, depreciation, amortization and impairment of fixed and intangible assets, and financial results. The company has disclosed periods with net income and periods with net loss, and attributes certain losses to factors such as exchange rate differences and, in earlier periods, goodwill impairment related to a prior merger. It also reports on capital expenditures as a percentage of consolidated revenues and on consolidated net financial debt, with explanations of changes in debt levels.
Corporate structure, governance and legal matters
The company’s filings include a glossary of regulatory and corporate terms, referencing entities such as the Argentine National Securities Commission (CNV), the Central Bank of Argentina (BCRA), the telecommunications regulator ENACOM, and the Argentine Corporations Law. Telecom Argentina identifies Cablevisión Holding S.A. (CVH) as its controlling company since January 1, 2018, and describes various controlled companies and joint ventures. The financial statements present equity attributable to the controlling company and to non-controlling interests, along with movements in reserves, retained earnings, and other comprehensive income.
Telecom Argentina also discloses certain legal and regulatory matters. For example, a 6-K filing reports that a Federal Court in Tucumán decided not to uphold an action brought by a consumer association related to a service outage, determining that the event was a fortuitous event. Another filing describes the initiation of a corporate reorganization process involving the merger of a controlled company, Teledifusora San Miguel Arcangel S.A. (TSMA), into Telecom Argentina as the absorbing company, effective from a specified date, with operations of TSMA to be considered as carried out by Telecom Argentina from that date.
Organizational updates and continuity
Telecom Argentina’s current reports also include organizational updates, such as changes in senior finance roles. One filing states that a Chief Financial Officer ceased to serve due to personal reasons and that, on an interim basis, the duties would be performed by the company’s Director of Finance until a new appointment is made. In its brand consolidation filing, the company explicitly states that Telecom Argentina S.A. remains active as the legal corporate name and that the ticker symbols under which it is listed on BYMA and NYSE remain unchanged, indicating continuity of its presence in public markets.
Through its combination of mobile, internet, cable TV, fixed telephony and data services, along with digital finance and technology solutions under the Personal brand family, Telecom Argentina presents itself in its filings and press releases as a diversified telecommunications and information and communication technology (ICT) services group. Its detailed financial reporting, adherence to IFRS and IAS 29, and regular 6-K submissions provide investors with insight into its operations, capital structure, and the macroeconomic context in which it operates.
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Short Interest History
Short interest in Telecom Argentina Sa (TCMFF) currently stands at 406 shares, representing 0.0% of the float. This relatively low short interest suggests limited bearish sentiment.
Days to Cover History
Days to cover for Telecom Argentina Sa (TCMFF) currently stands at 1.7 days, down 31.7% from the previous period. This low days-to-cover ratio indicates high liquidity, allowing short sellers to quickly exit positions if needed. The days to cover has increased 72% over the past year, indicating improving liquidity conditions. The ratio has shown significant volatility over the period, ranging from 1.0 to 1000.0 days.