A magnificent concentration of corporate debt: The top 46.
The US Justice Department today approved the merger of T-Mobile, the third
largest wireless carrier and Sprint Corp., the fourth largest wireless
carrier. For the merger to go forward, they will have to sell Sprint’s
prepaid brands to Dish. As for the rest, whatever this does to competition
and rates for wireless services, one thing is for sure: It creates another US
debt monster.
T-Mobile has $37.4 billion in short-term and long-term debt; Sprint has
$39.8 billion. Combined they will have $77.2 billion in debt.
This includes only debt, not other liabilities, such as accounts payable,
income tax payable, accrued payroll, or the catch-all “other liabilities.”
Short-term debt is due within one year and includes long-term debt that
matures within one year; long-term debt is due in over one year. “Capitalized
leases” – this is a big item with Amazon – are long-term debt.
After the merger, the combined T-Mobile and Sprint, with $77 billion in
debts, would move up to the 9th most indebted company in the US, just ahead
of Walmart and behind CVS.
This is just the latest product of the concentration of debt in the US.
Telecom mergers & acquisitions have created these behemoths:
- AT&T, Number 1 most indebted company in America,
with a fabulous $191 billion in short-term and long-term debt.
- Verizon, Number 3 most indebted company in America, with
a still fabulous $136 billion in debt.
- Comcast, Number 4 most indebted company in America, with
$113.78 billion in debt.
- And Charter Communications, the Number 10 most indebted
outfit in America, with $75.3 billion in debt.
I’m counting only non-financial companies. This excludes financial
companies such as banks. But there are some gray areas in this distinction.
This includes the Number 2 most indebted US company, Ford with $159.7 billion
in debt. Its wholly-owned subsidiary Ford Credit is its financial arm and
captive auto lender. So be it. Several companies in this group have financial
subsidiaries.
Apple is Number 5 with $112.6 billion in debt, a result of its all-time
record-breaking share buybacks with which it blew past GE, another share
buyback queen before its house of cards threatened to collapse, with $111.7
billion in Debt.
Those are the six non-financial publicly traded companies, each with more
than $100 billion in debt.
In fact, the top 10 most indebted companies combined have a breath-taking
$1.2 trillion in debt. These days we throw “trillions” around to stay fit on
a daily basis, but it’s still “real money,” so to speak. This is the
outgrowth of the massive concentration of debt in the US corporate world.
Corporate debt has ballooned in many countries. In terms of magnitude – in
terms of billions of dollars – and in terms of how fast this debt has
ballooned, no country can hold a candle to China’s corporations, though they
now have to deleverage, forced or otherwise. On that global scale, and as a
percent of GDP, the US corporate debt is only in 24th place (here are the countries
with the most corporate debt).
An interesting thing happened on Amazon’s balance sheet: Its long-term
debt, which includes capital leases, jumped by 77% in six months, from $33.1
billion at the end of 2018 to $58.5 billion at the end of June. This moved
Amazon up to the Number 12 most indebted company in America.
So I did some manual digging, and below are the 46 most indebted, publicly
traded non-financial companies in the US. Each has at least $20 billion in
short-term and long-term debt. Combined, they have $2.6 trillion in debt.
To get a feel for how much $2.6 trillion in debt is: This is equal to the
total debt of the government of France and more than the debt of Germany’s
government.
The data is based on recent quarterly reports. Let me know if I left out some
of your favorites (the minimum qualifier is $20 billion), and I will update
the table. “ST Debt” denotes “short-term debt” and “LT Debt” denoted
“Long-term Debt.” If your smartphone clips the table on the right and the
“Total” column is missing, hold your device in landscape position. You can
search the table via the search function in your browser. All amounts in
billion dollars.
|
Company
|
Symbol
|
ST Debt
|
LT Debt
|
Total
|
|
|
|
$ billion
|
$ billion
|
$ billion
|
1
|
AT&T
|
[T]
|
12.6
|
178.5
|
191.1
|
2
|
Ford
|
[F]
|
54.9
|
104.9
|
159.7
|
3
|
Verizon
|
[VZ]
|
11.6
|
124.6
|
136.2
|
4
|
Comcast
|
[CMCSA]
|
5.3
|
108.5
|
113.8
|
5
|
Apple
|
[AAPL]
|
22.4
|
90.2
|
112.6
|
6
|
General Electric
|
[GE]
|
16.0
|
95.8
|
111.7
|
7
|
GM
|
[GM]
|
33.5
|
74.7
|
108.2
|
8
|
CVS
|
[CVS]
|
8.7
|
86.9
|
95.6
|
9
|
Walmart
|
[WMT]
|
8.5
|
67.0
|
75.4
|
10
|
Charter Communications
|
[CHTR]
|
3.7
|
71.5
|
75.3
|
11
|
Microsoft
|
[MSFT]
|
8.3
|
66.6
|
74.9
|
12
|
Amazon
|
[AMZN]
|
0.0
|
58.5
|
58.5
|
13
|
Dell
|
[DELL]
|
6.4
|
49.8
|
56.2
|
14
|
Oracle
|
[ORCL]
|
4.5
|
51.7
|
56.2
|
15
|
IBM
|
[IBM]
|
11.6
|
43.3
|
54.9
|
16
|
United Technologies
|
[UTX]
|
4.8
|
43.0
|
47.8
|
17
|
Pfizer
|
[PFE]
|
9.7
|
36.8
|
46.4
|
18
|
Coca-Cola
|
[KO]
|
15.1
|
30.4
|
45.5
|
19
|
McDonald
|
[MCD]
|
0.8
|
44.5
|
45.3
|
20
|
Exxon-Mobile
|
[XOM]
|
22.7
|
21.6
|
44.3
|
21
|
United Health
|
[UNH]
|
4.6
|
37.1
|
41.6
|
22
|
DuPont
|
[DD]
|
2.8
|
37.7
|
40.5
|
23
|
AbbVie
|
[ABBV]
|
5.3
|
35.0
|
40.3
|
24
|
NextEra Energy Inc.
|
[NEE]
|
10.3
|
29.9
|
40.2
|
25
|
Sprint
|
[S]
|
4.5
|
35.4
|
39.8
|
26
|
T-Mobile
|
[TMUS]
|
2.3
|
35.1
|
37.4
|
27
|
Chevron
|
[CVX]
|
8.4
|
28.8
|
37.2
|
28
|
Exelon
|
[EXC]
|
3.8
|
33.4
|
37.1
|
29
|
HCA Healthcare
|
[HCA]
|
4.1
|
32.5
|
36.6
|
30
|
Kinder Morgan
|
[KMI]
|
2.6
|
34.0
|
36.5
|
31
|
Caterpillar
|
[CAT]
|
11.7
|
24.8
|
36.5
|
32
|
Home Depot
|
[HD]
|
2.3
|
32.0
|
34.2
|
33
|
Amgen
|
[AMGN]
|
3.8
|
29.7
|
33.5
|
34
|
American Airlines
|
[AAL]
|
5.0
|
28.5
|
33.5
|
35
|
Pepsi
|
[PEP]
|
3.9
|
28.8
|
32.7
|
36
|
Kraft Heinz
|
[KHC]
|
0.4
|
30.8
|
31.2
|
37
|
Phillip Morris
|
[PM]
|
4.1
|
27.0
|
31.0
|
38
|
Procter & Gamble
|
[PG]
|
8.9
|
21.4
|
30.3
|
39
|
Intel
|
[INTC]
|
2.9
|
26.5
|
29.4
|
40
|
Enterprise Products
|
[EPD]
|
1.5
|
24.7
|
26.2
|
41
|
UPS
|
[UPS]
|
3.3
|
22.5
|
25.8
|
42
|
Allergan
|
[AGN]
|
4.1
|
20.0
|
24.1
|
43
|
CISCO
|
[CSCO]
|
7.8
|
15.9
|
23.7
|
44
|
Simon Properties
|
[SPG]
|
1.4
|
21.9
|
23.3
|
45
|
Union Pacific
|
[UNP]
|
1.5
|
20.9
|
22.4
|
46
|
FirstEnergy
|
[FE]
|
1.5
|
18.8
|
20.3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total debt ($ billion)
|
|
|
|
2,554.6
|
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