Q3 2024 Equinix Inc Earnings Call
Good afternoon and welcome to the Equin X3 Order earnings conference call. All lines will be able to listen only until we open for questions.
Also today's conference is being recorded if anyone has objections, please disconnect at this time.
I now have to turn the call over to Chip Newcom Senior Director of Investor Relations. You may begin.
Chip Newcom: Good afternoon and welcome to today's conference call. Before we get started, I would like to remind everyone that some of the statements that we will be making today are forward-looking in nature and involve risks and uncertainties.
Actual results may vary significantly from those statements and may be affected by the risks we've identified in today's press release, as well as those identified now following with the SEC, including our most recent form 10K, by February 16th, 2024, and our most recent form 10K.
Chip Newcom: I'm going to assume no obligation and does not intend to update or comment on poor-looking statements made on this call.
Chip Newcom: In addition, in light of regulation for end disclosure, it is economic and policy not to comment on its financial guidance during the quarter unless it's done to an explicit public disclosure.
Today's topic is called, we will provide non-gap measures.
Chip Newcom: We provide a reconciliation of those nine years to the most directly comparable gap measures, and it looks to the reasons why the company uses these measures and says, press release on the Equalix Investual Relations page at www.equalix.com.
We made available on the IRPage of our website, a presentation designed to accompany this discussion, along with certain supplemental financial information and other data.
We would also like to remind you that we've posted an important information about equips on the IR page by website from time to time, and encourage you to check our website regularly for the most current available information.
Good afternoon today, our Adaire Fox Martin, Equal Excellency E.L. and President and Keith Taylor, Chief Financial Officer.
Following our prepared remarks, we will be taking questions from self-ident analysts. In the intro to graphing this call up in one hour, we would like to ask these analysts to limit any follow-on questions to on. At this time, I'll turn the call over to Adaire.
Thank you, Chip. Good afternoon and welcome to our third quarter earnings call. We had an outstanding quarter. We delivered record gross bookings with strong performance across each of our three regions. We had solid deal conversion rates and pricing remained robust.
Cabinet's billing increased meaningfully. All of this translated into our 87th quarter of consecutive revenue growth with attractive AFFO per share profitability, highlighting the scale and differentiation that reinforces our market position.
Importantly, given the robust demand for digital infrastructure to enable AI capabilities across industries and regions, our forward-looking pipeline remains strong, with healthy pre-sales activities supporting our momentum in Q4 and beyond.
Turning to our strategy, as I discussed last quarter, Equinix has developed a differentiated and successful business over the last two and a half decades.
Chip Newcom: creating exceptional value for our customers and our shareholders.
Chip Newcom: Our strength is underpinned by our position as the world's leading digital infrastructure company, our truly global footprint and scale, our neutrality, and our singular value proposition around interconnection.
Chip Newcom: Customer requirements and data center designs are evolving rapidly. Energy constraints and long-term development cycles pose challenges to our industry's ability to serve customers effectively.
Equinix is particularly well positioned to address these challenges as an industry leader to seize the significant opportunities ahead and drive future growth.
To this end we will focus on three strategic areas built on the tenets I shared on last quarter's earnings call of clarity, simplicity and focus.
First, we will start outside in with our customers. We will focus on enhancing how we engage with our customers at every milestone in our relationship with them.
Chip Newcom: Our goal is to be the partner of choice for our customers' most critical infrastructure workloads.
To achieve this, we intend to evolve our go-to-market engine in a structured and coordinated manner to deliver a frictionless customer experience that is segment-appropriate.
We have already seen the benefit of solution and segment focus in our record Q3 growth bookings outcome.
Second, we will deliver integrated solutions that make it easier for our customers and partners to deploy and consume solutions at Equinix.
Our initial efforts will focus on developing smarter solutions that extend our core co-location and interconnection offerings.
This is where we have the right to win and the right to lead.
In support of this, we have brought together our data center services team and our digital services team into a single business area led by John Lynn.
Third, we have been innovating in data center design and our approach to data center construction.
We are fortunate to have industry-leading procurement, design, and construction teams.
Chip Newcom: We intend to build for the future and accelerate our development of differentiated campuses that support the broad range of our customers' needs.
Essentially, this means moving from many smaller builds with phased capacity delivery to fewer, larger builds, balancing location with access to power on campuses that can service the full range of our customers' needs from SMEs to Hyperscalers.
At the same time, we will remain focused on delivering industry-leading investment returns by continuing to meet the evolving needs of our customers, placing the right application into the right footprint for the best business outcome.
Taken together, I believe these strategic moves, which are about doing less so that we can deliver more, will drive significant long-term value for our customers, partners and shareholders.
We continue to invest in the market opportunities we believe lie ahead.
Earlier this month, we announced our plans to nearly triple the investment capital of our XScale program.
Chip Newcom: with the agreement to form a greater than $15 billion joint venture with the CPP Investment Board and GIC.
With the capital raised through this new JV, Equinix expects to build new state-of-the-art X-scale facilities on multiple campuses across the U.S.
each with the capacity of multiple hundreds of megawatts.
As discussed previously, we've already closed on land and power for a 240 megawatt X-scale campus in Atlanta, which we expect to contribute to this new JV.
We are currently in active diligence to secure power and land in additional U.S. markets and look forward to providing more details in the coming quarters.
Chip Newcom: Since our last earnings call, in our established JVs, we have leased an incremental 20 megawatts in our SOL2 data center.
This brings total X-scale leasing to 385 MW globally, with nearly 90% of our operational and under-construction capacity leased.
We believe Equinix is uniquely positioned to innovate with and for hyperscalers, and we are excited about the opportunities ahead.
Enterprise demand is steadily building for AI related workloads.
We remain the preferred location for server provider on-ramps, supporting the data ingestion and distribution requirements of AI workloads.
Equinix customers can enjoy low-latency access to native hyperscaler on-ramps in 47 metros across 25 countries.
This includes 12 metros with on-runs to five or more providers.
Chip Newcom: This is six times the coverage of our nearest competitor.
Recent key service provider wins and production use cases include Nebias, a full-stack AI infrastructure provider.
Chip Newcom: Their new deployment in Paris will be among the first in Europe to offer NVIDIA H200 Tensor Core GPUs in support of providing essential resources for customer AI journeys.
Chip Newcom: Sakura Internet, a Japanese cloud service provider, is actively involved in the development of large-scale cloud services for generative AI, and aims to enhance its GPU-based cloud services to explore new business opportunities in Asia.
Chip Newcom: For Enterprise AI, Equinix is supporting our Fortune 200 shipping and logistics company, who deployed at Equinix to unlock predictive capabilities in logistics and build intelligent, data-driven supply chains.
We are also supporting a leading medtech company who is leveraging AI algorithms to analyze endoscopic images in real time.
This will save lives through enhancing diagnostic precision.
Our unique business model enables us to serve the full spectrum of our customers AI requirements.
Our retail footprint is well positioned to serve the inferencing and private AI workloads of enterprises of varying sizes.
Our rapidly expanding X-Scale offering can meet the significant requirements of hyperscalers and service providers.
Our ability to satisfy these needs fortifies our resilience in capturing upside and managing potential downside in a highly dynamic and evolving AI landscape.
Turning to our results as depicted on slide 3.
Chip Newcom: Q3 revenues were $2.2 billion, up 7% over the same quarter last year, driven by strong recurring revenue growth and X-scale fees.
Adjusted EBITDA was up 12% year over year, with solid AFFO per share profitability.
Chip Newcom: Interconnection revenues increased 10% year-over-year with continued strength from Equinix Fabric.
These growth rates are all on a normalised and constant currency basis.
Fueling our industry-leading global interconnection franchise, we now have 478,000 total interconnections deployed across our footprint.
Growth interconnection additions remain strong, and pricing continues to trend favorably.
Net interconnection additions improved to 5,700 due to strong increase in hyperscaler cross-connects and the continued diversification of our ecosystems.
Equinix Fabric saw continued solid growth and is now operating at an annual revenue run rate of greater than 250 million US dollars with an attach rate of approximately 40% across our global customer base.
Our fabric business grew thanks to 100 gigabit port additions and higher bandwidth virtual connections.
Equinix Internet Exchange saw peak traffic surpass 40 terabits per second for the first time.
In August, we opened our first data center in Johannesburg to support the growing digital infrastructure and connectivity needs of enterprises and service providers in the rapidly growing African continent.
We also opened the first phases of our New York 3 and Tokyo 15 IBXs this quarter, using capacity constraints in two of our key metros.
Customers taking advantage of our expanding global footprint include Pubmatic, a digital advertising firm who expanded their partnership with Equinix to leverage AI-powered predictive analytics for their ad campaigns.
SAS provider Zoho chose Equinix so they could better support their customers in complying with European data sovereignty requirements.
Our channel program delivered another solid quarter, contributing approximately 50% of new logos.
We continue to see growth from partners like Avant, Dow, Orange Business, and WWT, with wins across a wide range of industry segments and use cases, including AI.
Q3 wins include a data center modernization project with AT&T.
Together, we helped a customer experience technology company blend cloud and private infrastructure resources, enable multi-cloud networking, and accelerate AI and automation enhancements for customer interactions.
Chip Newcom: We believe this quarter is a testament to the trust our customers place in us and the value they realize from partnering strategically with us.
With that, I'll turn it over to Keith to cover the quarter's financials.
Keith: Thank you, Adaire, and good afternoon to everyone.
Keith: Let me start by saying we once again delivered another strong quarter.
The business continues to execute against its short-term goals, another step in our journey, while setting the stage for the years ahead.
We finished the quarter with record gross bookings.
each of our regions at or very near their all-time highs.
Our net bookings were also very strong, with net megawatts sold in our core business up 60% over the previous quarter.
a reflection of the growth and density of our bookings activity.
Additionally, we pre-sold a meaningful amount of future capacity, which is neither included in our bookings nor our backlog metrics.
We've closed more than 4,100 deals with more than 3,200 customers.
and our adjusted EBITDA and AFFO were at the high end of our expectations, the result of solid revenue growth and disciplined cost management.
As it relates to our non-financial metrics, we saw meaningful improvements across net billable cabinets and interconnections, and higher NMRR per cabinet.
Keith: Net billable cabinets stepped up by 3,100 globally driven by strong bookings and capacity openings in certain key markets.
Given our record Q3 gross bookings and our elevated backlog of cabinets sold but not yet installed, we expect our net billable cabinet additions to remain strong through the end of the year.
Net interconnection additions had a healthy step up as our grueless interconnection activity remains at its highest level.
Interconnection revenues increased to 19% of recurring revenues.
Our MRR per cabinet metric continues to trend favorably, increasing 6% year-over-year on a normalized and constant currency basis to over $2,300 per cabinet, driven by favorable pricing environments and increasing power densities.
In the quarter, the average cabinet booked had an average density of 6.2 kilowatts per cabinet.
Keith: while the density of our term cabinets was 4 kilowatts per cabinet.
Keith: Thank you for watching!
As Adaire highlighted, we're excited about the next phase of our eggscale initiative.
Keith: The announcement of our greater than $15 billion joint venture with CPPIB and GIC is another milestone for Equinix.
We continue to believe this off-balance sheet joint venture structure will enable us to serve the significant needs of our largest customers for both traditional cloud and emerging AI workloads, while delivering significant value to our investors on a per share basis.
Bottom line, given the strength of our balance sheet, including our low debt leverage and strategic and operational liquidity, alongside the XCO partnerships, we believe that Equinix represents the best opportunity to create value in the digital infrastructure space.
Keith: Now, let me cover the highlights from the quarter. Note that all growth rates in this section are on a normalized and constant currency basis.
Keith: As depicted on slide 4, global Q3 revenues were $2.201 billion, up 7% over the same quarter last year, at the midpoint of our guidance range due to the deferral of planned ex-scale fees into 2025.
For Q4, our revenue guidance implies a meaningful step up in non-recurring revenues related to eggscale fit-out activities and other sales activity.
Net of our FX hedges, there was a minimal FX impact when compared to our prior guidance rates.
Global Q3 adjusted EBITDA was $1.048 billion or approximately 48% of revenues up 12% over the same quarter last year at the top end of our guidance range due to strong operating performance.
2-3 adjusted EBITDA, net of our FX hedges included a 1 million dollar FX headwind when compared to our prior guidance rates.
and included $2 million of integration costs.
Global Q3 FFO was $866 million, up 12% over the same quarter last year, better than our expectation due to strong operating performance, favorable net interest expense, and the timing of our Singapore VI land lease payment.
Keith: Q3 AFFO included a minimal FX impact when compared to our prior guidance rates.
Global Q3 MR churn was lower than planned due to the deferral of forecasted MR churn from late September into early October.
Keith: As such, when we average the expected quarterly churn over the second half of the year, we expect MRR churn to be in the middle of our 2 to 2.5% quarterly guidance range.
Keith: Turning to our regional highlights, these full results are covered on slides 5 through 7.
Keith: On a year-over-year normalized basis, APAC was our fastest-growing region at 15%, followed by the Americas and EMEA regions growing at 6% and 3% respectively.
Excluding the impact of paraphrase actions, APAC grew 17% and EMEA grew 5%.
The Americas region delivered very strong bookings across many of our tier one metros including Dallas, New York, Silicon Valley and Washington DC. Demand continues to outpace supply in top markets driving a favorable pricing environment.
Our new business also delivered a great quarter with record-gross bookings activity, firm pricing, and robust AI deal activity led by our Dubai, Frankfurt, London, and Paris metros.
We also had healthy activity in our growth and emerging market metros as global scale and reach continue to be a point of differentiation for our business.
And finally, the Asia-Pacific region had a great quarter with near-record gross bookings and strong inter-region activity, resulting in quarterly revenues reaching the $500 million milestone for the very first time.
We experience continued momentum in our Hong Kong, Osaka, Singapore, and Tokyo markets, including significant AI demand in Japan for service provider enterprise and government use cases.
And now looking at our capital structure, please refer to slide 8.
Our balance sheet increased to approximately $35.4 billion, including elevated cash and short-term investments of $3.2 billion, ahead of our $1 billion maturing bond payment in November.
In the quarter, we issued more than $750 million in senior green bonds across our Euro and Swiss franc offerings as we continue to align our financings across our investing markets while supporting our future-first sustainability strategy.
To date, Equinix has issued approximately $5.6 billion of green bonds, making our company one of the top ten largest U.S. investment-grade corporate issuers in the green bond market.
Keith: Additionally, we settled both Ford and Spot AATM activity of approximately $975 million in the quarter.
We plan to continue to take a balanced and opportunistic approach to accessing the capital market as and when market conditions are favorable to fund our future growth, including future capital commitment purchases.
Turning to slide 9, for the quarter capital expenditures were $724 million including recurring capex of $69 million, a $24 million increase over the prior quarter as planned.
We have 57 major projects underway in 35 markets across 22 countries, including 13 X-scale projects.
Keith: This represents more than 22,000 cabinets of retail and more than 100 megawatts of eggscale capacity to be delivered through 2025.
Keith: We opened seven major projects in the quarter across seven metros, including new data centers in Johannesburg, Istanbul, New York, and Tokyo. We also purchased land for development in Amsterdam and Bangkok, as we continue to expand our footprint across Southeast Asia.
Keith: More than 85% of our current retail expansion spend is on our own land, our own buildings with long-term ground leases.
Our capital investments deliver strong returns, as shown on slide 10. Our 180 stabilized assets increase revenues by 4% year-over-year on a cost-in-currency basis, excluding the impact of prior price actions.
Stabilized assets were collectively 84% utilized and generated a 26% cash on cash return of the gross PPE invested.
Keith: And finally, please refer to slides 11-15 for our updated summary of 2024 guidance and bridges. Do note, all growth rates are on a normalized and constant currency basis.
For the full year, we're raising our revenue guidance by $36 million and our adjusted EBITDA guidance by $10 million due to strong bookings performance and favorable APEX rates.
Keith: This guidance implies a top-line growth rate of 78 percent.
Keith: Adjusted EBITDA margins are expected to be about 47%, which includes the acceleration of certain costs into Q3 and Q4.
We're also raising our full-year AFFO guidance by $18 million and now 11 to 13 percent increase over the previous year.
primarily due to operating performance and favorable net interest expense and does include the acceleration of costs into Q3 and Q4.
AFFO for shares is expected to now grow between nine and ten percent at the top end of our guidance range.
And finally, our four-year CapEx is expected to range between $2.8 and $3.1 billion, including about $240 million of recurring CapEx spend.
Speaker Change: So, let me stop here, and I'm going to turn the call back to Adaire.
Adaire: Thank you, Keith. In closing, we had a great third quarter, achieving record growth bookings and delivering robust performance across key financial and non-financial metrics.
Adaire: We are more committed than ever to seizing the vast and evolving opportunities in AI.
We will nearly triple the investment capital of our XScale program once our latest joint venture is fully realized.
But XScale is more than an investment vehicle for Equinix. Our XScale program is a force multiplier.
Only Equinix is positioned to offer integrated infrastructure at scale across the spectrum of workload requirements from hyperscalers to enterprises to SMEs.
Keith: Only Equinix can offer this globally.
Only Equinix can provide this in an interconnection-rich architecture.
The combination of these elements marks Equinix as unique amongst our industry peers.
Keith: The future of Equinix and the digital infrastructure industry is incredibly bright.
I firmly believe our relentless customer focus
ability to execute effectively and a highly differentiated market position will continue to drive significant long-term value for our customers, our partners, our employees and our shareholders.
With that, I'll stop here and open it up to questions.
Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star 1, unmute your phone, and record your name clearly. If you need to withdraw your question, press star 2. Again, to ask a question, please press star 1.
Our first question will come from Ari Klein with BMO Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Thanks and good afternoon. Maybe Adaire, you talked a little bit about the shifting strategic focus to large campuses. Can you talk a little bit about some of the benefits you would expect from that? Does that change the value proposition of any of your existing markets in any way?
Speaker Change: Hi, thank you. Thank you very much for the question. This is a key part of the strategy that we put together with our team recently.
Speaker Change: We have already got a long pipeline of builds that are committed and construction projects that are underway. As Keith mentioned, 57 major programs under work at this point in time.
Speaker Change: And of course, as we look through that, we will work through that and look at the opportunity to accelerate some of these bills and some of their phases into an earlier time frame so that we can deliver this capacity to our customers and to the market.
As we look at the intention to build fewer and larger campuses, this is really a multifaceted approach that enables us to look at this through the lens of securing the power that's necessary to execute in these campuses.
doing so in the context of a location that is adjacent to the metros that we operate in.
and allowing us to offer, which I think is unique in the industry, the entire spectrum of our product continuum.
to customers that range from hyperscalers with their requirements to enterprises with their large footprint requirements all the way through to our retail business and customers who require interconnection-rich capabilities in our environment.
So, this is, I think, something that will augment our approach to our strategy around design and construction and how we deliver capacity to the market to enable us to continue on our growth trajectory.
All right, if I may just add one thing, one other comment to Adaire's comment, you also have to appreciate that, you know, there are certain economies of scale.
Speaker Change: If you would sort of talk about, you know, Ralph with his global design and construction team.
Speaker Change: There's just too many small phases that we do along the process.
And it's, you know, the stage of where we are in the industry is just...
Speaker Change: is inherently inefficient.
and the average size of the deals that we're seeing today are much larger. And so, as Adaire says, it just makes sense to aggregate into the major metros in which we focus.
you know the extension of those major metros into other markets as well and do it in scale and size and so we get an outsized return relative to where we were and you sort of service the customer with a larger set of capacity available for them.
Thanks and maybe a somewhat of a follow-up on the development side. It looks like you're adding a significant number of cabinets specifically in the DC market including DC 16 phase 2 and 3 essentially back-to-back.
Is there something specific you're seeing in that market? Does that go to, you know, that shift to larger campuses?
And just even more broadly in America, if you have a large amount of cabinets, expect to come online or next.
12 to 18 months. Is that, to me, backlogged? Are you preempting inference demand in any way? Or is there something else?
Well, I think we're in the very unfortunate position that market-wise demand outstrips supply at the moment, and that is particularly true, I think, in the North American theatre of operation.
where we know that we will not only be able to serve the needs of our customers but also command a price premium in this robust pricing environment for the cabs that we release.
Speaker Change: Thank you.
Thank you.
Our next question will come from Simon Flannery with Morgan Stanley. You may proceed.
Great, good evening. Keith, I wanted to just come back to revenue growth. I think the
Simon Flannery: underlying adjusted for power pass-through growth this year is seven to eight percent. Could we revisit the Investor Day last year? I think you talked about this being something of a transition year but longer term you saw eight to ten percent growth and Adaire was just talking about the strong demand and pricing.
So, how do we think about that as we head into 2025 with the bookings backlog and how that relates to CapEx, especially given some of your new plans on expansion? Thanks.
Thanks for the question Simon. I might just jump in first and you maybe just comment on some of the dynamics.
that we saw in the market in Q3 and then, you know, pass over to Keith to address some of the specificity of the question that you raised there.
I think when we look at the first half of this year, we certainly saw some headwinds, even though I believe our performance was solid during the first half of the year.
Simon Flannery: And it would be fair to say that whilst in Q3 some of these headwinds still persist, we saw incredible improvement in our bookings trajectory. And there are some underpinning reasons why I believe that to be the case.
Simon Flannery: First of all, you know, we are, as we know, in a very strong demand environment.
But our sales teams executed with precision on our pipeline. And we had phenomenal execution that led to this record growth bookings, which of course facilitates the growth in our backlog.
Simon Flannery: And we did that in a way that means our forward-looking pipeline is also strong, so there were no major pull-forwards into our Q3 outcomes as a result of the wonderful execution of the sales team.
We also focused on some sales plays that cornered in particular conversations for us with our customers, enabling us to deliver solutions in very particular contexts that meet requirements for customers right across the spectrum of the market.
and we also adopted an approach where we began to demand shape.
Simon Flannery: So how we could look at capacity that existed in our Tier 2 metros and man-shape the workload in concurrence with the customer so that we were actually utilizing the capacity in these non-Tier 1 metros.
And it's interesting to see that the megawatts landing in our non-Tier 1 metros was 80% up Q on Q.
So this coupled with this very strong pipe
Speaker Change: And Keith alluded to it in his opening remarks, where we have already undertaken some pre-sale activity that I think de-risks.
Speaker Change: both Q4 and future quarters enables us to look forward in a positive way. We've delivered in Q3 some critical capacity into the market.
Pricing continues to be robust. As you heard, our interconnection ads are strong. Power density is rising. So whilst we've had some puts and takes, for us Q4 will be about focusing on delivering another great quarter so that we have a strong exit into 2025.
So Simon, maybe I'm just adding on to Adaire's comments, which I think really hit the mark in so many different ways, but as you can appreciate our business is very geographically dispersed.
As Adaire said, there's demand shaping into markets and that effect, that has some impact on price and price points. That all said, the number of core markets that we are currently constrained in
is something that has caused us to reflect on how we're going to grow and build the platform. And so hence why we're going to build bigger in particular markets that are the most important ones. And so that is something that I think that you'll continue to hear us talk about.
There's the cross currents that we've referred to at the beginning part of the year and still you know and still exist today
Speaker Change: But we're seeing, thankfully we're seeing the gross activity that more than outweighs these cross-currents.
The cross-currents are really about optimization, you've heard us speak about previously, particularly around network companies as they optimize their, you know, whether it's their cross-connect or other services, whether it's DDN providers and the like, that tend to be very cross-connect dense.
So those are some of the things I think that are at the forefront of our mind.
That all said, we've set ourselves up for what we believe is going to be a really good Q4.
That's going to be the strong indication coming off a record Q3.
What does Q4 look like and what is the ability of the matriarch?
Sorry, our XCALE 2.0 initiative look like as we look into 2025 as well. So it's the combination of those things I think that will allow or give us the confidence that we think we're going to have a very strong exit rate to the business.
And maybe just the last couple of points. One of the things we said in our prepared remarks was interconnection revenues have increased. Not only do we see a nice year-over-year growth rate at 10%, but the average price point is moving up on a per-cross-connect basis.
and the componentry of that relative to the size of our total revenue base has been increasing. And so it's the combination of those matters as well that we think will influence our growth rate as we look into 2025 and beyond.
Thanks for the call.
Thank you. Our next question will come from Jonathan Atkin with RBC. Your line is open.
I have a balance sheet question. Just with the $2.8 billion in cash, three and a half times net leverage, and just given the operating trends that you've talked about, what would you potentially have in how you plan to use some of the cash going forward?
whether it might be like land acquisitions or tuck-in or other data center acquisitions and then and then I have a follow-up. Thanks
Well, John, you know the business really well, so with the short-term investments, which are very, as you can appreciate, are very liquid, the cash on the balance sheet at September 30th was $3.2 billion cash in short-term investments.
Speaker Change: We're going to use a billion of that to pay down our debt in November.
And so on a pro forma basis, you know, clearly that...
We have a smaller balance than you're probably anticipating. That all said, given the capital plans that we have, the closure of the Philippines acquisition, the dividend, we're probably going to end the year around $1.5 billion of cash.
And as you and sort of the other analysts and
Speaker Change: So investors are aware
We have a really meaningful capital appetite looking forward into 2025, but maybe even more so in 26 and 27, as you know, the growth opportunity presents itself.
And then you sort of tie that into also our AgScale 2.0 initiative with CPP, IB and GIC.
You know, we're going to be a 25% partner to a $15 billion plus venture. And so we're going to have to fund that as well. And we're already, you know, seeing the initial sort of cash demands.
Speaker Change: from that initiative, both in what we need to do with the
Speaker Change: So the power generator, the utility provider, as well as the long-need items with, you know, with the, you know, the partners and the vendors and
It's really around the MEP, all the mechanical and electric and plumbing equipment and the like. So that's also a big consumer of cash on our balance sheet, as we anticipate what will happen in the future, which is a lot of revenue coming from those investments.
But, again, we have to get ahead of them today, and so we need the cash on the balance sheet to certainly fund that future growth, pay the dividend, you know, and continue to scale the business.
Thanks, Gabe. We're very focused on getting that capital into capacity as quickly as possible, right?
And the leverage, you know, the leverage is the net leverage, the number, John, as you know, is three and a half times leveraged, which is great for the industry, but we do we carry a little bit more cash, as you know.
But that all said, you know, when you look at it, we still have a tremendous amount of strategic flexibility in our balance sheet. And so we'll continue, you know, we're going to go raise more debt capital. We already have our sights.
Speaker Change: on different parts of the world who are going to raise the next tranches of debt capital.
You know, we've been really efficient with our ATM program, you know, we can put more leverage on the books with great comfort without finding ourselves in harm's way with any of the rating agencies, and so we have a lot of strategic flexibility there. So I think...
suffice it to say we're we are in a very enviable position vis-a-vis the liquidity and strategic flexibility we have and the partners we're engaging with to continually to sort of to scale the business in in the X scale and sort of the X scale franchise.
Thank you. My follow-up just relates to digital, and I might have missed, you talked about attached rates. I think that might have been for fabric, but can you just update us on metal and network edge and what the plans are going forward, how you see those businesses progressing or not? Thanks.
Sure. Thank you. Thank you for the question.
And I think from an overall digital services portfolio, Equinix has certainly demonstrated some success and some very strong success in the products.
Network Edge. Fabric achieved a greater than $250 million annual revenue run rate with a 40% attach.
This 40% attached number is a focus point for us.
Speaker Change: Moving forward into Q4 and next year, we think there's the opportunity to increase that attach rate. The growth in fabric was underpinned by solid 1GB port additions.
And we continue to see, you know, the potential in Fabric almost diversifying as an exchange where we have almost 4,000 customers who are connecting to 1,300 cloud and network destinations.
Underpinnings Fabric is obviously Fabric Cloud Router, which is available in 61 of our metros.
and of course all of the key cloud providers are part of this fabric infrastructure.
Network Edge, 450 plus customers at the moment using this service.
It is, yet, not a meaningful revenue contributor for us at this time, but we do believe that it drives ecosystem magnetism for us and is an evolving part of our business and one that we are focusing on under our digital services portfolio.
Overall, for us, as it relates to the products in this portfolio, we're really looking to ensure that we enhance the customer experience, that we deliver improved digital interactions for our customers. That includes the portal capabilities through which the customers connect with us.
Speaker Change: view to our customers.
Speaker Change: Our get started position though, our first focus for our digital services portfolio will be around our interconnection product portfolio and continuing to evolve and grow that great franchise.
Anything on metal then to kind of round out the discussion?
Speaker Change: Not at this point. Let me just give you a general, maybe another general comment, John, that when we look at digital services, they represent just under 8% of our revenues. Metal in and of itself represents about 1.25% of our revenues, and it was relatively flat quarter over quarter.
Speaker Change: Thank you.
Thank you. Next we will hear from Jim Schneider with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Jim Schneider: Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. You know, it's encouraging to see your new X-Scale joint venture with CPP and GIC. Can you maybe talk about the pace of new capacity additions you expect from that joint venture? Could we see anything by the first half of 2027 or is that too early and how should we expect sort of the the roundability of that capacity to come on through the 2029 time frame?
Speaker Change: Thank you for watching!
Speaker Change: I am
Yes, we're very excited as well about the opportunity that this represents for us and really does allow us to serve the needs of our customers right across the spectrum that we engage. So we agree with you in terms of the enthusiasm here.
And this is a transaction that will close.
shortly. And as soon as that transaction closes, given that we have already closed Atlanta and that we will move the Atlanta campus into the JV, this is where we will begin our work using, you know, the model that we have redefined in our design process for our data centers.
to introduce this capacity into our footprint. But we are working to ensure that we can bring capacity on as quickly as possible, and that's part of the process that will kick in following the formal close of this transaction.
and Jim I'll just elaborate a little bit further. We've already placed a number of orders for the long lead items as it relates to the Atlanta and the next campus so two campuses out.
Speaker Change: We're currently negotiating with the local power provider in Atlanta.
There's multiple other sites in the U.S. that we're working alongside different power producers to enter into an agreement, and so the combination of all those would probably allow you to make the assumption that the delivery of value will start much sooner than 2029.
Speaker Change: But it's still a little bit premature to give you exact dates, but suffice it to say we're getting ready to start preparing the land in Atlanta, and that will put us in a pretty good position to deliver something much sooner than the 2029 time frame.
Great, thank you. And then maybe as a follow-up, it was encouraging to see the resumption and growth in your new cabinet editions in this quarter. Maybe we'd love to get a sense of your confidence that the momentum in either the growth rate or the number of cabinets can continue to accelerate from here, and maybe talk about some of the underlying drivers of that. Thank you.
Speaker Change: Yeah.
Thank you. Yes, we were also very happy about how this measure showed up in Q3.
The volume that came through for us was, you know, quite impressive and I think despite the continuation of the power density gap that we've been highlighting you know over previous quarters.
underpinning the net billable cabinets. We saw strong bookings, we had lower churn, and we had capacity opening up.
Speaker Change: As we look forward, we think based on the backlog of what's been sold but not been installed, that this will remain solid into Q4 and into early 2025.
And so, yep, we're very happy with, as I said, how this showed up, even given, you know, the increasing power density, which allowed us to have a Charner 4 kilowatt cab, but to sell it at 6.2 kV a cab.
Speaker Change: Thank you.
Our next question will come from David Barden with Bank of America. Your line is open.
Hey guys thanks so much for taking the question. So I just want to follow up on
on Jim's question. So, Keith, you know, no good deed goes unpunished, so...
Speaker Change: Slide 22, footnote 2.
You highlight that you've made some adjustments to the cabinet disclosure By making a cabinet equivalent and we talked about this I think for several quarters
Could you elaborate a little bit on what is the adjustment? How does this affect
Is it equal adjustments in each region? You didn't make the adjustment in Asia. Does it affect the MRR for cabinet disclosures? I mean, it would be helpful to have this conversation, I think, and then if I could, I'll just let you go, and then I have a question for Adaire.
Yeah, no, it's a fair question. So this, again, for those that aren't, maybe haven't looked at the notes, you know, similar to how David has looked at them.
This really is more about available cabinet capacity.
given the demand profile and the density of certain deployments relative to where the power exists today.
And this is something from the beginning of time, as we continue to, again, for those that have walked through a data center, you'll walk through a data center and you'll see that
Speaker Change: his next one.
This is us, this is really about us creating that visibility to you, knowing that as density goes up
Absent the augmentation of power and certain markets that we will take some of the inventory out and of course it adjusts the net utilization.
Speaker Change: But, of course, because you increase density, you're increasing your price points, and the volume of revenue going through that cabinet, and again, as I've said publicly, in many a venue, we price to yield.
Speaker Change: So, we price on a kilowatt basis and so whether you use one cabinet or a thousand cabinets, depending on how much infrastructure you use, that's the revenue that we would earn from the business.
So, again, there's nothing meaningful here other than to say that given the density factor of some of the deals that we're doing and some of the AI workloads that we're winning, it's adjusting basically the availability.
Speaker Change: physical cabinet of capacity that's available. And that offset some of the builds that we basically brought to market this past quarter. So let me stop there, David, and see if I answered your question or whether there's anything else you'd like us to touch on there.
So I just want to clarify, so to the comments that Adaire was making about four K-dubs is traditional and kind of 6.2 is incremental, are each of these new cabinets being considered a 1.5 cabinet?
It depends on the configuration and what the specifications were for the data center. Again, we measure this down to the asset level, as you would appreciate, and Ralph and his team do a great job of allocating the available energy across the floor plate, depending on the consumption parameters of the customer.
And so all that to say is.
I suppose a network data center like Silicon Valley One or DC2
Speaker Change: 20 kilowatts per cabinet
Speaker Change: Obviously, that has a much more material impact on cabinets you would take out of available
capacity versus something, if that was, you know, if that was in a network data center versus a cloud data center. And so those are the things that we think about, but it's really about optimization of the asset.
Ralph and his team manage it specifically. We also put things on hold in anticipation of introducing, as you know, we do additional power blocks.
Speaker Change: We are building more phases. There's a lot of things that go into this. And so if there's something that happened in a given environment, that just might be temporary because, you know, we bring things in and out of availability depending on where we are with our power utilization statistics.
And then, and so just my final question on that, and I'm sorry to kind of thank you for Keith for sharing all the insights, but, so if I'm going to do an MRR for cabinet, then
Is the denominator the cabinet, or is it the cabinet equivalent, which would be a larger denominator? And so what I'm looking at is more of a normalized MRR for cabinet as opposed to a boosted MRR for cabinet.
Yeah, we've always measured things out of what we call a CAB-E basis, a cabinet equivalent, because you might have a scenario where you sell a cage, but you have fewer cabinets and there's a lot of other infrastructure that's gone into the cage. So we always measure on a CAB-E basis.
Okay, good. And then Adaire, sorry if I could, I apologize. Adaire, thank you for all the time.
You know, maybe it's just me, but it was interesting to read through the prepared remarks and listen to the prepared remarks because we talked maybe 50% of the time about the X-Scale program and all the investments and balance sheet management, and it's 1% of revenue.
Is this an effort to change the narrative about Equinix being a part of this kind of AI training?
Because I feel like the old regime worked really hard to convince people that this was not where Equinix was That it was all about inference, it was all about the future, but we're talking a lot about it, and I'm not sure why
Okay, that's a great question. Thank you for the opportunity to answer it for you.
As we've navigated our XScale journey, I think as we've gained momentum, it has become clear to us that XScale is an opportunity to be a multiplier for our core retail co-location business. And let me explain why I say that and how I mean that.
Speaker Change: First of all, I see it very much as
a business where we have a huge opportunity to maintain our already high degree of relevance.
in the supply chain for construction and design. And as Keith has already alluded to, you know, we manage a whole series of very strategic suppliers to enable us to build as quickly as possible and deliver revenue as quickly as possible for all of our new builds.
X-scale has a benefit in ensuring that as we're building at this kind of scale and this kind of size, supply chain position and stature remains for Equinix where it is now, which is in the top quadrant.
The second element around, you know, the narrative around Xscale is that we have recognized that with the Xscale footprint, we have a complete product set that addresses the evolving needs of our customers.
So I feel that our process and our approach is very balance orientated and very about X scale being an and to our existing business instead of an or.
First off, you know, with hyperscalers, we are able, obviously, to capture the training workloads and the large data store requirements of the hyperscaler community. XScale gives us the facility and the ability to do that.
For service providers, it also gives us the opportunity, perhaps, to unlock some large footprint. We've seen large footprint demand, even for our enterprise customers, increase over the course of the last period of time.
And this enables us to be able to provide that capability to enterprises who are looking to perhaps do private AI with Equinix.
who are looking to operate with Equinix at scale across a number of geographic locations. We gave some examples of customers that are enterprise-based and who are using Equinix capabilities in order to underpin their AI strategies.
Speaker Change: So
I really believe that this full and rich product continuum
Speaker Change: from Hyperscalers.
because the landscape continues to evolve.
and we now have an opportunity to be able to respond to how that landscape evolves over time. So please see this as an and, not an or.
Speaker Change: We want...
Speaker Change: to very clearly articulate.
Speaker Change: That's for us.
Speaker Change: This is about being balanced in our approach to the opportunity.
and that whilst training workloads have dominated the total kilowatts leased at this...
particular point moment in time. We see significant opportunity as customers move through the stages of AI adoption at a much more accelerated pace than they move through the stages of cloud adoption.
And we are actually talking to our customers not just about AI projects, but about AI-enabled strategies.
Speaker Change: And when you speak about AI-enabled strategies, there's a thoughtful process that one needs to consider around how you integrate in a hybrid and multi-cloud architecture where you store your data, etc., etc., etc.
So please, for us, this is very much clearly an and motion. And as we've understood more about our momentum and the opportunity in X-Scale, we see that it allows us...
Speaker Change: to provide a full and rich product continuum, serving customers across the spectrum.
Maybe speaking just a little bit financially on what it means, because
Speaker Change: It's not lost on me the comment that you made about it being small relative to the size of the business.
Speaker Change: and three to five percent accretive to our AFFO.
Speaker Change: As Adaire said, we're going to triple the size of that now. And the fact of the matter is, the value accretion from X scale today is probably greater than it was previously, particularly given the new price points.
Speaker Change: The yields one can derive from that type of investment.
So what you're going to see over time is I think a larger contributor to the cash flow in the business, not only directly but indirectly through the joint venture structure as well. And we're just at the front edge of it today. We get the fee stream, the non-recurring fee stream, you've seen us talk about that periodically.
That's not what's going to drive the consistent.
and recurring value for our franchise is the recurring fees and the performance of the JV and our ownership of that JV or JVs that will make a difference to the cash flow and the AFFO that you'll enjoy on a per share basis.
Speaker Change: And maybe the last comment is, look, on the last earnings call, we talked about
The business that we've already sold into Axial 1.0 is, on a run rate basis, when installed, is $700 million of revenue.
It's a substantial adder to growth, and it's $6 billion plus of contract value. Now magnify that and think about what is the value that accretes to the business, as Adaire highlighted.
And maybe one last comment, which is something that we'll absolutely be thinking about. It's not lost on me that XScale, whether it's Venture 1, Venture 2, or whichever Venture it may be, can be a provider of future inventory to the core business, which is the most important part of what we do as an organization.
And so using other people's capital, including part of ours, to grow our portfolio is really valuable. And so we see x scale.
as a really important additive, as Adaire said, it's an and, not an or, we're going to augment value substantially by the investment decisions we're making and the realization of how important it is to our future.
Thank you both.
Thank you.
Speaker Change: Thank you.
Speaker Change: Our last question will come from Timothy Horan with Oppenheimer. Your line is open.
Hey guys, Keith, just a clarification on that point. Your longer term guide for the X scale of 1-2%, 3-5 for AFFO, where are we in that process now or in those numbers now?
Speaker Change: Well, the revenue is very, as you know, Tim,
And you see it in our disclosures. On a recurring revenue basis, it's very small.
Speaker Change: Because we've sold the, if you will, the space and it's being deployed, I think we're at 385 megawatts.
Speaker Change: So that's going to get deployed, and so very, very low recurring, a lot of non-recurring. So that's one.
And then when you think about the cost model, all the work that we're doing and the debt that we've consumed and how that appears in the venture, it's not delivering a lot of incremental AFFO yet. We get the AFFO from the non-recurring fees.
Speaker Change: and some of the fed out costs.
So it's still on the come, which is.
which is something that I hope pleases everybody. We see the opportunity in front of us, and when this gets to run rate of...
700 million plus, or wherever we end up with the 2.0 version, it's going to be a much more meaningful line than I think that you would appreciate.
and just recognizing today, you're not feeling the value yet from it. You get the cash flow from the fee stream, the non-recurring fee stream, but the real value will come in the recurring fee stream and the performance of the joint ventures.
Sure, and does that start to hit, like, mid-next year, do you think? Or when does that really start to hit? Yeah. Oh, yeah.
Speaker Change: Yeah, well, we're realizing a little bit of it, but certainly you're going to see it, you're going to start to see it accelerate through 25 into 26. Great. Can you talk about the progression of pricing? Has it gotten better every single quarter as supply has started to kind of dry up?
Speaker Change: You know, related to this, how much of future capacity have you pre-sold, capacity under development have you pre-sold?
Speaker Change: Thank you for watching!
Certainly, in terms of what we're seeing from a pricing perspective, the pricing remains robust right across all theatres of operation, but particularly in the Americas market.
Speaker Change: where you know we are, as I said earlier, not just
demand shaping towards our Tier 1 metros, but our non-Tier 1 metros who have capacity available, also demand shaping and landing megawatts into those environments at premium rate prices. So we continue to see robust pricing. We continue to see the opportunity, particularly in high demand environments, in capacity constrained environments.
to support a churn that is positive to us where we are able to take workloads that are no longer required in that environment and replace them with much higher value workloads utilizing the same space and the same power.
The second part of the question, just on the volume of pre-booking two assets that are not yet open.
So, let me take the second part of the question, Tim. We're not ready to give you that number, but suffice it to say, we've got 57 projects currently underway across many markets and many countries.
Speaker Change: That all said, part of the reason you're hearing us talk about it today, and we haven't talked a lot about it previously, is unless something was available for sale within six months, the team was not allowed to book it.
Speaker Change: Today, given the environment that we all live in and the supply and demand, or the supply constraints.
We're now, if you will, pre-selling into future development sites.
Speaker Change: that are certainly under construction today.
and then on the joint venture basis those will be things will be built out tomorrow and we're not talking about that we're just talking about things that are assets that are under construction today we're pre-selling and to give you a sense an order of magnitude
just in order of magnitude. Think of it as roughly 20% of the gross activity in the core business.
Speaker Change: That tells you that, so what I mean that when you think about it if we did X on core, think about another 20 to 25 percent you could add to that for business that we're not yet recording as a booking.
All right, that's in our retail business and of course in our Excel business. We've pre-leased at 90% Thanks for all the color guys great quarter
Speaker Change: Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you for joining our Q3 conference call. This concludes the call today.
Speaker Change: Thank you again for your participation. You may disconnect at this time.