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DATE
Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025, at 8:30 a.m. ET
CALL PARTICIPANTS
- President and Chief Executive Officer — Steven Vondran
- Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer — Rodney Smith
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RISKS
- Rodney Smith highlighted that property revenue in Latin America was impacted by "$20 million of revenue reserves," primarily tied to an unresolved legal dispute with AT&T Mexico regarding rent calculation, as part of the full year 2025 outlook, with management's guidance assuming continued reserves of "$8 million to $10 million per quarter until the arbitration is settled."
- Steven Vondran disclosed, "we did receive a letter from DISH saying that they believe they're excused from making payments under the MLA based on the spectrum sale," prompting American Tower Corporation to initiate legal action to confirm contract enforceability.
TAKEAWAYS
- Total Revenue -- Grew nearly 8% year-over-year, driven by consolidated organic tenant billings growth of 5% year-over-year, significant U.S. services contribution, and double-digit growth from CoreSite.
- Adjusted EBITDA -- Increased nearly 8% year-over-year, boosted by 20 basis points of cash margin expansion and cost discipline.
- Attributable AFFO per Share (as adjusted) -- Rose approximately 10% year-over-year, reflecting both revenue and prudent cost management.
- Guidance (Full Year) -- Raised across all major consolidated financial metrics for the full year 2025 outlook, with attributable AFFO per share as adjusted now targeted for approximately 7% growth or 9% year-over-year excluding FX and financing costs.
- Property Revenue (Consolidated) -- Increased nearly 6% year-over-year; excluding noncash straight-line revenue and Sprint churn, U.S. and Canada up 5% year-over-year, International up nearly 8% year-over-year when excluding noncash straight-line revenue and FX impacts, and Data Center up over 14% year-over-year
- Organic Tenant Billings Growth -- Achieved 5% consolidated organic tenant billings growth year-over-year, with U.S. and Canada at 4% (or more than 5% excluding Sprint churn), and International at nearly 7% year-over-year (Africa and APAC reported double-digit organic growth).
- Data Center Segment (CoreSite) -- Reported over 14% data center property revenue growth, buoyed by record retail leasing, growing hybrid cloud and AI demand, and "mid-teens or higher stabilized yields," according to Steven Vondran, expected for CoreSite.
- Capital Allocation -- $3.2 billion common dividend planned for 2025, subject to Board approval, with $1.7 billion in capital expenditures (including $1.5 billion for approximately 2,150 new towers and $600 million for data centers) for 2025; 80% of discretionary spend targeted at developed markets.
- Leverage and Liquidity -- Net leverage at 4.9x, $10.7 billion in liquidity as of Q3 2025, and low floating rate debt exposure, according to Rodney Smith. with leverage at "the lowest among our tower peers."
- Share Buyback Activity -- Post-quarter, $28 million in stock repurchased; $2 billion authorization remains available, with management stating buybacks are opportunistic and compared against M&A alternatives.
- Legal Matters: AT&T Mexico -- Interim agreement reached; AT&T Mexico resumed payment of the majority of tower rents, with remaining amounts in escrow pending arbitration scheduled for August 2026.
- Legal Matters: DISH -- American Tower Corporation filed suit to affirm rent obligations under a contract with DISH after receiving a notice disputing payments post-spectrum sale; DISH remains current on payments as of the call.
- Customer Churn Outlook -- Management reiterated normal churn expectations in the 1%-2% range, including exposure to UScellular and wireless ISP segments.
- MLA (Master Lease Agreement) with Major Customer -- One large customer shifted to an à la carte leasing model, but management is “agnostic” as to contract structure and expects no material change to long-term revenue capture.
- Efficiency Initiatives -- Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded approximately 300 basis points since 2020; a new Chief Operating Officer role established to drive further incremental cost savings, with more detail to come in early 2026.
SUMMARY
American Tower (AMT 3.69%) reported strong double-digit year-over-year growth in both attributable AFFO per share as adjusted (approximately 10%) and data center property revenue (over 14%) in Q3 2025, while raising full-year 2025 guidance across all major consolidated financial metrics. Management emphasized robust leasing and services activity, especially in 5G-related applications, alongside significant new demand in data centers for AI-driven and hybrid cloud workloads. The company addressed two ongoing legal matters, noting that AT&T Mexico has largely resumed tower rent payments pending arbitration, and that DISH remains current but is now the subject of a preemptive lawsuit by American Tower Corporation regarding contract obligations through 2036. Amid elevated liquidity and lower leverage, capital allocation will remain disciplined, with an 80% focus on developed market investments and continued opportunistic share buybacks prioritized over acquisitions.
- Steven Vondran stated, "Application volumes in the third quarter remained elevated and heavily weighted towards amendments, but with a growing share of colocations," suggesting increasing network densification opportunities.
- Rodney Smith reported, "Our U.S. and Canada segment grew approximately 4% organically and more than 5% when excluding Sprint churn year-over-year," marking the final quarter of Sprint-related churn.
- The company expects ongoing revenue reserves from the AT&T Mexico dispute to remain at $8 million to $10 million per quarter until at least August 2026 when arbitration is scheduled.
- Data center pre-leasing rates fell to 6% in Q3 2025 as projects transitioned from construction to service, rather than from changes in underlying demand.
- American Tower Corporation confirmed "record retail new leasing revenue" at CoreSite in Q3 2025, with continued healthy growth across deployments and positive pricing actions.
- Management noted private market tower multiples remain elevated versus public company valuations, influencing the preference for share buybacks over M&A at current levels.
- Steven Vondran said, "Mobile data consumption in 2024 increased approximately 35% year-over-year for the third straight year," with expectations that rapid growth in mobile data consumption will require network capacity to double over the next five years.
- The company plans to provide additional details on future efficiency and cost reduction initiatives during its fourth quarter call as part of the 2026 outlook presentation.
INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
- AFFO (Adjusted Funds From Operations): A REIT-specific cash flow metric, adjusting NAREIT FFO for recurring capital expenditures and other non-cash items to better measure dividend sustainability.
- CoreSite: American Tower Corporation's data center platform focused on interconnection, cloud services, and enterprise colocation.
- Straight-line Revenue: An accounting method for lease revenue recognition that averages rent payments over the lease term, smoothing GAAP-reported income versus cash collection timing.
- MLA (Master Lease Agreement): Comprehensive multi-site lease arrangements with wireless carriers that define standardized terms, pricing, and escalation for tower usage.
- Colocation: The leasing of tower or data center space by companies to locate their infrastructure alongside other tenants for networking or equipment hosting purposes.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Steven Vondran: Thanks, Spencer. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining the call. As you can see from our published results, we completed a great quarter that delivered double-digit growth in attributable AFFO per share as adjusted. Leasing activity remained robust across our tower and data center businesses that was complemented by near-record services revenue. These top line trends, combined with focused execution of our strategic initiatives, have enabled us to increase our guidance for the year across all of our key consolidated metrics. At the midpoint of our revised guidance, we now expect to deliver attributable AFFO per share as adjusted, growth of approximately 7%.
Net of FX headwinds and financing costs, our outlook implies attributable AFFO per share as adjusted, growth of approximately 9%, which reflects the fundamental strength of our core operating model. Before turning the call over to Rod to review our detailed financial results and updated outlook, I'd like to spend a few minutes discussing the industry backdrop and what it means for American Tower. The past few months have been an interesting and active time in our industry, with spectrum moving between key players and signals of a more consolidated U.S. carrier market.
During my 25 years at American Tower, I've navigated many instances of carrier consolidation and spectrum deals, and our experienced team has a strong track record of delivering market-leading solutions that meet the needs of our customers while enhancing our strategic positioning. Although each transaction has been unique, there's been one consistent trend. The tower industry benefits when its customers become healthier. Financially strong customers tend to invest more heavily in their networks to keep pace with demand for mobile data consumption, which in turn drives greater demand for our best-in-class tower portfolio. Demand for mobile data, the backbone of our business model, continues to rise at a torrent pace.
In the U.S., the most recent CTIA survey showed that mobile data consumption in 2024 increased approximately 35% year-over-year for the third straight year; driven by growth in mobile customers, 5G-enabled devices, usage per device and fixed wireless access. To put this into perspective, at this pace, mobile data consumption would continue to double every 2 to 3 years. Experts believe that the rapid growth in mobile data consumption will require a doubling in overall network capacity over the next 5 years, which in turn will require a significant increase in cell sites that benefit our tower business.
We, therefore, remain quite optimistic about the opportunities that this industry landscape presents even before considering the likely tailwinds from AI-driven mobile data demand. We're also paying close attention to developments within satellite-based networks. We have a firsthand view through our board representation at AST SpaceMobile and regularly evaluate satellite capabilities with engineers and technology consultants. Our assessments are deeply rooted in data and firmly endorse the view that satellite-based networks will remain complementary to terrestrial towers due to the capacity and economic constraints inherent to the satellite model. And these challenges are only magnified with considering the evolving nature of wireless communication technology as growth in mobile data consumption compounds.
In the U.S., this demand continues to drive robust levels of leasing activity. Application volumes in the third quarter remained elevated and heavily weighted towards amendments, but with a growing share of colocations. On average, approximately 75% of our towers have been upgraded with 5G equipment. So there's still considerable runway for growth as carriers complete their 5G coverage rollouts and shift their attention to network quality with densification activity. We also see positive trends across our other tower portfolios, where data consumption has grown at a CAGR of roughly 20% to 25% since 2020.
5G mid-band coverage is still progressing and stands at an average of roughly 50% in Europe, 20% in Latin America and 10% in Africa, with emerging markets lagging developed markets and cell sites per capita. Our international customers, especially in our emerging markets, continue to invest in 4G and newer 5G networks, and we're well positioned to capture future upside as our less mature markets lease up over time. Strong industry tailwinds also continue to propel our data center business. This quarter, CoreSite signed record retail new leasing revenue and experienced healthy growth in our larger deployments as well, driven by strong demand for hybrid cloud and multi-cloud deployments and positive pricing actions amidst tight supply dynamics.
We're also seeing significant new demand from early-stage AI-related workloads like inferencing, machine learning models and GPU as a Service for neoclouds. It's becoming increasingly important for AI workloads to be co-located with hybrid installations. Our CoreSite facilities are perfectly suited for this as they have a rich ecosystem of network and cloud interconnection, coupled with purpose-built capacity design to support AI and other high-density deployments with features like liquid cooling. All of these positive trends in demand and pricing reinforce our expectation for CoreSite to achieve mid-teens or higher stabilized yields and to achieve these targets faster and with better visibility as pre-leasing and sales pipelines accumulate.
I'm confident that American Tower is well positioned to benefit from these demand drivers across our tower and data center businesses. Our portfolio of assets is unmatched in quality, scale and operational excellence, and we focused our company around four strategic priorities to optimize long-term value creation, maximize organic growth, expand margins, allocate capital with discipline and position our balance sheet as an asset. We maximize organic growth as the best operator of towers and distributed real estate in the world. Our contractual and asset management expertise continues to deliver industry-leading organic growth while passing along superior service, operational benefits and efficiencies to our customers. We expand margins by leveraging our global scale and world-class teams to drive cost efficiency.
We've generated approximately 300 basis points of adjusted EBITDA margin expansion since 2020, and we see room for continued expansion as we streamline operations. We look forward to communicating more details on future efficiency initiatives as part of our 2026 outlook presentation during our fourth quarter call. Our capital allocation philosophy optimizes long-term shareholder value creation. After funding our dividend, we evaluate internal uses of CapEx, inorganic opportunities, debt repayments and share buybacks against each other to drive the highest possible risk-adjusted returns for our business. This approach has recently prioritized developed tower markets and CoreSite to improve the quality of our earnings and durability of growth.
And as you saw in our results this morning, it informed our decision to repurchase $28 million of shares since quarter end. And our balance sheet with an investment-grade credit rating and leverage now below 5x, which is the lowest among our tower peers, provides a cost of capital advantage and superior financial flexibility to pursue our growth objectives. Taken together, our strategic priorities are designed to deliver our goal of industry-leading AFFO per share growth. Since assuming the CEO role last year, I'm increasingly impressed by my team's ability to execute these priorities and deliver value for all of our stakeholders. I'd like to thank our incredible employees for delivering yet another impressive quarter.
I'm confident that our team will continue to expertly manage our best-in-class assets and provide unmatched service for our customers in the future. With that, I'll hand the call over to Rod to discuss our detailed third quarter financial results and updated 2025 outlook. Rod?
Rodney Smith: Thanks, Steve, and thank you all for joining the call. As you saw in this morning's press release, we delivered another strong quarter and raised our full year outlook. Before diving into our third quarter results and our revised full year outlook, I'll share a few highlights. First, total revenue grew nearly 8% year-over-year, driven by steady consolidated organic growth in the mid-single digits, another strong quarter of U.S. services contribution and double-digit growth from CoreSite. Second, adjusted EBITDA also grew nearly 8% year-over-year as strong revenue growth was complemented by 20 basis points of cash margin expansion.
Third, attributable AFFO per share as adjusted grew approximately 10% year-over-year as strong adjusted EBITDA growth was enhanced by disciplined management of below-the-line costs. Finally, we are raising our full year outlook across property revenue, adjusted EBITDA, attributable AFFO and AFFO per share. The outlook raise is supported primarily by FX tailwinds, U.S. services outperformance and net interest benefits as compared to prior outlook. Our expectations for organic growth and CoreSite revenue growth remain in line with our prior outlook. Now let's dive into our results. Turning to third quarter property revenue and organic tenant billings growth on Slide 5. Consolidated property revenue grew nearly 6% year-over-year.
U.S. and Canada property revenue was flat year-over-year and grew approximately 5% when excluding noncash straight-line revenue and Sprint churn. International property revenue grew approximately 12% year-over-year and nearly 8% when excluding noncash straight-line revenue and FX impacts. Finally, data center property revenue grew over 14%, driven by a record quarter of retail new leasing and consistent pricing growth. Moving to the right side of the slide, we delivered consolidated organic tenant billings growth of 5%, in line with expectations, driven by solid demand across our global portfolio. Our U.S. and Canada segment grew approximately 4% organically and greater than 5% when excluding Sprint churn. As a reminder, this was our final quarter of Sprint churn.
Organic growth in our International segment was nearly 7%, reflecting double-digit growth in Africa and APAC, steady mid-single-digit growth in Europe and low single-digit growth in Latin America as expected. Turning to Slide 6. Adjusted EBITDA grew nearly 8% year-over-year as strong revenue growth was enhanced by disciplined cost management. Moving to the right side of the slide, attributable AFFO per share as adjusted grew approximately 10% year-over-year, supported by robust EBITDA growth and prudent management of below-the-line costs. Now let's turn to our revised full year outlook. As I mentioned, we are raising guidance across all of our key consolidated financial metrics.
Starting with property revenue outlook on Slide 7, we are raising our outlook by $40 million at the midpoint, which implies approximately 3% year-over-year growth or approximately 5% when excluding noncash straight-line revenue and FX impacts. We are reiterating organic growth assumptions across all regions and continue to expect organic tenant billings growth of approximately 5% and data center growth of approximately 13% year-over-year. The increase in outlook was driven by $50 million of FX tailwinds, a $5 million increase to pass-through revenue and $5 million of incremental non-run rate revenue in the U.S.
This was partially offset by $20 million of revenue reserves in Latin America, primarily related to our previously disclosed legal dispute with AT&T Mexico over the calculation of tower rent. As we disclosed in September, we reached a positive interim agreement with AT&T Mexico, whereby AT&T Mexico has paid American Tower the majority of withheld payments and will resume monthly payments of the majority of tower rents owed going forward. The remainder of the rents not paid to American Tower are to be deposited into an irrevocable escrow account administered by an independent trustee. The funds in escrow will be released in accordance with the final ruling of the arbitration or by mutual consent of the company and AT&T Mexico.
We remain confident in the terms of our master lease agreement with AT&T Mexico and expect to prevail in the arbitration. Per our conservative reserve policies, our 2025 outlook assumes approximately $30 million of revenue reserves for the full year, of which $19 million are already reflected in our results through the third quarter. We expect future reserves of approximately $8 million to $10 million per quarter until the arbitration is settled. The arbitration is scheduled for a hearing in August of 2026, and the final ruling may come at a later date. Moving to adjusted EBITDA on Slide 8.
We are raising our adjusted EBITDA outlook by $45 million at the midpoint, which implies approximately 4% growth year-over-year or approximately 7% growth year-over-year, excluding noncash net straight-line and FX impacts. The increase to outlook was driven by $30 million of FX tailwinds and $15 million of upside from consolidated operating profit, primarily driven by U.S. services outperformance. And finally, moving to our outlook for AFFO on Slide 9. We are raising our attributable AFFO outlook by $50 million, which now implies growth at the midpoint of approximately 7% year-over-year on an as-adjusted basis or approximately 9%, excluding financing costs and FX impacts.
The increase to outlook was driven by $20 million of FX tailwinds, $15 million of cash adjusted EBITDA and $15 million of upside from other items, consisting of $15 million of upside from net interest expense and $5 million of upside from cash taxes and minority interest, partly offset by $5 million of higher capital improvement CapEx. Turning to Slide 10. Our 2025 capital plan remains consistent with our prior outlook.
We continue to expect to distribute approximately $3.2 billion to our shareholders as a common dividend in 2025, subject to Board approval and expect $1.7 billion in capital expenditures. $1.5 billion of our capital expenditures are related to discretionary projects of building approximately 2,150 new towers at the midpoint and $600 million of data center spend. Importantly, we expect 80% of our discretionary projects this year to be in developed markets, consistent with our capital allocation philosophy that Steve reiterated earlier. Moving to the right side of the slide, our balance sheet remains strong. With our net leverage now at 4.9x, $10.7 billion in liquidity and low floating rate debt exposure, we have significant financial flexibility.
We'll remain disciplined in how we utilize our balance sheet and allocate capital to optimize long-term shareholder value creation. Subsequent to quarter end, we have executed $28 million of share repurchases, and we will continue to be opportunistic in utilizing the remaining $2 billion that the Board has authorized for share repurchases. Turning to Slide 11. And in summary, we are pleased with our results year-to-date, which demonstrate the fundamental durability of our business model. Robust mobile data consumption growth and demand for our interconnection-rich data centers underpin a long runway of growth opportunities for American Tower.
With our best-in-class portfolio of towers and data centers and strong balance sheet, we are well positioned to capture these growth opportunities and deliver on our goal of the industry-leading AFFO per share growth. And with that, operator, we can open the line for questions.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Michael Funk from Bank of America.
Michael Funk: So Steve, a quick one for you. So services revenue continues to come in above expectations, ours and the Street. Typically, that was a leading indicator for domestic deployments. So I would love to hear your thoughts on how that potentially factors in deployments in 2026. And then maybe to feather in another one, any thoughts you can also offer on how the AT&T EchoStar spectrum acquisition might impact deployments from AT&T and your expectations with that company?
Steven Vondran: Sure. Thanks for the question. So I'll start with the services piece. We've had a healthy pipeline of activity this year in services, and it has -- it's a near record year. You have to go back to when we actually own construction management firms back in the early 2000s to find a better service to the year for us. So we're very excited about the activity levels that we've seen. We also have a larger construction management component this year than we've had in prior year. So that's a little bit of what's kind of feathering into that. But that's indicative of the carrier activity that we're seeing.
And as we said from the beginning of the year, we're seeing robust activity across the board. And that's continued build-out of the 5G mid-band spectrum throughout the networks and also some early phase densification that we're seeing as well. So we're excited about the activity levels that we're seeing there. We'll refrain from guiding to 2026 until February on that. But we do see a healthy pipeline building, and we do think that our services business will be a good robust contributor in 2026 as well. So we're feeling very good about what we're seeing and hearing in terms of how that pipeline is building next year.
In terms of the spectrum sale, again, we'll learn more about that and share more about that in February in terms of 2026. What we've typically seen with the carriers is that when they buy spectrum, they want to deploy it. And there is certainly a lot of opportunity to continue to deploy mid-band 5G on our sites. And so we're looking forward to working with AT&T and helping them in what they decide to do next year. But until they've announced their build plans, it's probably not appropriate for me to comment in terms of what we think they're going to do on that.
Operator: And your next question comes from the line of Nick Del Deo from MoffettNathanson.
Nicholas Del Deo: First, on the spectrum front, the FCC now has marching orders to auction a lot of spectrum over the coming years. Some of it at potentially much higher frequencies than the mainstream spectrum that we've seen deployed to date, I think potentially as high up as 10 gigahertz. Obviously, it's going to depend on what bands are ultimately selected. But broadly speaking, how are you thinking about the relevance of your tower portfolio for potentially supporting some of these much higher frequency bands given their propagation attributes?
Steven Vondran: Yes. Thanks for the question. Look, I'm excited to hear that those bands are coming to market because towers are going to be the primary way those bands are deployed even up into that 7, 8, 9, 10 gigahertz. And that really underpins the beauty of the tower model and the long-term growth that we're going to see on the portfolio. And so when I see what's kind of been identified by the government, some of that, there's a little bit more mid-band to support 5G. But a lot of those spectrum bands that you just referenced are the 6G bands that need to be freed up and allocated for the U.S. to be competitive in the 6G market.
So we're excited to see that, that's been identified that they're working on making that available. And we're looking forward to seeing how that plays out. As we've seen in the past, the higher the frequency, the lower the wavelength, which means you will need some densification of sites. So as we look out across the landscape of the remaining tranche of 5G and also 6G, we think that, that bodes very well for long-term growth for us because carriers are going to densify their networks. It will give them more bandwidth. You'll see new use cases coming out. And there's some really exciting things coming out in kind of the early discussions about 6G and what it supports.
So we're very supportive of those bands coming to market and being auctioned, and we're looking forward to working with our customers to get those deployed as soon as they can.
Nicholas Del Deo: Okay. Great. Can I ask one on CoreSite as well? I saw your pre-lease share was down to 6% this quarter. I think historically, that's been driven by sort of larger customers taking big flows of space. I guess should we think about the 6% is, again, just the product of the ebb and flow of larger deals? Or are you kind of purposefully saving the space that you're developing for more of a retail SKU?
Steven Vondran: There's no slowdown in the deal flow. We are still seeing incredibly robust demand. What you're seeing in that dip on pre-leasing is us putting some stuff that was in construction to service. So you're really just seeing that move from pre-leasing to actual leasing. And that pre-leasing [Technical Difficulty] new projects to build new sites. So that's just a function of the flow of the construction, not a deal flow at all.
Nicholas Del Deo: Okay. Okay. So no underlying changes there. Good to hear.
Steven Vondran: Yes, we're still seeing huge demand drivers in CoreSite.
Nicholas Del Deo: Yes, Demand across the space is strong. I was wondering more if it was more of a purposeful shift on your part to hold space for retail where you don't see as much pre-leasing, but it doesn't sound like that's the case.
Steven Vondran: No. Still sticking to our knitting in terms of how we do business.
Operator: The next question comes from the line of Jim Schneider from Goldman Sachs.
James Schneider: I was wondering if you could maybe -- understanding that the cost optimization program, you can give us more details when you report Q4 results. But can you maybe give us a sense of how you would frame the opportunity in terms of rough order of magnitude? Directionally, how that when you do announce it should flow through the model? Would that be sort of a onetime thing or something that would layer in over the course of several quarters? And then maybe directionally, what are the considerations you're thinking about in terms of the sizing that opportunity? Are you trying to sort of get a sense about what is happening with the churn activity on your potential customers?
Or is there any other considerations that are kind of top of mind as you scope that out?
Rodney Smith: Jim, thanks for the question. So I'll start off by highlighting the fact that cost efficiencies is one of our strategic priorities. You've heard Steve and I talked about that over the quarters and the years as well. So it's something we've been focused on for a while here. I would point to a couple of things that have resulted from the work that we've done over the years. If you go back to 2020, since that time period, we've been able to expand our EBITDA margins by about 300 basis points. That comes from solid, steady organic growth.
It includes absorbing the Sprint churn, but it's complemented in a material way by the cost efficiencies that we've driven into the business over that time period. You've seen a couple of years where SG&A actually stepped down multiple years in a row. This year, it's about flat. So we're holding things very steady after reducing SG&A quite a bit over time. So we've got a very efficient business globally as it stands today with strong margins and as I pointed out, expanding margins. So we do see the future opportunities as incremental improvements to an already efficient business, not necessarily a step function change.
With that said, Steve has talked about, and we did hire or create a new role of Chief Operating Officer. That is a global role, but no fills that role. And it's focused on simplifying our operations across all areas in areas like supply chain technology, service delivery, network operations. And the goal there really is to improve service quality across the board by making things simpler and bending the cost curve down over time, particularly in the direct cost area. That should help us continue to maintain strong margins out into the future in a way to complement steady organic tenant billings growth.
With that said, we do look forward to our next earnings call when we finish up 2025, talk about the fourth quarter results and get into the '26 outlook. At that point, we will have a little bit more detail around cost efficiencies and improvements that may come from the COO position.
James Schneider: That's helpful. And then maybe as a follow-up, your data center business, I think you're guiding effectively to the midpoint of your prior guidance. A lot of your peers have sort of taken up their guidance. And obviously, the data points, as you pointed out in terms of new business are very, very positive across the whole ecosystem. So can you maybe give us a sense about whether there's anything happening under the hood that would sort of mute the upside you're seeing at least in the current business for the next couple of months into the end of the year?
Steven Vondran: Yes, I'll take that one. No, there's nothing that would mute our expectations for the business. We continue to believe that sustained double-digit growth is possible as long as we can keep building the capacity to absorb the demand that we're seeing out there. And we continue to see increased demand for the space in CoreSite from our core customer, which is the enterprises that need to be colocated in that facility for hybrid cloud deployments. And what's exciting about the way that customer is evolving is they're actually also expanding their installations to put inferencing there. So a lot of those key enterprise customers are expanding their installations to have their inference colocated with their hybrid cloud deployments.
And so there's a very long tail of that activity. So I think all the trends that we're seeing in the space reinforce the fact that there's a huge growth path there for us. So there's nothing muting that. I think we were just pretty close on our expectations for the year. And we pride ourselves on being pretty accurate on that. So nothing to be concerned about there. And in fact, we're excited about the future of CoreSite.
Rodney Smith: Jim, I would also just complement Steve's answer here with a couple of pieces. We are seeing strong double-digit growth. You see that in our numbers. And of course, Steve outlined that, that was in line with our expectations certainly. I'll highlight the fact that, that is well above the underwriting assumptions that we made when we originally purchased CoreSite. So the business is performing exceptionally well, driving upper teens in terms of stabilized yields on assets. That's why you're seeing a little bit more CapEx going into that business. We're up to a little over $600 million of CapEx.
And we -- not only are we seeing a robust pipeline, and we're able to be selective in terms of who we bring into these facilities, we're also seeing strong pricing ability on our end, which is driving a cash mark-to-market well up at the end -- the top end of the range that we had outlined. A couple of other things that I'll highlight here. The business is well positioned going forward. We have about 296 megawatts of power available and held for future development. That's a nice runway as we look out into the future to be able to provide condition space to meet the demand that we see coming.
We also have about 42 megawatts under construction currently. That's the highest we've seen in CoreSite in quite a while here. So we're building a lot of facilities to meet the demand that we've already taken in. Those couple of record years of sales and new business that we've seen over the years, we're now delivering on that. That's another reason why you're seeing a little bit of a touch down in terms of pre-leasing because we're just building so much into this curve.
So these CoreSite assets, interconnection-rich, network dense, they're really well positioned for the future, not just from a demand perspective, but from a pricing perspective as well as making sure we're in a good position to meet the demand going forward.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Ric Prentiss from Raymond James and Associates.
Ric Prentiss: Steve, I appreciate your comments in the beginning. Obviously, it's 25 years, you've seen a lot of spectrum deals and M&A. I wanted to just touch on one, UScellular T-Mobile deal is closed. Can you remind us again your exposure to UScellular? And then also, interestingly, T-Mobile on their earnings call talked about a charge where they were going to be reducing some cell sites that were not UScellular. That's one of the first times I've seen kind of carriers without a deal kind of saying they're reducing things. Do you have any extra color on what T-Mobile was talking about there?
Steven Vondran: On the second question, I don't have any color on that, Ric. In terms of the UScellular portfolio, it's pretty modest. They represent a little bit less than 1% of our U.S. revenue, a little bit less than 0.5% of our global revenue. And there is a chunk of that, that's up for renewal next year, which we've talked about previously. We haven't given a specific percentage, but there's a good chunk of that up for renewal next year. And so we'll give more guidance on what we expect on that in February in terms of churn coming from that. But just given the overall exposure, we'll still be in that 1% to 2% historical range for churn, we believe.
Ric Prentiss: Okay. And then on the DISH EchoStar AT&T deal, are you guys open to like doing a negotiation with DISH to kind of get an NPV value because we're watching that just trying to see how long Charlie Ergen wants to keep making tower payments, but you have good contracts, it seems. So just trying to get a sense of openness to trying to say, can we resolve this sooner rather than over 11 years.
Steven Vondran: Yes. Well, Rick, we've got a long track record of maximizing the value to our shareholders through our contract structures and any negotiations that we do. And so you can assume that we're going to retain the discipline we've always had on that. I think it'd be premature to speculate on what something might look like on that. Now what you will see in our 10-Q when we file it is you'll see that we did receive a letter from DISH saying that they believe they're excused from making payments under the MLA based on the spectrum sale. We disagree with that. And in fact, we filed suit.
We filed a declaratory judgment action to ask the court to confirm that we own the remainder of the rent under that agreement. And just to remind folks, that agreement goes through 2036. And this represents about 2% of our total property revenue, about 4% of our U.S. and Canada property revenue. And so we're focused on defending our contract and making sure that everyone acknowledges that it's a valid and enforceable contract through 2036. And then we will have whatever discussions make sense that are going to maximize long-term growth. But again, we feel good about our contract.
We feel good about the collectibility on it, and we will continue to do the right thing for our shareholders for the long term on that.
Ric Prentiss: Makes sense. One last one for me. Obviously, nice to see stock buybacks come in and kind of an endorsement of where you feel your stock price is at. Also finally, your leverage is below 5.0000. How should we think about the M&A environment out there for external growth, stock buyback and where are we at as far as private versus public multiples, which is kind of the capital allocation question between stock buyback and M&A?
Rodney Smith: Yes. Ric, thanks for the question. So you hit all of the relevant topics, of course. And let me start out by just highlighting our capital allocation philosophy here. As you've seen over the years that you've followed us, it's very consistent and a disciplined approach to capital allocation. Everything we do in capital allocation is really centered around optimizing long-term shareholder value. With that said, the first priority in capital allocation is dividending out 100% of our REIT taxable income, which this year will represent about $3.2 billion. Of course, that's subject to our Board approval. Next is the internal CapEx programs. We invest roughly $1.5 billion to $2 billion a year historically in internally generated capital programs.
And we focus those on the highest risk-adjusted returns we can put that money into at the time. And in today's environment, that is mean we're more heavily focused on prioritizing developed markets, U.S., Europe on the tower side as well as CoreSite, of course. Then it comes to evaluating M&A up against share buybacks and also just continuing to pay down debt. All three of those are options for us. Today, we don't see anything compelling that's material on the M&A side. We have been slightly over our leverage target recently for the last couple of years. As you know, Ric, we've been working diligently to strengthen the balance sheet, improve the credit quality of the business.
We're now BBB+. And in this quarter, we're below 5x. That is helped a little bit by the services contribution to EBITDA, which you can see in our numbers the full year implies a step down in EBITDA for Q4. That will put a little pressure on our leverage number certainly. And depending on how the euro and the U.S. dollar react, that could move around our U.S.-denominated total value of our European debt. With that said, it is possible that we could go back up to 5x later in the year. But we are around 5x or below 5x in what we believe is a sustainable way. So that gives us more flexibility.
And share buybacks are certainly an option. You saw us buy back about 28 million shares. We put that up against M&A opportunities around the globe. We're still seeing in developed markets specifically, private multiples on the M&A side for towers are still elevated relative to the multiples of public tower companies. But there's more than that, that goes into our decision-making. We just think we have a really compelling set of assets. We think buying back shares in this environment makes a lot of sense for us given our ability and confidence in this business generating upper single-digit AFFO per share growth over time before you account for the impacts of FX and interest rates.
So we've got a really solid portfolio. We're improving the quality of earnings, so it's getting better along the way. So that's how we think about it. The share buybacks are completely opportunistic. As we continue to delever, we will have even more and more financial flexibility to allocate capital in that -- in a way towards either M&A or share buybacks, and you kind of know what we favor at the moment.
Operator: The next question comes from the line of Eric Luebchow from Wells Fargo.
Eric Luebchow: Just curious, there's been some chatter around some of the new spectrum sales and your ability to monetize them, for instance, the 3.45 that AT&T is getting, which they already have in the network just requires software upgrade. Any just kind of high-level commentary on how you think some of this additional spectrum could impact future densification demand that you're starting to see in your footprint, as you mentioned?
Steven Vondran: Yes. Thanks for the question. So generally speaking, when carriers get more spectrum, that's good for us because they end up deploying that spectrum, and it typically requires them to do network augmentations that are monetizable events. Now on any given site, depending on the specifics of the site, there could be a software push that may not be an event at that moment. But over time, what we've seen is that more spectrum results in more leasing revenue for us. Even if they're able to do it with software pushes and kind of as an initial instance, that doesn't necessarily mean that they won't be able -- won't need to densify over time.
If you think about the growth of mobile data in the U.S., the latest CTIA report had it at about 35% year-over-year. And all the experts we talk to believe that mobile data usage will continue to rise at a robust percentage and the needs for the networks to augment themselves that you're going to basically twice as much capacity in 5 years as you have today. And everyone that we talk to believes that, that will come in part through spectrum, in part through efficiencies in the technology, but mostly through densification.
So even the spectrum that's being considered by the FCC to be auctioned plus the spectrum that's kind of out there in the market, we think that plus technology will solve about half of the issues that they need to solve in terms of quantity of data produced. The other half is going to have to come from densification. And so over time, we believe that, that densification is going to be right in line with what we originally thought. We always thought there'd be more spectrum that came to market. It could affect the timing a little bit in the near term, and we're kind of watching that to see how that plays out.
But we don't think it changes the medium- to long-term outlook for growth in our business or the need to densify the networks over the medium to long term.
Rodney Smith: Eric, I would just add on the application volume that Steve mentioned, we see our overall applications up about 20% year-over-year. That's supporting the good news that we've had in services, but it also reflects kind of the activity level that we're seeing in the marketplace. We're seeing a higher growth rate in the applications for colos. That's up more like 40% or so. So we are seeing the beginning of this shift or an increase in colocations, which could be the beginning of densification.
Now with that said, our colocation applications still represent a modest percentage of our overall apps, but we are experiencing an increase in a faster growth rate than the overall applications, which we think is good news.
Eric Luebchow: Yes. I appreciate that. And I guess just to follow up on one more question. I know you had one customer that came off their MLA earlier this year, they're on like an à la carte type of leasing arrangement. Any update on them? It sounds like things are progressing as planned. I think there was some revenue contribution that got shifted into 2026. And is there any kind of active discussions on maybe putting them back on a holistic MLA? Or are you kind of happy with the current arrangement you have with them?
Steven Vondran: We've always been agnostic as to whether we're under a comprehensive MLA or not because the underlying business that they need to do with us doesn't change, whether they're on a comprehensive agreement or not. And we've proven over a couple of decades now that we're successfully able to monetize those deployments, whether they're holistic structure or an à la carte structure. You can assume that we're always talking to every customer all the time. I mean the ink doesn't even dry on a contract before you're talking about the next iteration of it. So those are always ongoing discussions, but there's really nothing to report on that. We're there to support the rollout.
And the only real difference for us is it makes a little bit of a timing difference sometimes under the comprehensive agreements. It's kind of more fixed and more predictable, and it's a little bit more variable on an à la carte basis. But if you're thinking about the medium to long term, we're going to get that revenue either way, because it's just -- it may come in a little bit more fits and starts versus that kind of cadence that we can lay out in the contract.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of David Barden from New Street Research.
David Barden: It's great to be back. So I guess two, if I could. So the first one for you, Rod, would be just to follow up on Ric's question, which is to just make sure that DISH is current. And under what circumstances would you guys contemplate beginning to take a reserve given the fact that there's this ongoing lawsuit between the two of you? And then on a happier note, I would guess -- I don't know how to phrase this question, but what are the tower implications potentially for a space-based player that now owns terrestrial spectrum to see some new deployments that we weren't contemplating in our multiyear model in the past?
Steven Vondran: I'll actually take those just because we're already talking about DISH. So at this point, DISH is current. And so we wouldn't take any reserves because they're current today. And we expect them to pay. And that's the reason we kind of preemptively filed the lawsuit is to make sure that there's no interruption in that. So it's premature at this point to even talk about or think about reserves on that. When you think about the space-based player, it really depends on how -- if they're just complementary to the other carriers and they're reselling to the other wireless carriers, then they probably won't deploy a lot on the ground themselves.
Now there may be some teleports or there's a few things that are ground-based to support those networks, but that wouldn't be of any scale to be material in terms of the opportunity. If they decide to offer direct service, then they might well decide to complement their satellite network in terrestrial sites because the satellites don't penetrate buildings well, they don't work in dense and urban areas. So that certainly could be an upside that none of us have even contemplated. But at this point, we're not forecasting any of that. We're not putting that in any of our guidance going forward.
So our long-term algorithm that we've laid out for you guys does not contemplate that extra carrier in there. That would be all upside for what we've laid out.
Rodney Smith: David, I'll just welcome back. It's great to have you back on the call.
David Barden: Thanks, Rod. And I'll use that as an opening to ask one follow-up. I appreciate it, guys. So just as we think about SpaceX deployments, the growth of fixed wireless access with growing spectrum availability, the BEAD funding kind of pushing fiber out, the WISP Marketplace is under threat. I know that they can, in rural markets, be a customer. Is there any reason to believe that kind of the threat to the WISP market is a threat to churn as we look forward in the business model?
Steven Vondran: Look, we have a lot of great customers that are WISPs, and that's been a component of our vertical market segment for a long time. So they do comprise a very small percentage of our overall revenues. Some of those WISPs have struggled for a long time. So we do see churn every year in that, and that's kind of taken care of in our normal churn, that 1% to 2% that we see it as normal churn. So it wouldn't surprise me for some of those guys to have some trouble, again, consistent with what we've seen in the past.
But I don't see anything in there that would make me think we're going to fall outside that normal range of churn, 1% to 2%.
Operator: The next question comes from the line of Michael Rollins from Citi.
Michael Rollins: Just given the comments on EchoStar, I just had a couple of other follow-ups. The first one is you mentioned it's about 4% of domestic revenue currently. How much is EchoStar anticipated to contribute to growth over the next couple of years based on the contractual minimums that you've established? And then secondly, you referenced, I think, the long-term guidance just a few moments ago. Do you still believe American Tower is on track for its long-term domestic leasing growth guidance? And if you pull out EchoStar from that, can you share what the organic growth looks like ex EchoStar?
Steven Vondran: So in terms of the contributions for the future years, we haven't been specific about that, and that's not something I want to get into the specifics of. Again, we'll issue guidance for next year in February on it. When you think about our long-term U.S. organic growth guide that we put back -- put out back in 2021, we're seeing a robust pipeline of activity from the three major carriers, and we're feeling very good about the activity levels that we're seeing there. And if you think about that guidance was put out more than 5 years ago, and we've been pretty spot on in terms of the guidance for the first several years of that.
Now looking out toward the last couple of years, there are a couple of events that were not in our viewshed when we put that guidance out in 2021. We did not expect T-Mobile to buy UScellular, and we didn't expect DISH to sell the spectrum and kind of exit the network market. And we'll be factoring those into our guidance that we think about next year. But in terms of how that affects '26 and '27, I don't want to get specific about that until we actually issue guidance in February on that.
But again, the long-term growth perspectives, the medium- to long-term view of our business, our U.S. business contributing mid-single digits, that doesn't change with the changes in DISH. And we'll get more specific about those last 2 years of that multiyear guide in February.
Michael Rollins: Can I just follow up to that with one other? So when I think about when you gave that multiyear guide several years ago, there was significant change going on in the industry. And so you kind of gave us this north star, if you would, of where you think growth is going over an extended period of time. Do you think that conditions have changed enough and the timing is there where maybe not just giving a view for the next couple of years, but maybe giving new multiyear guidance when you come out with the fourth quarter results. So kind of giving us a more extended view, an updated view of where that's going.
Steven Vondran: Look, we'll figure out what we're going to say in February on that. What I would say is we've given you guys a long-term growth algorithm that we think is kind of directionally what you should be thinking about for the longer term with our business. And nothing in the recent events really changes that long-term growth algorithm. What drives growth of the tower rents and the equipment on the towers is the growth in mobile data consumption.
So as long as we continue to see mobile data growth in the U.S. and abroad at the types of clips that we're seeing, then we believe that the need to augment networks is going to continue to roll out just the way we've foreseen it that supports that algorithm. Now it's possible that you're going to see even more data growth than that because all the assumptions that are out there and the historical growth we've seen doesn't include much AI. So as AI becomes a larger component of our daily lives and that makes its way on to the mobile devices, it's possible that growth is going to be even higher.
But in terms of our kind of long-term growth algorithm, we believe that somewhere in the mid-single digits is where you should see the organic growth in the developed markets, a little bit higher in the emerging markets. And that's probably as specific as we're going to get from a long-term guide on that. And again, we'll give you guys more color on the next year in February.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Richard Choe from JPMorgan.
Richard Choe: I just wanted to follow up on the U.S. business quickly. What is driving the $5 million in incremental non-rate revenue there? And then a second question on the U.S. data center business, I guess, the quarter-to-quarter growth was kind of a little bit lower than what it's done recently. Was there some churn there that was a little bit higher than normal?
Rodney Smith: Richard, thanks for the question. Regarding the $5 million, that's just small non-run rate type activity. So nothing really to worry about and nothing specific that I would point to as well. And that really is the same issue with the differences in the data center business, really just onetime items here and there. There's always fluctuations quarter-over-quarter, but nothing material.
Richard Choe: Got it. And then on a bigger picture one with the cost efficiency review that you're going to talk more about next quarter, could that also kind of lead to some strategic changes and also kind of, call it, CapEx changes and priorities?
Steven Vondran: I'll take that one. Right now, we're really looking at how we can get the efficiencies in the business through things like supply chain, kind of getting a little bit some of the best practices across borders, automation, there's some AI opportunities in there. There's nothing specific in terms of the capital. Now we do spend capital in the U.S. in particular, to buy our land. And that does help manage the land cost on it, and we also get very good returns on the capital. It's possible that we could find some opportunities to do that more aggressively in other geographies, but that's something that would come later down the line.
That's not one of the near-term things that we're focused on. But that's the only thing I can think of that would be any kind of a shift in capital. And that really wouldn't be a shift, that might just be flexing up a little bit more on that opportunity if we found the right chance to do that.
Operator: And the final question comes from the line of Benjamin Swinburne from Morgan Stanley.
Benjamin Swinburne: Maybe just one more on EchoStar. I know that maybe there will be more info in the queue, Steve. But are there anything we should be thinking about in terms of what's next? It sounds like you expect them to continue to pay you. But is there any, I don't know, court date or any other process info you want to share with us at this point as we think about the situation moving forward?
Steven Vondran: No, we just filed it. So there's nothing on the docket yet to point to on that. And again, we think this is very straightforward. We think that we have a valid enforceable contract. We don't think that anything has changed in the marketplace that would hamper the enforceability of that through the remainder of the term. And like I said, we just preemptively filed that because we think it's the right thing to do to protect our shareholders' interest on that.
Benjamin Swinburne: Okay. And then just one more. You guys obviously went in and bought back some stock. The stock has been under pressure. I think the multiple we're seeing towers trade at, including AMT, at the lower end of where it's been in a long time. And actually, the spread between data center stocks and towers has widened out significantly as well. I guess it's a long wind up just how you think about CoreSite's and the value of this asset. Is there -- do you look at that sort of the value of data center assets in the public and private markets relative to what's embedded in your stock? It seems like you're not getting credit for it today.
Is that a relevant factor as you think about the right ownership structure for this business? And are you seeing more synergies between the two businesses? And you've talked about that over the years and whether that's starting to come together in your mind more?
Steven Vondran: Yes, I'll take that one. Look, we think that CoreSite is a great fit with American Tower. And we still believe the long-term synergies of having towers and a highly interconnected ecosystem will ultimately play out with opportunities at the edge for us. So we believe in that future. And in the meantime, we have an asset that's performing phenomenally well. And as to the components of the stock price and things like that, we're in this business for the long term, and we're thinking about the long-term value creation for the shareholders. We're not looking at a kind of a snapshot of where that valuation falls.
And so we're -- our focus is maximizing the value of that asset and continuing to work with the industry partners to prove out the edge over time. So when we're thinking about a stock buyback, that's really us being opportunistic. We're just looking at the value of the stock and our other available uses of our capital, and we think that's a good use of our capital. And so we made the decision to buy some. And so it really has nothing to do with CoreSite or that business. It's really all about what we think the value of the enterprise is.
And with CoreSite, we're committed to growing that thing as fast as it can grow as long as we're sticking to our business model and our return profile. And we'll look forward to proving out the edge over time.
Rodney Smith: Benjamin, I don't think I mentioned this earlier, but I would just highlight that we do have a Board authorization for a buyback program up to $2 billion. So we're just beginning to tap into that. So we do have capacity there already approved by the Board in terms of buybacks.
Operator: This concludes today's question-and-answer session. I will now conclude today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.
