The other day we were talking with@Keineui about freenet. Today I decided to do a longer post about it.
This is what the algorithm says:
🇩🇪 freenet AG ($FNTN (-0,42 %) )
🟢 OPTIMAL (Quality 75 / Opportunity 80)
• Current Yield: 7.8%
• Valuation: 8.0x P/FFO (Price to Funds from Operations)
Solid business at an attractive price.
This is what could look problematic at first glance:
• A scary 93% payout ratio based on classic accounting earnings.
• Top-line revenue historically looks stagnant.
• Short-term market noise and analyst downgrades regarding their wholesale network contracts.
This is why we like it:
đź§ The Capital-Light Advantage
Freenet operates a Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO) model. They don't spend billions building physical cell towers—they just rent capacity. Because of this, their accounting earnings (EPS) are heavily suppressed by non-cash charges. Their true ability to generate cash is totally disconnected from their accounting noise.
đź’° Cash Flow tells the real story
If we look past the 93% GAAP payout ratio and look at what really matters—Free Cash Flow—we find a highly secure 58% payout ratio. The 7.8% dividend is perfectly safe and easily covered by the actual cash they print.
🛡️ Aggressive Deleveraging
Far from being in distress, their balance sheet is pristine. Over the last decade, they have crushed their Net Debt / EBITDA from 3.6x down to a very safe 1.1x today. They used their cash machine to pay down debt perfectly.
(plot from dividendquad , data provided by EODHD)
⚖️ The Valuation Opportunity
The market is currently pricing the stock based on short-term uncertainty around wholesale network renewals, leaving FNTN trading at a severely depressed 8.0x P/FFO.
The Verdict:
What looks like an accounting problem on the surface is actually a perfectly healthy cash flow engine. It's a rare chance to lock in a massive 7.8% yield covered by Free Cash Flow, backed by a strong balance sheet, while we wait for the multiple to expand.
