Chorus Limited
Chorus Limited is New Zealand's largest fixed-line telecommunications infrastructure company, owning and operating a nationwide network of fiber-optic broadband, copper lines, local telephone exchanges, and associated infrastructure to deliver wholesale connectivity services.[1][2] Formed in 2008 through the structural separation of Telecom New Zealand's assets and formally incorporated in 2011, Chorus was designated as the lead provider for the government's Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB) initiative, which aimed to deploy fiber-to-the-premises to 75% of New Zealand's population by 2019, later expanded to cover 87% through subsequent phases completed by 2022.[1][3] The company maintains an open-access model, leasing its infrastructure to multiple retail service providers to foster competition, and supports approximately 1.8 million broadband connections across urban and rural areas.[4][5] Key achievements include the successful rollout of over 1.3 million fiber-enabled locations under the UFB program, significantly enhancing national internet speeds and reliability, with fiber connections now comprising the majority of its revenue-generating assets.[5] However, Chorus has faced controversies over subcontractor practices during the build phase, including widespread labor law violations such as underpayment, excessive hours, and exploitation of migrant workers, leading to government investigations, blacklisting of 38 firms, and criticism for inadequate oversight.[6][7] As of 2025, the New Zealand government is evaluating the sale of its remaining debt and equity holdings in Chorus—stemming from UFB funding—to redirect funds, marking a potential end to its direct involvement in the company's financing.[8]Company Overview
Profile and Core Operations
Chorus Limited is New Zealand's largest fixed-line telecommunications infrastructure company, operating as a wholesale-only provider that builds, maintains, and operates an open-access network primarily consisting of copper and fibre-optic cables, local telephone exchanges, and street cabinets. The company enables retail service providers to deliver broadband, voice, and data services to end-users without owning retail operations itself, thereby promoting market competition through non-discriminatory access to its infrastructure. As of 2025, Chorus manages approximately 1.8 million connections across its network, which forms the backbone of New Zealand's fixed-line communications.[2][9] Core operations center on the expansion and upkeep of fibre infrastructure, which covers 87% of the New Zealand population, alongside legacy copper assets that support ongoing broadband delivery. Chorus owns the majority of the country's telephone exchanges and focuses on wholesale services, including backhaul connectivity and interconnection points for ISPs. The company is listed on the New Zealand Exchange (NZX) and Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) under the ticker CNU, reflecting its role in delivering regulated pricing and service quality standards set by the Commerce Commission.[10][11][12]Market Position and Ownership
Chorus Limited occupies a dominant position in New Zealand's fixed-line telecommunications infrastructure market, serving as the country's largest wholesale provider of copper, fibre, and related connectivity services to retail operators such as Spark New Zealand, One New Zealand, and 2degrees Mobile.[5][13] It owns and maintains the legacy copper network, which historically supported the majority of fixed broadband and voice connections, while also leading the rollout of fibre-optic infrastructure under the government-backed Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB) initiative.[2] This wholesale-focused model positions Chorus as a critical enabler rather than a direct retail competitor, with its networks underpinning a significant portion of national fixed-line access, though rural broadband penetration has declined to below 30% of connections amid shifts to alternative technologies like satellite.[14] Competitors in retail services exert pressure on pricing and uptake, but Chorus's infrastructure scale provides a natural monopoly-like advantage in backhaul and local loop services, subject to regulatory oversight by the Commerce Commission to promote competition.[15] Ownership of Chorus Limited is publicly dispersed following its 2011 initial public offering and dual listing on the New Zealand Exchange (NZX: CNU) and Australian Securities Exchange (ASX: CNU), with no controlling shareholder or significant government stake post-separation from Telecom New Zealand.[5] Institutional investors hold the largest stakes, led by UniSuper Management Pty Ltd at 13.3%, L1 Capital Pty Ltd at 7.9%, and The Vanguard Group, Inc. at 5.5%, collectively representing key international and Australian funds focused on long-term holdings.[16][17] The remaining shares are distributed among other institutions, such as Franklin Templeton and Smartshares, alongside retail investors, ensuring broad ownership without dominant individual or corporate control as of the latest disclosures in 2024.[18] This structure supports strategic independence while exposing the company to market-driven governance and capital allocation.Infrastructure and Services
Fibre Network and UFB Initiative
Chorus Limited operates New Zealand's largest open-access fibre-optic network, primarily developed through its participation in the government's Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB) initiative.[19] The UFB programme, launched in 2011, aimed to deliver fibre-to-the-premises broadband to 75% of New Zealanders by 2020 through a public-private partnership, with the government providing initial subsidies of NZ$1.35 billion matched by private investment from local fibre companies (LFCs).[20] Chorus, as the primary LFC, secured contracts to build fibre infrastructure across approximately 70% of the targeted areas, focusing on urban and suburban regions.[21] The initiative progressed in phases, with UFB1 and UFB2 expanding coverage to 87% of the population by the programme's completion in December 2022, passing fibre to over 1.3 million premises in 412 towns and cities.[22] Chorus invested more than NZ$4 billion over 11 years to construct and extend its multi-technology mix (MTM) network, incorporating fibre alongside copper and other assets, under regulatory oversight requiring non-discriminatory wholesale access.[19] Fibre connections on Chorus's network support symmetric speeds up to 10 Gbps, with residential plans typically offering 100 Mbps to 1 Gbps downstream, enabling applications like high-definition streaming and remote work.[23] By mid-2025, fibre uptake reached 72.1% of passed addresses, reflecting growing demand amid rising data usage averaging 686 GB per month per connection.[24][25] Post-UFB, Chorus has pursued extensions beyond the 87% coverage threshold, including targeted builds to 10,000 additional premises completed by mid-2025 and community co-funded projects contributing up to NZ$3,500 per connection for rural expansions.[26][27] These efforts align with regulatory frameworks mandating equivalent access for retail service providers, while addressing data growth outpacing legacy networks.[28] As of late 2024, overall UFB uptake stood at 76%, underscoring the network's role in New Zealand's digital infrastructure amid plans for further all-fibre transitions.[22]Copper Network and Retirement Plans
Chorus Limited owns and operates New Zealand's nationwide legacy copper access network, which provides unbundled copper local loop (UCLL) services for voice telephony and broadband connectivity via technologies such as ADSL and VDSL.[29] This infrastructure, inherited from Telecom New Zealand following the 2011 structural separation, spans urban and rural areas but has become increasingly costly to maintain due to aging equipment and declining demand as fibre-optic alternatives proliferate.[30] The network supports regulated wholesale services, including unbundled bitstream access (UBA), but faces obsolescence as end-of-life components lead to higher fault rates and energy consumption.[31] Retirement of the copper network began in 2021, with Chorus accelerating withdrawals in fibre-covered areas to reduce operational expenditures and redirect resources toward modern infrastructure.[32] The company aims to fully decommission the network by 2030, citing benefits such as fewer network faults and a projected 4% reduction in electricity usage from legacy equipment removal.[31] As of October 2025, approximately 61,000 copper lines remain active outside the existing fibre footprint, while services in fibre-enabled zones are targeted for withdrawal by the end of fiscal year 2026—six months ahead of prior schedules.[33][34] Regulatory oversight by the Commerce Commission has facilitated this transition through the Copper Withdrawal Code, effective April 5, 2024, which permits Chorus to cease copper services in areas with viable alternatives like fibre, provided six months' notice is given and minimum coverage obligations are met.[29] This framework addresses the network's end-of-life status and supports deregulation efforts to migrate users away from copper, though it has drawn scrutiny over potential impacts on non-fibre areas reliant on alternatives such as fixed wireless or satellite.[35] Chorus must ensure service continuity during withdrawals, but the process has contributed to short-term financial pressures, including operating losses from decommissioning costs.[31]Rural Broadband Initiative (RBI) and Other Services
The Rural Broadband Initiative (RBI), launched by the New Zealand government in 2011, aimed to extend broadband access to rural areas excluded from the Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB) program, targeting 86% coverage of rural homes and businesses with peak download speeds of at least 5 Mbps by December 2016 through fixed wireless, satellite, and fiber backhaul technologies.[36] [37] Phase 1 involved a $300 million government investment shared among build partners including Chorus, Vodafone, and Telecom New Zealand, with Chorus deploying fiber-optic backhaul to upgrade approximately 91 roadside cabinets in the initial rollout phases to support wireless distribution.[38] [39] Chorus's RBI contributions focused on non-urban infrastructure development, including fiber connections to rural exchange points and base stations, enabling service providers to deliver enhanced connectivity to priority users such as schools and healthcare facilities under open-access terms mandated by government contracts.[40] Phase 2, commencing around 2017, expanded coverage to over 70,000 additional rural households and businesses, incorporating commercial extensions beyond subsidized areas, with Chorus maintaining obligations for wholesale access to these services.[41] By August 2016, RBI Phase 1 had achieved objectives in regions like Northland, delivering faster internet to communities previously reliant on slower copper-based or mobile networks.[36] Beyond RBI, Chorus provides wholesale backhaul services to support mobile network operators, including unregulated commercial options for fiber-based connectivity outside core UFB and RBI zones, which facilitate data transport from cell sites to core networks.[42] These backhaul offerings, often Ethernet-based, complement Chorus's regulated products and have been utilized to enhance rural mobile coverage indirectly through partnerships. Additionally, Chorus enables co-funded fiber extensions in underserved rural and semi-rural areas post-UFB/RBI completion, where communities contribute to builds beyond the standard 87% national fiber coverage target achieved by 2022.[11] Bandwidth management services, available across UFB, RBI, and non-zoned areas, allow service providers to procure scalable fiber access for enterprise and residential applications, with service descriptions updated as of 2022 to include voluntary direct fiber options in competitor-built regions.[43]History
Origins and Separation from Telecom New Zealand
Chorus originated as the fixed-line telecommunications infrastructure division of Telecom New Zealand Limited (TCNZ), which had dominated the sector since its privatization in 1990.[44] As New Zealand's incumbent operator, TCNZ controlled both retail services and wholesale network assets, leading to regulatory scrutiny over its market power. The Telecommunications Amendment Act (No 2) 2006 mandated operational separation to promote competition, requiring TCNZ to functionally divide its wholesale and retail arms by March 31, 2008, with independent governance and systems for the network business, initially branded as Chorus.[45] The push for structural separation intensified with the government's 2011 Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB) initiative, aimed at deploying fibre-optic networks to 75% of New Zealanders by 2019. TCNZ's Chorus unit successfully bid for 24 of 33 regions, covering about 70% of the population, but regulators conditioned funding on full separation to prevent conflicts of interest in network deployment and retail competition.[46] In May 2011, TCNZ announced plans to demerge Chorus as a standalone entity, marking the world's first voluntary structural split by an incumbent telco.[47] [48] Shareholders approved the demerger on October 25, 2011, with 99.8% support, paving the way for Chorus to access NZ$929 million in initial government subsidies for fibre rollout.[49] [48] Shares in the separated entities began trading on November 22, 2011, with Chorus debuting at NZ$3.03 on the NZX and ASX, while the demerger took effect on November 30, 2011, and separation day was declared December 1, 2011.[50] [51] Under the scheme, TCNZ shareholders received one Chorus share for every five TCNZ shares held, with Chorus assuming approximately NZ$1.7 billion in debt to fund infrastructure obligations.[52] [53] Post-demerger, Chorus operated independently as the regulated owner of copper, fibre, and backhaul assets, while TCNZ (rebranded Spark in 2014) focused on retail services.[54]Initial Public Offering and Early Expansion (2011–2015)
Chorus Limited was demerged from Telecom New Zealand (now Spark New Zealand) as part of a structural separation mandated to enable participation in the government's Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB) initiative. Telecom shareholders approved the demerger on October 25, 2011, with 99.8% of votes in favor.[49] The demerger was completed on December 1, 2011, distributing one Chorus share for every five Telecom shares held by eligible shareholders.[55] Chorus commenced trading on the New Zealand Exchange (NZX) on December 1, 2011, and on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) on November 21, 2011, under the ticker CNU.[56] This listing positioned Chorus as an independent fixed-line infrastructure operator, retaining Telecom's copper network assets while focusing on wholesale services.[50] Prior to the demerger, Chorus was selected on May 24, 2011, as the Crown's primary partner for the UFB initiative, tasked with deploying fiber broadband across approximately 70% of the program's geographical coverage in 24 regions, encompassing 69.4% of UFB1's scope.[57] The UFB agreement committed Chorus to an initial rollout prioritizing high-demand users, including businesses, schools, medical centers, and greenfield developments, through December 2015.[58] This marked the onset of Chorus's expansion beyond legacy copper infrastructure, leveraging Crown Fibre Holdings subsidies and loans totaling around NZ$929 million to accelerate fiber deployment.[20] By mid-2015, Chorus had invested over NZ$1.7 billion in fiber networks and related capabilities since its establishment, achieving connections for approximately 500,000 end-users.[59] Rollout progress included passing about 20% of targeted premises by June 2013, with plans for years four and five (2013–2015) extending fiber to over 250,000 additional homes, schools, and businesses.[60][61] Early funding releases from Crown Fibre Holdings in 2014 supported ongoing construction, emphasizing scalable infrastructure to meet growing broadband demands while maintaining copper network operations for revenue stability.[62]UFB Rollout Challenges and Progress (2016–2020)
The Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB) rollout by Chorus under the UFB1 initiative progressed steadily from 2016 to 2019, with deployment accelerating to cover urban areas representing 75% of New Zealand's population by the programme's December 2019 target date. By the end of fiscal year 2016 (June 2016), Chorus had completed fibre deployment in additional North Island cities such as Hamilton and Tauranga, contributing to nationwide connections exceeding 10,000 per month. Uptake reached 35% in Chorus-serviced UFB areas by June 2017, with over 275,000 customers connected to fibre broadband. This growth reflected improved deployment efficiency, as gross connections per working day increased significantly from earlier years. Challenges during this period included installation delays and resource constraints, though Chorus addressed wait times by reducing average connection intervals to 12 days by October 2016 through process optimizations. Historical difficulties in scaling a skilled field workforce had led to penalties for missing early targets, but by 2016, the programme was ahead of schedule in many regions, with population access to fibre-to-the-premises approaching 50%. Regulatory oversight, including price-quality paths imposed by the Commerce Commission, imposed financial penalties for non-compliance with service standards, constraining Chorus's capital expenditure flexibility amid ongoing build demands. Local construction issues, such as site-specific obstacles and coordination with utilities, occasionally slowed progress but did not derail overall timelines. In June 2017, the government launched UFB2 to extend coverage to 87% of premises, awarding Chorus contracts for 187 additional towns and rural areas, shifting focus toward nationwide completion by 2022. By fiscal year 2018 (June 2018), Chorus had aligned its plans to deliver fibre to approximately three-quarters of the expanded UFB footprint under its responsibility. UFB1 targets were met by late 2019, with cumulative nationwide connections hitting one million by June 2020, driven by rising demand for high-speed services. Despite these advances, the transition to UFB2 introduced complexities in reallocating resources from urban completion to smaller localities, where build economics were less favorable.[63]Recent Developments and All-Fibre Transition (2021–Present)
In 2021, Chorus initiated the progressive retirement of its copper network in urban areas where Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB) fibre is available, aiming to complete the full withdrawal by 2030 as part of the shift to an all-fibre infrastructure.[32][64] This process has reduced copper connections to 123,000 lines by early 2025, accompanied by declining fault volumes and optimized maintenance spending on legacy infrastructure.[65][30] Fibre rollout advanced steadily, with Chorus adding 31,000 new connections in the fiscal year ended June 2025 (FY25), bringing fibre to 92% of its fixed-line base and achieving 72.1% uptake in eligible UFB areas.[66][30] By July 2025, the company completed fibre deployment to 59 additional communities, enhancing access to higher-speed broadband.[67] In June 2025, the Infrastructure Commission endorsed Chorus's proposal to extend fibre coverage from 87% to 95% of New Zealand locations, supporting further rural and suburban expansion under the Fibre Frontier initiative.[68] Network traffic grew 10% year-over-year in FY25, driven by fibre-enabled data demand.[69] The transition bolstered financial performance, with FY25 revenue reaching NZ$1,014 million (up from prior years) and EBITDA at NZ$705 million, yielding a net profit of NZ$4 million after a NZ$9 million loss in FY24, primarily from fibre revenue growth despite copper decline.[66][70] In Q1 FY26 (ended September 2025), fibre uptake in UFB2 areas edged higher, with the network extension project surpassing 9,000 passed homes.[25] Government involvement in the UFB program diminished in October 2025, when officials announced plans to sell Crown holdings in Chorus debt and equity, effectively concluding state oversight of the initiative.[71] Chorus supported deregulation of copper services in April 2025 submissions to the Commerce Commission, arguing that existing regulations are obsolete amid fibre dominance.[72]Regulation and Government Relations
Key Regulatory Frameworks and Oversight
Chorus Limited, as New Zealand's primary fixed-line infrastructure provider, is regulated primarily by the Commerce Commission under the Telecommunications Act 2001, which mandates open access to its copper and fibre networks to promote competition in retail telecommunications markets.[73][74] The Act requires Chorus to offer regulated services such as unbundled copper local loop (UCLL) and unbundled bitstream access (UBA) on its legacy copper network, with pricing and non-price terms subject to Commission oversight to prevent anti-competitive behavior.[75] For its fibre network, developed under the government-backed Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB) initiative, Chorus has been subject to a dedicated regulatory regime since December 2021, following amendments via the Telecommunications (New Regulatory Framework) Amendment Act 2018.[76] This includes price-quality regulation administered by the Commerce Commission, which sets multi-year revenue caps and quality targets; for the period 1 January 2025 to 31 December 2028, Chorus's allowable revenue from specified fibre services is capped at NZ$4.1 billion.[77] In Chorus Limited v Minister for the Digital Economy and Communications NZHC 3602, Chorus successfully challenged the lawfulness of certain ministerial regulations under the Telecommunications Act related to fibre services, with the High Court ordering the severance of offending provisions.[78] Additionally, Chorus must comply with information disclosure requirements under the Telecommunications (Regulated Fibre Service Providers) Regulations 2019, enabling public scrutiny of its performance, costs, and pricing for fibre backhaul, distribution, and regulated services.[79] Chorus adheres to open access undertakings for fibre services, ensuring non-discriminatory terms for retail service providers (RSPs), as stipulated in its Deed of Open Access approved by the government.[80] The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) provides policy oversight, including fibre-specific regulations that anchor wholesale pricing to prevent excessive charges on downstream services.[78] As fibre coverage expands toward 100% of New Zealand premises by 2025, regulatory focus is shifting, with copper services facing potential deregulation in fibre-enabled areas to reflect declining usage, though full retirement remains tied to service obligations like telecommunications service obligations (TSO) for voice in remote locations.[81] The Commerce Commission monitors compliance through periodic reviews and can impose penalties for breaches, as seen in past investigations into fibre access terms.[82]Government Contracts, Subsidies, and Stake Sales
Chorus Limited has been a primary beneficiary of government funding through the Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB) initiative, under which the Crown committed up to $929 million in structured debt and equity to support the company's fiber network deployment.[83] This funding, channeled via Crown Fibre Holdings (later restructured as Crown Infrastructure Partners), formed part of a public-private partnership where the government subsidized approximately 40-50% of build costs in targeted areas to accelerate nationwide fiber rollout, completed in December 2022.[84] The concessional terms of this finance, including lower-than-market interest rates on debt portions, effectively acted as a subsidy to reduce Chorus's capital costs for UFB Phase 1 and subsequent expansions.[84] In parallel, Chorus secured contracts under the Rural Broadband Initiative (RBI), a $300 million government program launched in 2011 to enhance connectivity in underserved areas.[85] As the successor to Telecom New Zealand's obligations, Chorus completed a $234 million cabinet upgrade phase of RBI by June 2016, deploying improved fixed-line broadband to over 110,000 rural households and businesses through enhancements to existing copper infrastructure.[86] This work fulfilled deed requirements for open access and minimum speeds, with government subsidies covering deployment costs in low-density regions where private investment alone was uneconomical.[87] Regarding stake sales, the New Zealand government announced on October 9, 2025, its intent to divest remaining UFB-related securities in Chorus, including approximately $643 million in debt, non-voting equity, and warrants valued collectively near $700 million.[88] [89] These holdings originated from the Crown's $1 billion total investment in the fiber network but were retained post-rollout without ongoing policy justification, as the UFB initiative had achieved its coverage targets.[88] [8] Finance Minister Nicola Willis described the potential sale, possibly early in 2026, as a prudent balance sheet optimization rather than asset liquidation, emphasizing repayment terms on the interest-free loan components.[90] Opposition critics, including Labour Party figures, labeled it a sale of "family silverware," arguing it prematurely monetizes public infrastructure contributions.[91] No RBI-specific equity stakes have been reported for sale, as those contracts emphasized service delivery over ownership instruments.[86]Financial Performance
Revenue Sources and Growth Trends
Chorus Limited derives the majority of its revenue from wholesale access services provided to retail service providers (RSPs) for fixed-line broadband delivery over its copper and fibre networks, including unbundled bitstream services (UBS) and regulated bitstream services under the Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB) initiative.[30] Ancillary revenue streams include field services for network installation and maintenance, infrastructure services such as backhaul and co-location for data centres, value-added network services, and minor contributions from copper recycling and other operations.[92] Fibre-related services, particularly gigabit passive optical network (GPON) broadband, have become the dominant source, accounting for approximately 73% of total revenue in fiscal year 2025 (ended 30 June 2025), reflecting the ongoing migration from legacy copper infrastructure.[30] The following table summarizes the revenue breakdown for fiscal years 2024 and 2025:| Category | FY2025 (NZ$m) | FY2024 (NZ$m) | Change (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fibre Broadband (GPON) | 745 | 697 | +6.9 |
| Fibre Premium (P2P) | 64 | 69 | -7.2 |
| Copper Broadband | 56 | 83 | -32.5 |
| Copper Voice | 17 | 28 | -39.3 |
| Field Services | 64 | 67 | -4.5 |
| Infrastructure | 35 | 33 | +6.1 |
| Value-Added Services | 26 | 26 | 0 |
| Other | 5 | 4 | +25 |
| Total | 1,014 | 1,010 | +0.4 |