F

Charter (CHTR) 2025 — Grade F: $97.1B Debt, Goodwill 608% of Equity, LBO Structure

CHTR·2025·English

Grade: F — Major Red Flags

Framework: Schilit *Financial Shenanigans* + Beneish M-Score + forensic accounting principles

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (Filed 2026-01-30) + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: KPMG LLP — Clean opinion (1 critical audit matter: residential and small business revenue IT systems)

One-line verdict: Charter should be flagged for elimination. $97.1B in debt against $477M in cash, $97.6B in goodwill and franchise intangibles sitting on $16.1B of equity, and an Altman Z-Score of 0.21 deep in the distress zone. The operating cash flow machine ($16.1B) is real, but this is a company that exists at the pleasure of its bondholders. Revenue declined 0.6% to $54.8B as the company lost 368,000 net customer relationships while adding 1.9 million mobile lines — a business model in transition with an LBO balance sheet and no margin of safety.

MetricResult
Red Flags**3** (AR vs revenue, cash vs debt, goodwill/intangibles)
Watch Items**1** (leverage)
Checks Completed**17/18**
Beneish M-Score**-2.66** (clean)
Altman Z-Score**0.21** (distress zone)

The LBO That Never Deleveraged

Charter Communications is the product of the 2016 Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks acquisitions — roughly $67B in deals financed with debt. Nearly a decade later, the balance sheet still tells that story:

ItemAmountContext
Long-Term Debt**$94.0B**Plus $1.4B equipment financing, $1.7B current
Cash on Hand**$477M**0.5% of total debt
Goodwill$29.7BFrom TWC/Bright House acquisitions
Franchise Rights (Intangibles)$67.9BIndefinite-lived, never amortized
**Total Goodwill + Intangibles****$97.6B****608% of shareholder equity**
Accumulated Deficit$(5.4B)Improving from $(7.8B) prior year
Total Charter Shareholders' Equity$16.1BThin cushion

From the 10-K: the franchise rights represent "the right to operate cable systems in specific geographies." These are carried at historical cost, never amortized, and tested for impairment annually. Charter identifies "Capitalization of labor and overhead costs" and "Valuation and impairment of franchises and goodwill" as critical accounting policies requiring "difficult, subjective and/or complex judgments."

Revenue: Flat, Shifting From Video to Mobile

From the 10-K: "Total revenues decreased slightly primarily due to lower customers, higher seamless entertainment allocation and lower advertising sales, partly offset by mobile line growth and higher average revenue per customer."

SegmentFY2025FY2024Change
Residential$42.6B$43.0B-1.0%
Commercial (SMB + Enterprise)$7.3B$7.3B+0.9%
Advertising Sales$1.5B$1.8B-17.6%
Other$3.4B$3.0B+12.1%
**Total****$54.8B****$55.1B****-0.6%**

The residential revenue breakdown reveals the business model transition:

·Internet: Revenue grew $405M (rate/mix +$785M, offset by 393,000 fewer customers)
·Mobile: Revenue grew $679M as residential mobile lines surged from 9.5M to 11.4M (+1.8M)
·Video: Revenue declined $1,426M — 255,000 fewer video customers plus $322M unfavorable "seamless entertainment allocation" (costs allocated to programmer streaming apps bundled free with video)
·Voice: Revenue declined $166M as customers dropped from 5.6M to 4.8M

Approximately 89% of revenues come from monthly subscription fees. The remaining 11% comes from advertising, franchise fees, device sales, and installation charges.

MetricFY2022FY2023FY2024FY2025Trend
Revenue$54.0B$54.6B$55.1B$54.8BFlat
Net Income$5.1B$4.6B$5.1B$5.0BFlat
Gross Margin54.6%54.8%55.8%56.5%Slowly rising
Net Margin9.4%8.3%9.2%9.1%Range-bound
ROE55.4%41.1%32.6%31.1%Declining (equity growing)

Customer Statistics (from 10-K)

MetricFY2025FY2024Change
Total Customer Relationships31,846K32,214K-368K
Residential Internet27,641K28,034K-393K
Mobile Lines11,766K9,858K+1,908K
Video Customers12,605K12,892K-287K
Voice Customers6,046K6,884K-838K
Monthly Residential ARPU$119.05$118.71+$0.34

Customer relationships declined by 368,000, but ARPU rose slightly. The company is losing customers but extracting more from remaining ones through rate increases and bundling — a strategy with a finite runway.

Cash Flow: The Saving Grace

MetricFY2022FY2023FY2024FY2025
Operating Cash Flow$14.9B$14.4B$14.4B$16.1B
Net Income$5.1B$4.6B$5.1B$5.0B
**CFFO / Net Income****2.95****3.17****2.84****3.22**
Free Cash Flow$5.5B$3.3B$3.2B$4.4B
CapEx$9.4B$11.1B$11.3B$11.7B

CFFO/NI of 3.22 is one of the highest in the NASDAQ 100. The massive gap between net income and CFFO comes from ~$12.9B in depreciation and amortization — non-cash charges against the acquired infrastructure. The cash generation is real.

From the 10-K on CapEx: "Capital expenditures were $11.7 billion and $11.3 billion for the years ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively. The increase was primarily driven by an increase in support capital, higher spend on network evolution and an increase in scalable infrastructure spend, partly offset by a decrease in line extensions." Charter expects FY2026 CapEx of approximately $11.4B.

From the 10-K on borrowing: long-term debt increased, driven by "an increase in the amount by which borrowings of long-term debt exceeded repayments."

The 18-Point Screening

Revenue Quality

#CheckResultDetail
A1DSOPass25 days, +4 days YoY. Normal for cable billing
A2AR vs Revenue**FAIL**AR outpaced revenue for 2 consecutive years
A3Revenue vs CFFOPassRevenue -0.6%, CFFO +11.4%. Cash follows revenue

A2: Receivables grew while revenue declined — two consecutive years. From the 10-K, as of December 31, 2025 there were approximately 82,300 customers over 60 days past due (down from 102,500 prior year), 9,700 over 90 days past due (down from 12,100), and 13,600 over 120 days (flat). The aging data actually improved, suggesting the AR growth may reflect the mobile line surge (longer billing cycles for mobile device installment plans) rather than deteriorating collection quality.

Expense Quality

#CheckResultDetail
B1InventoryPassNo material inventory (services business)
B2CapExPassCapEx growth 3.5% vs revenue -0.6%. Proportional
B3SG&A RatioPassSG&A/Gross Profit = 14.4%. Excellent
B4Gross MarginPass56.5%, +0.7pp. Steady climb

From the 10-K: "Other costs of revenue increased $353 million during the year ended December 31, 2025 compared to the corresponding period in 2024 primarily due to higher mobile service direct costs and mobile device sales due to an increase in mobile lines." The margin expansion comes from shedding low-margin video content costs offset by growing mobile costs.

Cash Flow Quality

#CheckResultDetail
C1CFFO vs NIPassRatio 3.22. Cash generation far exceeds accounting profit
C2FCFPass$4.4B, FCF/NI = 0.89
C3AccrualsPass-7.2%. Negative accruals = conservative accounting
C4Cash vs Debt**FAIL**Cash $477M covers 0.5% of $97.1B debt

C4: This is the most alarming single data point. $477M in cash against $97.1B in debt. Charter relies entirely on revolving credit facilities and continuous refinancing. From the 10-K, the Charter Operating credit facilities require compliance with "a maximum total leverage covenant and a maximum first lien leverage covenant." The debt covenants also restrict the ability to "incur additional debt; pay dividends on equity or repurchase equity; make investments; sell all or substantially all of their assets."

Balance Sheet

#CheckResultDetail
D1Goodwill + Intangibles**FAIL**$97.6B = 608% of equity
D2Leverage**WATCH**Debt/EBITDA = 4.6x. Interest coverage 2.6x
D3Soft AssetsPassOther assets +5.1% vs revenue -0.6%. Normal
D4ImpairmentN/ANo write-off data

D1: $67.9B in franchise rights that have never been impaired since the 2016 acquisitions. In a world of 5G fixed wireless (T-Mobile, Verizon), fiber overbuilders (AT&T), and Starlink, the local monopoly value these rights represent is under genuine competitive pressure. A 17% write-down would wipe out all equity.

Acquisition & Manipulation

#CheckResultDetail
E1Serial AcquirerPassFCF after acquisitions positive
E2Goodwill SurgePassGoodwill+Intangibles flat YoY
F1M-ScorePass-2.66, clean. No manipulation signal

KPMG Critical Audit Matter

KPMG identified one critical audit matter: testing of residential and small business revenue ($46.9B for FY2025). From the auditor's report: "Subjective auditor judgment was required in evaluating the sufficiency of audit evidence over residential and small business revenue due to the volume of data and the number of accounting systems. Specifically, obtaining an understanding of the systems and processes used in the Company's recognition of residential and small business revenue and evaluating the related internal controls required significant audit effort, including specialized skills and knowledge related to IT."

This is an IT systems complexity issue, not an accounting judgment issue. Revenue recognition itself is straightforward (recognized monthly as services are provided), but the sheer volume of data flowing through multiple billing systems creates audit complexity.

Key Risks from Item 1A

1. Competition eroding the broadband moat. From the 10-K: "Our Internet service faces competition from other companies FTTH, cell phone home Internet service, Internet delivered via satellite and DSL services. Various operators offer wireless Internet services delivered over networks which they continue to enhance to deliver faster speeds and also continue to expand 5G mobile services."

2. Video cord-cutting is permanent. "Our video service faces competition from a number of sources, including DBS services, and companies that deliver linear network programming, movies and television shows on demand and other video content over broadband Internet connections... often with password sharing among multiple users and security that makes content susceptible to piracy."

3. Franchise impairment risk. The 10-K warns that increased competition may "reduce our future cash flows which may contribute to future impairments of our franchises and goodwill and our ability to meet cash flow requirements, including debt service requirements."

4. Refinancing wall. $97.1B in debt must be continuously refinanced. Each tranche refinances at higher rates. The 10-K acknowledges risks around "liquidity and access, in general, of funds to meet our debt obligations prior to or when they become due."

Altman Z-Score and F-Score

ModelScoreInterpretation
Altman Z-Score**0.21**Distress zone (<1.81). Structural for cable LBOs
F-Score (Dechow)**1.13**Low fraud probability (0.42%)

The Z-Score of 0.21 reflects negative working capital, minimal retained earnings (accumulated deficit), and extreme leverage — all structural features of the post-LBO cable business model, not fraud indicators. The F-Score's low fraud probability (0.42%) confirms no manipulation signal.

Summary

#CheckResult
A1-A3Revenue QualityPass-Fail-Pass
B1-B4Expense QualityPass-Pass-Pass-Pass
C1-C4Cash Flow QualityPass-Pass-Pass-Fail
D1-D4Balance SheetFail-Watch-Pass-N/A
E1-E2M&A RiskPass-Pass
F1Beneish M-ScorePass

Grade: F. Should be flagged for elimination.

Charter generates $16.1B in operating cash flow with a CFFO/NI ratio of 3.22 — among the strongest cash conversion in the NASDAQ 100. The M-Score is clean at -2.66. Expense discipline is excellent (SG&A at 14.4% of gross profit). There is no accounting manipulation.

The problem is structural: $97.1B in debt, $477M in cash, $97.6B in goodwill and franchise intangibles on $16.1B of equity, a Z-Score of 0.21, and interest coverage of just 2.6x. Revenue is flat as the company loses 368,000 customer relationships per year while scrambling to grow mobile lines (+1.9M). The $67.9B in franchise rights — booked in 2016 when cable had a near-monopoly on broadband — have never been impaired despite material competitive encroachment from 5G fixed wireless, fiber, and satellite.

The cash flow machine is real. The balance sheet is a time bomb. Whether Charter defuses it depends on factors entirely outside the financial statements: interest rates, competition intensity, and the pace of broadband disruption.

**Disclaimer**: This report is based on Charter's FY2025 10-K (SEC EDGAR, filed 2026-01-30) and public financial data. This is NOT investment advice.

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (Filed 2026-01-30) + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: KPMG LLP (Unqualified opinion, 1 critical audit matter)

This report is based on SEC 10-K filings and public financial data. Not investment advice.

Charter (CHTR) 2025 — Grade F: $97.1B Debt, Goodwill 608% of Equity, LBO Structure — EarningsGrade