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Liberty Latin America Ltd.

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FY2020 Annual Report · Liberty Latin America Ltd.
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UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
Form 10-K

☑ ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the fiscal year ended

December 31, 2020

OR

☐ TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the transition period from                     to                    

Commission file number 001-38335

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
(Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)

Bermuda
(State or Other Jurisdiction of Incorporation or Organization)

98-1386359
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)

2 Church Street,
 Hamilton
(Address of Principal Executive Offices)

HM 11
(Zip Code)

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (441) 295-5950 or (303) 925-6000

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

Title of Each Class
Class A Common Shares, par value $0.01 per share
Class C Common Shares, par value $0.01 per share

Trading Symbols
LILA
LILAK

Name of Each Exchange on Which Registered
The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC
The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC

Indicate by check mark if the Registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.    Yes  ☑        No  ☐

Indicate by check mark if the Registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act.    Yes  ☐        No  ☑

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: none

Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for
such shorter period that the Registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.    Yes  ☑        No  ☐

Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter)
during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the Registrant was required to submit such files).    Yes  ☑        No  ☐

Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company or an emerging growth company. See the
definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. Check one:

Large Accelerated Filer

Smaller Reporting Company

☑
☐

Accelerated Filer

Emerging Growth Company

☐
☐

Non-Accelerated Filer

☐

If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the Registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting
standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act  ☐

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has filed a report on and attestation to its management’s assessment of the effectiveness of its internal control over financial reporting under Section
404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting firm that prepared or issued its audit report.  ☑

Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant is a shell company as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. Yes ☐ No ☑

State the aggregate market value of the voting and non-voting common equity held by non-affiliates computed by reference to the price at which the common equity was last sold, or the average
bid and asked price of such common equity, as of the last business day of the registrant’s most recently completed second fiscal quarter: $1.5 billion.

The number of outstanding common shares of Liberty Latin America Ltd. as of January 31, 2021 was: 49,011,035 Class A; 1,932,386 Class B; and 181,128,981 Class C.

Portions of the definitive proxy statement for the Registrant’s 2021 Annual General Meeting of Shareholders are incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K.

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE

 
 
 
 
LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Item 1.
Item 1A.
Item 1B.
Item 2.
Item 3.
Item 4.

Item 5.
Item 6.
Item 7.
Item 7A.
Item 8.
Item 9.
Item 9A.
Item 9B.

Item 10.
Item 11.
Item 12.
Item 13.
Item 14.

Business
Risk Factors
Unresolved Staff Comments
Properties
Legal Proceedings
Mine Safety Disclosures

PART I

PART II

Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Shareholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities
Selected Financial Data
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
Financial Statements and Supplementary Data
Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure
Controls and Procedures
Other Information

Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance
Executive Compensation
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Shareholder Matters
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence
Principal Accountant Fees and Services

PART III

Item 15.
Item 16.

Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules
Form 10-K Summary

PART IV

Page
Number

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I-33
I-53
I-54
I-54
I-54

II-1
II-3
II-4
II-50
II-54
II-54
II-54
II-56

III-1
III-1
III-1
III-1
III-1

IV-1
IV-4

 
 
 
Item 1.    BUSINESS

(a) General Development of Business

PART I

Liberty Latin America Ltd. (Liberty Latin America) is a registered company in Bermuda that primarily includes:

(i)

(ii)

Cable  &  Wireless  Communications  Limited  and  its  subsidiaries  (collectively  C&W),  which  includes  Cable  &  Wireless  Panama,  S.A.
(CWP);

Liberty Communications PR Holding LP and its subsidiaries (collectively Liberty Puerto Rico), which include Liberty Communications
of  Puerto  Rico  LLC  (LCPR)  and,  as  of  October  31,  2020  and  as  further  described  in  note  4,  Liberty  Mobile  Inc.  and  its  subsidiaries
(Liberty Mobile);

(iii) VTR Finance N.V. and its subsidiaries (collectively VTR, which includes VTR.com SpA (VTR.com)); and

(iv) LBT CT Communications, S.A. and its subsidiary, Cabletica S.A. (Cabletica).

VTR,  Liberty  Communications  PR  Holding  LP  and  LCPR  were  formerly  known  as  VTR  Finance  B.V.,  Leo  Cable  LP  and  Liberty  Cablevision  of
Puerto  Rico  LLC,  respectively.  C&W  owns  less  than  100%  of  certain  of  its  consolidated  subsidiaries,  including  The  Bahamas  Telecommunications
Company Limited (C&W Bahamas) (a 49%-owned entity that owns all of our operations in the Bahamas), Cable & Wireless Jamaica Limited (C&W
Jamaica) (a 92%-owned entity that owns the majority of our operations in Jamaica), and CWP (a 49%-owned entity that owns most of our operations in
Panama). Liberty Latin America owns 80% of LBT CT Communications S.A.

We  are  an  international  provider  of  fixed,  mobile  and  subsea  telecommunications  services.  We  provide  residential  and  business-to-business  (B2B)
services in (i) over 20 countries across Latin America and the Caribbean, through two of our reportable segments, “C&W Caribbean and Networks” and
“C&W Panama”, (ii) Chile and Costa Rica, through our reportable segment, “VTR/Cabletica”, and (iii) Puerto Rico, through our reportable segment,
Liberty Puerto Rico. Through our “Networks & LatAm” business, C&W Caribbean and Networks also provides (i) B2B services in certain other countries
in Latin America and the Caribbean and (ii) wholesale communication services over its subsea and terrestrial fiber optic cable networks that connect over
40 markets in that region.

In the following text, the terms “Liberty Latin America,” “we,” “our,” “our company” and “us” may refer, as the context requires, to Liberty Latin

America or collectively to Liberty Latin America and its subsidiaries.

We were originally formed as a Bermuda company on July 11, 2017, as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Liberty Global plc (Liberty Global) under the
name LatAm Splitco Ltd. and we changed our name to Liberty Latin America Ltd. on September 22, 2017. During October 2017, the Board of Directors of
Liberty Global authorized a plan to distribute to the holders of its ordinary shares (the LiLAC Shares) common shares in our company (the Split-Off),
which was completed on December 29, 2017. The LiLAC Shares were tracking shares, which were intended to reflect or “track” the economic performance
of Liberty Global’s “LiLAC Group” rather than the economic performance of Liberty Global as a whole. The LiLAC Group comprised the same entities
as Liberty Latin America at the time of the Split-Off.

References in the following text to our assets, liabilities or businesses reflect the historical information of (i) certain former subsidiaries of Liberty
Global for periods prior to the Split-Off and (ii) Liberty Latin America and its consolidated subsidiaries for the period following the Split-Off. Although
Liberty  Latin  America  was  previously  reported  on  a  combined  basis,  the  financial  and  operating  information  presented  herein  includes  Liberty  Latin
America and its consolidated subsidiaries for all periods presented, unless stated otherwise.

Developments in the Business

We have expanded our footprint through fixed network new build and upgrade projects, mobile coverage expansion, and strategic acquisitions. Our
new build projects consist of network programs pursuant to which we pass additional homes and businesses with our broadband communications network.
We are also upgrading networks to increase broadband speeds and the services we can deliver for our customers. During the past three years, we passed or
upgraded  over  1.2  million  additional  homes  and  commercial  premises.  We  have  made  strategic  acquisitions  to  drive  scale  benefits  across  our  business,
enhancing our ability to innovate and deliver quality services, content and products to our customers. Within the last three years, we completed, or have
entered into definitive agreements to complete, the following transactions:

I-1

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the  acquisition  on  October  31,  2020,  of  AT&T’s  wireless  and  wireline  operations  in  Puerto  Rico  and  the  U.S.  Virgin  Islands  in  an  all-cash
transaction (the AT&T Acquisition) based upon an enterprise value of $1.95 billion;

on July 30, 2020, we entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Telefónica S.A.’s operations in Costa Rica in an all-cash transaction based
upon an enterprise value of $500 million on a cash- and debt-free basis (the Telefónica-Costa Rica Acquisition).  The  transaction  is  subject  to
certain customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals, and is expected to close in the first half of 2021;

the disposition on November 5, 2019 of Cable & Wireless Seychelles based on an enterprise value of approximately $104 million to a consortium
of local investors (the Seychelles Disposition);

the acquisition on March 31, 2019 of an 87.5% stake from the government of Curacao in United Telecommunications Services N.V. (UTS, and the
acquisition, the UTS Acquisition), which provides fixed and mobile services to the island nations of Curacao, St. Maarten, St. Martin, Bonaire, St.
Eustatius and Saba, and on September 10, 2019 of the remaining 12.5% from the government of St. Maarten, each in an all cash transaction;

the acquisition on October 17, 2018 of Searchlight Capital Partners L.P.’s 40% interest in both Leo Cable LP and Leo Cable L.L.C., which in turn
gave us 100% ownership of Liberty Puerto Rico, in exchange for 9,500,000 unregistered Class C common shares; and

the acquisition on October 1, 2018 of an 80% stake in Cabletica (the Cabletica Acquisition), which is a leading cable operator in Costa Rica that
provides television, broadband internet and fixed-line telephony services to residential customers, from Televisora de Costa Rica S.A. in an all
cash transaction.

For information regarding our material financing transactions, see note 10 to our consolidated financial statements included in Part II of this Annual

Report on Form 10-K.

Forward-looking Statements

Certain statements in this Annual Report on Form 10-K constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation
Reform Act of 1995. To the extent that statements in this Annual Report on Form 10-K are not recitations of historical fact, such statements constitute
forward-looking statements, which, by definition, involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or
implied  by  such  statements.  In  particular,  statements  under  Item  1.  Business, Item 1A. Risk Factors, Item 7. Management’s  Discussion  and  Analysis  of
Financial Condition and Results of Operations and Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk may contain forward-looking
statements, including statements regarding: our business, product, foreign currency and finance strategies; our property and equipment additions; grants or
renewals of licenses; subscriber growth and retention rates; changes in competitive, regulatory and economic factors; the timing and impacts of proposed
transactions, including the Telefónica-Costa Rica Acquisition; anticipated changes in our revenue, costs or growth rates; debt levels; our liquidity and our
ability  to  access  the  liquidity  of  our  subsidiaries;  credit  risks;  the  interest  rate  risks  associated  with  the  phasing  out  of  LIBOR;  internal  control  over
financial reporting; foreign currency risks; compliance with debt, financial and other covenants; our future projected contractual commitments and cash
flows; and other information and statements that are not historical fact. Where, in any forward-looking statement, we express an expectation or belief as to
future results or events, such expectation or belief is expressed in good faith and believed to have a reasonable basis, but there can be no assurance that the
expectation or belief will result or be achieved or accomplished. In evaluating these statements, you should consider the risks and uncertainties discussed
under Item 1A. Risk Factors and Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk, as well as the following list of some but not all of
the factors that could cause actual results or events to differ materially from anticipated results or events:

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economic and business conditions and industry trends in the countries in which we operate;

the competitive environment in the industries in the countries in which we operate, including competitor responses to our products and services;

fluctuations in currency exchange rates, inflation rates and interest rates;

our relationships with third-party programming providers and broadcasters and the ability to acquire programming;

our relationships with suppliers and licensors and the ability to maintain equipment, software and certain services;

instability in global financial markets, including sovereign debt issues and related fiscal reforms;

I-2

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our ability to obtain additional financing and generate sufficient cash to meet our debt obligations;

the impact of restrictions contained in certain of our subsidiaries’ debt instruments;

consumer disposable income and spending levels, including the availability and amount of individual consumer debt;

changes in consumer viewing preferences and habits, including on mobile devices that function on various operating systems and specifications,
limited bandwidth, and different processing power and screen sizes;

customer acceptance of our existing service offerings, including our video, broadband internet, fixed-line telephony, mobile and business service
offerings, and of new technology, programming alternatives and other products and services that we may offer in the future;

our ability to manage rapid technological changes;

the impact of 5G and wireless technologies on broadband internet;

our ability to maintain or increase the number of subscriptions to our video, broadband internet, fixed-line telephony and mobile service offerings
and our average revenue per household and mobile subscriber;

our ability to provide satisfactory customer service, including support for new and evolving products and services;

our ability to maintain or increase rates to our subscribers or to pass through increased costs to our subscribers;

the impact of our future financial performance, or market conditions generally, on the availability, terms and deployment of capital;

changes  in,  or  failure  or  inability  to  comply  with,  government  regulations  in  the  countries  in  which  we  operate  and  adverse  outcomes  from
regulatory proceedings;

government intervention that requires opening our broadband distribution networks to competitors;

our ability to renew necessary regulatory licenses, concessions or other operating agreements and to otherwise acquire future spectrum or other
licenses that we need to offer new mobile data or other technologies or services;

our ability to obtain regulatory approval and satisfy other conditions necessary to close acquisitions and dispositions, and the impact of conditions
imposed  by  competition  and  other  regulatory  authorities  in  connection  with  acquisitions,  such  as  with  respect  to  the  Telefónica-Costa  Rica
Acquisition;

our ability to successfully acquire new businesses and, if acquired, to integrate, realize anticipated efficiencies from and implement our business
plan with respect to the businesses we have acquired or that we expect to acquire, such as with respect to the Telefónica-Costa Rica Acquisition;

changes in laws or treaties relating to taxation, or the interpretation thereof, in the U.S. or in other countries in which we operate and the results of
any tax audits or tax disputes;

changes in laws and government regulations that may impact the availability and cost of capital and the derivative instruments that hedge certain
of our financial risks;

the ability of suppliers and vendors, including third-party channel providers and broadcasters (including our third-party wireless network provider
under our mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) arrangement), to timely deliver quality products, equipment, software, services and access;

the availability of attractive programming for our video services and the costs associated with such programming, including retransmission and
copyright fees payable to public and private broadcasters;

uncertainties inherent in the development and integration of new business lines and business strategies;

our ability to adequately forecast and plan future network requirements, including the costs and benefits associated with our network extension
and upgrade programs;

the availability of capital for the acquisition and/or development of telecommunications networks and services, including property and equipment
additions;

problems  we  may  discover  post-closing  with  the  operations,  including  the  internal  controls  and  financial  reporting  process,  of  businesses  we
acquire, such as with respect to the AT&T Acquisition and the Telefónica-Costa Rica Acquisition;

the effect of any of the identified material weaknesses in our internal control over financial reporting;

I-3

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piracy, targeted vandalism against our networks, and cybersecurity threats or other security breaches, including the leakage of sensitive customer
data, which could harm our business or reputation;

the outcome of any pending or threatened litigation;

the loss of key employees and the availability of qualified personnel;

the effect of any strikes, work stoppages or other industrial actions that could affect our operations;

changes in the nature of key strategic relationships with partners and joint venturers;

our equity capital structure;

our ability to realize the full value of our intangible assets;

changes in and compliance with applicable data privacy laws, rules, and regulations;

our ability to recoup insurance reimbursements and settlements from third-party providers;

our ability to comply with economic and trade sanctions laws, such as the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC);
and

events  that  are  outside  of  our  control,  such  as  political  conditions  and  unrest  in  international  markets,  terrorist  attacks,  malicious  human  acts,
hurricanes and other natural disasters, pandemics, including the COVID-19 pandemic, and other similar events.

The broadband distribution and mobile service industries are changing rapidly and, therefore, the forward-looking statements of expectations, plans
and intent in this Annual Report on Form 10-K are subject to a significant degree of risk. These forward-looking statements and the above described risks,
uncertainties and other factors speak only as of the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K, and we expressly disclaim any obligation or undertaking to
disseminate any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statement contained herein, to reflect any change in our expectations with regard thereto, or
any other change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on any
forward-looking statement.

(b) Description of Business

Overview

We are a leading communications company with operations in Puerto Rico, Chile, Panama, Costa Rica, the Caribbean, including Jamaica, and other
parts of Latin America. The communications and entertainment services that we deliver to our residential and business customers include video, broadband
internet, telephony and mobile services. In most of our operating footprint, we offer a “triple-play” of bundled services of video, internet and telephony in
one subscription. We are also focused on leveraging our full-service product suite to deliver fixed-mobile convergence offerings. Available fixed service
offerings depend on the bandwidth capacity of a particular system and whether it has been upgraded for two-way communications.

Our business products and services also include enterprise-grade connectivity, data center, hosting and managed solutions, as well as IT solutions with
customers  ranging  from  small  and  medium  enterprises  to  international  companies  and  governmental  agencies.  We  also  operate  an  extensive  subsea  and
terrestrial fiber optic cable network that connects over 40 markets in the region, providing connectivity solutions both within and outside our operating
footprint.

We  are  the  largest  fixed-line  provider  of  high-speed  broadband  and  video  services  across  a  number  of  our  markets,  including  Puerto  Rico,  Chile,
Jamaica  and  Trinidad  and  Tobago.  We  also  operate  the  largest  telephony  network  in  most  of  our  C&W  markets  where  we  provide  residential
communications  services.  In  addition,  we  offer  mobile  services  throughout  most  of  our  operating  footprint,  including  Puerto  Rico  and  the  U.S.  Virgin
Islands. Across C&W’s markets, we are a mobile network operator in Panama and most of our Caribbean markets, including the Bahamas and Jamaica. As
a network provider, we are able to offer a full range of voice and data services, including value-added, data-based and fixed-mobile converged services. In
Chile, VTR provides mobile services as an MVNO and leases a third-party’s radio access network. For a breakdown of revenue by major category, see note
21 to our consolidated financial statements in Part II of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

I-4

Our operating brands include the following:

C&W

VTR.com

Liberty Puerto Rico

Cabletica

Trends in Market Demand

In  December  2019,  COVID-19  was  reported  in  Wuhan,  China.  On  March  11,  2020,  the  World  Health  Organization  declared  the  outbreak  a
“pandemic,” pointing to the sustained risk of further global spread. To date, confirmed cases of COVID-19 have been experienced in each of the markets in
which we operate. During 2020, COVID-19 has negatively impacted our operations, primarily within our C&W Caribbean and Networks, C&W Panama
and VTR/Cabletica segments, due to resulting lockdowns, moratoriums, cancellation of live sporting events, and mobility, travel and tourism restrictions
across many of the markets in which we operate. The implications of these restrictions have been (i) the issuance of discounts to customers, (ii) the pause in
certain managed service projects, particularly with government agencies, (iii) at VTR, customers experiencing network connection-related issues stemming
from  the  significant  increase,  over  a  short  period  of  time,  in  the  capacity  usage  by  our  customers,  and  (iv)  delayed  or  deferred  customer  payments  and
increased customer churn. In VTR, our most competitive consumer fixed market, we experienced increased revenue generating unit churn during the third
quarter following network challenges related to the increased bandwidth demand earlier in the year. We have carried out a number of operational actions to
improve the experience for our customers. Within our mobile operations, the lockdowns negatively impacted, primarily at C&W Caribbean and Networks
and C&W Panama during the second quarter of 2020, our customers’ ability to recharge their prepaid mobile devices. In addition, we experienced declines
in inbound roaming activity as a result of travel restrictions and reduced tourism activities in the markets in which we operate. These factors collectively
resulted  in  declines  in  revenue  within  our  B2B  and  mobile  operations  and  lower  ARPU  (as  defined  below)  associated  with  our  residential  fixed
subscription  services.  Given  the  impacts  of  COVID-19  continue  to  rapidly  evolve,  the  extent  to  which  COVID-19  may  further  impact  our  financial
condition or results of operations continues to be uncertain and cannot be predicted at this time.

I-5

Operating Data

The following tables present certain operating data as of December 31, 2020. The tables reflect 100% of the data applicable to each of our reportable
segments, and for the key markets within the segments of C&W Caribbean and Networks, C&W Panama and VTR/Cabletica, regardless of our ownership
percentage. For additional information regarding terms used in the following tables, see the Operating Data Glossary below.

Homes
Passed

Two-way
Homes
Passed

Customer
Relationships

Total
RGUs

Video
RGUs

Internet
RGUs

Telephony
RGUs

Total Mobile
Subscribers (d)

C&W Caribbean and Networks:

Jamaica
The Bahamas
Trinidad and Tobago
Barbados
Other

Total C&W Caribbean and Networks

C&W Panama (a) (b)

Total C&W
VTR/Cabletica:

VTR
Cabletica
Total VTR/Cabletica (c)

Liberty Puerto Rico (d)

Total

613,700 
120,900 
334,600 
140,400 
331,700 

613,700 
120,900 
334,600 
140,400 
311,900 
1,541,300  1,521,500 
687,900 
2,229,200  2,209,400 

687,900 

633,000 

3,848,600  3,424,700 
627,100 
4,481,600  4,051,800 
1,137,700  1,137,700 
7,848,500  7,398,900 

296,700 
35,300 
157,000 
82,400 
233,900 
805,300 
184,700 
990,000 

1,465,800 
268,300 
1,734,100 
480,500 
3,204,600 

634,200 
68,200 
332,500 
174,200 
374,100 
1,583,200 
405,500 
1,988,700 

2,848,800 
443,200 
3,292,000 
905,600 
6,186,300 

128,400 
7,400 
106,200 
33,700 
77,800 
353,500 
89,900 
443,400 

259,600 
26,400 
140,100 
69,400 
177,300 
672,800 
155,900 
828,700 

246,200 
34,400 
86,200 
71,100 
119,000 
556,900 
159,700 
716,600 

1,065,500 
206,900 
1,272,400 
235,200 
1,951,000 

1,286,100 
214,800 
1,500,900 
434,300 
2,763,900 

497,200 
21,500 
518,700 
236,100 
1,471,400 

992,300 
181,100 
— 
118,600 
394,500 
1,686,500 
1,461,900 
3,148,400 

280,300 
— 
280,300 
1,022,600 
4,451,300 

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

RGU  balances  do  not  include  58,600  RGUs  that,  due  to  the  impact  of  COVID-19,  have  not  been  disconnected  in  accordance  with  our  normal
disconnect policy for non-payment and continue to receive services.

During the fourth quarter of 2020, we announced that we would shut down our DTH operations in Panama, which went into effect in January 2021,
and as such, the associated customer relationships and RGUs are no longer included in our subscriber count.

Our homes passed in Costa Rica include 40,000 homes on a third-party network that provides us long-term access.

On  October  31,  2020,  we  closed  the  AT&T  Acquisition  at  which  point  Liberty  Puerto  Rico  began  to  provide  mobile  services.  Mobile  subscriber
information associated with the AT&T Acquisition is preliminary and subject to adjustment until we have completed our review of such information
and determined that it is presented in accordance with our policies. RGU balances do not include 11,200 fixed RGUs representing customers that,
due to the impact of COVID-19, have not been disconnected in accordance with our normal disconnect policy for non-payment and were moved to
an "essential services plan", a basic service plan.

I-6

(d) Mobile subscribers comprise the following:

C&W Caribbean and Networks:

Jamaica
The Bahamas
Barbados
Other

Total C&W Caribbean and Networks

C&W Panama (a)
Total C&W

VTR
Liberty Puerto Rico (b)

Total

Prepaid

Postpaid

Total

970,000 
150,800 
88,400 
346,500 
1,555,700 
1,338,900 
2,894,600 
11,300 
239,000 
3,144,900 

22,300 
30,300 
30,200 
48,000 
130,800 
123,000 
253,800 
269,000 
783,600 
1,306,400 

992,300 
181,100 
118,600 
394,500 
1,686,500 
1,461,900 
3,148,400 
280,300 
1,022,600 
4,451,300 

(a)

(b)

RGU balances do not include 12,400 mobile subscribers that, due to the impact of COVID-19, have not been disconnected in accordance with
our normal disconnect policy for non-payment and continue to receive services.

Postpaid mobile subscribers include 126,800 Corporate Responsible Users (CRU). A CRU represents an individual receiving mobile services
through an organization that has entered into a contract for mobile services with us and the organization is responsible for the payment of the
CRU’s mobile services. Mobile subscriber information associated with the AT&T Acquisition is preliminary and subject to adjustment until
we have completed our review of such information and determined that it is presented in accordance with our policies.

I-7

Operating Data Glossary

Customer Relationships – The number of customers who receive at least one of our video, internet or telephony services that we count as RGUs, without
regard to which or to how many services they subscribe. To the extent that RGU counts include equivalent billing unit (“EBU”) adjustments, we reflect
corresponding  adjustments  to  our  customer  relationship  counts.  For  further  information  regarding  our  EBU  calculation,  see  Additional  General  Notes
below. Customer relationships generally are counted on a unique premises basis. Accordingly, if an individual receives our services in two premises (e.g., a
primary home and a vacation home), that individual generally will count as two customer relationships. We exclude mobile-only customers from customer
relationships.

Homes Passed – Homes, residential multiple dwelling units or commercial units that can be connected to our networks without materially extending the
distribution plant. Certain of our homes passed counts are based on census data that can change based on either revisions to the data or from new census
results.

Internet (Broadband) RGU – A home, residential multiple dwelling unit or commercial unit that receives internet services over our network.

Mobile Subscribers – Our mobile subscriber count represents the number of active subscriber identification module (“SIM”) cards in service rather than
services  provided.  For  example,  if  a  mobile  subscriber  has  both  a  data  and  voice  plan  on  a  smartphone  this  would  equate  to  one  mobile  subscriber.
Alternatively, a subscriber who has a voice and data plan for a mobile handset and a data plan for a laptop (via a dongle) would be counted as two mobile
subscribers.  Customers  who  do  not  pay  a  recurring  monthly  fee  are  excluded  from  our  mobile  telephony  subscriber  counts  after  periods  of  inactivity
ranging from 30 to 60 days, based on industry standards within the respective country. In a number of countries, our mobile subscribers receive mobile
services pursuant to prepaid contracts.

Revenue Generating Unit (RGU) – RGU is separately a video RGU, internet RGU or telephony RGU. A home, residential multiple dwelling unit, or
commercial  unit  may  contain  one  or  more  RGUs.  For  example,  if  a  residential  customer  in  Chile  subscribed  to  our  video  service,  fixed-line  telephony
service and broadband internet service, the customer would constitute three RGUs. RGUs are generally counted on a unique premises basis such that a
given  premises  does  not  count  as  more  than  one  RGU  for  any  given  service.  On  the  other  hand,  if  an  individual  receives  one  of  our  services  in  two
premises (e.g., a primary home and a vacation home), that individual will count as two RGUs for that service. Each bundled video, internet or telephony
service is counted as a separate RGU regardless of the nature of any bundling discount or promotion. Non-paying subscribers are counted as RGUs during
their free promotional service period. Some of these subscribers may choose to disconnect after their free service period. Services offered without charge
on a long-term basis (e.g., VIP subscribers or free service to employees) generally are not counted as RGUs. We do not include subscriptions to mobile
services in our externally reported RGU counts. In this regard, our RGU counts exclude our separately reported postpaid and prepaid mobile subscribers.

SOHO - Small office/ home office customers.

Telephony RGU – A home, residential multiple dwelling unit or commercial unit that receives voice services over our network. Telephony RGUs exclude
mobile subscribers.

Two-way Homes Passed –  Homes  passed  by  those  sections  of  our  networks  that  are  technologically  capable  of  providing  two-way  services,  including
video, internet and telephony services.

Video RGU – A home, residential multiple dwelling unit or commercial unit that receives our video service over our network primarily via a digital video
signal while subscribing to any recurring monthly service that requires the use of encryption-enabling technology. Video RGUs that are not counted on an
EBU basis are generally counted on a unique premises basis. For example, a subscriber with one or more set-top boxes that receives our video service in
one premises is generally counted as just one RGU.

Additional General Notes:

Most of our operations provide telephony, broadband internet, data, video or other B2B services. Certain of our B2B service revenue is derived from
SOHO customers that pay a premium price to receive enhanced service levels along with video, internet or telephony services that are the same or similar
to  the  mass  marketed  products  offered  to  our  residential  subscribers.  All  mass  marketed  products  provided  to  SOHO  customers,  whether  or  not
accompanied by enhanced service levels and/or premium prices, are included in the respective RGU and customer counts of our operations, with only those
services  provided  at  premium  prices  considered  to  be  “SOHO  RGUs”  or  “SOHO  customers.”  To  the  extent  our  existing  customers  upgrade  from  a
residential product offering to a SOHO product offering, the number of SOHO RGUs and SOHO customers will increase, but there is no impact to our total
RGU or customer counts. With the exception of our B2B SOHO customers, we generally do not count customers of B2B services as customers or RGUs
for external reporting purposes.

I-8

Certain  of  our  residential  and  commercial  RGUs  are  counted  on  an  EBU  basis,  including  residential  multiple  dwelling  units  and  commercial
establishments,  such  as  bars,  hotels,  and  hospitals,  in  Chile  and  Puerto  Rico.  Our  EBUs  are  generally  calculated  by  dividing  the  bulk  price  charged  to
accounts in an area by the most prevalent price charged to non-bulk residential customers in that market for the comparable tier of service. As such, we
may experience variances in our EBU counts solely as a result of changes in rates.

While we take appropriate steps to ensure that subscriber and homes passed statistics are presented on a consistent and accurate basis at any given
balance sheet date, the variability from country to country in (i) the nature and pricing of products and services, (ii) the distribution platform, (iii) billing
systems, (iv) bad debt collection experience and (v) other factors add complexity to the subscriber and homes passed counting process. We periodically
review  our  subscriber  and  homes  passed  counting  policies  and  underlying  systems  to  improve  the  accuracy  and  consistency  of  the  data  reported  on  a
prospective  basis.  Accordingly,  we  may  from  time  to  time  make  appropriate  adjustments  to  our  subscriber  and  homes  passed  statistics  based  on  those
reviews.

Fixed Network and Product Penetration Data (%)

Panama

Jamaica

The Bahamas

Trinidad and
Tobago

Barbados

Other C&W

Chile

Costa Rica

Puerto Rico

Network data:

Two-way homes

passed 

(1)

Homes passed:

(2)

(2)

Cable 
FTTx 
VDSL 

(2)

Product penetration:
(3)
Television 
Broadband internet 
Fixed-line telephony 
Double-play 
(5)
Triple-play 

(4)

(5)

(4)

100 %

100 %

100 %

100 %

100 %

94 %

89 %

99 %

100 %

59 %
24 %
16 %

13 %
23 %
23 %
42 %
39 %

45 %
14 %
41 %

21 %
42 %
40 %
38 %
38 %

31 %
35 %
34 %

6 %
22 %
28 %
52 %
21 %

100 %
— %
— %

32 %
42 %
26 %
9 %
51 %

— %
100 %
— %

24 %
49 %
51 %
32 %
40 %

68 %
12 %
20 %

23 %
57 %
38 %
32 %
14 %

96 %
4 %
— %

28 %
38 %
15 %
36 %
29 %

97 %
3 %
— %

33 %
34 %
3 %
51 %
7 %

98 %
2 %
— %

21 %
38 %
21 %
11 %
39 %

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

(5)

Percentage of total homes passed that are two-way homes passed.

Percentage  of  two-way  homes  passed  served  by  a  cable,  fiber-to-the-home/-cabinet/-building/-node  (FTTx)  or  digital  subscriber  line  (DSL)
network, as applicable. “VDSL” refers to both our DSL and very high-speed DSL technology networks.

Percentage of total homes passed that subscribe to television services.

Percentage of two-way homes passed that subscribe to broadband internet or fixed-line telephony services, as applicable.

Percentage  of  total  customers  that  subscribe  to  two  services  (double-play  customers)  or  three  services  (triple-play  customers)  offered  by  our
operations (video, broadband internet and fixed-line telephony), as applicable.

I-9

Video, Broadband Internet & Fixed-Line Telephony and Mobile Services

Video services:

Panama

Jamaica

The
Bahamas

Trinidad
and
Tobago

Barbados

Other C&W

Chile

Costa Rica

Network

System 

(1)

VDSL/HFC/FTTx VDSL/HFC/FTTx VDSL/FTTx

HFC

FTTx

VDSL/HFC/FTTx HFC/FTTx HFC/FTTx

Puerto
Rico

HFC /
FTTx

Broadband
internet
service:
Maximum

download
speed offered
(Mbps)

Mobile services:

Network

Technology
(3)

600

150

300

500

1,000

100 

(2)

600

200

500

LTE

LTE

LTE

—

LTE

LTE / HSPA+

LTE

—

5G

(1)     These are the primary systems used for delivery of services in the countries indicated. “HFC” refers to hybrid fiber coaxial cable networks.

(2)    Represents an average as speeds vary by market.

(3)    Fastest available technology. “LTE” refers to the Long Term Evolution Standard. “HSPA+” refers to Evolved High Speed Packet Access.

I-10

 
Products and Services

We offer our customers a comprehensive set of converged mobile, broadband, video and fixed-line telephony services. In the table below, we identify

the services we offer in each of the countries in the Caribbean and Latin America where we have operations.

Mobile

Broadband
internet

Video

Fixed-line
telephony

C&W:

Anguilla
Antigua & Barbuda
Barbados
Bonaire
British Virgin Islands
Cayman Islands
Curaçao
Dominica
Grenada
Jamaica
Montserrat
Saba
St. Eustatius
St. Maarten
St. Martin
St. Kitts & Nevis
St. Lucia
St. Vincent & the Grenadines
The Bahamas
Trinidad and Tobago
Turks & Caicos

Panama

VTR/Cabletica:

Chile
Costa Rica

Puerto Rico

X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
—
X

X

X
—

X

X
X
X
—
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
—
—
X
—
X
X
X
X
X
X

X

X
X

X

X
X
X
—
X
X
X
X
X
X
—
—
—
—
—
X
X
X
X
X
X

X

X
X

X

X
—
X
—
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
—
—
—
—
X
X
X
X
X
X

X

X
X

X

We  believe  that  our  ability  to  offer  our  customers  greater  choice  and  selection  in  bundling  their  services  enhances  the  attractiveness  of  our  service

offerings, improves customer retention, minimizes churn and increases overall customer lifetime value.

Residential Services

Mobile  Services.  We  offer  mobile  services  throughout  most  of  our  operating  footprint.  We  are  a  mobile  network  provider,  delivering  high-speed
services in Puerto Rico, Panama and all but one of our Caribbean markets, but excluding Costa Rica. In Chile, we provide mobile services as an MVNO,
where VTR leases a third-party’s radio access network. As a mobile network provider, we are able to offer a full range of voice and data services, including
value-added services. Where available, we expect our mobile services will allow us to provide an extensive converged product offering with video, internet
and fixed-line telephony, allowing our customers connectivity in and out-of-the-home. We hold spectrum licenses as a mobile network provider, with terms
typically ranging from 10 to 15 years across our C&W markets. In Puerto Rico, spectrum licenses are typically held for perpetuity with the exception of
CBRS spectrum which has a term of 10 years.

I-11

Subscribers to our mobile services pay varying monthly fees depending on whether the mobile service is bundled with one of our other services or
includes mobile data services over their phones, tablets or laptops. Our mobile services are available on a postpaid or prepaid basis. We offer our customers
the  option  to  purchase  mobile  handsets  with  purchase  terms  typically  related  to  whether  the  customer  selects  a  prepaid  or  postpaid  plan.  Customers
selecting a prepaid plan or service pay in advance for a pre-determined amount of airtime and/or data and generally do not enter into a minimum contract
term. Customers subscribing to a postpaid plan generally enter into contracts ranging from 12 to 24 months. The long-term contracts are often taken with a
subsidized mobile handset. Our mobile services include voice, SMS and internet access via data plans.

Broadband  Internet  Services.  To  support  our  customers’  expectations  for  seamless  connectivity,  we  are  expanding  our  networks  to  make  ultrafast
broadband  available  to  more  people.  This  includes  investment  in  the  convergence  of  our  fixed  and  mobile  data  systems  and  making  wireless  systems
available  in  the  home.  During  2020,  our  Network  Extension  programs  (as  defined  and  described  below)  passed  approximately  387,000  homes  across
Liberty Latin America. We provide next generation WiFi and telephony gateway products to our subscribers. These products enable us to maximize the
impact of our ultrafast broadband networks by providing reliable wireless connectivity anywhere in the home. These gateway products can be self-installed
and have an automatic WiFi optimization function, which selects the best possible wireless frequency.

The  internet  speeds  we  offer  are  one  of  our  differentiators,  as  customers  spend  more  time  streaming  video  and  other  bandwidth-heavy  services  on
multiple  devices.  As  a  result,  we  are  continuing  to  invest  in  additional  bandwidth  and  technologies  to  increase  internet  speeds  throughout  our  Latin
America and Caribbean footprint. We plan to continue the upgrade and expansion of our fixed networks so that we can deploy high-speed internet service
to additional customers in the coming years.

Our residential subscribers access the internet via DSL over our fixed-line telephony networks, FTTx or hybrid fiber coaxial cable networks and with
cable modems connected to their internet capable devices, including personal computers, or wirelessly via next generation WiFi and telephony gateway
products. In each of our markets, we offer multiple tiers of internet service. The speed of service depends on location and the tier of service selected by our
subscribers.

Our  value-added  services  include  security  measures  and  online  storage.  Mobile  broadband  internet  services  are  also  available  through  our  mobile
services  described  above.  Subscribers  to  our  internet  service  pay  a  monthly  fee  based  on  the  tier  of  service  selected.  In  addition  to  the  monthly  fee,
customers pay an activation service fee upon subscribing to an internet service. This one-time fee may be waived for promotional reasons. We determine
pricing for each different tier of internet service through an analysis of speed, market conditions and other factors.

Video Services. We offer video services in Puerto Rico, Chile, Costa Rica, and in most of C&W’s residential markets. To meet the demands of our
customers,  we  have  enhanced  our  video  services  with  next  generation,  market-leading  digital  television  platforms  that  enable  our  customers  to  control
when and where they watch their programming. These advanced services are delivered over our FTTx, VDSL and hybrid fiber coaxial cable networks and
include  a  digital  video  recorder  (DVR),  a  video-on-demand  (VoD)  offering  and  an  advanced  electronic  programming  guide.  In  most  of  our  markets,
customers can pause their programming while a live broadcast is in progress as well as access a selection of channels and VoD content through a mobile
application. We have also launched “Replay TV” in many of our markets. Replay TV allows a viewer to watch a TV program from the beginning after it
has started or has concluded.

In Chile, our TV Everywhere app (branded “VTR Play”) extends the advanced video viewing experience to connected devices beyond the set-top box,
including mobile phones and tablets. In our Caribbean video markets and Panama, we offer a comprehensive internet streaming video service (branded
“Flow ToGo” and “+TV Go”) that allows our video customers to stream an increasing number of channels with a broadband connection in and out of the
home  and  on  multiple  devices.  In  Puerto  Rico,  our  video  customers  can  watch  their  favorite  channels  on  the  TiVO  serviced  Liberty  Go  app  as  well  as
access over 65 applications from content providers to watch streamed linear and VoD programming by authenticating as a Liberty Puerto Rico customer.

Our operations with video services offer multiple tiers of digital video programming starting with a basic video service. In addition, subscribers have
the option to select extended and/or premium subscription tiers. Fixed digital video services require a set-top box provided by us that also enables access to
enhanced features such as VoD. Subscribers to our basic digital video services pay a fixed monthly fee and generally can elect to receive, in most of our
markets, a skinny entry tier or a basic tier, including a number of high definition (HD) channels. We also offer a variety of premium packages combining
linear channels and VoD. In the few markets where our analog service is still available, including Costa Rica, subscribers to that service typically receive
fewer channels than subscribers to our digital services, with the number of channels dependent on their location. Subscribers to our digital services in each
case receive the channels available through our analog service. In all of our video operations, we continue to upgrade our systems to expand our digital
services and encourage our remaining analog

I-12

subscribers to convert to a digital or premium digital service. Discounts to our monthly service fees are generally available to a subscriber who selects a
bundled service of at least two of the following services: video, internet and fixed-line telephony.

We tailor our video services in each country of operation based on local preferences, culture, demographics and local regulatory requirements. Our
channel  offerings  include  the  most  relevant  content  to  our  subscribers,  combining  general  entertainment,  sports,  movies,  documentaries,  lifestyle,  news,
adult, children and foreign channels, as well as local, regional and international broadcast networks. We also operate several channels in the Caribbean,
including a leading Caribbean sports network, Flow Sports, and through a consolidated joint venture, RUSH, the channel operating the rights to broadcast
the Premier League across the Caribbean (excluding Puerto Rico).

Telephony  Services.  C&W  is  the  incumbent  fixed-line  telephony  service  provider  in  most  of  its  residential  markets.  VTR  is  the  second  largest
residential fixed-line telephony operator, and a leading provider within its footprint. LCPR and Cabletica also offer telephony services over their respective
cable networks.

We offer multi-feature telephony service over our various fixed networks, including cable, FTTx and copper networks. Depending on location, these
services are provided via either circuit-switched telephony or voice-over-internet-protocol (VoIP) technology. As we continue to develop and invest in new
technologies  that  will  enhance  our  customers’  experiences,  we  are  replacing  obsolete  switches  with  VoIP  technology  and  older  copper  networks  with
modern fiber optics. These digital telephony services cover international and domestic services.

Business Services

C&W is one of the largest business service providers in its markets, and business services represent a significant portion of C&W’s revenue. We offer
cloud-based integrated communication services, connectivity and wholesale solutions to carriers and businesses throughout the Caribbean and in parts of
Latin America via our subsea and terrestrial fiber optic cable networks. Our systems include long-haul terrestrial backbone and metro fiber networks that
provide access to major commercial zones, wireless carrier cell sites and customers in key markets within our operating footprint. Our networks deliver
critical infrastructure for the transit of growing traffic from businesses, governments and other telecommunications operators across the region, particularly
to the high-traffic destination of the United States.

I-13

Below is a map of our subsea fiber network.

I-14

With over 50,000 km of fiber optic cable, and a capacity of over 3 terabits per second (Tbps), C&W is able to carry large volumes of voice and data
traffic on behalf of our customers, businesses and carriers. C&W’s networks also allow us to provide point-to-point, clear channel wholesale broadband
capacity  services  and  IP  transit,  superior  switching  and  routing  capabilities  and  local  network  services  to  telecommunications  carriers,  internet  service
providers (ISPs) and large corporations. In the case of outages on portions of the cable systems, our network provides inbuilt resiliency through our traffic
re-routing  capability.  C&W  has  received  recognition  for  its  wholesale  services.  In  2020,  C&W  was  recognized  by  Frost  &  Sullivan  with  the  Latin
American  and  Caribbean  Hosted  IP  Telephony  and  UCaaS  Growth  Excellence  Frost  Radar  Award.  Our  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks  business  was
named the Best Marketing Team and Best Social Media Campaign at the 2020 Global Carrier Awards. We hold several notable certifications, including the
International ISO 27001 Certification, which reinforces the commitment to customer data safety, as well as CISCO Cloud and Managed Services Partner
Master Certification, along with several others such as SOC 1 Type 2 and SOC 2 Type 2 attestations and PCI-DSS for select services.

We  also  provide  services  to  business  customers  across  various  segments,  from  small  and  medium  businesses  to  larger  corporate  and  enterprise
organizations  including  multi-national  companies  and  governments.  We  work  with  our  business  customers  to  customize  the  information  and
communication services they require. We target specific industry segments, such as financial institutions, the hospitality sector, education institutions and
government ministries and agencies. We have agreements to provide our services over fully managed and monitored network bandwidth, dedicated fiber
lines and third-party fiber networks. We offer tailored solutions that combine our standard services with value-added features, such as dedicated customer
care and enhanced service performance monitoring, to meet specific customer requirements. Our business products and services include voice, broadband,
enterprise-grade connectivity, network security, unified communications and a range of cloud based IT solutions, such as Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS),
disaster recovery and other service offerings. We also offer a range of data, voice and internet services to carriers, ISPs and mobile operators. Our extensive
fiber optic cable networks allow us to typically deliver redundant, end-to-end connectivity. Our networks also allow us to provide business customers our
services over fiber lines and local networks; thereby, seamlessly connecting businesses anywhere in the region. We continuously enhance our capabilities
and offerings to be the preferred provider for the business market.

Our business services fall into five broad categories:

• VoIP  and  circuit-switch  telephony,  on-premise  and  hosted  private  branch  exchange  solutions  and  conferencing  options,  hosted  contact  center

solutions;

• Data  services  for  internet  access,  virtual  private  networks,  high  capacity  point-to-point,  point-to-multi-point  and  multi-point-to-multi-point

services, managed networking services such as wide area networks and WiFi networks;

• Wireless services for mobile voice and data;

•

Interactive TV service with specialized channel lineups for targeted industries; and

• Value  added  services,  including  cloud  IT  services  such  as  disaster  recovery  as  a  service,  backup  services,  and  IaaS; managed network security

services; and specialized services such as digital signage, retail analytics and location based marketing.

The extensive reach of our network and assets, as well as our comprehensive set of capabilities positions us to meet the needs of carriers, businesses
and government customers that are searching for a capable, progressive provider to manage their ever more complex communications, connectivity and
information technology needs.

Technology

In many of our markets, we transmit our broadband internet, video and fixed-line telephony services over a hybrid fiber coaxial (HFC) cable network,
and increasingly through FTTx networks. An HFC network consists primarily of fiber networks that we connect to the home over the last few hundred
meters  by  coaxial  cable  and  an  FTTx  network  uses  fiber-to-the-home/-cabinet/-building/-node.  In  several  of  our  Caribbean  markets,  we  transmit  our
services over a fixed network consisting of FTTx, VDSL or DSL copper lines. Approximately 95% of our networks allow for two-way communications
and are flexible enough to support our current services as well as new services.

I-15

We closely monitor our network capacity and customer usage. We continue to take actions and explore improvements to our technologies that will

increase our capacity and enhance our customers’ connected entertainment experience. These actions include:

•

recapturing bandwidth and optimizing our networks by:

◦

◦

◦

◦

◦

◦

◦

increasing the number of nodes in our markets;

increasing the bandwidth of our hybrid fiber coaxial cable networks;

converting analog channels to digital;

bonding additional data over cable service interface specification (DOCSIS) 3.0 channels;

deploying VDSL over our fixed telephony network;

replacing copper lines with modern optic fibers; and

using digital compression technologies.

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

freeing spectrum for high-speed internet, VoD and other services by encouraging customers to move from analog to digital services;

increasing the efficiency of our networks by moving headend functions (encoding, transcoding and multiplexing) to cloud storage systems;

enhancing our network to accommodate further business services;

using our wireless technologies to extend services outside of the home;

offering remote access to our video services through laptops, smart phones and tablets;

expanding the availability of next generation decoder and set-top boxes and related products, as well as developing and introducing online media
sharing and streaming or cloud-based video; and

testing new technologies.

We  are  engaged  in  network  extension  and  upgrade  programs  across  Liberty  Latin  America.  We  collectively  refer  to  these  network  extension  and
upgrade programs as the “Network Extensions.” Through the Network Extensions, we continue to expand our fixed networks pursuant to which we pass or
upgrade  homes  and  businesses  with  our  broadband  communications  network.  In  addition,  we  look  for  mobile  service  opportunities  where  we  have
established cable networks and have expanded our fixed-line networks where we have a strong mobile offering. This will allow us to offer converged fixed-
line and mobile services to our customers.

We deliver high-speed data and fixed-line telephony over our various fixed networks, including cable, FTTx and copper networks. These networks are
further  connected  via  our  subsea  and  terrestrial  fiber  optic  cable  networks  that  provide  connectivity  within  and  outside  the  region.  Our  subsea  network
cables terminating in the United States carry over 3 Tbps, which represent less than 10% of their potential capacity based on current deployed technology,
presenting  us  with  significant  growth  opportunities.  In  Puerto  Rico,  our  network  includes  a  fiber  ring  around  the  island  that  provides  enhanced
interconnectivity points to the island’s other local and international telecommunications companies.

As noted above, we operate one of the largest subsea fiber networks in the region and our systems include long-haul terrestrial backbone and metro
fiber networks that provide access to major commercial zones, wireless carrier cell sites and customers in key markets within our operating footprint. For
more information about our subsea network, see —Business Services above.

Mobile

We operate mobile networks in all of our consumer markets except Chile (where we operate as an MVNO), Costa Rica and Trinidad & Tobago. Our
networks  deliver  high-speed  services  across  our  markets,  with  approximately  95%  LTE  population  coverage.  Our  primary  wireless  networks  use
GSM/EDGE, 3G and 4G LTE technologies, which we offer in most of the

I-16

countries where we operate. We aim to increase the speed of transmission of our data services and have been expanding our 3G and 4G LTE coverage. We
transmit  wireless  calls  and  data  through  radio  frequencies  that  we  use  under  spectrum  licenses.  We  have  a  diversified  portfolio  of  frequencies  which
support 3G, 4G and 5G (Puerto Rico & USVI only) technologies. While spectrum is a limited resource, and, as a result, we may face spectrum and capacity
constraints on our wireless network in certain countries. We believe our current spectrum portfolio will allow us to meet subscribers’ needs in the coming
years and minimal further investment, although we will continue to evaluate our need to acquire additional frequencies to supplement our existing spectrum
portfolio. For example, in 2020, we acquired CBRS (3.5 GHz) spectrum in Puerto Rico and the USVI in the auction for that frequency. In Puerto Rico and
USVI  the  700  MHz  FirstNet  (Band  14)  is  usable  by  us  (when  not  occupied  by  first  responders’  traffic)  but  owned  by  AT&T  and  the  First  Responders
Public Private Partnership.

We continue to invest significant capital in expanding our network capacity and reach and to address spectrum and capacity constraints on a market-
by-market basis. Our prime 5G deployed market is Puerto Rico and USVI where over 90% of the population is served by our 5G capable network. We
continually look for opportunities to expand our 5G footprint to other countries where a positive business case exists. Similarly, we are investing to build a
new mobile core in Puerto Rico, which when built, will be virtualized, redundant and “pooled” across all our countries/islands in the Caribbean region
(inside and outside hurricane regions) to provide redundancy and resilience. These pooled and redundant network elements will be connected by our owned
and  operated  diverse  submarine  cable  routes  with  automatic  alternate  routing.  Across  all  our  mobile  operations  we  continually  strive  to  improve  our
network  performance  by  commissioning  annual  competitive  performance  benchmarking  studies  and  undertaking  customer  experience  improvement
programs. In Puerto Rico and the USVI, we are a part of the national US Firstnet (Emergency/First Responders) network, which necessitates above-average
network resilience and other customer performance requirements, subject to governmental penalties for non-compliance.

Supply Sources

Content

With telecommunication companies increasingly offering similar services, content is one of the drivers for customers in selecting a provider of video,
broadband and/or wireless services. Therefore, in addition to providing products that allow our customers to consume content whenever and wherever they
want, we continue to invest into content that matters the most to our customers. Our programming strategy is based on:

•

•

•

•

product (enabling access through home and mobile screens at anytime, including live, restart, catch-up, personal recording, on-demand and third
party apps);

proposition (exceeding our customers’ expectations on content and entertainment by offering access to the wider range of channels and third party
app services);

acquisition (investment in the most relevant channels, sports and on-demand); and

partnering (alliances with content partners and leading distributors to aggregate the best linear, non linear and third party apps content).

Except for Flow Sports and Flow 1 services in the Caribbean, and the RUSH sports channel operated by a consolidated joint venture with the Digicel
Group,  we  license  almost  all  of  our  programming  and  on-demand  content  through  distribution  agreements  with  third-party  content  providers,  including
broadcasters  and  leading  cable  networks.  For  such  licenses,  we  generally  pay  a  monthly  fee  on  a  per  subscriber  basis,  through  long-term  programming
licenses.  In  our  distribution  agreements,  we  seek  to  include  the  rights  to  offer  the  licensed  channels  and  programming  to  our  authenticated  customers
through  multiple  delivery  platforms  including  through  our  apps  for  IP-connected  mobile  and  fixed  devices,  and  our  websites.  We  also  acquire  rights  to
make available, in selected markets, our and third party video services to mobile and/or broadband subscribers that are not subscribers to fixed TV services.

With respect to rights for the sports and entertainment services we operate directly or in a joint-venture in the Caribbean, we seek to license the most
locally relevant sports content, such as the English Premier League, UEFA Champions League and Bundesliga soccer, Indian Premier League cricket, and
WWE Wrestling. Our latest video device that is distributed to a growing number of markets, including Puerto Rico, Chile and Panama, also enables our
customers to access, through its App Store, leading subscription video on demand (SVOD) services such as Netflix, HBOMax and Amazon Prime Video.

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Mobile Handsets and Customer Premises Equipment

We use a variety of suppliers for mobile handsets to offer our customers mobile services. For other customer premises equipment, we purchase from a
number of different suppliers and regularly assess production lead times to ensure supply continuity and implement dual sourcing strategies to mitigate
further risks when applicable. Customer premises equipment includes set-top boxes, modems, WiFi routers, extenders and similar devices. For each type of
equipment, we retain specialists to provide customer support. For our broadband services, we use a variety of suppliers for our network equipment and the
various services we offer.

Software Licenses

We  license  software  products,  including  email  and  security  software  as  well  as  content,  such  as  news  feeds,  from  several  suppliers  for  our  internet
services and internal IT platforms. The agreements for these products require us to pay a per subscriber fee or a one-off software license fee and a share of
advertising revenue for content licenses. For our mobile network operations and our fixed-line telephony services, we license software products, such as
voicemail, text messaging and caller ID, from a variety of suppliers. For these licenses we seek to enter into long-term contracts, which generally require us
to pay based on usage of the services.

Access Arrangements

For our mobile services provided through MVNO arrangements at VTR, we are dependent on third-party wireless network providers, with whom we
contract  to  carry  the  mobile  communications  traffic  of  our  customers.  We  seek  to  enter  into  medium  to  long-term  arrangements  for  this  service.  Any
termination of these arrangements could significantly impact our mobile services provided through VTR.

Regulatory Matters

Video distribution, broadband internet, fixed-line telephony and mobile businesses are regulated in each of the markets in which we operate, and the
scope  of  regulation  varies  from  market  to  market.  Adverse  regulatory  developments  could  subject  our  businesses  to  a  number  of  risks.  Regulation,
including conditions imposed on us by competition or other authorities as a requirement to close acquisitions or dispositions, could limit growth, revenue
and the number and type of services offered and could lead to increased operating costs and property and equipment additions. In addition, regulation may
restrict our operations and subject them to further competitive pressure, including pricing rules and restrictions, interconnect and other access obligations,
and restrictions or controls on content, including content provided by third parties. Failure to comply with current or future regulation could expose our
businesses to various penalties.

C&W Caribbean and Networks

The video, broadband, telephony and mobile services provided by C&W Caribbean and Networks are subject to regulation and enforcement by various
governmental and regulatory entities in each of the jurisdictions where such services are provided. The scope and reach of these regulations are distinct in
each  market.  Generally,  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks  provides  services  in  accordance  with  licenses  and  concessions  granted  by  national  authorities
pursuant to national telecommunication legislation and associated regulations. Certain of these regulatory requirements are summarized below.

As  the  incumbent  telecommunications  provider  in  many  of  its  jurisdictions,  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks  is  subject  to  significant  regulatory
oversight with respect to the provision of fixed-line and mobile telephony services. Generally, in these markets, C&W Caribbean and Networks operates
under a government issued license or concession that enables it to own and operate its telecommunication networks, including the establishment of wireless
networks  and  the  use  of  spectrum.  These  licenses  and  concessions  are  typically  non-exclusive  and  have  renewable  multi-year  terms  that  include
competitive, qualitative and rate regulation. Licenses and concessions are scheduled to expire over the next two years in the Cayman Islands and Turks and
Caicos Islands. We believe we have complied with all local requirements to have existing licenses renewed and have provided all necessary information to
enable  local  authorities  to  process  applications  for  renewal  in  a  timely  manner.  In  addition,  in  some  of  the  ECTEL  (as  defined  below)  states  we  are
operating under expired licenses and have applied for renewal of such licenses. We expect that such licenses will be granted or renewed, as applicable, on
the same or substantially similar terms and conditions in a timely manner. Pending issuance of new or renewed licenses or concessions, we continue to
operate on the same terms and conditions as prior to the licenses expiring.

With respect to licenses for mobile spectrum, the initial grant of the spectrum is sometimes subject to an auction process, but in a number of other
cases, the license may be granted on the basis of an administrative process at a set level of fees for a fixed period of time, typically to coincide with carrier
licenses, subject to the payment of annual fees and compliance with

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applicable  license  requirements.  In  very  rare  cases,  spectrum  previously  assigned  to  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks  may  be  re-allocated  by  regulatory
authorities to other operators in the market. Alternatively, spectrum sought by C&W Caribbean and Networks may not be available for grant, due to prior
historical grants or due to the need to avoid interference with neighboring markets particularly in the Caribbean. By and large, spectrum assignments, once
granted, remain unchanged for the duration of a license and beyond.

Rate  regulation  of  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks’  telephony  services  typically  includes  price  caps  that  set  the  maximum  rates  it  may  charge  to
customers, or legislation that requires consent from a regulator prior to any price increases. In addition, all regulators determine and set the rates that may
be  charged  by  all  telephony  operators,  including  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks,  for  interconnect  charges,  access  charges  between  operators  for  calls
originating on one network that are completed through connections with one or more networks of other providers, and charges for network unbundling
services. In addition, in certain markets, regulators set, or are seeking to set, mobile roaming rates. Interconnection rates (and primarily mobile termination
and roaming rates) in the telecommunications industry worldwide are decreasing, and we are experiencing this trend towards lower interconnection rates in
our markets.

In recent years, a number of markets in which C&W Caribbean and Networks operates have demonstrated an increased interest in regulating various
aspects of broadband internet services due to the increasing importance of high speed broadband. National regulators have also demonstrated an increased
focus on the issues of network resilience, broadband affordability and penetration, quality of services and consumer rights.

Certain regulators are also seeking to mandate third-party access to C&W Caribbean and Networks’ network infrastructure, including dark fiber and
landing stations, as well as to regulate wholesale services and prices. Any such decision and application to grant access to our network infrastructure may
strengthen our competitors by granting them the ability to access our network to offer competing products and services without making the corresponding
capital intensive infrastructure investment. In addition, any resale access granted to competitors on favorable economic terms that are not set by the free
market could adversely impact our ability to maintain or increase our revenue and cash flows. The extent of any such adverse impacts ultimately will be
dependent  on  the  extent  that  competitors  take  advantage  of  the  resale  access  ultimately  afforded  to  our  network,  the  pricing  mandated  by  regulatory
authorities and other competitive factors or market developments.

As  an  example  of  infrastructure  sharing,  the  Office  of  Utilities  Regulation  (OUR)  in  Jamaica  has  completed  a  consultation  process  on  telecom
facilities sharing rules that would require all licensees to share infrastructure (including dark fiber, ducts, subsea cable landing stations and mobile network
towers) with third parties, including competitors, without any requirement of making a corresponding capital intensive infrastructure investment. Once the
rules are finalized by the Chief Parliamentary Counsel in Jamaica, they will be formally published and thereafter become law. Our operations in Jamaica
intend to appeal to the telecommunications tribunal and finally to the courts for changes to be made to the adverse provisions of the new rules or to revoke
them entirely. The process of such a challenge is likely to be long and we cannot at this time determine the possibility of a successful outcome.

In addition, the Eastern Caribbean Telecommunications Authority (ECTEL), the regulatory body for telecommunications in five Eastern Caribbean
States  (Commonwealth  of  Dominica,  Grenada,  St.  Kitts  &  Nevis,  St.  Lucia  and  St.  Vincent  and  the  Grenadines),  has  adopted  an  Electronic
Communications Bill that may have a material adverse impact on C&W Caribbean, and Networks’ operations in the ECTEL member states. The proposed
Electronic Communications Bill includes provisions relating to:

•

•

•

•

net  neutrality  principles  mandating  equal  access  to  all  content  and  applications  regardless  of  the  source  and  without  favoring,  degrading,
interrupting, intercepting, blocking access or throttling speeds;

subscription television rate regulation;

regulations implementing market dominance rules;

network unbundling at regulated rates; and

• mandated unbundled access to all landing station network elements at cost-based rates.

We currently cannot determine the impact these provisions will have on our operations because national regulators are required to conduct extensive

market reviews before adopting specific measures and these measures might be reconsidered in

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accordance with the market reviews. It is currently unclear as to when the new legislation will be enacted. We expect that consensus on the final version of
the bill will take some time. As such, the timing and ultimate effect of the bill is unclear.

In  addition  to  rate  regulation,  several  markets  in  which  C&W  operates  have  imposed,  or  are  considering  imposing,  regulations  designed  to  further
encourage competition, including introducing requirements related to unbundling, network access to third parties, and local number portability (LNP) for
fixed and mobile services. Jurisdictions such as the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands and Jamaica have implemented fixed and mobile LNP and ECTEL has
implemented mobile LNP. Other jurisdictions, including Barbados, have considered or begun to implement LNP. Trinidad and Tobago has yet to implement
fixed LNP, although mobile LNP rules are already in place.

The pay television service provided in certain C&W markets is subject to, among other things, subscriber privacy regulations, data protection laws and

regulations, and the must-carry rule (as defined below) and retransmission consent rights of broadcast stations.

C&W is also subject to universal service obligations in a number of markets. These obligations vary in specificity and extent, but they are generally
related  to  ensuring  widespread  geographic  coverage  of  networks  and  that  the  populations  of  C&W’s  individual  markets  have  access  to  basic
telecommunication  services  at  minimum  quality  standards.  In  a  number  of  cases,  C&W  is  required  to  support  universal  access/service  goals  through
contributions to universal service funds or participate in universal service-related projects. In Panama, there is a proposal to modify the universal service
law to expand its scope to include television services and provide conditions that would diminish the value of the contribution to the fund vis-a-vis projects
covered by the law. An additional process regarding coverage of maintenance cost of universal service law phones is ongoing.

In  addition  to  the  industry-specific  regimes  discussed  above,  C&W’s  operating  companies  must  comply  with  both  specific  and  general  legislation
concerning,  among  other  matters,  data  retention,  consumer  protection  and  electronic  commerce.  These  operating  companies  are  also  subject  to  national
level regulations on competition and on consumer protection.

In  Trinidad  and  Tobago,  C&W  was  required  by  the  Telecommunications  Authority  of  Trinidad  and  Tobago  (TATT),  in  connection  with  TATT’s
approval of C&W’s acquisition of Columbus International Inc. in March 2015, to dispose of its 49% shareholding in the Telecommunications Services of
Trinidad and Tobago Limited (TSTT). The disposal of C&W’s stake in TSTT is not complete. We cannot predict when, or if, we will be able to dispose of
this investment at an acceptable price. As such, no assurance can be given that we will be able to recover the carrying value of our investment in TSTT.

With respect to C&W’s B2B and networks business in Latin America, we are subject to significantly less regulation in the markets in which we operate
compared  to  our  residential  businesses  described  above.  We  do  have  the  licenses  in  Latin  America  and  the  U.S.  necessary  to  operate  wholesale  and
enterprise  services  in  all  countries  in  which  we  operate.  Although  the  legal  framework  in  Latin  America  changes  from  country  to  country,  we  do  own
international/local carrier and Internet or data services licenses in every jurisdiction in which we operate. Most licenses are granted for a 10 to 15 year term.

The  networks  business  operates  over  50,000  km  of  submarine  fiber  optic  cable  systems  in  the  U.S.,  the  Caribbean  and  Latin  America.  These  sub-
systems have cable landing stations and facilities in the U.S. and its territories. These facilities are regulated by the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC), the Department of Homeland Security and other U.S. governmental agencies that impose additional reporting and licensing obligations on C&W
Caribbean and Networks.

C&W Panama

C&W Panama is subject to regulatory entities, principally the National Authority of Public Services (ASEP), created in 1996 and modified in 2006
through Decree Law No. 10. ASEP regulates and controls the public services for the supply of drinking water, sanitary sewerage, telecommunications and
electricity. Also, C&W Panama is subject to the Authority for Consumer Protection and Defense of Competition (ACODECO), guarantor of consumer
protection and antitrust, which operates under the direction of the Ministry of Commerce and Industries.

By virtue of the Telecommunications Law 1996, public services in Panama are classified as “Type A services” and “Type B services,” with Mobile
Telephony  (STMC)  and  Personal  Communication  (PCS)  services  being  classified  as  Type  A  services.  Spectrum.  C&W  Panama  has  a  total  of  65MHz
allocated (20 MHz in the 700 MHz band, 20 MHz in the 1900 MHz band and 25 MHz in the 850 MHz band). Due to COVID-19, ASEP granted temporary
use from April 2020 and until June 30th, 2021, free of charge, of 30 MHz to each of the 4 operators, between 1710 – 1780 MHz and 2110 – 2180 MHz
(AWS Band).

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Concessions. C&W Panama holds thirteen concessions renewed for the following twenty years, available until the year 2037, except a pay TV license
that  was  renewed  in  2008  for  25  years.  C&W  Panama  decided  not  to  renew  the  concessions  corresponding  to  discontinued  or  not  provided  services
(facsimile retransmission service and conventional trunk systems service for public or private use), and the Concession #104 (Pay Phone Services), was
renewed under special conditions imposed by the regulator. C&W Panama was obliged to obtain regulator approval to remove public pay phones in places
where the service is no longer exclusive and are not profitable; the service can be provided by any other concessionaires in the territory of Panama. C&W
Panama  filed  a  legal  action  within  the  Supreme  Court  of  the  Republic  of  Panama,  opposing  the  aforementioned  condition  imposed  by  the  regulator,
however  in  2019,  the  Supreme  Court  confirmed  the  obligation  to  obtain  regulator  approval  and  the  necessity  to  define  a  procedure  to  formalize  each
disconnection.

Public Telephone Service. By means of Resolution AN No. 11208-Telco of May 3rd, 2017, renewed for the following twenty years the concession for
the  Public  and  Semi-Public  Terminal  Service  (identified  with  No.  104).  C&W  Panama  is  the  only  operator  that  provides  Public  Telephone  Service  in
Panama.

Fixed  Services  (Fixed-Line  Telephony,  Public  and  Semipublic  Telephone).  C&W  Panama  has  a  license  to  provide  Basic  Local,  National  and
International Telecommunications Services, as well as Public and Semipublic Terminals and Rental of Dedicated Voice Circuits, within the entire territory
of Panama until the year 2037. C&W Panama is a Type B concessionaire, with or without use of radio spectrum, subject to compliance with Law No. 31 of
February  8th,  1996,  Executive  Decree  No.  73  of  1997  and  the  Resolutions  issued  by  the  regulator  regarding  the  fulfillment  of  quality  goals  for  the
provision of these services, such as the attention to recommendations issued by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU).

Mobile Services. Through Contract DAF-034-2013, dated November 22nd, 2013, C&W Panama is authorized to install, maintain, manage, operate and
commercially  exploit  the  Mobile  Telephone  Service,  in  the  assigned  radio  spectrum  segments,  which  currently  C&W  Panama  has  65  MHz  (32.5MHz
uplink + 32.5MHz downlink), under the prepaid and post-paid contract modalities, public and semi-public telephones, including supplementary services
and other Mobile Telephony services, throughout Panama, which is valid until 2037.

Pay  Television  Service.  Initially,  the  concession  for  the  provision  of  the  pay  television  service  was  granted  to  the  International  Contact  Center
Company in 2008, and then the rights were transferred in favor of C&W Panama, whose provision is governed by Law No. 24/99, and its regulations in
Executive Decree No. 189/99 and No. 111/00. The license was granted to retransmit audio and video signals through coaxial cable and fiber optics in the
province of Panama, with a validity of 25 years, which was later extended to other provinces in the coverage area for the provision of paid TV service.

VTR / Cabletica

VTR

VTR  is  subject  to  regulation  and  enforcement  by  various  governmental  entities  in  Chile  including  the  Chilean  Antitrust  Authority,  the  Ministry  of
Transportation  and  Telecommunications  (the  Ministry)  through  the  Chilean  Undersecretary  of  Telecommunications  (SubTel),  the  National  Television
Council (CNTV) and the National Consumer Service (SERNAC).

In  addition  to  the  specific  regulations  described  below,  VTR.com  is  subject  to  certain  regulatory  conditions  which  were  imposed  by  the  Chilean
Antitrust Authority in connection with VTR.com’s combination with Metrópolis Intercom SA in April 2005. These conditions are indefinite and include,
among  others,  (i)  prohibiting  VTR.com  and  its  control  group  from  participating,  directly  or  indirectly  through  a  related  person,  in  Chilean  satellite  or
microwave television businesses, (ii) prohibiting VTR.com from using its market power over programmers without justification, (iii) prohibiting VTR.com
from obtaining exclusive broadcast rights, except for specific events, (iv) requiring VTR.com to offer its broadband capacity for resale of internet services
on a wholesale basis, and (v) requiring VTR to maintain a uniform single price policy for all of the national territory. In September 2019, VTR submitted a
petition  to  the  Chilean  Competition  Court  (TDLC)  to  lift  all  the  above-mentioned  conditions.  VTR  asserts  that  such  conditions  should  only  have  been
adopted for a transitional period and that they have been in place for an excessively long period during which the market structure and levels of competition
have  materially  changed.  Objections  were  filed  by  other  operators  and  by  the  Free  Competition  Prosecutor  and  SubTel.  In  December  2019,  the  TDLC
joined this procedure with an adversarial procedure initiated by AMC Networks Latin America LLC (AMC) against VTR. In 2019, AMC alleged that VTR
had  violated  condition  (ii)  noted  above  by  not  agreeing  to  a  content  distribution  agreement  with  AMC  (see  below  for  more  information  regarding  this
matter). We can’t estimate at this time when this matter will be resolved.

Video. The provision of pay television services requires a permit issued by the Ministry. Cable pay television permits are granted for an indefinite term

and are non-exclusive. As these permits do not involve radio electric spectrum, they are granted

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without ongoing duties or royalties. VTR.com has permits to provide cable pay television services in most of the medium- and large-sized markets in Chile.

Cable  television  service  providers  in  Chile  are  free  to  define  the  channels  and  content  included  in  their  services  and  are  not  required  to  carry  any
specific programming, except as described below. However, CNTV may impose sanctions on providers who are found to have run programming containing
excessive violence, adult content or other objectionable programming or advertising of certain categories of products within certain time slots throughout
the day. Pay television operators are directly responsible for violation of such prohibitions. Additionally, the Chilean Television Act (the Television Act)
requires pay television operators to offer a certain quota of cultural content and to distribute public interest campaigns.

The Television Act  establishes  a  retransmission  consent  regime  between  broadcast  television  concession  holders  and  pay  television  operators.  This
regime provides that once a broadcast operator achieves digital coverage of 85% of the population within its concession areas, the broadcast operator may
require that pay television operators enter into an agreement for the retransmission of its digital signal. In addition, the Television Act requires that the
technical or commercial conditions imposed by broadcast operators not discriminate among pay television operators. Also, the Television Act establishes a
must carry regime requiring pay television operators to distribute up to four local broadcast television channels in each operating area. The channels that
must  be  carried  by  any  particular  pay  television  operator  are  to  be  selected  by  CNTV.  The  full  implementation  of  the  retransmission  and  must  carry
regimes are still pending.

VTR.com’s  ability  to  change  its  channel  lineup  is  restricted  by  an  agreement  reached  with  SERNAC  in  July  2012  and  the  general  regulation
established by SubTel in February 2014 (by the Telecommunication Services General Rulemaking). This framework allows VTR.com  to  change  one  or
more channels from its lineup after a 60-day notice period to its subscribers. In such cases, VTR.com shall offer a channel of similar content and quality or
proportional compensation. Despite this, TVI, a mid-sized programmer in Chile, sued VTR in July 2016, after VTR’s decision to remove TVI’s channels
from its channel lineup. TVI argued that VTR was violating the condition set out in the 2005 VTR/Metrópolis merger conditions (as summarized above),
which prohibits VTR from using its market power to unjustifiably refuse to contract with programmers. The TDLC dismissed the lawsuit, but the Supreme
Court,  in  May  2019,  reversed  that  decision  questioning  the  termination  procedure  applied  by  VTR.  The  Supreme  Court  required  VTR  to  open  a  new
negotiation period and if no agreement was reached, to return TVI’s channels until the original contractual term is fulfilled. As a result, the TVI channels
have been reinstated on VTR’s channel lineup. Using the precedent from the TVI case, in August 2019, AMC sued VTR claiming a breach of the condition
related to contracting with programmers. This process is still pending and was joined with VTR’s petition to lift the 2005 merger conditions as described
above. Additionally, a consumer association filed a class action against VTR requesting that VTR compensate clients with a permanent discount on the
monthly rent for each change of channels or, in the alternative, the nullification of the power enshrined in VTR’s subscriber contract that authorizes the
company to change its channel lineup. This collective process is still pending.

Internet. A law passed in November 2017 requires all ISPs to apply for a public service concession for data transmission within three months of the
passage  of  such  law.  Because  VTR.com  operates  via  networks  that  were  previously  approved  by  SubTel, VTR.com  timely  applied  and  an  approval  is
pending.

A  law  on  internet  neutrality  prohibits  “arbitrary  blockings”  of  legal  content,  applications  or  services  and  the  provision  of  differentiated  service
conditions  according  to  the  origin  or  ownership  of  the  content  or  service  provided  through  the  internet.  Additionally,  the  law  authorizes  ISPs  to  take
measures to ensure the privacy of their users and provide virus protection and safety processes over their network, as long as these measures do not infringe
antitrust laws. Additional measures have been implemented, including obligations related to consumer information, traffic management policies, internet
quality of service requirements and notices required by law concerning the effective maximum and minimum traffic speeds offered under internet access
plans.

In order to protect the constitutional rights of privacy and safety of communications, ISPs are prohibited from undertaking surveillance measures over
data content on their networks. Also, special summary proceedings have been created in order to safeguard intellectual property rights against violations
committed through networks or digital systems. These proceedings include measures designed to withdraw, disqualify or block infringing content in the
ISP’s  network  or  systems.  The  law  also  provides  for  the  right  of  intellectual  property  owners  to  judicially  request  from  ISPs  the  delivery  of  necessary
information to identify the provider of infringing content.

A law passed in November 2017 requires all fixed and mobile ISPs to meet levels of quality of service, guarantee a minimum broadband throughput
based  on  the  offered  speed,  and  provide  their  subscribers  with  a  certified  measurement  tool  allowing  subscribers  to  verify  this  minimum  service  level,
imposing fines or penalties to ISPs if the service level is not fulfilled. During 2020, the Ministry issued the Regulation on the Organization, Operation, and
Public Tender Mechanism of the

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Independent  Technical  Body  (OTI)  which,  according  to  this  legal  framework,  will  be  responsible  for  performing  the  quality-of-service  measurements.
Also, SubTel issued a technical rule on the service levels that ISPs need to comply with in the provision of their internet service. Finally, as required by the
above regulation, major ISPs organized a Representative Committee and filed before SubTel a proposal of the terms and conditions of the public tender to
designate the OTI (which is not approved by Subtel yet).

Fixed-Line Telephony and Mobile Services. The provision of fixed-line telephony and mobile services requires a public telecommunications service
concession. VTR has  concessions  to  provide  fixed-line  telephony  in  most  major  and  medium-sized  markets  in  Chile.  Telephony  concessions  are  non-
exclusive  and  have  renewable  30-year  terms.  The  original  term  of  VTR’s  fixed-line  telephony  concessions  expires  in  November  2025.  Long  distance
telephony  services  are  considered  intermediate  telecommunications  services  and,  as  such,  are  also  regulated  by  the  Ministry.  VTR  has  concessions  to
provide this service, which is non-exclusive, for a 30-year renewable term expiring in September 2025.

VTR.com holds concessions to provide fixed wireless local telephony service on the 3.5 GHz band in several regions of the country. These concessions
have renewable 30-year terms, expiring in 2036. During 2018, SubTel partially froze 20MHz of the 50 MHz concession granted to VTR.com in order to
evaluate  future  5G  concession  auctions.  VTR.com  is  contesting  SubTel’s  legal  ability  to  take  such  a  measure.  In  November  2018,  Movistar  asked  the
TDLC to rule on whether the decision to keep part of the spectrum at 3.5 GHz available for immediate deployment (with potential use for mobile services),
was consistent with previous decisions requiring this band to be allocated to fixed services. Although the TDLC rejected Movistar’s request, it considered
that in order to allow the use of this already assigned spectrum for mobile services, SubTel should open public tenders to assign the concessions for mobile
services. This decision has been challenged before the Supreme Court by all interested parties, including VTR, and a final decision on the case is pending.

In January 2020, SubTel opened for public comments its plan for a 5G tender, which ended with a contest for four bands of spectrum: 20MHz in the
700  MHz  band,  30  MHz  in  the  AWS  Band,  150  MHz  in  the  3.5  MHz  band  (not  including  the  spectrum  previously  assigned  to  fixed  wireless  local
telephony), and 400 MHz in the 26 GHz band. Technical proposals were submitted in October 2020, and given that several competitors tied there was an
auction to define the winners. In February 2021, Entel, Movistar, WOM and Claro were awarded with several spectrum bands to provide mobile services
using 5G technologies. Additionally, the concessions granted in this tender allow SubTel to modify the licenses in case of non-use or inefficient use of the
spectrum.

With  respect  to  mobile  services,  in  2009,  SubTel  awarded  VTR.com  a  30MHz  license  in  the  1700/2100  MHz  band.  The  license  has  a  30-year
renewable term, expiring in 2040. Currently, antitrust bodies and the Supreme Court have declared a new cap structure for spectrum allocation, which is
variable depending on the macro band were spectrum is being assigned and the amount of spectrum available. Therein for the low macro-band from 0 to
1.000 MHz the cap is 32% of the band, from 1.001 MHz to 3000MHz the cap is 30% of the band, for 3001MHz band to 6000MHz band the cap is 30% and
for higher than 6001MHz the cap is 25%.

VTR.com has concessions to provide fixed-line telephony in most major and medium-sized markets in Chile. Telephony concessions are non-exclusive
and have renewable 30-year terms. The original term of VTR.com’s fixed-line telephony concessions expires in November 2025. Long distance telephony
services are considered intermediate telecommunications services and, as such, are also regulated by the Ministry. VTR.com has concessions to provide
this service, which is non-exclusive, for a 30-year renewable term expiring in September 2025.

There  are  no  universal  service  obligations  in  Chile.  However,  local  service  concession  holders  are  obligated  to  provide  telephony  service  to  all
customers that are within their service area or are willing to pay for an extension to receive service. All local service providers, including VTR.com, must
give long distance telephony service providers equal access to their network connections at regulated prices and must interconnect with all other public
service concession holders whose systems are technically compatible.

As a general rule, fixed-line telephony service providers are free to establish the rates directly charged to their customers, unless the Chilean Antitrust
Authority concludes that due to a lack of sufficient competition in the market, rates should be fixed by SubTel. However, SubTel sets the maximum rates
that may be charged by each operator for interconnect charges, access charges between operators for calls originating on one network that are completed
through connections with one or more networks of other providers. Rate regulation on interconnection charges is applicable to all fixed-line and mobile
telephony  companies,  including  VTR.com.  The  determination  of  the  maximum  rates  that  may  be  charged  by  operators  for  their  fixed-line  or  mobile
services are made on a case-by-case basis by SubTel and are effective for five years.

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Other Chilean Regulation

Price Increase.  The  Consumer  Rights  Protection  Law  has  been  interpreted  to  require  that  any  raise  in  rates  exceeding  inflation  must  be  previously
accepted and agreed to by subscribers. Although VTR.com disagrees with this interpretation, in July 2012, VTR.com reached an agreement with SERNAC
that  permits  VTR.com  to  make  adjustments  to  its  published  prices  twice  per  year  to  adjust  for  inflation,  except  those  services  that  are  subject  to  rate
regulation. VTR.com is generally prohibited from increasing the rates over the inflation adjustment. VTR.com may, however, cancel a subscriber’s contract
after 12 months and propose a new contract with new rate provisions. Once a year VTR.com may propose to its existing subscribers additional changes to
their rates, which must be accepted by the subscriber for the rates to go into effect.

Bundling. In 2012, the Chilean Antitrust Authority issued its regulation governing the on-net/off-net pricing practice in the mobile industry and the
offering of bundled telecommunication services. Pursuant to the terms of this regulation, as revised by the Chilean Supreme Court, mobile services may be
sold jointly with fixed-line services. However, promotional discounts are not permitted for these double-play offers. As for traditional bundling over the
same platform (e.g., bundled fixed-line services such as our double-play and triple-play packages, or bundled mobile services), this regulation provides that
such  services  may  be  bundled,  subject  to  certain  price  limitations.  These  limitations  require  that  the  total  price  for  a  bundle  must  be  greater  than  the
standalone price for the most expensive service included in the bundle. Also, when three or more services are bundled, the price for the bundle must be
greater than the sum of the standalone prices for each service in the bundle, excluding the lowest priced service.

Consumer’s Rights Protection Law. In 2018, a bill was enacted introducing significant new powers to SERNAC including a material increase in its

ability to levy fines and compensations.

Cabletica

Cabletica is subject to regulation and enforcement by various governmental entities in Costa Rica, including the Ministry of Science and Technology,
the  Costa  Rican  Telecommunications  Superintendence  (Sutel),  and  the  Consumer  Support  Office  of  the  Ministry  of  Economy,  Industry  and  Commerce
(MEIC). Cabletica holds a telecommunications services concession, expiring in 2028, issued by Sutel that authorizes the deployment and operation of its
wireline HFC network throughout the country. At the service layer, the concession permits: (i) paid television; (ii) the provision of fixed telephony service;
(iii) internet access; and (iv) data links.

Video. Cable television service providers in Costa Rica are free to define the channels and content included in their services and are not required to
carry any specific programming, except as described below. However, the Commission of Control and Qualification of Public Spectacles of the Ministry of
Justice  and  Peace  may  impose  sanctions  on  providers  that  have  run  programming  containing  excessive  violence,  adult  content,  or  other  objectionable
content. Pay television operators are directly responsible for violating such prohibitions.

The Costa Rican General Telecommunications Law (art.138) establishes a retransmission consent regime between broadcast television concessionaires
and pay television operators. This regime provides that (i) the concessionaires must include within their programming the Costa Rican television channels
that have coverage in at least sixty percent of the national territory, excluding Isla del Coco, which complies with at least fourteen minimum hours of daily
transmission,  and  (ii)  the  reception  of  the  signal  complies  with  the  minimum  signal  requirements  established  in  this  regulation,  which  have  acceptable
ratings and have the corresponding transmission rights.

Internet.  The  Regulation  of  Provision  and  Quality  of  Services  of  Sutel  establishes  minimum  quality  thresholds,  such  as  minimum  speeds,

oversubscription, and delay.

Fixed-Line Telephony Services. The current regulations separate VoIP fixed telephony from traditional fixed telephony (e.g., copper lines) and there is

no fixed number portability.

Other Costa Rican Regulation

The  powers  of  the  Agency  for  the  Protection  of  Data  of  Inhabitants  (Prohab)  are  stipulated  in  the  Law  on  the  Protection  of  the  Person  against  the
Processing  of  Personal  Data  (Law  No.  8968).  Its  functions  are  focused  on  compliance  with  data  protection  regulations.  The  Commission  to  Promote
Competition (Coprocom) is a maximum deconcentration body attached to MEIC. Its fundamental purpose is to comply with the provisions of the Law on
Promotion of Competition and Effective Defense of the Consumer (Law No. 7472) through the protection and promotion of (i) the process of competition
and free

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competition, (ii) investigating and sanctioning monopolistic practices, and (iii) other restrictions related to the efficient functioning of the market.

Liberty Puerto Rico

Liberty Puerto Rico is subject to regulation in Puerto Rico by various governmental entities at the Puerto Rico and the U.S. federal level, including the
FCC and the Puerto Rico Telecommunications Regulatory Bureau (TRB). TRB has primary regulatory jurisdiction in Puerto Rico at the local level and is
responsible  for  awarding  franchises  to  cable  operators  for  the  provision  of  cable  service  in  Puerto  Rico  and  regulating  cable  television  and
telecommunications services.

Our  business  in  Puerto  Rico  is  subject  to  comprehensive  regulation  under  the  United  States  Communications  Act  of  1934,  as  amended  (the
Communications Act),  which  regulates  communication,  telecommunication  and  cable  television  services.  The  Communications  Act  also  provides  the
general legal framework for, among other things, the provision of telephone services, services related to interconnection between telephone carriers, and
television, radio, cable television and direct broadcast satellite services.

The  FCC  and/or  the  TRB  have  the  authority  to  impose  sanctions,  including  warnings,  fines,  license  revocations  and,  in  certain  specific  cases,
termination of the franchise, although license revocation and franchise termination are rare. The Communications Act specifies causes for the termination
of  licenses,  including,  for  example,  the  failure  to  comply  with  license  requirements  and  conditions  or  to  pay  fines  or  fees  in  a  timely  manner.  Such
sanctions by the TRB and/or FCC can be appealed to, and reviewed by, Puerto Rican courts and U.S. federal courts.

In  May  2018,  the  FCC  established  the  Uniendo  a  Puerto  Rico  Fund  (UPR Fund)  to  provide  subsidies  for  the  deployment  and  hardening  of  fixed
wireline and mobile wireless communications networks in Puerto Rico. Stage 1 of the UPR Fund made $51 million of new funding available for Puerto
Rico  telecommunications  providers  following  Hurricanes  Maria  and  Irma  in  2017  (the  2017  Hurricanes).  Stage  2  of  the  UPR  fund  made  additional
funding available to providers of services over fixed wireline networks through a competitive bidding process, and to mobile wireless providers subject to
those providers meeting certain conditions.

To  be  eligible  for  Stage  2  UPR  funding  for  fixed  services,  Liberty  Puerto  Rico  requested  that  TB  designate  it  as  an  Eligible  Telecommunications
Carrier (ETC), which the TB did in June 2018. As part of its obligations as an ETC, Liberty Puerto Rico must offer services to low income customers
under  the  federal  Lifeline  Program  and  low-cost  services  to  schools  and  libraries  under  the  Schools  and  Libraries  Program  (E-Rate).  Both  programs
provide FCC subsidies to ensure access to telecommunications and broadband access services for specified classes of customers. Liberty Puerto Rico began
offering Lifeline services in April 2019 and will bid on Funding Year 2022 for E-Rate subsidies.

In  September  2019,  the  FCC  established  rules  governing  UPR  Fund  Stage  2  funding  to  support  certain  fixed  and  mobile  providers  of  voice  and
broadband service in Puerto Rico. The FCC stated that it would award up to $505 million over 10 years to eligible providers of fixed voice and broadband
services  in  Puerto  Rico  through  a  single  round  competitive  bidding  process  that  would  select  one  support  recipient  in  each  of  the  78  municipalities  in
Puerto  Rico,  using  a  specified  formula  for  evaluating  bids.  Entities  winning  Stage  2  support  must  also:  (1)  submit  to  the  FCC’s  Wireline  Competition
Bureau (Bureau) a  detailed  network  deployment  plan  as  well  as  a  plan  that  describes  and  commits  to  the  methods  and  procedures  that  will  be  used  to
prepare for and respond to disasters in Puerto Rico; and (2) participate in the FCC’s Disaster Information Report System, which is a web-based system that
communications companies can use to report to the FCC communications infrastructure status during disasters.

On  February  5,  2020,  the  Bureau  released  a  Public  Notice  that  established  the  application  requirements  and  submission  process  for  the  UPR  Fund
Stage 2 Competition. The Bureau later released an application form and instructions, and announced the application deadline. On November 2, 2020 LCPR
received preliminary approval from the FCC for an award of approximately $71.54 million through the UPR Fund. The funds are in support of providing
high-speed broadband access to all locations within 43 of Puerto Rico’s 78 municipalities, representing service to over 914,000 locations. Liberty Puerto
Rico is in the process of submitting all required materials to finalize its award and is awaiting final FCC action.

With  respect  to  Stage  2  UPR  funding  for  mobile  wireless  providers,  the  FCC  also  established  in  September  2019  that  mobile  wireless  providers
providing service in Puerto Rico as of June 2017 were eligible to receive up to $254 million over three years based on their relative number of subscribers
for such service as of June 2017. In order to obtain such support, the mobile providers were required to confirm the number of mobile wireless subscribers
they served as of June 2017, and obtain FCC approval of a plan that describes and commits to the methods and procedures that will be used to prepare for
and respond to disasters in Puerto Rico. Liberty’s predecessor wireless provider in Puerto Rico (AT&T) submitted the required documentation and in June
2020, the FCC authorized that entity to receive approximately $33M in funding over three years.

I-25

That entity had previously obtained the required ETC designation in Puerto Rico. Liberty, having purchased that business in the AT&T Acquisition, will
now receive those funds.

In Puerto Rico, antitrust regulation is governed by the U.S. Sherman Act, other federal antitrust legislation, and the Puerto Rico Anti-Monopoly Law.
In  particular,  the  Sherman  Act  seeks  to  prevent  anti-competitive  practices  in  the  marketplace  and  requires  governmental  review  of  certain  business
combinations,  among  other  things.  The  Puerto  Rico  Anti-Monopoly  Law  substantially  parallels  the  Sherman  Act  and  authorizes  the  Puerto  Rico
Department  of  Justice  to  investigate  and  impose  competition-related  conditions  on  transactions.  The  Attorney  General  of  Puerto  Rico  is  permitted  to
investigate a transaction under federal law or under the Puerto Rico Anti-Monopoly Law.

Puerto Rico Law 5 of 1973, as amended, created the Puerto Rico Department of Consumer Affairs, which regulates marketing campaigns, publicity,
and  breach  of  service  contracts,  and  prohibits  false  advertising.  The  Puerto  Rico  Telecommunications  Act  of  1996  (Law 213),  which  created  the  TRB,
requires that rates for telecommunication services be cost-based, forbids cross-subsidies and focuses on encouraging, preserving and enforcing competition
in the cable and telecommunications markets. Although Law 213 does not require Liberty Puerto Rico to obtain any approval of rate increases for cable
television or telecommunication services, any such increases must be in compliance with Law 213’s requirements, including notification to the TRB before
such increases take effect.

Video. The provision of cable television services requires a franchise issued by the TRB. Franchises are subject to termination proceedings in the event
of a material breach or failure to comply with certain material provisions set forth in the franchise agreement governing a franchisee’s system operations,
although  such  terminations  are  rare.  In  addition,  franchises  require  payment  of  a  franchise  fee  as  a  requirement  to  the  grant  of  authority.  Franchises
establish comprehensive facilities and service requirements, as well as specific customer service standards and monetary penalties for non- compliance.
Franchises are generally granted for fixed terms of up to ten years and must be periodically renewed.

Our pay television service in Puerto Rico is subject to, among other things, subscriber privacy regulations and must-carry and retransmission consent
rights of broadcast television stations. The Communications Act and FCC rules govern aspects of the carriage relationship between broadcast television
stations and cable companies. To ensure that every qualifying local television station can be received in its local market without requiring a cable subscriber
to switch between cable and off-air signals, the FCC allows every qualifying full-power television broadcast station to require that all local cable systems
transmit  that  station’s  primary  digital  channel  to  their  subscribers  within  the  station’s  market  (the  “must-carry” rule)  pursuant  to  the  Cable  Television
Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992. Alternatively, a station may elect every three years to forego its must carry rights and seek a negotiated
agreement to establish the terms of its carriage by a local cable system, referred to as retransmission consent.

Internet. Liberty  Puerto  Rico  offers  high-speed  internet  access  throughout  its  entire  footprint.  In  March  2015,  the  FCC  issued  an  order  classifying
mass-market broadband internet access service as a “telecommunications service,” changing its long-standing treatment of this offering as an “information
service,”  which  the  FCC  traditionally  has  subjected  to  limited  regulation.  The  rules  adopted  by  the  FCC  prohibited,  among  other  things,  broadband
providers from: (i) blocking access to lawful content, applications, services or non-harmful devices; (ii) impairing or degrading lawful internet traffic on the
basis of content, applications, services or non-harmful devices; and (iii) favoring some lawful internet traffic over other lawful internet traffic in exchange
for consideration (collectively, 2015 Restrictions). In addition, the FCC prohibited broadband providers from unreasonably interfering with users’ ability
to  access  lawful  content  or  use  devices  that  do  not  harm  the  network,  or  with  edge  providers’  ability  to  disseminate  their  content,  and  imposed  more
detailed  disclosure  obligations  on  broadband  providers  than  were  previously  in  place.  On  December  14,  2017,  the  FCC  adopted  a  Declaratory  Ruling,
Report and Order (the 2017 Order) that, in large part, reversed the regulations issued by the FCC in 2015. The 2017 Order, among other things, restores
the classifications of broadband Internet access as an information service under Title I of the Communications Act, and mobile broadband Internet access
service as a private mobile service, and eliminates the 2015 Restrictions. The 2017 Order does require ISPs to disclose information to consumers regarding
practices  such  as  throttling,  paid  prioritization  and  affiliated  prioritization,  and  restores  broadband  consumer  protection  authority  to  the  Federal  Trade
Commission. On October 1, 2019, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (D.C. Circuit) ruled on numerous appeals of the
2017  Order  by  interested  parties.  The  D.C.  Circuit  largely  upheld  the  2017  Order.  However,  it  vacated  that  portion  of  the  2017  Order  preempting
inconsistent state or local regulations, and remanded the 2017 Order to the FCC for further consideration of its effect on public safety, pole attachment
regulation, and the Lifeline support program. The D.C. Circuit’s ruling may be subject to further judicial review. Legislative proposals regarding the net
neutrality rules also are pending in Congress.

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Fixed-Line  Telephony  Services.  Liberty  Puerto  Rico  offers  fixed-line  telephony  services,  including  both  circuit-switched  telephony  and  VoIP.  Its
circuit-switched  telephony  services  are  subject  to  FCC  and  local  regulations  regarding  the  quality  and  technical  aspects  of  service.  All  local
telecommunications providers, including Liberty Puerto Rico, are obligated to provide telephony service to all customers within the service area, subject to
certain  exceptions  under  FCC  regulations,  and  must  give  long  distance  telephony  service  providers  equal  access  to  their  network.  Under  the
Communications  Act,  competitive  local  exchange  carriers  (CLECs),  like  us,  may  require  interconnection  with  the  incumbent  local  exchange  carrier
(ILEC), and the ILEC must negotiate a reasonable and nondiscriminatory interconnection agreement with the CLEC. Such arrangement requires the ILEC
to interconnect with the CLEC at any technically feasible point within the ILEC’s network, provide access to certain unbundled network elements of the
ILEC’s network, and allow physical collocation of the CLEC’s equipment in the ILEC’s facilities to permit interconnection or access to unbundled network
element services. Therefore, we have the right to interconnect with the incumbent local exchange carrier Puerto Rico Telcom (PRTC). We have negotiated
an interconnection agreement with PRTC, and the physical interconnection between both companies has been activated.

All of the circuit-switched telephony and VoIP services of Liberty Puerto Rico are subject to a charge for the federal Universal Service Fund (USF),
which is a fund created under the Communications Act to subsidize telecommunication services in high-cost areas, to provide telecommunications services
for low-income consumers, and to provide certain subsidies for schools, libraries and rural healthcare facilities. The FCC has redirected the focus of USF to
support broadband deployment in high-cost areas. In addition, our circuit-switched telephony and VoIP services are subject to a charge for a local Puerto
Rico Universal Service Fund, which was created by law to subsidize telecommunications services for low-income families under the federal USF Lifeline
and Link-Up programs.

The FCC has adopted other regulations for VoIP services, including the requirement that interconnected VoIP providers and facilities-based broadband
internet access providers must comply with the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, which requires carriers to provide certain assistance
to  federal  law  enforcement  authorities.  VoIP  providers  are  also  required  to  offer  basic  and  enhanced  911  emergency  calling  services,  which  requires
disclosure to all VoIP customers. VoIP providers are also subject to federal customer proprietary network information rules related to customer privacy.

Mobile Services. Liberty Mobile Puerto Rico and Liberty Mobile U.S. Virgin Islands offer mobile services in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The FCC regulates virtually all aspects of United States wireless communications systems, including spectrum licensing, tower and antenna construction,
modification  and  operation,  the  ownership  and  sale  of  wireless  systems  and  licenses,  as  well  as  the  acquisition  and  use  of  wireless  spectrum.  Local
governments, such as in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, typically regulate the placement of wireless towers and similar facilities via zoning laws.
At present, neither the FCC nor state or local governments regulate specific service offerings or rate plans. In addition, other federal and state agencies have
asserted  jurisdiction  over  consumer  protection  and  the  elimination  and  prevention  of  anticompetitive  business  practices  in  the  wireless  industry.  The
specific issues as to which our United States mobile services operations are subject to regulatory oversight include: roaming, interconnection, spectrum
allocation and licensing, facilities siting, pole attachments, intercarrier compensation, Universal Service Fund (“USF”) contributions and distributions (such
as  through  the  UPR  program),  network  neutrality,  911  services,  consumer  protection,  consumer  privacy,  and  cybersecurity.  Failure  to  comply  with
applicable regulations could subject us to fines, forfeitures, and other penalties (including, in extreme cases, revocation of our spectrum licenses), even if
any non-compliance was unintentional.

Competition

We operate in an emerging region of the world, where market penetration of telecommunication services such as broadband and mobile data is lower
than in more developed markets. Generally, our markets are at a relatively nascent stage of the global shift to a “data-centric” world. Although there has
been  strong  growth  in  data  consumption  in  our  key  markets,  data  consumption  in  our  operating  regions  still  lags  significantly  when  compared  to
international  benchmarks.  We  believe  that  we  have  the  opportunity  to  capitalize  upon  this  underlying  growth  trend  in  the  majority  of  our  markets,  and
benefit from increasing penetration of our data services as well as economic growth, in all of our markets, over time.

However, technological advances and product innovations have increased and are likely to continue to increase giving customers several options for
the provision of their communications services. Our customers want access to high quality communication services that allow for seamless connectivity.
Accordingly,  our  ability  to  offer  converged  services  (video,  internet,  fixed  telephony  and  mobile)  is  a  key  component  of  our  strategy.  In  many  of  our
markets, we compete with companies that provide converged services, as well as companies that are established in one or more communication products
and services. Consequently, our businesses face significant competition. In all markets, we seek to differentiate our communications services by focusing
on customer service, competitive pricing and offering quality high-speed connectivity.

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Mobile and Telephony Services

In many of our markets we are either the leading or one of the leading mobile providers. In the markets where we are one of the top mobile providers,
we continue to seek additional bandwidth to deliver our wide range of services to our customers and increase our LTE  coverage.  We  also  offer  various
calling  plans,  such  as  unlimited  network,  national  or  international  calling,  unlimited  off-peak  calling  and  minute  packages,  including  calls  to  fixed  and
mobile  phones.  In  addition,  we  use  our  bundled  offers  with  our  video  and  high-speed  internet  services  to  gain  mobile  subscribers  where  possible.  Our
ability  to  offer  fixed-mobile  convergence  services  is  expected  to  be  a  key  driver.  In  several  of  our  markets,  we  expect  to  increase  focus  on  converged
services, including mobile, fixed-line, broadband and video.

•

•

•

•

C&W Caribbean and Networks. We typically operate in duopoly mobile market structures and face competition from Digicel Group Ltd. (Digicel)
in most of our C&W Caribbean and Networks’ residential markets, and ALIV in the Bahamas.

C&W  Panama.  In  Panama,  our  most  competitive  mobile  market,  we  compete  with  subsidiaries  of  Millicom  International  Cellular  S.A.
(Millicom), América Móvil,  S.A.B.  de  C.V.  (Claro)  and  Digicel.  Millicom  entered  the  market  through  the  acquisition  of  Movistar’s  assets  in
Panama in 2019.

Liberty Puerto Rico. Liberty Puerto Rico competes with T-Mobile US, Claro, Worldnet, and Neptuno for the provision of mobile services.

VTR. Movistar, Claro and Empresa Nacional de Telecomunicaciones S.A. (Entel) are the primary companies that offer mobile telephony in Chile.
In mid-2015, WOM S.A. (WOM) entered the mobile services market through its acquisition of the Nextel Chile network. As an MVNO,  VTR
offers its mobile services on a standalone basis. To attract and retain customers, VTR focuses on its triple-play and double-play customer bases,
offering them postpaid mobile accounts at an attractive price.

The market for fixed-line telephony services is mature across our markets. Changes in market share are driven by the combination of price and quality
of  services  provided  and  the  inclusion  of  telephony  services  in  bundled  offerings.  In  most  of  our  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks’  markets,  we  are  the
incumbent  telecommunications  provider  with  long  established  customer  relationships.  In  our  other  markets,  our  fixed-line  telephony  services  compete
against the incumbent telecommunications operator in the applicable market. In these markets, the incumbent operators have substantially more experience
in  providing  fixed-line  telephony,  greater  resources  to  devote  to  the  provision  of  such  services  and  long-standing  customer  relationships.  In  all  of  our
markets, we also compete with VoIP operators offering services across broadband lines and over-the-top (OTT) telephony providers, such as WhatsApp. In
many countries, our businesses also face competition from other cable telephony providers, FTTx-based providers or other indirect access providers.

Competition exists in both the residential and business fixed-line telephony products due to market trends, the offering of carrier pre-select services,
number portability, the replacement of fixed-line with mobile telephony and the growth of VoIP services, as well as continued deregulation of telephony
markets and other regulatory action, such as general price competition. Carrier pre-select allows the end user to choose the voice services of operators other
than  the  incumbent  while  using  the  incumbent’s  network.  Our  fixed-line  telephony  strategy  is  focused  around  value  leadership,  and  we  position  our
services as “anytime” or “any destination.” Our portfolio of calling plans includes a variety of innovative calling options designed to meet the needs of our
subscribers. In many of our markets, we provide product innovation, such as telephone applications that allow customers to make and receive calls from
their fixed-line call packages on smart phones. In addition, we offer varying plans to meet customer needs and, similar to our mobile services, we use our
telephony bundle options with our digital video and internet services to help promote our telephony services and flat rate offers are standard.

•

•

•

C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks. We  face  competition  in  the  provision  of  fixed-telephony  services  from  Digicel  in  our  Caribbean  markets  and
Cable Bahamas Limited (Cable Bahamas) in the Bahamas. These companies all have competitive pricing on similar services, and the intensified
level of competition we are experiencing in several of our markets has added increased pressure on the pricing of our services.

C&W Panama. We face competition from a subsidiary of Millicom in Panama. Millicom entered the Panama market through its acquisition of an
80% stake in Cable Onda S.A. (Cable Onda) in 2019.

Liberty Puerto Rico. Liberty Puerto Rico primarily competes with Claro who is the incumbent fixed operator in Puerto Rico. For  B2B,  Liberty
Puerto Rico primarily competes with Claro and WorldNet.

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•

VTR. VTR faces fixed-telephony competition from the incumbent telecommunications operator, Movistar and other telecommunications operators.
Movistar has substantial experience in providing telephony services, resources to devote to the provision of telephony services and long-standing
customer relationships. Price is a key factor as are bundles with quality services. We distinguish our services by delivering reliable market leading
internet access speeds with attractive bundled offers.

Broadband Internet

With respect to broadband internet services and online content, our businesses face competition in a rapidly evolving marketplace from incumbent and
non-incumbent telecommunications companies, mobile operators and cable-based ISPs, many of which have substantial resources. The internet services
offered  by  these  competitors  include  both  fixed-line  broadband  internet  services  using  cable,  DSL  or  FTTx  networks  and  wireless  broadband  internet
services. These competitors have a range of product offerings with varying speeds and pricing, as well as interactive services, data and other non-video
services  offered  to  homes  and  businesses.  With  the  demand  for  mobile  internet  services  increasing,  competition  from  wireless  services  using  various
advanced technologies is a competitive factor. In several of our markets, competitors offer high-speed mobile data via LTE wireless networks. In addition,
other wireless technologies, such as WiFi, are available in almost all of our markets. In this intense competitive environment, speed, bundling, and pricing
are key drivers for customers.

A key component of our strategy is speed leadership. Our focus is on increasing the maximum speed of our connections as well as offering varying
tiers of services and prices, a variety of bundled product offerings and a range of value added services. We update our bundles and packages on an ongoing
basis  to  meet  the  needs  of  our  customers.  Our  top  download  speeds  generally  range  from  50  Mbps  to  speeds  of  up  to  600  Mbps.  In  Barbados  we  also
deliver  speeds  of  up  to  1  Gbps  for  our  customers.  In  many  of  our  markets,  we  offer  the  highest  download  speeds  available  via  our  cable  and  FTTx
networks. The focus is on high-speed internet products to safeguard our high-end customer base and allow us to become more aggressive at the low- and
medium-end of the internet market. By fully utilizing the technical capabilities of DOCSIS 3.0 technology on our cable systems, we can compete with local
FTTx initiatives and create a competitive advantage compared to DSL infrastructures and LTE initiatives on a national level.

In  several  of  our  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks’  markets,  we  are  the  incumbent  phone  company  offering  broadband  internet  products  through  a
variety of technologies, ranging from DSL to FTTx. In these markets and our other Latin American markets, our key competition for internet services is
from cable and IPTV  operators  and  mobile  data  service  providers.  To  compete  effectively,  we  are  expanding  our  LTE  service  areas  and  increasing  our
download speeds. In most of our markets, we offer our internet service through bundled offerings that include video and fixed-line telephony. We also offer
a wide range of mobile products either on a prepaid or postpaid basis.

•

•

•

•

C&W Caribbean and Networks. Where C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks  is  the  incumbent  telecommunications  provider,  it  competes  with  cable
operators,  the  largest  of  which  are  Cable  Bahamas  in  the  Bahamas  and  Digicel  in  certain  of  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks’  markets.  To
distinguish itself from these competitors, C&W Caribbean and Networks is investing in footprint expansion and upgrades and uses its bundled
offers with video and telephony to promote its broadband internet services.

C&W Panama. The largest competitor in Panama is Cable Onda.

VTR. VTR  faces  competition  primarily  from  non-cable-based  ISPs,  such  as  Movistar, Entel,  and  Mundo  Pacifico,  and  from  other  cable-based
providers, such as Claro and GTD Manquehue (GTD). Competition is particularly intense with each of these companies offering competitively
priced services, including bundled offers with high-speed internet services. Mobile broadband competition is significant as well. Movistar, Claro
and Entel have launched LTE networks for high-speed mobile data. To compete effectively, VTR is expanding its two-way coverage and offering
attractive bundling with fixed-line telephony and digital video service and high-speed internet with download speeds of up to 600 Mbps.

Liberty  Puerto  Rico.  Liberty  Puerto  Rico  competes  primarily  with  Claro  and  other  operators  using  fiber  networks  or  fixed  wireless  access
technologies. To compete with these providers, Liberty Puerto Rico offers its high-speed internet with download speeds of up to 500 Mbps.

Video Distribution

Our video services compete primarily with traditional free-to-air (FTA) broadcast television services, DTH satellite service providers and other fixed-
line telecommunications carriers and broadband providers, including operations offering (i) services over hybrid fiber coaxial networks, (ii) DTH satellite
services, (iii) internet protocol television (IPTV) over broadband internet

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connections using asymmetric DSL or VDSL or an enhancement to VDSL called “vectoring,” (iv) IPTV over FTTx networks, or (v) LTE services. Many
of these competitors have a national footprint and offer features, pricing and video services individually and in bundles comparable to what we offer. In
certain markets, we also compete with other cable or FTTx based providers who have overbuilt portions of our systems.

OTT aggregators and SVOD services utilizing our or our competitors’ high-speed broadband connections are also a significant competitive factor as
are other video service providers that overlap our service areas. OTT video providers (such as HBO Go/Max, Amazon Prime Video, Disney+ and Netflix in
most  of  our  markets,  and  Hulu,  DirecTV  Now,  Sling,  and  Digicel  Play  in  selected  markets)  offer  rich  VOD catalogues and/or linear channels.  In  some
cases, these AVOD services are provided free-of-charge (such as YouTube and Pluto TV). Typically these services are available on multiple devices in and
out of the home. To enhance our video offering, we are developing cloud-based, next generation user interfaces based on advanced technologies, and are
providing our subscribers with TV Everywhere applications, and in some markets, we feature leading premium and AVOD OTT video services in our video
platforms (such as HubTV in Puerto-Rico), and our users can subscribe to these OTT services, search and discover and consume programs through our UI.
Our businesses also compete to varying degrees with other sources of entertainment and information, such as online entertainment, newspapers, magazines,
books, live entertainment/concerts and sporting events.

Piracy and other unauthorized uses and distribution of content, including through web-based applications, devices and online platforms, also present
challenges for our video business. These platforms illegally stream copyrighted content, for example, Premier League games that can be viewed with an
internet  connection.  While  piracy  is  a  challenge  in  most  jurisdictions  in  which  we  operate,  it  is  particularly  prevalent  in  those  jurisdictions  that  lack
developed copyright laws and effective enforcement of copyright laws.

We believe that our deep-fiber access, where available, provides us with several competitive advantages. For instance, our cable networks allow us to
concurrently deliver internet access, together with real-time television and VoD content, without impairing our high-speed internet service. In addition, our
cable  infrastructure  in  most  of  our  footprint  allows  us  to  provide  triple-play  bundled  services  of  broadband  internet,  television  and  fixed-line  telephony
services without relying on a third-party service provider or network. Where mobile is available, our mobile networks, together with our fixed fiber-rich
networks, will allow us to provide a comprehensive set of converged mobile and fixed-line services. Our capacity is designed to support peak consumer
demand. In serving the business market, many aspects of the network can be leveraged at very low incremental costs given that business demand peaks at a
time  when  consumer  demand  is  low,  and  peaks  at  lower  levels  than  consumer  demand.  In  response  to  the  continued  growth  in  OTT  viewing,  we  have
launched a number of innovative video services, including Flow ToGo and +TV Go in C&W Caribbean and Networks’ markets, LibertyGo in Puerto Rico
and VTR Play in Chile.

Our ability to attract and retain customers depends on our continued ability to acquire appealing content and services on competitive terms and to make
such  content  available  on  multiple  devices  and  outside  the  home.  Some  competitors  have  obtained  long-term  exclusive  contracts  for  certain  sports
programs, which limits the opportunities for other providers to offer such programs. Other competitors also have obtained long-term exclusive contracts for
programs,  but  our  operations  have  limited  access  to  certain  of  such  programming  through  select  contracts  with  those  companies.  If  exclusive  content
offerings increase through other providers, programming options could be a deciding factor for subscribers on selecting a video service.

In  this  competitive  environment,  we  enhance  our  offers  with  converged  digital  services,  such  as  DVR  and  replay  functionalities,  and  VoD  and
multiscreen services. In addition, we offer attractive content packages tailored to particular markets and discounts for bundled services. To improve the
quality of the programming in our packages, our operations periodically modify their digital channel offerings. Where we offer mobile, we focus on our
converged service offerings. We use these services, as well as bundles of our fixed-line services, as a means of driving video and other products where we
can leverage convenience and price across our portfolio of available services.

•

•

C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks.  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks  competes  with  a  variety  of  pay  TV  service  providers,  with  several  of  these
competitors  offering  double-play  and  triple-play  packages.  Fixed-mobile  convergence  services  are  not  currently  a  significant  factor  in  most  of
C&W Caribbean and Networks’ residential markets. In several of its other markets, including Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago and Barbados, C&W
Caribbean  and  Networks  is  the  largest  or  one  of  the  largest  video  service  providers.  In  these  markets,  its  primary  competition  is  from  DTH
providers,  such  as  DIRECTV  Latin  America  Holdings,  Inc.  (DirecTV),  which  is  now  called  Vrio  Corp.,  and  operators  of  IPTV  services  over
VDSL and FTTx, such as Digicel.

C&W Panama. C&W Panama competes primarily with Cable Onda, which is 80% owned by Millicom and which offers video, internet and fixed-
line telephony over its cable network, and with the DTH services of Claro. To compete effectively, C&W Panama invests in leading mobile and
fixed networks and content.

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•

•

VTR.  VTR  competes  primarily  with  DTH  and  IPTV  service  providers,  including  Movistar, Claro  and  DirecTV,  among  others.  Movistar offers
double-play and triple-play packages using IPTV for video in its FTTx footprint and OTT on its DSL footprint. Claro offers triple-play packages
using DTH and, in most major cities in Chile, through a hybrid fiber coaxial cable network. It also offers mobile services. DirecTV offers video
through DTH and does not bundle with any broadband or telephony services. To compete effectively, VTR focuses on enhancing its subscribers’
viewing  options  in  and  out  of  the  home  through  a  broad  non-linear  content  offering,  catch-up  television,  DVR  functionality,  and  a  variety  of
premium channels. These services and its variety of bundled options, including internet and telephony, enhance VTR’s competitive position.

Liberty  Puerto  Rico.  Liberty  Puerto  Rico  is  the  largest  provider  of  fixed-line  video  services  in  Puerto  Rico.  Liberty  Puerto  Rico’s  primary
competition for video customers is from DTH satellite providers DirecTV and Dish Network Corporation (Dish Network). Dish Network  is  an
aggressive competitor, offering low introductory offers, free HD channels and, in its top tier packages, a free multi-room DVR service. DirecTV is
also a significant competitor offering similar programming in Puerto Rico compared to Dish Network. In order to compete, Liberty Puerto Rico
focuses on offering video packages with attractive programming, including HD and Spanish language channels, plus a specialty video package of
Spanish-only channels that has gained popularity. In addition, Liberty Puerto Rico uses its bundled offers that include high-speed internet with
download speeds of up to 500 Mbps to drive its video services.

Business and Wholesale Services

Through C&W, we provide a variety of advanced, point-to-point, clear channel broadband capacity, IP, Multiprotocol Label Switching, Ethernet and
managed services over our owned and operated, technologically advanced, subsea fiber optic cable network. Our subsea and terrestrial fiber routes combine
to form a series of fully integrated networks that typically provide complete operational redundancy, stability and reliability, allowing us in most cases to
provide our clients with superior service and minimal network downtime. Given the advanced technical state of the network combined with the challenges
in securing the necessary governmental and environmental licenses in all of our operating markets, we believe the network is unlikely to be replicated in
the region. Competing networks in the region connect fewer countries than we do and are either linear in design, or if ringed, have high latency protection
routes. In addition, our network as of December 31, 2020, utilized less than 10% of its potential design capacity, and we believe that our ability to take
advantage of this large unused carrying capacity, as well as the financial and time investment required to build a similar network, and the potential delays
associated with acquiring governmental permissions, makes it unlikely that our network will be replicated in the near term.

We  compete  in  the  provision  of  B2B  services  with  residential  telecommunications  operators  as  noted  above.  We  also  compete  with  regional  and

international service providers, particularly when addressing larger customers.

Human Capital Resources

Our Team. As of December 31, 2020, we employed approximately 11,900 full-time employees across our five reportable segments. Our employees are
employed across our segments as follows: C&W Caribbean and Networks approximately 4,800 full-time employees, C&W Panama approximately 2,400
full-time employees, VTR/Cabletica approximately 2,300 employees and Liberty Puerto Rico approximately 2,200 employees. The remaining employees
are employed by our corporate entities. Women represented 42% of our global employees and 38% of our managerial positions. Of our total employee
population, approximately 4,000 are covered by contracts with various unions, primarily across our Caribbean markets, Panama and Puerto Rico.

During  2020,  our  total  employee  attrition  rate,  both  voluntary  and  involuntary,  was  approximately  21%.  The  Employee  Net  Promoter  Score  is  a
widely-used methodology to measure the employee experience (eNPS). From 2018 to 2020, we saw an increase of 30 points (net change of 243%) in our
eNPS as measured by our annual employee survey, and believe that we have a passionate, engaged and dedicated workforce.

Our Chief People Officer, who reports to the CEO and is part of the Executive Team, leads our People and Culture initiatives. Initiatives form part of

the strategy and priorities of all leaders and our Chief People Officer regularly reports progress on these initiatives to our Board of Directors.

Talent  Strategy.  We  manage  our  talent  strategy  through  a  cycle  consisting  of  Talent  Acquisition,  Learning  &  Development,  and  Performance
Management. We offer prospective candidates a compelling employee value proposition rooted in our culture, which combines a shared vision, philosophy
and principles for how we work. We foster an environment where employees can learn, develop, and gain experience through new opportunities to work in
different geographies. Unique to our region, we have revamped our performance management process from an annual performance rating to a more agile
system that better aligns with our culture and ways of working as one team. We offer a simpler, meaningful, and engaging Agile

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Performance  Development  (APD)  experience  for  all  our  employees,  focused  on  frequent  conversations  throughout  the  year  combined  with  real-time
feedback between managers and employees.

Our employees are the heart and soul of our business, helping us to deliver value to our customers, shareholders and communities. As our employees

grow and develop, so will our company.

Equality, Diversity & Inclusion. Our employees comprise many races, ethnicities, beliefs, and cultures, and we are built on a set of strong principles
including  respect.  We  learned  from  the  events  and  global  dialogue  in  2020  that  we  can  always  improve  our  efforts  in  this  area,  and  in  2020  we  took  a
number of actions in the areas of Equality, Diversity & Inclusion.

In 2020, we conducted a virtual listening tour across 22 countries to learn from our employees, understand their experiences within our company and
in  their  community,  and  identify  focus  areas  where  we  could  implement  initiatives  that  would  drive  progress.  As  an  initial  undertaking,  this  process  of
listening,  asking  questions,  and  being  open  to  feedback  created  a  heightened  understanding  of  the  need  to  continue  to  work  on  the  areas  of  Equality,
Diversity & Inclusion. As a result, we developed an Equality, Diversity and Inclusion strategy and established an employee volunteer team and a senior
advisory team to oversee, guide and drive the strategy.

Our  CEO  signed  the  CEO  Action  for  Diversity  &  Inclusion  pledge  with  a  focus  on  four  components:  creating  an  environment  for  open  dialogue,
conducting implicit bias training, sharing best practices and lessons learned, and developing dedicated Diversity & Inclusion plans in consultation with our
Board of Directors.

We know that our success depends on our people. Having a diverse and inclusive workforce will help us become more innovative, more reflective of

our customer base, and more creative when it comes to engaging with our customers and our communities.

COVID-19 Response. We had to adapt quickly to the impact of the pandemic and rapidly put into place measures that would protect our employees,
our  customers,  and  our  communities.  As  we  were  deemed  an  essential  business  across  our  markets,  providing  critical  connectivity  and  access,  we
mobilized  and  equipped  our  office  personnel  to  be  able  to  work  remotely,  while  supplying  our  front-line  team  members  with  appropriate  personal
protective  equipment  and  sanitation  supplies.  We  took  necessary  precautions  across  our  retail  footprint  as  well,  and  complied  with  local  government
regulations.

We also created a COVID-19 Employee Assistance Fund where employees could apply for grants up to $500 USD to support financial needs created
by  the  pandemic.  We  funded  the  Employee  Assistance  Fund  through  donations  from  members  of  our  Board  of  Directors,  our  Executive  Team  and
employees. We also extended our Employee Assistance Program providing 24/7 support via a helpline of trained counselors, psychologists and advisors to
those who need it.

Corporate  Social  Responsibility.  In  addition  to  our  core  products  and  services,  we  contribute  to  the  communities  where  we  operate.  Our
communities are so much more than locations for our business. It’s where we live, where our families grow, where we celebrate and connect. We believe we
have a responsibility to enable progress and build more resilient communities. We bring this to life through a shared approach across our markets with a
focus on four critical areas: Learning; Environment; Access; Disaster Relief. When our communities thrive, we all win.

Our employees lead many of our outreach programs, working alongside our local and regional charitable foundations. We proudly support and give
back. In 2020, through our company-wide initiative, Mission Week, over 1,000 employees came together to make a positive impact in local communities
through a wide range of volunteer activities. 

Compensation, Benefits and Well-being. As part of our Employee Value Proposition, we offer compensation, benefits, and well-being packages that we
believe are fair and competitive. We include a mix of base salary, short and long-term incentives (based on eligibility), as well as a wide range of programs
that support our employees’ overall well-being including: retirement savings plans, healthcare and insurance benefits, paid parental leave, paid time off,
and employee assistance programs. These programs vary by employee level and geography.

Compliance and Ethics. We conduct our business with honesty and integrity in accordance with high ethical and legal standards, and with respect for
each  other  and  those  with  whom  we  do  business.  Our  Code  of  Conduct  sets  out  the  basic  rules,  standards  and  behaviors  necessary  to  achieve  those
objectives. Employees can confidentially and anonymously report any behavior or action they see or experience which goes against our Code of Conduct
through SpeakUp, our employee hotline.

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We expect our employees and directors to display responsible and ethical behavior, to follow consistently both the meaning and intent of our Code of
Conduct and to act with integrity in all of our business dealings. We expect managers and supervisors to take such action as is necessary and appropriate to
ensure that our business processes and practices are in full compliance with our company culture and principles.

We expect our business partners to also act with integrity in all business dealings with us and others. Our Business Partner Code of Conduct sets forth

the basic rules, standards and behaviors that we expect of our business partners.

As part of our global onboarding process, we require all new employees to complete training on our Code of Conduct. Additionally, we periodically

host seminars on anti-corruption, anti-bribery and other important compliance topics.

Health & Safety. Our vision is to have the safest operations in our industry and markets. To reduce the risk of serious injuries we invest in systems that
enable us to receive reliable and structured data to enable informed decision making. We also work to improve our safety practices in the field and in our
retail and office locations to prevent work-related illness and injuries.

Available Information

All our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), as well as amendments to such filings, are available on our internet website free
of charge generally within 24 hours after we file such material with the SEC. Our website address is www.lla.com. The information on our website is not
part of this Annual Report on Form 10-K and is not incorporated by reference herein.

Item 1A.    RISK FACTORS

In addition to the other information contained in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, you should consider the following risk factors in evaluating our

results of operations, financial condition, business and operations or an investment in the shares of our company.

The risk factors described in this section have been separated into five groups:

•

•

•

•

•

risks that relate to the competition we face and the technology used in our businesses;

risks that relate to our operating in overseas markets and being subject to foreign and domestic regulation;

risks that relate to certain financial matters;

risks relating to our corporate history and structure; and

risks relating to our common shares and the securities market.

Although we describe below and elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K the risks we consider to be the most material, there may be other
unknown  or  unpredictable  economic,  business,  competitive,  regulatory  or  other  factors  that  also  could  have  material  adverse  effects  on  our  results  of
operations,  financial  condition,  businesses  or  operations  in  the  future.  In  addition,  past  financial  performance  may  not  be  a  reliable  indicator  of  future
performance and historical trends should not be used to anticipate results or trends in future periods.

If any of the events described below, individually or in combination, were to occur, our businesses, prospects, financial condition, results of operations

and/or cash flows could be materially adversely affected.

Risks that Relate to the Competition we Face and the Technology Used in Our Businesses

We operate in increasingly competitive markets, and there is a risk that we will not be able to effectively compete with other service providers.

The markets for cable television, broadband internet, telephony and mobile services are highly competitive. In the provision of video services, we
face  competition  from  FTA  and  digital  terrestrial  television  (DTT)  broadcasters,  DTH  satellite  providers,  networks  using  DSL,  VDSL  or  vectoring
technology, Multi-channel Multipoint Distribution System operators, FTTx networks, OTT content providers, and, in some countries where parts of our
systems  are  overbuilt,  cable  networks,  among  others.  Our  operating  businesses  are  facing  increasing  competition  from  video  services  provided  by,  or
over the networks of, other telecommunications operators and service providers. As the availability and speed of broadband

I-33

internet  increases,  we  also  face  competition  from  OTT  providers,  including  telephony  providers  such  as  WhatsApp,  utilizing  our  or  our  competitors’
high-speed internet connections. Some of these providers offer services without charging a fee, which could erode relationships with customers and may
lead  to  a  downward  pressure  on  prices  and  returns  for  telecommunication  services  providers.  In  the  provision  of  telephony  and  broadband  internet
services, we are experiencing increasing competition from other telecommunications operators and other service providers in each country in which we
operate, as well as other mobile providers of voice and data. Many of the other operators offer double-play, triple-play and quadruple-play bundles of
services. In many countries, we also compete with other facilities-based operators and wireless providers. Developments in wireless technologies, such as
LTE (the next generation of ultra-high-speed mobile data) and WiFi, are creating additional competitive challenges.

In almost all cases, our licenses are not exclusive. As a result, our competitors have similar licenses and have and may continue to build systems and
provide services in areas in which we hold licenses. In the case of cable- and broadband-enabled services, the existence of more than one cable system
operating  in  the  same  territory  is  referred  to  as  an  “overbuild.”  Overbuilds  could  increase  competition  or  create  competition  where  none  existed
previously, either of which could adversely affect our growth, financial condition and results of operations.

In some of our markets, national and local government agencies may seek to become involved, either directly or indirectly, in the establishment of
FTTx networks, DTT systems or other communications systems. We intend to pursue available options to restrict such involvement or to ensure that such
involvement is on commercially reasonable terms. There can be no assurance, however, that we will be successful in these pursuits. As a result, we may
face competition from entities not requiring a normal commercial return on their investments. In addition, we may face more vigorous competition than
would have been the case if there were no such government involvement. Increased competition could result in increased customer churn, reductions of
customer  acquisition  rates  for  some  products  and  services  and  significant  price  and  promotional  competition.  In  combination  with  difficult  economic
environments, these competitive pressures could adversely impact our business, results of operations and cash flows.

Changes in technology may limit the competitiveness of and demand for our services.

Technology  in  the  video,  telecommunications  and  data  services  industries  is  changing  rapidly,  including  advances  in  current  technologies  and  the
emergence  of  new  technologies.  New  technologies,  products  and  services  may  impact  consumer  behavior  and  therefore  demand  for  our  products  and
services. Our ability to anticipate changes in technology and consumer tastes and to develop and introduce new and enhanced products and services on a
timely basis will affect our ability to maintain, continue to grow, or increase our revenue and number of customers and remain competitive. New products
and  services,  once  marketed,  may  not  meet  consumer  expectations  or  demand,  can  be  subject  to  delays  in  development  and  may  fail  to  operate  as
intended. A lack of market acceptance of new products and services that we may offer, or the development of significant competitive products or services
by others, could have a material adverse impact on our results of operations and cash flows.

Our significant property and equipment additions may not generate a positive return.

Significant additions to our property and equipment are, or in the future may be, required to add customers to our networks and to upgrade or expand
our  broadband  communications  networks  and  upgrade  customer  premises  equipment  to  enhance  our  service  offerings  and  improve  the  customer
experience.  Additions  to  our  property  and  equipment,  including  in  connection  with  Network  Extensions,  require  significant  capital  expenditures  for
equipment  and  associated  labor  costs  to  build  out  and/or  upgrade  our  networks  as  well  as  for  related  customer  premises  equipment.  Additionally,
significant competition, the introduction of new technologies, the expansion of existing technologies, such as FTTx and advanced DSL technologies, the
impact  of  natural  disasters  like  hurricanes,  or  adverse  regulatory  developments  could  cause  us  to  decide  to  undertake  previously  unplanned  builds  or
upgrades of our networks and customer premises equipment.

No  assurance  can  be  given  that  any  rebuilds,  upgrades  or  extensions  of  our  network  will  increase  penetration  rates,  increase  average  monthly
subscription revenue per average cable RGU or mobile subscriber, as applicable, or otherwise generate positive returns as anticipated, or that we will have
adequate  capital  available  to  finance  such  rebuilds,  upgrades  or  extensions.  Additionally,  costs  related  to  our  Network  Extensions  and  property  and
equipment additions could end up being greater than originally anticipated or planned. If this is the case, we may require additional financing sooner than
anticipated or we may have to delay or abandon some or all of our development and expansion plans or otherwise forego market opportunities. Additional
financing may not be available on favorable terms, if at all, and our ability to incur additional debt will be limited by our debt agreements. If we are unable
to,  or  elect  not  to,  pay  for  costs  associated  with  adding  new  customers,  expanding,  extending  or  upgrading  our  networks  or  making  other  planned  or
unplanned additions to our property

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and equipment, or are delayed in making such investments, our growth could be limited and our competitive position could be harmed.

We  depend  almost  exclusively  on  our  relationships  with  third-party  programming  providers  and  broadcasters  for  programming  content,  and  a

failure to acquire a wide selection of popular programming on acceptable terms could adversely affect our business.

The  success  of  our  video  subscription  business  depends,  in  large  part,  on  our  ability  to  provide  a  wide  selection  of  popular  programming  to  our
subscribers. We do not produce our own content and we depend on our agreements, relationships and cooperation with public and private broadcasters and
collective rights associations to obtain such content. If we fail to obtain a diverse array of popular programming for our pay television services, including
a sufficient selection of HD channels as well as non-linear content (such as a selection of attractive VoD content and rights for ancillary services such as
DVRs and catch up or ‘Replay’ services), on satisfactory terms, we may not be able to offer a compelling video product to our customers at a price they
are willing to pay. Additionally, we frequently negotiate and renegotiate programming agreements and our annual costs for programming can vary. There
can be no assurance that we will be able to renegotiate or renew the terms of our programming agreements on acceptable terms or at all.

If we are unable to obtain or retain attractively priced competitive content, demand for our television services could decrease, thereby limiting our
ability  to  attract  new  customers,  maintain  existing  customers  and/or  migrate  customers  from  lower  tier  programming  to  higher  tier  programming.
Furthermore, we may be placed at a competitive disadvantage as certain OTT providers increasingly produce their own exclusive content and if certain of
our competitors acquire exclusive programming rights, particularly with respect to popular sports.

We  depend  on  third-party  suppliers  and  licensors  to  supply  and  maintain  necessary  equipment,  software  and  certain  services  required  for  our

businesses.

We rely on third-party vendors for the equipment (including customer premises equipment, network infrastructure and mobile handsets), software and
services that we require in order to provide services to our customers. Our suppliers often conduct business worldwide and their ability to meet our needs
is  subject  to  various  risks,  including  political  and  economic  instability,  international  regulations  or  sanctions,  natural  calamities,  interruptions  in
transportation  systems,  power  supplies,  terrorism  and  labor  issues.  In  addition,  we  rely  on  third  parties  (in  particular,  local  municipalities,  power
companies  and  other  telecommunications  companies)  for  access  to  poles  to  attach  our  network  equipment,  and  their  ability  to  provide  such  access  is
subject to similar risks. As a result, we may not be able to obtain the equipment, software, access and services required for our businesses on a timely
basis or on satisfactory terms. Any shortfall in our equipment could lead to delays in completing extensions to our networks and in connecting customers
to our services and, accordingly, could adversely impact our ability to maintain or increase our RGUs, revenue and cash flows. Also, if demand exceeds
the suppliers’ and licensors’ capacity or if they experience financial difficulties, the ability of our businesses to provide some services may be materially
adversely  affected,  which  in  turn  could  affect  our  businesses’  ability  to  attract  and  retain  customers.  To  the  extent  that  we  have  minimum  order
commitments, we would be adversely affected in the event that we were unable to resell committed products or otherwise decline to accept committed
products.  Although  we  actively  monitor  the  creditworthiness  of  our  key  third-party  suppliers  and  licensors,  the  financial  failure  of  a  key  third-party
supplier or licensor could disrupt our operations and have an adverse impact on our revenue and cash flows. We rely upon intellectual property that is
owned or licensed by us to use various technologies, conduct our operations and sell our products and services. Legal challenges could be made against
our use of our owned or licensed intellectual property rights (such as trademarks, patents and trade secrets) and we may be required to enter into licensing
arrangements on unfavorable terms, incur monetary damages or be enjoined from use of the intellectual property rights in question. We rely on power
companies to provide power necessary to operate equipment necessary to conduct our operations and to operate our customer premises equipment. As a
result  of  any  long-term  interruption  in  power  supplies,  we  may  not  be  able  to  deliver  our  services  on  a  timely  or  satisfactory  basis,  which  could
accordingly adversely impact our ability to maintain or increase our RGUs, revenue and cash flows.

In addition, the operation, administration, maintenance and repair of our network, including our subsea cable network, requires the coordination and
integration  of  sophisticated  and  highly  specialized  hardware  and  software  technologies  and  equipment  located  throughout  the  Caribbean  and  Latin
America  and  requires  operating  and  capital  expenses.  Events  outside  of  our  control,  such  as  natural  disasters,  technological  failures,  vandalism,  war,
terrorism, inadvertent cuts or extraordinary social or political events, could impact the continued operation of our network. We cannot assure you that our
systems will continue to function as expected in a cost-effective manner.

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VTR, which offers mobile telephony and data services, relies on the radio access network of a third-party wireless network provider to carry its

mobile communications traffic.

VTR’s services to mobile customers in Chile rely on the use of an MVNO arrangement in which VTR utilizes the radio access network of a third-
party wireless network provider to carry its mobile communications traffic. If the MVNO arrangement is terminated, or if the third-party wireless network
provider fails to provide the services required under the MVNO arrangement, or if a third-party wireless network provider fails to deploy and maintain its
network, and VTR is unable to find a replacement network operator on a timely and commercially reasonable basis or at all, VTR could be prevented from
continuing the mobile services relying on such MVNO arrangement.

Failure  in  our  technology  or  telecommunications  systems  from  security  attacks  or  natural  disasters  could  significantly  disrupt  our  operations,

which could reduce our customer base and result in lost revenue.

Our  success  depends,  in  part,  on  the  continued  and  uninterrupted  performance  of  our  information  technology  and  network  systems  as  well  as  our
customer service centers. The hardware supporting a large number of critical systems for our cable network in a particular country or geographic region is
housed in a relatively small number of locations. Our systems and equipment (including our routers and set-top boxes) are vulnerable to damage or security
breach from a variety of sources, including a cut in our terrestrial network or subsea cable network, telecommunications failures, power loss, malicious
human acts, security flaws and natural disasters. In particular, our systems and equipment are in regions prone to hurricanes, earthquakes and other natural
disasters, and they have been impacted by hurricanes in the recent past.

Moreover,  despite  security  measures,  our  servers,  systems  and  equipment  are  potentially  vulnerable  to  physical  or  electronic  break-ins,  computer
viruses  and  similar  disruptive  actions  as  further  discussed  below.  See “Cyberattacks  or  other  network  disruptions  could  have  an  adverse  effect  on  our
business.”

Our disaster recovery, security and service continuity protection measures include back-up power systems, resilient ring network systems, procuring
capacity in competing networks to further strengthen our reliability profile and network monitoring. We also are party to the Atlantic Cable Maintenance
and Repair Agreement, which provides us with certain dedicated repair vessels and timely call out services with respect to our subsea cables through to the
present. We cannot assure you, however, that these precautions will be sufficient to prevent loss of data or prolonged network downtime or that we will be
able to renegotiate arrangements with the Atlantic Cable Maintenance and Repair Agreement on successful terms.

Despite the precautions we have taken, unanticipated problems affecting our systems could cause failures in our information technology systems or
disruption  in  the  transmission  of  signals  over  our  networks  or  similar  problems.  Any  disruptive  situation  that  causes  loss,  misappropriation,  misuse  or
leakage of data could damage our reputation and the credibility of our operations. Further, sustained or repeated system failures that interrupt our ability to
provide service to our customers or otherwise meet our business obligations in a timely manner could adversely affect our reputation and result in a loss of
customers and revenue.

Cyberattacks or other network disruptions could have an adverse effect on our business.

As described above, our success depends, in part, on the continued and uninterrupted performance of our information technology and network systems.
The hardware supporting a large number of critical systems for our cable network in a particular country or geographic region is housed in a relatively
small number of locations. In addition, through our operations, sales and marketing activities, we collect and store certain non-public personal information
related to our customers, and we also gather and retain information about employees in the normal course of business. We may share information about
such persons with vendors, contractors and other third-parties that assist with certain aspects of our business. Our and our vendors’ servers, systems and
equipment (including our routers and set-top boxes) are vulnerable to damage or security breach from a variety of sources, including a cut in our terrestrial
network or subsea cable network, security flaws, and malicious human acts.

Despite  security  measures,  our  and  our  vendors’  servers,  systems  and  equipment  are  potentially  vulnerable  to  physical  or  electronic  break-ins,
computer  viruses,  worms,  phishing  attacks  and  similar  disruptive  actions.  Furthermore,  our  operating  activities  could  be  subject  to  risks  caused  by
misappropriation, misuse, leakage, falsification or accidental release or loss of information maintained in our information technology systems and networks
and  those  of  our  third-party  vendors,  including  customer,  personnel  and  vendor  data.  The  techniques  used  to  gain  such  access  to  our  or  our  vendors’
technology  systems,  data  or  customer  information,  disable  or  degrade  service,  or  sabotage  systems  are  constantly  evolving,  may  be  difficult  to  detect
quickly, and often are not recognized until launched against a target. It is possible for such cyberattacks to go undetected for an extended period of time,
increasing the potential harm to our customers, employees, assets, and reputation.

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Cyberattacks against our or our vendors’ technological infrastructure or breaches of network information technology may cause equipment failures,
disruption of our or their operation, and potentially unauthorized access to confidential customer or employee data, which could subject us to increased
costs and other liabilities as discussed further below.

To date, we have not been subject to cyberattacks or network disruptions that, individually or in the aggregate, have been material to our operations or
financial condition. Although we have not detected a material security breach or cybersecurity incident to date, we have been the target of events of this
nature and expect to be subject to similar attacks in the future. We engage in a variety of preventive measures at an increased cost to us, in order to reduce
the  risk  of  cyberattacks  and  safeguard  our  infrastructure  and  confidential  customer  information,  but  as  with  all  companies,  these  measures  may  not  be
sufficient for all eventualities and there is no guarantee that they will be adequate to safeguard against all cyberattacks, system compromises or misuses of
data.

If hackers or cyberthieves gain improper access to our or our vendors’ technology systems, networks, or infrastructure, they may be able to access,
steal,  publish,  delete,  misappropriate,  modify  or  otherwise  disrupt  access  to  confidential  customer  or  employee  data  or  our  or  our  customers’  business
systems or networks. Moreover, additional harm to customers or employees could be perpetrated by third parties who are given access to the confidential
customer  data  or  business  systems  or  networks.  A  network  disruption  (including  one  resulting  from  a  cyberattack)  could  cause  an  interruption  or
degradation of service and diversion of management attention, as well as permit access, theft, publishing, deletion, misappropriation, or modification to or
of confidential customer data or business systems or networks. Due to the evolving techniques used in cyberattacks to disrupt or gain unauthorized access
to technology networks, we may not be able to anticipate or prevent such disruption or unauthorized access.

The  costs  imposed  on  us  as  a  result  of  a  cyberattack  or  network  disruption  could  be  significant.  Among  others,  such  costs  could  include  increased
expenditures on cyber security measures, litigation, regulatory actions, fines, sanctions, lost revenue from business interruption, and damage to the public’s
perception regarding our ability to provide a secure service. As a result, a cyberattack or network disruption could have a material adverse effect on our
business,  financial  condition,  cash  flows,  and  operating  results.  We  also  face  similar  risks  associated  with  security  breaches  affecting  third  parties  with
which we are affiliated or otherwise conduct business. While we maintain cyber liability insurance that provides both third-party liability and first-party
insurance coverage, our insurance may not be sufficient to protect against all of our losses from any future disruptions or breaches of our systems or other
events as described above.

We  rely  on  information  technology  to  operate  our  business  and  maintain  our  competitiveness,  and  any  failure  to  invest  in  and  adapt  to

technological developments and industry trends could harm our business.

We  depend  on  the  use  of  sophisticated  information  technologies  and  systems,  including  technology  and  systems  used  for  website  and  mobile
applications, network management systems, customer billing, financial reporting, human resources and various other processes and transactions. As our
operations grow in size, scope and complexity, we must continuously improve and upgrade our systems and infrastructure to offer an increasing number of
customers  enhanced  products,  services,  features  and  functionality,  while  maintaining  or  improving  the  reliability  and  integrity  of  our  systems  and
infrastructure.

Our future success also depends on our ability to adapt our services and infrastructure to meet rapidly evolving consumer trends and demands while
continuing to improve the performance, features and reliability of our services in response to competitive service and product offerings. The emergence of
alternative platforms such as smartphone and tablet computing devices and the emergence of niche competitors who may be able to optimize products,
services or strategies for such platforms have, and will continue to, require new and costly investments in technology. We may not be successful, or may
be less successful than our current or new competitors, in developing technology that operates effectively across multiple devices and platforms and that
is appealing to consumers, either of which would negatively impact our business and financial performance. New developments in other areas, such as
cloud computing and software as a service provider, could also make it easier for competition to enter our markets due to lower up-front technology costs.
In addition, we may not be able to maintain our existing systems or replace or introduce new technologies and systems as quickly as customers would like
or in a cost-effective manner.

Unauthorized access to our network resulting in piracy could result in a loss of revenue.

We rely on the integrity of our technology to ensure that our services are provided only to identifiable paying customers. Increasingly, sophisticated
means of illicit piracy of television, broadband and telephony services are continually being developed in response to evolving technologies. Furthermore,
billing and revenue generation for television services rely on the proper functioning of encryption systems. While we continue to invest in measures to
manage  unauthorized  access  to  our  networks,  any  such  unauthorized  access  to  our  cable  television  service  could  result  in  a  loss  of  revenue,  and  any
failure to

I-37

respond to security breaches could raise concerns under our agreements with content providers, all of which could have a material adverse effect on our
business and results of operations.

If we are unable to retain key employees, our ability to manage our business could be adversely affected.

Our  operational  results  depend  upon  the  retention  and  continued  performance  of  our  management  team.  Our  ability  to  retain  and  hire  new  key
employees  for  management  positions  could  be  impacted  adversely  by  the  competitive  environment  for  management  talent  in  the  broadband
communications industry. The loss of the services of key members of management and the inability or delay in hiring new key employees could adversely
affect our ability to manage our business and our future operational and financial results.

We may not have sufficient insurance to cover damage due to natural catastrophe claims and future claims either due to coverage limits or as a

result of insurance carriers seeking to deny coverage of such claims, which in either case could expose us to significant liabilities.

We  maintain  a  program  of  third-party  traditional  and  parametric  wind  risk  insurance  coverage  against  various  liability,  property  and  business
interruption  damage  risks.  We  believe  these  insurance  programs  are  an  effective  way  to  protect  our  assets  against  these  risks.  However,  the  potential
damage that could arise from a natural catastrophe event or events in the future could exceed the coverage provided by such programs. In addition, our
insurance carriers have in the past sought and may in the future seek to rescind or deny coverage with respect to pending or future claims related to such
natural catastrophe damage. Additionally, if we sustain certain wind damage that does not trigger coverage under our parametric wind risk insurance, we
may receive no proceeds or proceeds that do not fully cover such damage. If we do not have sufficient coverage under our policies, or if the insurance
companies are successful in rescinding or denying coverage, we may be required to make material investments to repair such damage which could result in
decreased capital investment, decreased liquidity or increased use of credit facilities or other existing or new debt or funding arrangements.

Data privacy regulations are expanding and compliance with, and any violations of, these regulations may cause us to incur significant expenses.

Privacy  legislation,  enforcement  and  policy  activity  in  this  area  are  expanding  rapidly  in  many  jurisdictions  and  creating  a  complex  regulatory
compliance  environment.  The  cost  of  complying  with  and  implementing  these  privacy-related  and  data  protection  measures  could  be  significant.  In
addition, even our inadvertent failure to comply with federal, state or international privacy-related or data protection laws and regulations could result in
proceedings against us by governmental entities or others, and substantial fines and damages. The theft, loss or misuse of personal data collected, used,
stored or transferred by us to run our business could result in significantly increased business and security costs or costs related to defending legal claims.

We are involved in disputes and legal proceedings that, if determined unfavorably to us, could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial
condition and results of operations.

We  are  continually  involved  in  disputes  and  legal  proceedings  arising  out  of  the  regular  course  of  our  business,  including  disputes  and  legal
proceedings initiated by regulatory, competition and tax authorities as well as proceedings with competitors and other parties, including legal proceedings
that  programmers  may  institute  against  us  and  proceedings  that  may  arise  from  acquisitions  and  other  transactions  we  may  consummate.  For  example,
certain  copyright  agencies  have  asserted,  and  may  in  the  future  assert,  claims  against  us  and  our  subsidiaries  regarding  the  transmission  of  any  of  the
musical works within such agencies’ repertoire. Such claims seek injunctive relief as well as monetary damages. Additionally, VTR is subject to various
legal proceedings in Chilean courts. For more information on these VTR legal proceedings, see Item 3. Legal Proceedings included in Part I of this Annual
Report on Form 10-K. We cannot assure you that we will obtain a final favorable decision with regard to any particular proceeding. Any such disputes or
legal proceedings could be expensive and time consuming, could divert the attention of our management and, if resolved adversely to us, could harm our
reputation and increase our costs, all of which could result in a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

Risks that Relate to Our Operating in Overseas Markets and Being Subject to Foreign and Domestic Regulation

Our businesses are conducted almost exclusively outside of the U.S., which gives rise to numerous operational risks.

Our businesses operate almost exclusively in countries outside the U.S., and we have substantial physical assets and derive a substantial portion of our

revenues from operations in Latin America and the Caribbean. Therefore, we are subject to the following inherent risks:

•

fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates;

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•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

difficulties in staffing and managing operations consistently through our several operating areas;

export and import restrictions, custom duties, tariffs and other trade barriers;

burdensome tax, customs, duties or regulatory assessments based on new or differing interpretations of law or regulations, including increases in
taxes and governmental fees;

economic and political instability, social unrest, and public health crises, such as the occurrence of a contagious disease like the novel coronavirus;

changes in foreign and domestic laws and policies that govern operations of foreign-based companies;

interruptions to essential energy inputs;

direct and indirect price controls;

cancellation of contract rights and licenses;

delays or denial of governmental approvals;

a lack of reliable security technologies;

privacy concerns; and

uncertainty regarding intellectual property rights and other legal issues.

Operational risks that we may experience in certain countries include uncertain and rapidly changing political, regulatory and economic conditions,
including  the  possibility  of  disruptions  of  services  or  loss  of  property  or  equipment  that  are  critical  to  overseas  businesses  as  a  result  of  vandalism,
expropriation, nationalization, war, insurrection, terrorism or general social or political unrest.

In certain countries and territories in which we operate, political, security and economic changes may result in political and regulatory uncertainty and
civil  unrest.  Governments  may  expropriate  or  nationalize  assets  or  increase  their  participation  in  the  economy  generally  and  in  telecommunications
operations in particular. Civil unrest in one or more of our markets may adversely affect our operations in the affected market or possibly in other markets
depending on the scope of other operations supported by the affected market. For example, riots broke out in Chile in October 2019 in support of concerns
over social inequality. These riots led to the injury or detainment of protesters and the dismissal of members of the Chilean President’s cabinet. Continued
internal  turmoil  could  slow  or  halt  the  development  of,  or  otherwise  constrain  the  market  for  our  VTR  products  and  services,  could  impact  foreign
exchange rates, and could otherwise impair the business and financial condition of VTR. In addition, following these riots and protests the government
announced that it would initiate a process to draft a new constitution for the country. On October 25, 2020, the government conducted a national plebiscite
to determine whether to draft a new constitution and the process to do so. 78% of voters approved a proposal to adopt a new constitution and 79% approved
a proposal to call a new constitutional convention (without participation of existing representatives in the Chilean Congress). Chile has scheduled another
national vote on April 11, 2021 to elect the members of the constitutional convention. Chile anticipates holding another national vote in August 2022 to
approve the new constitution. There is still significant uncertainty regarding the process to approve a new constitution and further protests and political
instability cannot be ruled out. Furthermore, the existing constitution has been in place since 1980 and any new constitution could change Chile’s political
situation, potentially affecting the Chilean economy and business outlook, and ultimately VTR’s financial condition, results of operations and prospects.

In addition, certain countries and territories in which we operate, or in which we may operate in the future, face significant challenges relating to the
lack, or poor condition, of physical infrastructure, including transportation, electricity generation and transmission. Such countries and territories may also
be subject to a higher risk of inflationary pressures, which could increase our operating costs and decrease consumer demand and spending power. Each of
these factors could, individually or in the aggregate, have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations and prospects.

Moreover,  in  many  foreign  countries,  particularly  in  certain  developing  economies,  it  is  not  uncommon  to  encounter  business  practices  that  are
prohibited by certain regulations, such as the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and similar laws. Although our subsidiaries and business affiliates
have undertaken, and will continue to undertake, compliance efforts with respect to these laws, their respective employees, contractors and agents, as well
as those companies to which they outsource

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certain of their business operations, may take actions in violation of their policies and procedures. Any such violation could result in penalties imposed on,
and  adversely  affect  the  reputation  of,  these  subsidiaries  and  business  affiliates.  Any  failure  by  these  subsidiaries  and  business  affiliates  to  effectively
manage  the  challenges  associated  with  the  international  operation  of  their  businesses  could  materially  adversely  affect  their,  and  hence  our,  financial
condition.

Public health crises, such as the recent outbreak of the novel coronavirus, in countries where we operate or where our contractors’ or vendors’ facilities
are  located  could  also  have  an  effect  on  our  financial  condition  or  operations  through  impacts  on  our  customers’  ability  to  use  our  services,  on  the
availability of our workforce or through adverse impacts to our supply chain.

We are exposed to foreign currency exchange rate risk.

We are exposed to foreign currency exchange rate risk with respect to our debt in situations where our debt is denominated in a currency other than the
functional currency of the operations whose cash flows support our ability to service, repay or refinance such debt. Although we generally seek to match
the denomination of our borrowings with the functional currency of the operations that are supporting the respective borrowings, market conditions or other
factors may cause us to enter into borrowing arrangements that are not denominated in the functional currency of the underlying operations (unmatched
debt).  Our  policy  is  generally  to  provide  for  an  economic  hedge  against  foreign  currency  exchange  rate  movements,  whenever  possible  and  when  cost
effective to do so, by using derivative instruments to synthetically convert unmatched debt into the applicable underlying currency.

In  addition  to  the  exposure  that  results  from  unmatched  debt,  we  are  exposed  to  foreign  currency  risk  to  the  extent  that  we  enter  into  transactions
denominated  in  currencies  other  than  our  operating  subsidiaries’  respective  functional  currencies  (non-functional  currency  risk),  such  as  equipment
purchases and programming contracts. Changes in exchange rates with respect to amounts recorded in our consolidated balance sheet related to these items
will  result  in  unrealized  (based  upon  period-end  exchange  rates)  or  realized  foreign  currency  transaction  gains  and  losses  upon  settlement  of  the
transactions. Moreover, to the extent that our revenue, costs and expenses are denominated in currencies other than our respective functional currencies, we
will experience fluctuations in our revenue, costs and expenses solely as a result of changes in foreign currency exchange rates. Generally, we will consider
hedging non-functional currency risks when the risks arise from agreements with third parties that involve the future payment or receipt of cash or other
monetary  items  to  the  extent  that  we  can  reasonably  predict  the  timing  and  amount  of  such  payments  or  receipts  and  the  payments  or  receipts  are  not
otherwise hedged. In this regard, we have entered into foreign currency forward contracts to hedge certain of these risks. Certain non-functional currency
risks related to our programming and other direct costs of services and other operating costs and expenses and property and equipment additions were not
hedged as of December 31, 2020.

We  also  are  exposed  to  unfavorable  and  potentially  volatile  fluctuations  of  the  U.S.  dollar  (our  reporting  currency)  against  the  currencies  of  our
operating  subsidiaries  when  their  respective  financial  statements  are  translated  into  U.S.  dollars  for  inclusion  in  our  consolidated  financial  statements.
Cumulative  translation  adjustments  are  recorded  in  accumulated  other  comprehensive  earnings  or  loss  as  a  separate  component  of  equity.  Any  increase
(decrease) in the value of the U.S. dollar against any foreign currency that is the functional currency of one of our operating subsidiaries will cause us to
experience unrealized foreign currency translation losses (gains) with respect to amounts already invested in such foreign currencies. Accordingly, we may
experience a negative impact on our comprehensive earnings or loss and equity with respect to our holdings solely as a result of FX. Our primary exposure
to FX risk during 2020 was to the Chilean peso as 21.5% of our reported revenue during the period was derived from VTR, whose functional currency is
the Chilean peso. In addition, our reported operating results are impacted by changes in the exchange rates for other local currencies in Latin America and
the  Caribbean.  We  generally  do  not  hedge  against  the  risk  that  we  may  incur  non-cash  losses  upon  the  translation  of  the  financial  statements  of  our
operating subsidiaries and affiliates into U.S. dollars.

Failure  to  comply  with  economic  and  trade  sanctions,  and  similar  laws  could  have  a  materially  adverse  effect  on  our  reputation,  results  of

operations or financial condition, or have other adverse consequences.

We  operate  in  the  Caribbean  and  Latin  America,  and  similar  to  other  international  companies,  we  are  subject  to  economic  and  trade  sanctions
programs,  including  certain  of  which  that  are  administered  by  OFAC,  which  prohibit  or  restrict  transactions  or  dealings  with  specified  countries,  their
governments, and in certain circumstances, their nationals, and with individuals and entities that are specially designated. These regulations are extensive
and  complex,  and  they  differ  from  one  sanctions  regime  to  another.  Failure  to  comply  with  these  regulations  could  subject  us  to  legal  and  reputational
consequences, including civil and criminal penalties.

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For example, certain of our companies provide (and may in the future provide), directly or indirectly, certain services to governmental entities in Cuba
(e.g., C&W  sells  IP  and  international  transport  telecommunication  services  to  La  Empresa  de  Telecomunicaciones  de  Cuba  S.A.  (ETECSA),  the  Cuba
state-owned telecommunications provider and to three international telecommunications providers that in turn sell telecom services to ETECSA). All these
services  are  provided  outside  of  Cuba  and  the  provision  of  non-facilities  based  telecom  services  to  Cuba  are  permissible  under  a  general  license  from
OFAC.

We also have interconnection and services contracts with telecommunications carriers located in Venezuela.  With respect to Cuba, we believe we have
designed our activities to comply with certain telecommunications and information systems general license and exemptions. With respect to Venezuela, we
have advised OFAC that we believe that our activities there are not covered by the OFAC regulations or are otherwise allowed under a general license and
exemptions or, in the alternative, should be licensed by OFAC.

We believe that our activities with respect to these countries are known to OFAC. We note, however, that OFAC regulations and related interpretive
guidance are complex and subject to varying interpretations. Due to this complexity, OFAC’s interpretation of its own regulations and guidance vary on a
case  to  case  basis.  As  a  result,  we  cannot  provide  any  guarantees  that  OFAC  will  not  challenge  any  of  our  activities  in  the  future,  which  could  have  a
material adverse effect on our results of operations.

Any  violations  of  applicable  economic  and  trade  sanctions  could  limit  certain  of  our  business  activities  until  they  are  satisfactorily  remediated  and
could  result  in  civil  and  criminal  penalties,  including  fines,  that  could  damage  our  reputation  and  have  a  materially  adverse  effect  on  our  results  of
operation or financial condition.

Our businesses are subject to risks of adverse regulation.

Our businesses are subject to the unique regulatory regimes of the countries in which they operate. Video distribution, broadband internet, telephony
and  mobile  businesses  are  subject  to  licensing  or  registration  eligibility  rules  and  regulations,  which  vary  by  country.  Our  ability  to  provide
telecommunications  services  depends  on  applicable  law,  telecommunications  regulations  and  the  terms  of  the  licenses  and  concessions  we  are  granted
under such laws and regulations. In particular, we are reliant on access with mutually beneficial terms to spectrum for both existing and next generation
telecommunication services, entrance into interconnection agreements with other telecommunications companies and are subject to a range of decisions by
regulators, including in respect of pricing, for example, for termination rates. The provision of electronic communications networks and services requires
our  licensing  from,  or  registration  with,  the  appropriate  regulatory  authorities.  It  is  possible  that  countries  in  which  we  operate  may  adopt  laws  and
regulations regarding electronic commerce, which could dampen the growth of the internet services being offered and developed by these businesses. In a
number of countries, our ability to increase the prices we charge for our cable television service or make changes to the programming packages we offer is
limited by regulation or conditions imposed by competition authorities, or is subject to review by regulatory authorities or termination rights of customers.
In addition, regulatory authorities may grant new licenses to third parties and, in any event, in most of our markets new entry is possible without a license,
although  there  may  be  registration  eligibility  rules  and  regulations,  resulting  in  greater  competition  in  territories  where  our  businesses  may  already  be
active. More significantly, regulatory authorities may require us to grant third parties access to our bandwidth, frequency capacity, infrastructure, facilities
or services to distribute their own services or resell our services to end customers. For example, certain regulators are seeking to mandate third-party access
to portions of C&W’s network infrastructure. Consequently, our businesses must adapt their ownership and organizational structure as well as their pricing
and service offerings to satisfy the rules and regulations to which they are subject. A failure to comply with applicable rules and regulations could result in
penalties,  restrictions  on  our  business  or  loss  of  required  licenses  or  other  adverse  conditions.  We  may  continue  to  operate  in  jurisdictions  where
governments  fail  to  grant  or  renew  licenses  for  our  operations,  which  could  result  in  penalties,  fines  or  restrictions  that  could  have  a  material  adverse
impact on our business and financial condition.

Adverse changes in rules and regulations could:

•

•

•

•

•

impair our ability to use our bandwidth in ways that would generate maximum revenue and cash flow;

create a shortage of capacity on our networks, which could limit the types and variety of services we seek to provide our customers;

impact our ability to access spectrum for our mobile services;

strengthen our competitors by granting them access and lowering their costs to enter into our markets; and

otherwise have a significant adverse impact on our results of operations.

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Businesses,  including  ours,  that  offer  multiple  services,  such  as  video  distribution  as  well  as  internet,  telephony,  and/or  mobile  services,  often  face
close regulatory scrutiny from competition authorities in countries in which they operate. This is particularly the case with respect to any proposed business
combinations,  which  will  often  require  clearance  from  national  competition  authorities.  The  regulatory  authorities  in  several  countries  in  which  we  do
business have considered from time to time what access rights, if any, should be afforded to third parties for use of existing cable television networks and
have imposed access obligations in certain countries. This has resulted, for example, in video must carry obligations in many markets in which we operate.
For more information, see Item 1. Business—Description of Business—Regulatory Matters.

Regulations may be especially strict in the markets of those countries in which we are considered to hold a significant market position. We have been,
in the past, and may be in the future, subject to allegations and complaints by our competitors and other third parties regarding our competitive behavior as
a significant market operator.

When we acquire additional communications companies, these acquisitions may require the approval of governmental authorities, which can block,
impose conditions on, or delay an acquisition, thus hampering our opportunities for growth. If conditions are imposed and we fail to meet them in a timely
manner,  the  governmental  authority  may  impose  fines  and,  if  in  connection  with  an  acquisition  transaction,  may  require  restorative  measures,  such  as
mandatory disposition of assets or divestiture of operations, similar to the divestiture with respect to the AT&T Acquisition. The acquisition of C&W in
May  2016  triggered  regulatory  approval  requirements  in  certain  jurisdictions  in  which  C&W  operates.  The  regulatory  authorities  in  all  of  these
jurisdictions, except for Trinidad and Tobago, have completed their review of the May 16, 2016 acquisition of C&W (the C&W Acquisition) and have
granted  their  approval.  While  we  expect  to  receive  this  outstanding  approval,  such  approval  may  include  binding  conditions  or  requirements  that  could
have an adverse impact on C&W’s operations and financial condition.

Furthermore,  the  governments  in  the  countries  and  territories  in  which  we  operate  differ  widely  with  respect  to  political  structure,  constitution,
economic philosophy, stability and level of regulation. Many of our operations depend on governmental approval and regulatory decisions, and we provide
services  to  governmental  organizations  in  certain  markets  (and  in  certain  cases,  like  Venezuela,  governmental  organizations  are  our  biggest  customers).
Moreover, in several of C&W’s key markets, including Panama and the Bahamas, governments are C&W’s partners and co-owners. The Government of the
Bahamas is a part-owner in C&W Bahamas and the Government of Panama is a part-owner in CWP, and each of the governments have the right to appoint
members  to  the  board  of  directors  of  the  respective  entity.  In  both  the  Bahamas  and  Panama,  we  hold  licenses  or  have  received  concessions  from  the
government or independent regulatory bodies to operate our business, including our mobile and fixed networks. Consequently, we may not be able to fully
utilize  C&W’s  contractual  or  legal  rights  or  all  options  that  may  otherwise  be  available,  where  to  do  so  might  conflict  with  broader  regulatory  or
governmental considerations. In addition, we are, and in the future may be, a party to certain disputes with regulators and governments from time to time
that could have a material adverse effect on our business and results of operations.

Changes to existing legislation and new legislation may significantly alter the regulatory regime applicable to us, which could adversely affect our
competitive position and profitability, and we may become subject to more extensive regulation if we are deemed to possess significant market power in
any of the markets in which we operate.

Significant changes to the existing regulatory regime applicable to the provision of cable television, telephony and internet services have been and are
still being introduced. In addition, we are subject to review by competition or national regulatory authorities in certain countries concerning whether we
exhibit significant market power. A finding of significant market power could result in us becoming subject to access and pricing obligations and other
requirements that could provide a more favorable operating environment for existing and potential competitors. Government regulation or administrative
policies may change unexpectedly and negatively affect our interests. For example, there has been a general trend for governments to seek greater access to
telecommunications  records  and  to  communications  for  law  enforcement  purposes  and  a  trend  in  certain  countries  experiencing  civil  unrest  to  restrict
access to telecommunications on national security grounds. Adverse regulatory developments could subject our businesses to a number of risks. For more
information, see Item 1. Business—Description of Business—Regulatory Matters.

For  various  reasons,  governments  may  seek  to  increase  the  regulation  of  the  use  of  the  internet,  particularly  with  respect  to  user  privacy  and  data
protection,  access  rights  content,  pricing,  copyrights,  consumer  protection,  distributions  and  characteristics  and  quality  of  products  and  services.
Application  of  existing  laws,  including  those  addressing  property  ownership  and  personal  privacy  in  the  context  of  rapidly  evolving  technological
developments remains uncertain and in flux. New interpretations of such laws could have an adverse effect on our business. Governments may also seek to
regulate the content of communications in all of our revenue streams, which could reduce the attractiveness of our services. Governments may also change
their attitude towards foreign investment or extract extra concessions from businesses. Or governments may elect to intervene directly in our markets by
constructing their own infrastructure. In Jamaica for example, the government recently announced an intention to explore the possibility of constructing its
own national broadband backbone, connecting schools, hospitals, government ministries and fire and police stations. Accordingly, our operations may be
constrained by the

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relevant political environment and may be adversely affected by such constraints, as well as by changes to the political structure or government in any of
the markets in which we operate.

Future  changes  to  regulation  or  changes  in  political  administrations  or  a  significant  deterioration  in  our  relationship  with  relevant  regulators  in  the
jurisdictions in which we operate, as well as failure to acquire and retain the necessary consents and approvals or in any other way comply with regulatory
requirements, or excessive costs of complying with new or more onerous regulations and restrictions could have a material adverse effect on our business,
reputation, financial condition, results of operations and prospects.

We may not be successful in acquiring future spectrum or other licenses that we need to offer new mobile data or other services.

We offer mobile data services through licensed spectrum in a number of markets. While these licenses, and other licenses that we possess, enable us to
offer mobile data services today, as technology develops and customer needs change, it may be necessary to acquire new spectrum or other licenses in the
future  to  provide  us  with  additional  capacity  and/or  offer  new  technologies  or  services.  While  we  actively  engage  with  regulators  and  governments  to
ensure that our spectrum needs are met, there can be no guarantee that future spectrum licenses will be made available in certain or all territories or that
they  will  be  made  available  on  commercially  viable  terms.  We  will  likely  require  additional  spectrum  licenses  for  LTE  networks,  and  there  may  be
competition for their acquisition. In addition, we may need other types of licenses for the new products and services that we contemplate or will consider
offering. Failure to acquire necessary new spectrum licenses or other required licenses for new services or products, or to do so on commercially viable
terms, could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

We cannot be certain that we will be successful in acquiring new businesses or integrating acquired businesses with our existing operations, or that

we will achieve the expected returns on our acquisitions.

Part of our business strategy is to grow and expand our businesses, in part, through selective acquisitions that enable us to take advantage of existing
networks,  local  service  offerings  and  region-specific  management  expertise.  Our  ability  to  acquire  new  businesses  may  be  limited  by  many  factors,
including  availability  of  financing,  debt  covenants,  the  prevalence  of  complex  ownership  structures  among  potential  targets,  government  regulation  and
competition from other potential acquirers, including private equity funds. Even if we are successful in acquiring new businesses, the integration of these
businesses, such as in the AT&T Acquisition and Telefonica-Cost Rica Acquisition, may present significant costs and challenges associated with: realizing
economies of scale in interconnection, programming and network operations; eliminating duplicative overheads; integrating personnel, networks, financial
systems and operational systems; greater than anticipated expenditures required for compliance with regulatory standards or for investments to improve
operating results; and failure to achieve the business plan with respect to any such acquisition. We cannot be assured that we will be successful in acquiring
new businesses or realizing the anticipated benefits of any completed acquisition.

In  addition,  we  anticipate  that  any  companies  we  may  acquire  will  be  located  in  the  Caribbean  or  Latin  America.  Such  companies  may  not  have
disclosure controls and procedures or internal controls over financial reporting that are as thorough or effective as those required by U.S. securities laws
and  the  FCPA.  While  we  intend  to  conduct  appropriate  due  diligence  and  to  implement  appropriate  controls  and  procedures  as  we  integrate  acquired
companies, we may not be able to certify as to the effectiveness of these companies’ disclosure controls and procedures or internal controls over financial
reporting until we have fully integrated them.

We  may  not  be  successful  in  renewing  the  necessary  regulatory  licenses,  concessions  or  other  operating  agreements  needed  to  operate  our
businesses upon expiration, and such licenses may be subject to termination, revocation or material alteration in the event of a breach or to promote
the public interest or as a result of triggering a change of control clause.

While  we  actively  engage  with  the  applicable  governments  and  other  regulatory  bodies  in  advance  of  the  expiry  of  our  licenses,  concessions  and
operating agreements, there can be no guarantee that when such licenses, concessions and operating agreements expire, we will be able to renew them on
similar or commercially viable terms, or at all. For instance, C&W’s  licenses  in  the  Cayman  Islands  and  the  Turks  and  Caicos  Islands  are  scheduled  to
expire in the next year; however, we have already applied for renewals in both jurisdictions. In addition, in some of the ECTEL states, we are operating
under expired licenses and have applied for renewal of such licenses.

Some of these licenses may also include clauses that allow the grantor to terminate or revoke or alter them in the event of a default or other failure by
us  to  comply  with  applicable  conditions  of  the  license  or  to  promote  the  public  interest.  Further,  a  number  of  our  operating  licenses  include  change  of
control clauses, which may be triggered by the sale of a business to which those clauses relate, or certain types of corporate restructurings. Some of these
change of control clauses may restrict our

I-43

strategic options, including the ability to complete any potential disposal of individual businesses, a combination of businesses or the entire company unless
a consent or waiver is obtained, and, if triggered, may lead to some licenses being terminated. Failure to hold or to continue to hold or obtain the necessary
licenses,  concessions  and  other  operating  agreements  required  to  operate  our  businesses  could  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  our  business,  financial
condition, results of operations and prospects.

We do not have complete control over the prices that we charge.

Our businesses are in some countries subject to regulation or review by various regulatory, competition or other government authorities responsible for
the regulation or the review of the charges to our customers for our services. Such authorities, in certain cases, could potentially require us to repay such
fees  to  the  extent  they  are  found  to  be  excessive  or  discriminatory.  We  also  may  not  be  able  to  enforce  future  changes  to  our  subscription  prices.
Additionally, in certain markets, our ability to bundle or discount our services may be constrained if we are held to be dominant with respect to any product
we offer. This may have an adverse impact on our revenue, profitability of new products and services and our ability to respond to changes in the markets
in which we operate.

Strikes, work stoppages and other industrial actions could disrupt our operations or make it more costly to operate our businesses.

We are exposed to the risk of strikes, work stoppages and other industrial actions. In the future we may experience lengthy consultations with labor
unions or strikes, work stoppages or other industrial actions. Strikes and other industrial actions, as well as the negotiation of new collective bargaining
agreements or salary increases in the future, could disrupt our operations and make it more costly to operate our facilities. In addition, strikes called by
employees of any of our key providers of materials or services could result in interruptions of the performance of our services. The occurrence of any of the
above  risks  could  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  our  business,  financial  condition  and  results  of  operations.  We  depend  on  third-party  suppliers  and
licensors to supply necessary equipment, software and certain services required for our businesses.

We may have exposure to additional tax liabilities.

We are subject to income taxes as well as non-income based taxes in the Caribbean, parts of Latin America, parts of Europe and the U.S. In addition,
most  tax  jurisdictions  that  we  operate  in  have  complex  and  subjective  rules  regarding  the  valuation  of  intercompany  services,  cross-border  payments
between  affiliated  companies  and  the  related  effects  on  income  tax  and  transfer  tax.  Significant  judgment  is  required  in  determining  our  provision  for
income  taxes  and  other  tax  liabilities.  In  the  ordinary  course  of  our  business,  there  are  many  transactions  and  calculations  where  the  ultimate  tax
determination is uncertain. In addition, our business has undertaken acquisitions, restructurings and other transactions in prior years where the ultimate tax
determination resulting from these transactions remains uncertain. We are regularly under audit by tax authorities in many of the jurisdictions in which we
operate. Although we believe that our tax estimates are reasonable, any material differences as a result of final determinations of tax audits or tax disputes
could have an adverse effect on our financial position and results of operations in the period or periods for which determination is made.

We are subject to changing tax laws, treaties and regulations in and between countries in which we operate or otherwise have a presence. Also, various
income tax proposals in the jurisdictions in which we operate could result in changes to the existing laws on which our deferred taxes are calculated. A
change in these tax laws, treaties or regulations, or in the interpretation thereof, could result in a materially higher income or non-income tax expense. Any
such material changes could cause a material change in our effective tax rate.

Further changes in the tax laws of the foreign jurisdictions in which we operate could arise as a result of the base erosion and profit shifting project
being undertaken by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). The OECD, which represents a coalition of member countries
that includes Chile and the United States, has undertaken studies and is publishing action plans that include recommendations aimed at addressing what
they believe are issues within tax systems that may lead to tax avoidance by companies. The OECD has extended inclusion to non-OECD countries under
their Inclusive Framework on Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS), bringing together over 100 countries to collaborate on the implementation of the
OECD BEPS Package. This framework allows interested countries and jurisdictions to work with the OECD and G20 members on developing standards on
BEPS-related issues and reviewing and monitoring the implementation of the whole BEPS Package. Included within this expanded group of countries are
several jurisdictions in which we do business. It is possible that additional jurisdictions in which we do business could react to these initiatives or their own
concerns by enacting tax legislation that could adversely affect us or our shareholders through increasing our tax liabilities.

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Risks that Relate to Certain Financial Matters

The effects of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak could continue to adversely impact our business and results of operations.

The  outbreak  and  continuing  exponential  spread  of  COVID-19,  which  first  surfaced  in  Wuhan,  China  in  December  2019  and  was  declared  a
“pandemic” by the Word Health Organization in March 2020, may continue to lead to a significant number of adverse effects, both external and internal, on
our  business  and  results  of  operations.  With  respect  to  external  impacts,  the  COVID-19  outbreak  has  resulted  in  a  substantial  curtailment  of  the  global
economy, including global travel, tourism, and business activities. As part of the global efforts to contain the spread of COVID-19, most of the countries in
which we operate have imposed travel restrictions, with a significant number of airport closures, flight cancellations and suspensions, and port closures.
These  measures,  coupled  with  the  further  spread  of  COVID-19,  have  resulted  in  a  significant  reduction  of  worldwide  travel,  including  travel  related  to
tourism, which is an important economic activity for many of the markets in which we operate. If these conditions continue for an extended period of time,
we could experience reduced demand for our products and services, including a reduction in roaming charges incurred by tourists, which could continue to
have a negative impact on our ability to enter into new customer contracts or renew existing customer contracts, specifically in our B2B operations and
with hotels and other tourist-related businesses. In addition, a continued prolonged period of travel, commercial and other similar restrictions, or delays in
vaccine rollouts, and the resulting reduced demand for air and sea travel as a result of the COVID-19 outbreak could continue to have a negative impact on
the ability of our government customers to perform their obligations to us under their existing customer contracts, as many of these markets rely heavily on
tourism to drive their respective economies.

With  respect  to  internal  impacts,  the  COVID-19  outbreak  has  resulted  in  significant  uncertainty  in  many  areas  of  our  business.  This  continued
uncertainty is expected to continue to negatively impact our operations. We may experience labor shortages if our employees are unable or unwilling to
come  to  work  due  to  being  infected  with  COVID-19,  quarantine  measures,  or  related  outcomes  as  a  result  of  this  outbreak.  In  this  regard,  our  internal
controls  over  financial  reporting  measures  may  be  impacted  by  labor  shortages  and/or  work  from  home  initiatives.  Similarly,  some  of  our  retail  stores,
offices and facilities either have been or may be temporarily shut down because of this outbreak, which certain of our customers frequently access to pay
for our products and services. The inability of our customers to pay for our products and services, as well as continued government intervention precluding
payment from customers for a certain period of time, whether in such retail stores, due to a continued general downturn in the global economy or otherwise,
could continue to negatively impact our cash flows, liquidity, including working capital, and ability to borrow. To the extent to which any of the above
materialize for a meaningful period of time, we would have to rely on committed liquidity facilities to bridge cash flow, working capital and or capital
expenditure requirements. This may have a long term consequence for both our liquidity position and longer term leverage levels across the business. In
turn, such results could impact our capital expenditures, including those earmarked for equipment and associated labor costs to build out and/or upgrade
our networks as well as for related customer premises equipment. Additionally, certain of our product shipments from vendors may be delayed. If such a
disruption were to extend over a prolonged period, it could have an impact on the continuity of our supply chain. Any disruption resulting from similar
events on a larger scale or over a prolonged period could cause significant delays in shipments of products until we are able to resume such shipments or
shift  from  the  affected  contractor  or  vendor  to  another  third-party  vendor.  If  our  suppliers  cannot  deliver  the  supplies  we  need  to  operate  our  business,
including handsets, set-top boxes, and other devices, and if we are unable to deliver our products to our customers, our business and results of operations
could continue to be negatively impacted.

As  of  December  31,  2020,  the  impact  of  COVID-19  has  had  a  significant  impact  on  our  results  of  operations,  financial  position,  cash  flows  and
liquidity. The extent of the impact of the continued outbreak on our operational and financial performance will depend on certain developments, including
the duration and spread of the outbreak, vaccine rollouts, the impact on our customers and our sales cycles, the impact on our employees, and the effect on
our vendors, all of which are uncertain and cannot be predicted. The outbreak has resulted in systemic disruption of the worldwide equity markets, and the
market values of our publicly-traded equity declined significantly beginning in late February 2020. If, among other factors, (i) our equity values were to
remain  at  these  declined  levels  for  a  sustained  period  or  were  to  decline  further  or  (ii)  the  adverse  impacts  stemming  from  the  COVID-19  outbreak,
competition,  economic,  regulatory  or  other  factors,  including  macro-economic  and  demographic  trends,  were  to  cause  our  results  of  operations  or  cash
flows  to  be  worse  than  anticipated,  we  could  conclude  in  future  periods  that  impairment  charges  are  required  in  order  to  reduce  the  carrying  values  of
goodwill or other long-lived assets. Any such impairment charges could be significant. Additionally, our ability to execute on cost-cutting measures and
organizational change initiatives may impact our financial performance and results of operations, including less-than-anticipated cost savings. For instance,
in the event demand for our products or services continue to be reduced as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and related economic impacts, we may need
to assess different corporate actions, organizational change initiatives, and cost-cutting measures, including reducing our workforce, reducing our operating
and capital costs, or closing one or more of our retail stores, offices or facilities, and these actions could cause us to incur costs and expose us to other risks
and inefficiencies, including whether we would be able to rehire our workforce or recommence operations at such facilities if our business experiences a
subsequent recovery. Also, the expansion of our new Operations Center in Panama City, Panama, which is one of our key organizational change initiatives,
may continue to be impacted as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Our substantial leverage could limit our ability to obtain additional financing and have other adverse effects.

Our businesses are highly leveraged. At December 31, 2020, the outstanding principal amount of our debt, together with our finance lease obligations,
aggregated $8,514 million, including $162 million that is classified as current in our consolidated balance sheet and $7,225 million that is not due until
2026 or thereafter. In addition, we may incur substantial additional debt in the future, including in connection with any future acquisitions. We believe that
we  have  sufficient  resources  to  repay  or  refinance  the  current  portion  of  our  debt  and  finance  lease  obligations  and  to  fund  our  foreseeable  liquidity
requirements during the next 12 months. However, as our debt maturities grow in later years, we anticipate that we will seek to refinance or otherwise
extend our debt maturities. No assurance can be given that we will be able to complete refinancing transactions or otherwise extend our debt maturities. In
this regard, it is difficult to predict how political and economic conditions, sovereign debt concerns or any adverse regulatory developments will impact the
credit and equity markets we access and our future financial position.

Our ability to service or refinance our debt and to maintain compliance with the leverage covenants in our credit agreements is dependent primarily on
our ability to maintain or increase the cash flow of our operating subsidiaries and to achieve adequate returns on our property and equipment additions and
acquisitions. Accordingly, if our cash provided by operations declines or we encounter other material liquidity requirements, we may be required to seek
additional debt or equity financing in order to meet our debt obligations and other liquidity requirements as they come due. In addition, our current debt
levels  may  limit  our  ability  to  incur  additional  debt  financing  to  fund  working  capital  needs,  acquisitions,  property  and  equipment  additions,  or  other
general corporate requirements. We can give no assurance that any additional debt or equity financing will be available on terms that are as favorable as the
terms of our existing debt or at all or that we will be able to maintain compliance with the leverage covenants in our credit agreements, which could have a
material adverse effect on our business, liquidity and results of operations.

We may not be able to generate sufficient cash to meet our debt service obligations.

Our ability to meet our debt service obligations or to refinance our debt, depends on our future operating and financial performance, which will be
affected  by  our  ability  to  successfully  implement  our  business  strategy  as  well  as  general  macroeconomic,  financial,  competitive,  regulatory  and  other
factors beyond our control. In addition, we are dependent on customers, in particular local, municipal and national governments and agencies, to pay us for
the services we provide in order for us to generate cash to meet our debt service obligations and to maintain our business. Accordingly, we are exposed to
the risk that our government customers could default on their obligations to us and we cannot rule out the possibility that unexpected circumstances in a
particular country’s economic condition may render such government unable to meet its obligation to us. Any such event could have an adverse effect on
our cash flows, results of operations, financial condition and/or liquidity. If we cannot generate sufficient cash to meet our debt service requirements or to
maintain  our  business,  we  may,  among  other  things,  need  to  delay  planned  capital  expenditures  or  investments  or  sell  material  assets  to  meet  those
obligations.

If we are not able to refinance any of our debt, obtain additional financing or sell assets on commercially reasonable terms or at all, we may not be able
to  satisfy  our  debt  obligations.  In  that  event,  borrowings  under  other  debt  agreements  or  instruments  that  contain  cross-default  or  cross-acceleration
provisions with respect to other indebtedness of relevant members of each of our four borrowing groups (i.e. C&W, VTR, Cabletica, and Liberty Puerto
Rico) may become payable on demand and we may not have sufficient funds to repay all of our debts. See Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis
of Financial Condition and Results of Operations—Liquidity and Capital Resources.

Certain  of  our  subsidiaries  are  subject  to  various  debt  instruments  that  contain  restrictions  on  how  we  finance  our  operations  and  operate  our

businesses, which could impede our ability to engage in beneficial transactions.

Certain  of  our  subsidiaries  are  subject  to  significant  financial  and  operating  restrictions  contained  in  outstanding  credit  agreements,  indentures  and
similar instruments of indebtedness. These restrictions will affect, and in some cases significantly limit or prohibit, among other things, the ability of those
subsidiaries to:

•

•

incur or guarantee additional indebtedness;

pay dividends or make other upstream distributions;

• make investments;

•

transfer, sell or dispose of certain assets, including their stock;

I-46

• merge or consolidate with other entities;

•

•

engage in transactions with us or other affiliates; or

create liens on their assets.

As a result of restrictions contained in these debt instruments, the companies party thereto, and their subsidiaries, could be unable to obtain additional

capital in the future to:

•

fund property and equipment additions or acquisitions that could improve our value;

• meet their loan and capital commitments to their business affiliates;

•

•

•

•

invest in companies in which they would otherwise invest;

fund any operating losses or future development of their business affiliates;

obtain lower borrowing costs that are available from secured lenders or engage in advantageous transactions that monetize their assets; or

conduct other necessary or prudent corporate activities.

In  addition,  some  of  the  credit  agreements  to  which  these  subsidiaries  are  parties  include  financial  covenants  that  require  them  to  maintain  certain
financial ratios. Their ability to meet these financial covenants may be affected by adverse economic, competitive, or regulatory developments and other
events beyond their control, and we cannot assure you that these financial covenants will be met. In the event of a default under our subsidiaries’ credit
agreements or indentures, the lenders may accelerate the maturity of the indebtedness under those agreements or indentures, which could result in a default
under other outstanding credit facilities or indentures. We cannot assure you that any of these subsidiaries will have sufficient assets to pay indebtedness
outstanding under their credit agreements and indentures. Any refinancing of this indebtedness is likely to contain similar restrictive covenants.

We  are  exposed  to  interest  rate  risks  and  other  adverse  changes  in  the  credit  market.  Shifts  in  such  rates  may  adversely  affect  the  debt  service

obligation of our subsidiaries.

We require a significant amount of capital to operate and grow our business. We fund our capital needs in part through borrowings in the public and
private credit markets. Adverse changes in the credit markets, including increases in interest rates, could increase our cost of borrowing and/or make it
more difficult for us to obtain financing for our operations or refinance existing indebtedness. In addition, our borrowing costs can be affected by short- and
long-term debt ratings assigned by independent rating agencies, which are based, in significant part, on our performance as measured by customary credit
metrics. A decrease in these ratings would likely increase our cost of borrowing and/or make it more difficult for us to obtain financing. A severe disruption
in the global financial markets could impact some of the financial institutions with which we do business, and such instability could also affect our access
to financing.

In particular, we are exposed to the risk of fluctuations in interest rates, primarily through the credit facilities of certain of our subsidiaries, which are
indexed to the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) or other base rates. Although we enter into various derivative transactions to manage exposure to
movements in interest rates, there can be no assurance that we will be able to continue to do so at a reasonable cost or at all. If we are unable to effectively
manage our interest rate exposure through derivative transactions, any increase in market interest rates would increase our interest rate exposure and debt
service obligations, which would exacerbate the risks associated with our leveraged capital structure. Regulators in the U.K. have announced that LIBOR
will be phased out by the end of 2021. On November 30, 2020, the administrator of U.S. dollar LIBOR announced a delay in the phase out of a majority of
the U.S. dollar LIBOR publications until June 30, 2023, with the remainder of LIBOR publications still being phased out at the end of 2021. Our loan
documents contain customary provisions that contemplate alternative calculations of the applicable base rate once LIBOR is no longer available. We do not
expect that these alternative calculations will be materially different from what would have been calculated under LIBOR at this time.

The phasing out of LIBOR and EURIBOR will result in a new reference rate being applied to our LIBOR-indexed debt which may not be the same

as the new reference rate applied to our LIBOR-indexed derivative instruments, and will have to be adjusted for.

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In July 2017, the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority (the authority that regulates LIBOR) announced that it intends to stop compelling banks to submit
rates  for  the  calculation  of  LIBOR  after  2021.  Additionally,  the  European  Money  Markets  Institute  (the  authority  that  administers  the  Euro  Interbank
Offered Rate (EURIBOR)) has announced that measures will need to be undertaken by the end of 2021 to reform EURIBOR to ensure compliance with
E.U. Benchmarks Regulation. Currently, it is not possible to predict the exact transitional arrangements for calculating applicable reference rates that may
be made in the U.K., the U.S., the Eurozone or elsewhere given that a number of outcomes are possible, including the cessation of the publication of one or
more reference rates. Our loan documents contain provisions that contemplate alternative calculations of the base rate applicable to our LIBOR-indexed
debt  to  the  extent  LIBOR  is  not  available,  which  alternative  calculations  we  do  not  anticipate  will  be  materially  different  from  what  would  have  been
calculated under LIBOR. Additionally, no mandatory prepayment or redemption provisions would be triggered under our loan documents in the event that
the LIBOR rate is not available. It is possible, however, that any new reference rate that applies to our LIBOR-indexed debt could be different than any new
reference rate that applies to our LIBOR-indexed derivative instruments. We anticipate managing this difference and any resulting increased variable-rate
exposure through modifications to our debt and/or derivative instruments, however future market conditions may not allow immediate implementation of
desired modifications and the company may incur significant associated costs.

We are subject to increasing operating costs and inflation risks, which may adversely affect our results of operations.

While our operations attempt to increase our subscription rates to offset increases in programming and operating costs, there is no assurance that they
will be able to do so. In certain countries in which we operate, our ability to increase subscription rates is subject to regulatory controls. For example, VTR
is generally prohibited from increasing subscription rates over the rate of inflation. Also, our ability to increase subscription rates may be constrained by
competitive  pressures.  Therefore,  operating  costs  may  rise  faster  than  associated  revenue,  resulting  in  a  material  negative  impact  on  our  cash  flow  and
results of operations. We are also impacted by inflationary increases in salaries, wages, benefits and other administrative costs in certain of our markets.

Uncertainties  and  challenging  conditions  in  the  global  economy  and  in  the  countries  in  which  we  operate  may  adversely  impact  our  business,

financial condition and results of operations.

The  macroeconomic  environment  can  be  highly  volatile,  and  instability  in  global  markets  has  contributed,  and  could  in  the  future  contribute,  to  a
challenging global economic environment. Future developments are dependent upon a number of political and economic factors, and as a result, we cannot
predict when challenging conditions will exist or the extent to which the markets in which we operate may deteriorate. Unfavorable economic conditions
may impact a significant number of our customers and/or the prices we are able to charge for our products and services, and, as a result, it may be more
difficult  for  us  to  attract  new  customers  and  more  likely  that  customers  will  downgrade  or  disconnect  their  services.  Countries  may  also  seek  new  or
increased  revenue  sources  due  to  fiscal  deficits,  including  increases  in  regulatory  levels,  and  any  such  actions  may  adversely  affect  our  company.  In
addition, as countries seek to recover from natural disasters like hurricanes, they may seek new or increased revenue sources from businesses such as ours,
including  by  increasing  taxes  and  levies.  Accordingly,  our  results  of  operations  and  cash  flows  may  be  adversely  affected  if  the  macroeconomic
environment becomes uncertain or declines or governments increase taxes or levies as a result of fiscal deficits or natural disasters. We are currently unable
to predict the extent of any of these potential adverse effects.

Additional factors that could influence customer demand include access to credit, unemployment rates, affordability concerns, consumer confidence,
capital  and  credit  markets  volatility,  geopolitical  issues  and  general  macroeconomic  factors.  Certain  of  these  factors  drive  levels  of  disposable  income,
which  in  turn  affect  many  of  our  revenue  streams.  Business  solutions  customers  may  delay  purchasing  decisions,  delay  full  implementation  of  service
offerings or reduce their use of services. Our residential customers may similarly elect to use fewer higher margin services, switch from fixed to mobile
services  resulting  in  the  so-called  traffic  substitution  effect,  reduce  their  consumption  of  our  video  services  or  similarly  choose  to  obtain  products  and
services under lower cost programs offered by our competitors. In addition, adverse economic conditions may lead to a rise in the number of our customers
who are not able to pay for our services.

Adverse economic conditions can also have an adverse impact on tourism, which in turn can adversely impact our business. In tourist destinations,
levels  of  gross  domestic  products  and  levels  of  foreign  investment  linked  to  tourism  are  closely  tied  to  levels  of  tourist  arrivals  and  length  of  stay.  In
addition to having a direct impact on our revenue, due, for example, to reduction of roaming charges incurred by tourists, these factors will in turn drive
disposable income, with the corresponding impact on use of our products and services.

Due to the Caribbean’s heavy reliance on tourism, the Caribbean economy has suffered during previous periods of global recession and fluctuations in

exchange rates and is likely to be adversely affected if major economies again find themselves in

I-48

recession or if consumer and/or business confidence in those economies erodes in the face of trends in the global financial markets and economies.

Should current economic conditions deteriorate, there may be volatility in exchange rates, increases in interest rates or inflation, liquidity shortfalls and
an adverse effect on our revenue and profits. Recessionary pressures or country-specific issues could, among other things, affect products and services, the
level of tourism experienced by some countries and the level of local consumer and business expenditure on telecommunications. In addition, most of our
operations  are  in  developing  economies,  which  historically  have  experienced  more  volatility  in  their  general  economic  conditions.  The  impact  of  poor
economic conditions, globally or at a local or national level in the countries and territories in which we operate, could have a material adverse effect on our
business, financial condition, results of operations.

We are exposed to sovereign debt and currency instability risks that could have an adverse impact on our liquidity, financial condition and cash

flows.

Our operations are subject to macroeconomic and political risks that are outside of our control. For example, high levels of sovereign debt in the U.S.,
Puerto Rico and several other countries in which we operate, combined with weak growth and high unemployment, could potentially lead to fiscal reforms
(including austerity measures), tax and levy increases, sovereign debt restructurings, currency instability, increased counterparty credit risk, high levels of
volatility and disruptions in the credit and equity markets, as well as other outcomes that might adversely impact our company.

We  are  exposed  to  the  risk  of  default  by  the  counterparties  to  our  derivative  and  other  financial  instruments,  undrawn  debt  facilities  and  cash

investments.

Although  we  seek  to  manage  the  credit  risks  associated  with  our  derivative  and  other  financial  instruments,  cash  investments  and  undrawn  debt
facilities,  we  are  exposed  to  the  risk  that  our  counterparties  could  default  on  their  obligations  to  us.  Also,  even  though  we  regularly  review  our  credit
exposures,  defaults  may  arise  from  events  or  circumstances  that  are  difficult  to  detect  or  foresee.  At  December  31,  2020,  our  exposure  to  counterparty
credit risk included (i) cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash balances of $913 million and (ii) aggregate undrawn debt facilities of $1,173 million.
While we currently have no specific concerns about the creditworthiness of any counterparty for which we have material credit risk exposures, the current
economic conditions and uncertainties in global financial markets have increased the credit risk of our counterparties and we cannot rule out the possibility
that one or more of our counterparties could fail or otherwise be unable to meet its obligations to us. Any such instance could have an adverse effect on our
cash  flows,  results  of  operations,  financial  condition  and/or  liquidity.  In  this  regard,  (i)  the  financial  failure  of  any  of  our  counterparties  could  reduce
amounts available under committed credit facilities and adversely impact our ability to access cash deposited with any failed financial institution, thereby
causing  a  default  under  one  or  more  derivative  contracts,  and  (ii)  tightening  of  the  credit  markets  could  adversely  impact  our  ability  to  access  debt
financing on favorable terms, or at all.

The  liquidity  and  value  of  our  interests  in  certain  of  our  partially-owned  subsidiaries,  as  well  as  the  ability  to  make  decisions  related  to  their

operations, may be adversely affected by shareholder agreements and similar agreements to which we are a party.

We  indirectly  own  equity  interests  in  a  variety  of  international  video,  broadband  internet,  telephony,  mobile  and  other  communications  businesses.
Certain  of  these  equity  interests,  such  as  our  interests  in  our  operating  subsidiaries  of  CWP  and  C&W  Bahamas,  are  held  pursuant  to  concessions  or
agreements that provide the terms of the governance of the subsidiaries as well as the ownership of such interests. These agreements contain provisions that
affect the liquidity, and therefore the realizable value, of those interests by subjecting the transfer of such equity interests to consent rights or rights of first
refusal of the other shareholders or partners or similar restrictions on transfer. In certain cases, a change in control of the subsidiary holding the equity
interest will give rise to rights or remedies exercisable by other shareholders or partners. All of these provisions will restrict the ability to sell those equity
interests and may adversely affect the prices at which those interests may be sold. Additionally, these agreements contain provisions granting us and the
other shareholders or partners certain liquidity rights as well as certain governance rights, for example, with respect to material matters, including but not
limited to acquisitions, mergers, dispositions, shareholder distributions, incurrence of debt, material expenditures and issuances of equity interests, which
may prevent the respective subsidiary from making decisions or taking actions that would protect or advance the interests of our company, and could even
result in such subsidiary making decisions or taking actions that adversely impact our company. Furthermore, our ability to access the cash of these non-
wholly-owned subsidiaries may be restricted in certain circumstances under the respective shareholder, joint venture, partnership or similar agreements.

Goodwill and other identifiable intangible assets represent a significant portion of our total assets, and we may never realize the full value of our

intangible assets.

I-49

As of December 31, 2020, we had goodwill of $4,886 million, which represented approximately 32% of our total assets. We evaluate goodwill and
other indefinite-lived intangible assets (primarily spectrum licenses and cable television franchise rights) for impairment at least annually on October 1 and
whenever facts and circumstances indicate that their carrying amounts may not be recoverable. As further described in note 9 to our consolidated financial
statements,  during  the  years  ended  December  31,  2020,  2019  and  2018,  we  incurred  significant  goodwill  impairments.  If,  among  other  factors,  (i)  our
equity values were to decline significantly or (ii) the adverse impacts of competition, economic, regulatory or other factors, including macro-economic and
demographic trends, were to cause our results of operations or cash flows to be worse than anticipated, we could conclude in future periods that impairment
charges are required in order to reduce the carrying values of the goodwill and, to a lesser extent, other long-lived assets of C&W, including C&W Panama.
Any such impairment charges could be significant.

Risks Relating to our Corporate History and Structure

We are a holding company, and we could be unable in the future to obtain cash in amounts sufficient to service our financial obligations or meet

our other commitments.

Our ability to meet our financial obligations at the parent company level depends upon our ability to access cash. As a holding company, our sources of
cash are limited to our available cash balances, net cash from the operating activities of our wholly-owned subsidiaries that are available to us, any cash
dividends and cash interest we may receive from our other subsidiaries and cash proceeds from any asset sales we may undertake in the future. The ability
of our operating subsidiaries to pay cash dividends or to make other cash payments or advances to us depends on their individual operating results and any
statutory, regulatory or contractual restrictions to which they may be or may become subject.

Certain of the company’s directors and an executive officer overlap with Liberty Global, and certain directors and officers have financial interests

in Liberty Global, which may lead to conflicting interests.

As a result of the Split-Off, Miranda Curtis and Paul A. Gould, who serve as directors of Liberty Global, and Liberty Global’s chief financial officer,
also serve as directors of Liberty Latin America. Additionally, the chief executive officer of Liberty Global, Michael Fries, also serves as our executive
chairman.  Our  directors  (including  the  executive  chairman)  have  fiduciary  duties  to  our  company.  Likewise,  any  such  persons  who  serve  in  similar
capacities at Liberty Global or any other public corporation have fiduciary duties to that corporation or to that corporation’s shareholders. For example,
there may be the potential for a conflict of interest when the company or Liberty Global pursues acquisitions and other corporate opportunities that may be
suitable  for  each  of  them.  In  addition,  all  of  our  directors  and  executive  officers,  other  than  our  directors  Alfonso  de  Angoitia  Noriega  and  Eric  L.
Zinterhofer, have financial interests in Liberty Global as a result of their ownership of Liberty Global ordinary shares and/or equity awards. As a result of
these multiple fiduciary duties and financial interests, these directors and executive officers may have conflicts of interest or the appearance of conflicts of
interest with respect to matters involving or affecting more than one of the companies to which they owe fiduciary duties or in which they have financial
interests.

Our bye-laws provide that, to the fullest extent permitted by applicable law, we have waived and renounced on behalf of ourselves and our subsidiaries
any breach of a fiduciary duty by each of our directors by reason of the fact that such person directs a corporate opportunity to another person or entity
(such  as  Liberty Global)  instead  of  the  company,  or  does  not  refer  or  communicate  information  regarding  such  corporate  opportunity  to  the  company,
unless such opportunity was expressly offered to such person solely in his or her capacity as a director of our company and such opportunity relates to a
line of business in which we or any of our subsidiaries are then directly engaged. The waiver given to our directors in respect of the diversion of corporate
opportunities does not amount to a general authorization to our directors to subordinate Liberty Latin America’s interests to their personal interests. Our
directors will continue to be bound by their common law and statutory duties under the Bermuda Companies Act to act honestly and in good faith with a
view  to  the  best  interests  of  Liberty  Latin  America  and  to  exercise  the  care,  diligence  and  skill  that  a  reasonably  prudent  person  would  exercise  in
comparable circumstances. Furthermore, our bye-laws contain a general waiver by shareholders for any claim or right of action a shareholder might have
(whether  individually  or  by  or  in  the  right  of  the  company)  against  any  director  or  officer  of  the  company,  arising  from  any  action  or  inaction  by  such
director or officer in the performance of their duties for us or any of our subsidiaries (but excluding any matter involving fraud or dishonesty). This general
waiver does not eliminate directors’ or officers’ fiduciary duties to Liberty Latin America under Bermuda law. Rather, it prohibits actions from being taken
by shareholders against directors or officers in the event of a breach of such duties, unless the breach involves fraud or dishonesty.

In addition, any potential conflict that qualifies as a “related party transaction” (as defined in Item 404 of Regulation S-K) is subject to review by an
independent committee of the applicable company’s board in accordance with its corporate governance guidelines. Any other potential conflicts that arise
will be addressed on a case-by-case basis, keeping in mind the applicable fiduciary duties owed by the executive officers and directors of each company.
From time to time, we may enter into transactions with Liberty Global and/or any of its subsidiaries or other affiliates. In the event of any potential conflict
that

I-50

qualifies  as  a  “related  party  transaction”  (as  defined  in  Item  404  of  Regulation  S-K)  involving  Liberty  Global  and/or  any  of  its  subsidiaries  or  other
affiliates,  the  audit  committee  or  another  independent  body  of  Liberty  Latin  America  would  be  required  to  review  and  approve  the  transaction.  If  the
potential conflict or transaction involved an executive officer of Liberty Latin America,  the  audit  committee  of  our  company  would  be  the  independent
committee charged by our corporate governance guidelines with this duty, and if the potential conflict or transaction involved a director of Liberty Latin
America, a committee of the disinterested independent directors of Liberty Latin America would be the independent committee charged by our corporate
governance guidelines with this duty. There can be no assurance that the terms of any such transactions will be as favorable to the company or any of its
subsidiaries or affiliates as would be the case where there is no overlapping director or officer or where there are no financial interests in Liberty Global.

Risks Relating to Our Common Shares and the Securities Market

Different classes of our common shares have different voting rights, but all common shares vote together as one class; if you hold Class C common

shares you will have no significant voting rights.

Holders of our Class A common shares are entitled to one vote per share; holders of our Class B common shares are entitled to 10 votes per share; and
holders of our Class C common shares are not entitled to any votes in respect of their common shares, unless such common shares are required to carry the
right to vote under applicable law, in which case holders of our Class C common shares will be entitled to 1/100 of a vote per share. Our bye-laws prescribe
that all classes of common shares vote together as one class, meaning that those holding Class C common shares will have little to no ability to influence
the outcome of a shareholder vote as they will be consistently outvoted by holders of our Class A and Class B common shares.

The division of our common shares into different classes with different relative voting rights does not affect the fiduciary duties owed by our directors.
As a Bermuda company, our directors’ fiduciary duties are owed primarily to Liberty Latin America rather to holders of our common shares, or any class of
our common shares.

It may be difficult for a third-party to acquire us, even if doing so may be beneficial to our shareholders.

Certain provisions of our bye-laws and Bermuda law may discourage, delay or prevent a change in control of the company that a shareholder may

consider favorable. These provisions include the following:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

authorizing a capital structure with multiple classes of shares: a Class B that entitles the holders to ten votes per share, a Class A that entitles the
holders to one vote per share and a Class C that entitles the holder to no voting rights, except as otherwise required by applicable law (in which
case, the holder is entitled to 1/100 of a vote per share);

authorizing the issuance of “blank check” preferred shares, which could be issued by our board to increase the number of outstanding shares and
thwart a takeover attempt;

classifying our board with staggered three-year terms, which may lengthen the time required to gain control of our board;

prohibiting shareholder action by written consent, thereby requiring all shareholder actions to be taken at a meeting of the shareholders;

establishing advance notice requirements for nominations of candidates for election to our board or for proposing matters that can be acted upon
by shareholders at shareholder meetings;

requiring  supermajority  shareholder  approval  with  respect  to  certain  extraordinary  matters,  such  as  certain  mergers,  amalgamations,  or
consolidations of the company, or in the case of amendments to our bye-laws; and

the existence of authorized and unissued shares which would allow our board to issue shares to persons friendly to current management, thereby
protecting the continuity of its management, or which could be used to dilute the share ownership of persons seeking to obtain control of us.

Although our Class B common shares are eligible to trade on the OTC Grey Markets, there is no meaningful trading market for these shares and

the market price of these shares is subject to volatility.

Our Class B common shares are not widely held, with over 75% of such outstanding shares beneficially owned by John C. Malone, a director emeritus
of our company. Although our Class B common shares are eligible to trade on the OTC Grey Markets, they are sparsely traded and do not have an active
trading market. The OTC Grey Markets tend to be highly illiquid, in part, because there is no national quotation system by which potential investors can
track the market price of shares. OTC Grey

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Market securities do not have bid or ask quotations in the OTC Link system or the OTC Bulletin Board. Broker-dealers must report OTC Grey Market
trades to the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, and therefore trade data is available on http://www.otcmarkets.com and other public sources. As a
result, trading in the OTC Grey Markets is generally much more limited than trading on any national securities exchange. There is also a greater chance of
market volatility for securities that trade on the OTC Grey Markets as opposed to a national exchange or quotation system due to many factors, including,
among other things, a lack of readily available price quotations, lower trading volume, absence of consistent administrative supervision of “bid” and “ask”
quotations and similar market conditions. Each Class B common share is convertible, at any time at the option of the holder, into one Class A common
share.

We may be significantly influenced by one principal shareholder, and he may sell his shares, which may cause the price of our common shares to

decrease.

As  of  December  31,  2020,  John  C.  Malone  beneficially  owned  a  number  of  our  common  shares  representing  approximately  25%  of  the  aggregate
voting power of our outstanding common shares. As a result, Mr. Malone has significant influence over Liberty Latin America. Mr. Malone’s rights to vote
or dispose of his equity interest in Liberty Latin America are not subject to any restrictions in favor of Liberty Latin America other than as may be required
by applicable law and except for customary transfer restrictions pursuant to incentive award agreements. The sale of a substantial number of our common
shares by Mr. Malone within a short period of time, or the perception that such sale might occur, could cause our share price to decrease, make it more
difficult for us to raise funds through future offerings of our common shares or acquire other businesses using our common shares as consideration.

Bermuda law may, in certain circumstances, afford less protection to our shareholders than the laws in effect in other jurisdictions.

We  are  incorporated  and  organized  under  the  laws  of  Bermuda.  As  a  result,  our  corporate  affairs  are  governed  by  the  Bermuda  Companies  Act.
Bermuda law permits a company to specify thresholds for shareholder approval different from those applicable by default, either generally or for specific
corporate actions. Our bye-laws prescribe a shareholder approval threshold that is higher than the default of a simple majority of votes cast at a quorate
general  meeting  of  shareholders  for  certain  corporate  actions.  With  respect  to  a  Bermuda  company’s  directors,  there  is  no  requirement  for  shareholder
approval for transactions between directors and companies or their subsidiaries of which they are directors (except in the case of loans, guarantees or the
provision of security by a company to its directors or certain connected persons in their personal capacity). In addition, the rights of our shareholders and
the fiduciary responsibilities of our directors under Bermuda law are not as clearly established as under statutes or judicial precedent in other jurisdictions,
where directors’ duties are sometimes codified under applicable law. Therefore, our shareholders may have more difficulty protecting their interests than
would shareholders of a public company incorporated in another jurisdiction.

We are a Bermuda company and it may be difficult for you to enforce judgments against us or our directors and executive officers.

We are a Bermuda exempted company organized under the laws of Bermuda. As a result, the rights of holders of our common shares are governed by
Bermuda law and our memorandum of association and bye-laws. The rights of shareholders under Bermuda law may differ from the rights of shareholders
of  companies  incorporated  in  other  jurisdictions,  including  the  U.S.  and  the  U.K.  Certain  of  our  directors  are  not  residents  of  the  United  States,  and  a
substantial  portion  of  our  assets  are  located  outside  the  United  States.  As  a  result,  it  may  be  difficult  for  investors  to  effect  service  of  process  on  those
persons in the United States or to enforce in the United States judgments obtained in U.S. courts against us or those persons based on the civil liability
provisions of the U.S. securities laws. It is doubtful whether courts in Bermuda will enforce judgments obtained in other jurisdictions, including the United
States, or entertain actions in Bermuda against us or our directors or officers under the securities laws of those jurisdictions.

We are a Bermuda company and the Bermuda Economic Substance Act 2018 may cause us to incur substantial additional costs, incur significant

penalties or possibly require us to re-domicile.

Bermuda  recently  enacted  the  Economic  Substance  Act  2018  requiring  affected  Bermuda  registered  companies  to  maintain  a  substantial  economic
presence in Bermuda. This legislation could require us to incur substantial additional cost, and/or incur significant penalties and possibly require us to re-
domicile our company to a jurisdiction with higher tax rates. Our results of operations could be materially and adversely affected if we become subject to
these or other unanticipated tax liabilities. 

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Our bye-laws generally restrict shareholders from bringing legal action against our officers and directors.

Our bye-laws contain a general waiver by shareholders for any claim or right of action a shareholder might have (whether individually or by or in the
right of the company) against any director or officer of the company, arising from any action or inaction by such director or officer in the performance of
their  duties  for  us  or  any  of  our  subsidiaries  (but  excluding  any  matter  involving  fraud  or  dishonesty).  Consequently,  this  waiver  limits  the  right  of
shareholders to assert claims against our officers and directors unless the act or failure to act involves fraud or dishonesty.

There are regulatory limitations on the ownership and transfer of our common shares.

Our  common  shares  may  be  offered  or  sold  in  Bermuda  only  in  compliance  with  the  provisions  of  the  Bermuda  Companies  Act  and  the  Bermuda
Investment Business Act 2003, which regulates the sale of securities in Bermuda. In addition, the Bermuda Monetary Authority must approve all issues and
transfers of shares of a Bermuda exempted company. However, the Bermuda Monetary Authority has, pursuant to its statement of June 1, 2005, given its
general  permission  under  the  Exchange  Control  Act  1972  and  related  regulations  for  the  issue  and  free  transfer  of  our  common  shares  to  and  among
persons  who  are  non-residents  of  Bermuda  for  exchange  control  purposes  as  long  as  any  class  of  our  common  shares  are  listed  on  an  appointed  stock
exchange, which includes Nasdaq. This general permission would cease to apply if none of our common shares were to be listed on Nasdaq or another
appointed stock exchange.

Certain Searchlight parties may sell Class C common shares subject to a Registration Rights Agreement in the public market, which may cause the
market price of our common shares to decrease, and therefore make it more difficult to raise equity financing or issue equity as consideration in an
acquisition.

Our  Registration  Rights  Agreement  with  certain  Searchlight  parties  requires  us  to  promptly  register  under  the  Securities  Act  the  9,500,000  Class  C
common shares subject to such agreement and held by such shareholders or their permitted transferee(s), upon their request. The registration rights for such
Searchlight parties will allow them to sell such shares without compliance with the volume and manner of sale limitations under Rule 144 promulgated
under the Securities Act and will facilitate the resale of such securities into the public market. The market value of our common shares could decline as a
result  of  sales  by  such  shareholders  from  time  to  time.  In  particular,  the  sale  of  a  substantial  number  of  our  shares  by  such  shareholders  within  a  short
period of time, or the perception that such sale might occur, could cause our share price to decrease, make it more difficult for us to raise funds through
future offerings of our common shares or acquire other businesses using our common shares as consideration.

We  have  identified  material  weaknesses  in  our  internal  control  over  financial  reporting,  which  could,  if  not  remediated,  result  in  material
misstatements in our financial statements.  

Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 requires any company subject to the reporting requirements of the U.S. securities laws to include in its
annual report on Form 10-K an assessment of its and its consolidated subsidiaries’ internal control over financial reporting. To comply with this statute, we
are required to issue a statement as to whether or not our internal control over financial reporting is effective; and our independent auditors are required to
issue an audit opinion on our internal control over financial reporting.

As of December 31, 2020, we did not maintain effective adequate internal control over financial reporting attributable to certain identified material
weaknesses. We describe these material weaknesses in Item 9A. Controls and Procedures in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. A material weakness is
defined as a deficiency, or combination of deficiencies, in internal control over financial reporting, such that there is a reasonable possibility that a material
misstatement  of  our  annual  or  interim  financial  statements  will  not  be  prevented  or  detected  on  a  timely  basis.  The  material  weaknesses  will  not  be
considered remediated until the applicable new or enhanced controls operate for a sufficient period and management has concluded, through testing, that
these  controls  are  operating  effectively.  As  remediation  has  not  yet  been  completed,  these  material  weaknesses  continued  to  exist  with  respect  to  our
internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020. If our remedial measures are insufficient to address the material weaknesses, or if one or
more additional material weaknesses or significant deficiencies in our internal control over financial reporting are discovered or occur in the future, our
consolidated financial statements may contain material misstatements and we could be required to restate our financial results, which could, in turn, harm
our reputation or otherwise cause a decline in investor confidence and in the market price of our stock. 

Item 1B.    UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS

None.

I-53

Item 2.    PROPERTIES

At December 31, 2020, we leased our corporate office in Denver, Colorado, U.S. Additionally, through our C&W Caribbean and Networks segment,
we  own  significant  portions  of  our  subsea  network  in  the  Caribbean  region  (see  Item  1.  Business—Description  of  Business—Products  and  Services—
Business Services). Also, our subsidiaries either own or lease the fixed assets necessary for the operation of their respective businesses, including office
space, transponder space, headend facilities, rights of way, cable television and telecommunications distribution equipment, telecommunications switches,
base  stations,  poles,  cell  towers  and  customer  premises  equipment  and  other  property  necessary  for  their  operations.  The  physical  components  of  their
broadband networks require maintenance and periodic upgrades to support the new services and products they introduce. Subject to these maintenance and
upgrade activities, our management believes that our current facilities are suitable and adequate for our business operations for the foreseeable future.

Item 3.    LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

VTR Class Action

On August 25, 2020, VTR was notified that the Chilean National Consumer Authority (“SERNAC”, the Spanish acronym for Servicio Nacional del
Consumidor) had filed a class action complaint against VTR in the 14th Civil Court of Santiago. The complaint relates to consumer complaints regarding
VTR’s broadband service and capacity during the pandemic and raises claims regarding, among other things, VTR’s disclosure of its broadband speeds and
aggregate capacity availability and VTR’s response to address the causes of service instability during the pandemic. VTR was also notified in August about
two additional class action complaints filed by two Chilean consumer associations (ODECU and AGRECU) making similar claims and allegations. The
class action complaint of ODECU was filed in the 21st Civil Court of Santiago, and the class action complaint of AGRECU was filed in the 26th Civil
Court of Santiago. The complaint of SERNAC and ODECU seeks (i) the Court declare that VTR has infringed the rules of the Consumer Protection Law;
(ii) the responsibility of VTR for such infractions and, if so, establish the corresponding fines; and (iii) compensatory damages. In the case of AGRECU,
th
the complaint only seeks compensatory damages. On October 22, 2020, VTR was notified of a fourth class action complaint filed by Conadecus in the 16
Civil  Court  of  Santiago  alleging  that  VTR  did  not  adhere  to  certain  call  center,  technical  visit  and  service  level  requirements  under  applicable  law.  We
believe that the allegations contained in the complaints are without merit, in particular as it relates to VTR’s service and response during the pandemic and
intend to defend the complaints vigorously. We cannot predict at this point the length of time that these actions will be ongoing.

In addition, from time to time, our subsidiaries and affiliates have become involved in litigation relating to claims arising out of their operations in the

normal course of business. For additional information, see note 20 to our consolidated financial statements in Part II of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Item 4.     MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES

Not applicable.

I-54

Item  5.        MARKET  FOR  REGISTRANT’S  COMMON  EQUITY,  RELATED  SHAREHOLDER  MATTERS  AND  ISSUER  PURCHASES  OF

PART II

EQUITY SECURITIES

General

The capitalized terms used in Part II of this Annual Report on Form 10-K are defined in the consolidated financial statements and the notes thereto. In
the following text, the terms “we,” “our,” “our company” and “us” may refer, as the context requires, to Liberty Latin America or collectively to Liberty
Latin America and its subsidiaries.

Market Information

Our outstanding share capital comprises Class A, Class B and Class C common shares. Our Class A and Class C common shares trade on the Nasdaq
Global  Select  Market  under  the  symbols  “LILA”  and  “LILAK,”  respectively.  Our  Class  B  common  shares  are  eligible  to  be  traded  on  the  OTC  Grey
Markets under the symbol “LILAB,” although they do not have an established public trading market. The following table sets forth the range of highest and
lowest prices for our Class B common shares for each of the periods indicated, as reported by Bloomberg, taking into account both opening and closing
prices.  Over-the-counter  market  prices  reflect  inter-dealer  prices,  without  retail  mark-up,  mark-down  or  commission  and  may  not  necessarily  represent
actual transactions.

Year ended December 31, 2019
First quarter
Second quarter
Third quarter (a)
Fourth quarter (a)
Year ended December 31, 2020
First quarter
Second quarter
Third quarter (b)
Fourth quarter (b)

Class B

High

Low

$
$
$
$

$
$
$
$

23.80  $
18.00  $
18.00  $
18.00  $

15.00  $
17.00  $
17.00  $
17.00  $

18.00 
18.00 
18.00 
18.00 

15.00 
17.00 
17.00 
17.00 

(a) The Class B common shares trade infrequently. During the third and fourth quarters of 2019, no trades occurred. As such, the high and low prices

shown for this period relate to the second quarter of 2019.

(b) During the third and fourth quarters of 2020, no trades occurred. As such, the high and low prices shown for this period relate to the second quarter of

2020.

Holders

As of January 31, 2021, we had the following number of holders of record of our common stock: 10,905 Class A; 24 Class B; and 24,977 Class C. The
foregoing does not include the number of shareholders whose shares are nominally held by banks, brokerage houses or other institutions, but include each
such institution as one record holder.

Dividends

We  have  not  paid  any  cash  dividends  on  our  shares,  and  we  have  no  present  intention  of  doing  so.  Any  future  payment  of  cash  dividends  will  be
determined  by  our  board  of  directors  in  light  of  our  earnings,  financial  condition  and  other  relevant  considerations.  Except  as  noted  in  Item  7.
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations and note 10 to our consolidated financial statements, there are
currently no contractual restrictions on our ability to pay dividends in cash or shares.

Securities Authorized for Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans

Information required by this item is incorporated by reference to our definitive proxy statement for our 2021 Annual General Meeting of Shareholders.

II-1

 
 
Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities; Use of Proceeds from Registered Securities

All information under this Item has been previously reported on our Current Reports on Form 8-K.

Issuer Purchase of Equity Securities

On March 17, 2020, we announced that our Directors authorized a share repurchase program, which authorizes us to repurchase from time to time up
to $100 million of our Class A common shares and/or Class C common shares, as the case may be, over two years (the Share Repurchase Program). The
Share Repurchase Program does not obligate us to repurchase any of our Class A or C common shares. Under the Share Repurchase Program, we may
repurchase our common shares from time to time in open market purchases at prevailing market prices, in privately negotiated transactions, in block trades,
derivative transactions and/or through other legally permissible means.

There  were  no  repurchases  of  our  Class  A  or  C  common  shares  during  the  three  months  ended  December  31,  2020.  At  December  31,  2020,  the

remaining amount authorized for repurchases of Liberty Latin America Shares was $91 million.

The  following  graph  compares  the  changes  in  the  cumulative  total  shareholder  return  on  our  Liberty  Latin  America  Class  A  and  Class  C  ordinary
shares from January 2, 2018 (the day the shares began trading following the Split-Off) to December 31, 2020, to the change in the cumulative total return
on  the  MSCI  Emerging  Markets  NTR  Index  and  the  Nasdaq  Composite  TR  Index  (assuming  reinvestment  of  dividends,  where  applicable).  The  graph
assumes that $100 was invested on January 2, 2018.

Stock Performance Graph

January 2,

June 30,
2018

December 31,

June 30,

December 31,

2019

79.84  $
80.36  $
92.90  $
116.13  $

89.43 
90.98 
99.48 
130.84 

Liberty Latin America Shares - Class A
Liberty Latin America Shares - Class C
MSCI Emerging Markets NTR Index
Nasdaq Composite TR Index

$
$
$
$

100.00  $
100.00  $
100.00  $
100.00  $

88.60  $
90.60  $
91.79  $
107.75  $

67.10  $
68.12  $
84.00  $
95.72  $

II-2

 
 
Liberty Latin America Shares - Class A
Liberty Latin America Shares - Class C
MSCI Emerging Markets NTR Index
Nasdaq Composite TR Index

Item 6.    SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

June 30,

December 31,

2020

42.43  $
41.52  $
89.75  $
147.42  $

$
$
$
$

51.58 
51.85 
117.73 
189.61 

The following tables present selected historical financial information of Liberty Latin America. The selected financial data (i) as of December 31, 2020
and  2019  and  for  the  years  ended  December  31,  2020,  2019  and  2018  has  been  derived  from  our  audited  consolidated  financial  statements  included
elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K and (ii) as of December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016 and for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016 has
been  derived  from  our  audited  consolidated  financial  statements  that  are  not  included  in  this  Annual  Report  on  Form  10-K.  This  information  is  only  a
summary and should be read in conjunction with Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations and our
consolidated financial statements.

Summary Balance Sheet Data (a):

Goodwill

Property and equipment, net

Total assets (b)

Debt and finance lease obligations, including current

portion
Total equity

Summary Statement of Operations Data (a):

Revenue

Operating income (loss)

Net loss

Net loss attributable to Liberty Latin America

shareholders

Basic and diluted net loss per share attributable to
Liberty Latin America shareholders (c)

2020

2019

December 31,
2018
in millions

2017

2016

$

$

4,885.5 

4,911.4 

$

$

4,906.4 

4,301.1 

$

$

5,133.3 

4,236.9 

$

$

5,673.6 

4,169.2 

$

$

6,353.5 

3,860.9 

$ 15,230.0 

$ 14,937.5 

$ 13,446.6 

$ 13,616.9 

$ 14,143.9 

$

$

8,357.2 

3,443.7 

$

$

8,370.0 

870.1 

$

$

6,682.1 

4,123.4 

$

$

6,371.5 

4,690.6 

$

$

6,047.9 

5,660.4 

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
2017
2018
in millions, except per share amounts

2016

$

$

$

$

$

3,764.6 

91.7 

(808.9)

(687.2)

(3.51)

$

$

$

$

$

3,867.0 

353.8 

(182.4)

(80.1)

(0.43)

$

$

$

$

$

3,705.7 

(23.6)

(635.8)

(345.2)

(1.96)

$

$

$

$

$

3,590.0 

(162.9)

(798.7)

(778.1)

(4.46)

$

$

$

$

$

2,723.8 

315.3 

(404.0)

(432.3)

(3.39)

(a) We completed the AT&T Acquisition on October 31, 2020 and acquired UTS effective March 31, 2019, Cabletica on October 1, 2018 and C&W on

May 16, 2016.

(b) We adopted ASU 2016-02, as defined and described in note 2 to our consolidated financial statements, on January 1, 2019 using the effective date

transition method. The main impact of the adoption of this standard was the recognition of right-of-use assets and lease liabilities.

(c)

Amounts  are  calculated  based  on  weighted  average  number  of  shares  outstanding  of  195,535,301,  184,369,078,  176,001,049,  174,490,845  and
127,542,735,  respectively.  The  2020,  2019  and  2018  amounts  represent  the  weighted  average  number  of  Liberty  Latin  America  common  shares
outstanding during the year, respectively. The 2017 amount represents (i) the weighted average number of LiLAC Shares outstanding during the year
prior to the Split-Off and (ii) the weighted average number of Liberty Latin America common shares outstanding during the year subsequent to the
Split-Off. The 2016 amount represents the actual weighted average number of LiLAC Shares outstanding, as adjusted to reflect the total 119,210,601
Class A and Class C LiLAC Shares issued to holders of Class A and Class C Liberty Global ordinary shares in recognition of the Liberty Global
ordinary shares that were issued to acquire C&W as if such distribution was completed on the May 16, 2016 date of the C&W Acquisition.

II-3

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Item 7.    MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

The  following  discussion  and  analysis,  which  should  be  read  in  conjunction  with  our  consolidated  financial  statements,  is  intended  to  assist  in

providing an understanding of our results of operations and financial condition and is organized as follows:

• Overview. This section provides a general description of our business and recent events.

•

•

•

Results of Operations. This section provides an analysis of our results of operations for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018.

Liquidity  and  Capital  Resources.  This  section  provides  an  analysis  of  our  liquidity,  consolidated  statements  of  cash  flows  and  contractual
commitments.

Critical Accounting Policies, Judgments and Estimates. This section discusses those material accounting policies that involve uncertainties and
require significant judgment in their application.

Unless  otherwise  indicated,  convenience  translations  into  U.S.  dollars  are  calculated,  and  operational  data  (including  subscriber  statistics)  are

presented, as of December 31, 2020.

Overview

General

We  are  an  international  provider  of  fixed,  mobile  and  subsea  telecommunications  services.  We  provide  residential  and  B2B  services  in  (i)  over  20
countries across Latin America and the Caribbean, through two of our reportable segments, C&W Caribbean and Networks and C&W Panama, (ii) Chile
and Costa Rica, through our reportable segment, VTR/Cabletica, and (iii) Puerto Rico, through our reportable segment, Liberty Puerto Rico. Through our
Networks & LatAm business, C&W Caribbean and Networks also provides (i) B2B services in certain other countries in Latin America and the Caribbean
and (ii) wholesale communication services over its subsea and terrestrial fiber optic cable networks that connect over 40 markets in that region.

C&W owns less than 100% of certain of its consolidated subsidiaries, including C&W Bahamas (a 49%-owned entity that owns all of our operations in
the Bahamas), C&W Jamaica (a 92%-owned entity that owns the majority of our operations in Jamaica), and CWP (a 49%-owned entity that owns most of
our operations in Panama). In addition, we own Cabletica through our 80.0% ownership of its parent, LBT CT Communications, S.A..

Operations

At  December  31,  2020,  we  (i)  owned  and  operated  fixed  networks  that  passed  7,848,500  homes  and  served  6,186,300  revenue  generating  units
(RGUs), comprising 2,763,900 broadband internet subscribers, 1,951,000 video subscribers and 1,471,400 fixed-line telephony subscribers and (ii) served
4,451,300 mobile subscribers.

During the fourth quarter of 2020, we completed an organizational change with respect to our C&W operations whereby management of the CWP
subsidiary  of  C&W  now  reports  directly  to  the  Chief  Operating  Officer  of  Liberty  Latin  America  and  no  longer  reports  to  the  former  C&W  segment
decision maker. As a result, CWP is now a separate operating and reportable segment, herein referred to as the C&W Panama segment. Accordingly, as of
December 31, 2020, our reportable segments are as follows:

•

•

C&W Caribbean and Networks;

C&W Panama;

• VTR/Cabletica; and

•

Liberty Puerto Rico.

As a result of the aforementioned segment change, we have revised the presentation of the discussion and analysis set forth below in order to align

with the current segment presentation included in our consolidated financial statements.

II-4

COVID-19

In  December  2019,  COVID-19  was  reported  in  Wuhan,  China.  On  March  11,  2020,  the  World  Health  Organization  declared  the  outbreak  a
“pandemic,” pointing to the sustained risk of further global spread. To date, confirmed cases of COVID-19 have been experienced in each of the markets in
which we operate. During 2020, COVID-19 has negatively impacted our operations, primarily within our C&W Caribbean and Networks, C&W Panama
and VTR/Cabletica segments, due to resulting lockdowns, moratoriums, cancellation of live sporting events, and mobility, travel and tourism restrictions
across many of the markets in which we operate. The implications of these restrictions have been (i) the issuance of discounts to customers, (ii) the pause in
certain managed service projects, particularly with government agencies, (iii) at VTR, customers experiencing network connection-related issues stemming
from  the  significant  increase,  over  a  short  period  of  time,  in  the  capacity  usage  by  our  customers,  and  (iv)  delayed  or  deferred  customer  payments  and
increased  customer  churn.  In  VTR,  our  most  competitive  consumer  fixed  market,  we  experienced  increased  RGU  churn  following  network  challenges
related  to  the  increased  bandwidth  demand  earlier  in  the  year.  We  have  carried  out  a  number  of  operational  actions  to  improve  the  experience  for  our
customers. Within our mobile operations, the lockdowns negatively impacted, primarily at C&W Caribbean and Networks and C&W Panama during the
second quarter of 2020, our customers’ ability to recharge their prepaid mobile devices. During the third and fourth quarters of 2020, we witnessed partial
recovery. Since March 2020, we experienced declines in inbound roaming activity as a result of travel restrictions and reduced tourism activities in the
markets in which we operate. These factors collectively resulted in declines in revenue within our B2B and mobile operations and lower ARPU (as defined
below)  associated  with  our  residential  fixed  subscription  services.  The  extent  to  which  COVID-19  continues  to  impact  our  operational  and  financial
performance will depend on certain developments, which include, among other factors:

•
•

•
•
•
•

•
•
•

the duration and spread of the outbreak;
the ability of governments and medical professionals in our markets to respond further to the outbreak, including securing access to a vaccine and
vaccinating citizens;
the actions by governments to require the extension of services for individuals regardless of payment status;
the impact of changes to, or new, government regulations imposed in response to the pandemic, including laws and moratoriums;
the impact on our customers and our sales cycles;
the impact on actual and expected customer receivable collection patterns, including the impact of such patterns on our allowance for bad debt
provisions following the adoption of ASU 2016-13 on January 1, 2020;
the impact on our employees, including that from labor shortages or work from home initiatives;
the impacts on foreign currency and interest rate fluctuations; and
the  effect  on  our  vendors,  as  COVID-19  could  have  adverse  impacts  on  our  supply  chain  thereby  impacting  our  customers’  ability  to  use  our
services.

Given the impacts of COVID-19 continue to rapidly evolve, the extent to which COVID-19 may further impact our financial condition or results of
operations continues to be uncertain and cannot be predicted at this time. The heightened volatility of global markets resulting from COVID-19 further
expose us to risks and uncertainties.

As COVID-19 continues to spread, we have, and expect to continue to take, a variety of measures to promote the safety and security of our employees,
and ensure the availability of our communication services. To this end, we upgraded our network in an effort to handle peak traffic, accelerated our digital
transformation  efforts,  including  self-installations  for  as  many  of  our  services  and  customers  as  possible,  developed  innovative  pricing  plans  that  meet
customers’ needs across our products and services, and changed our cost structure.

AT&T Acquisition

On  October  9,  2019,  Liberty  Latin  America’s  wholly-owned  subsidiary,  Liberty  Puerto  Rico,  agreed  to  acquire  AT&T’s  wireless  and  wireline
operations in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands in an all-cash transaction. The AT&T Acquisition closed on October 31, 2020. In connection with the
AT&T  Acquisition  we  paid  $1.9  billion,  as  further  described  in  note  4  to  the  consolidated  financial  statements.  We  financed  this  acquisition  through  a
combination of net proceeds from the 2026 SPV Credit Facility, the 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes and available liquidity. In connection with the AT&T
Acquisition, we expect to incur significant operating and capital costs to integrate the businesses of AT&T with our existing operations in Puerto Rico,
including  during  2021  approximately  $35  million  to  $40  million  of  integration-related  costs.  We  expect  that  we  will  generate  synergies  during  2021  of
approximately $10 million.

As a regulatory condition to close, we were required to dispose of, among other assets, a small B2B business in our existing Puerto Rico operations.

The disposal of this B2B business closed in early January 2021.

II-5

Rights Offering

On August 5, 2020, our Directors authorized the Rights Distribution of Class C Rights to holders of Liberty Latin America Shares to acquire Class C
common shares in the Rights Offering. In the Rights Distribution, we distributed 0.269 of a Class C Right for each share of Class A, Class B or Class C
common shares held as of September 8, 2020, which was the record date for the Rights Distribution. Fractional Class C Rights were rounded up to the
nearest  whole  right.  Each  whole  Class  C  Right  entitled  the  holder  to  purchase,  pursuant  to  the  basic  subscription  privilege,  one  share  of  LILAK  at  a
subscription price of $7.14, which was equal to an approximate 25% discount to the volume weighted average trading price of LILAK for the 3-day trading
period  ending  on  and  including  September  2,  2020.  Each  Class  C  Right  also  entitled  the  holder  to  subscribe  for  additional  shares  of  LILAK  that  were
unsubscribed for in the Rights Offering pursuant to an over-subscription privilege. The Rights Offering commenced on September 11, 2020, which was
also  the  ex-dividend  date  for  the  Rights  Distribution.  The  Rights  Offering  expired  in  accordance  with  its  terms  on  September  25,  2020  and  was  fully
subscribed with 49,049,073 shares of LILAK issued to those rights holders exercising basic and, if applicable, over-subscription privileges. The proceeds
from the Rights Offering, which aggregated $350 million before expenses, are expected to be used to finance acquisitions, including the Telefónica-Costa
Rica Acquisition, and for other general corporate purposes.

Telefónica-Costa Rica Acquisition

On July 30, 2020, we entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Telefónica S.A.’s wireless operations in Costa Rica in an all-cash transaction based
upon  an  enterprise  value  of  $500  million  on  a  cash-  and  debt-free  basis.  The  transaction  is  subject  to  certain  customary  closing  conditions,  including
regulatory approvals, and is expected to close in the first half of 2021.

Strategy and Management Focus

From a strategic perspective, we are seeking to build or acquire broadband communications and mobile businesses that have strong prospects for future
growth. As discussed further under Liquidity and Capital Resources—Capitalization below, we also seek to maintain our debt at levels that provide for
attractive equity returns without assuming undue risk.

We strive to achieve “organic” revenue and customer growth in our operations by developing and marketing bundled entertainment, information and
communications services, and extending and upgrading the quality of our networks where appropriate. As we use the term, organic growth excludes foreign
currency translation effects (FX) and the estimated impact of acquisitions and disposals. While we seek to increase our customer base, we also seek to
maximize the average revenue we receive from each household by increasing the penetration of our video, broadband internet, fixed-line telephony and
mobile services with existing customers through product bundling and up-selling.

From an operational perspective, we are focused on our customer experience and increasing efficiencies. Beginning in 2019 and continuing on during
2020, we have been centralizing key parts of our business into our new operations center in Panama City, Panama. In addition, we embarked on digital
transformation efforts across our company.

We  are  engaged  in  network  extension  and  upgrade  programs  across  Liberty  Latin  America.  We  collectively  refer  to  these  network  extension  and
upgrade programs as the “Network Extensions.” The Network Extensions will be completed in phases with priority given to the most accretive expansion
opportunities. During 2020, our network extension and upgrade programs passed approximately 387,000 homes across Liberty Latin America. Depending
on a variety of factors, including the financial and operational results of the programs, the Network Extensions may be continued, modified or cancelled at
our discretion. See Item 1. Business—Products and Services—Residential Services—Internet Services.

For  information  regarding  our  expectation  with  regard  to  property  and  equipment  additions  as  a  percent  of  revenue  during  2021,  see  Liquidity  and

Capital Resources—Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows below.

Competition and Other External Factors

We  are  experiencing  significant  competition  from  other  telecommunications  operators  and  other  communication  service  providers  in  all  of  our
markets. The significant competition we are experiencing, together with macroeconomic factors, has adversely impacted our revenue, RGUs and/or average
monthly subscription revenue per average fixed residential RGU or mobile subscriber, as applicable, (ARPU) in a number of C&W’s markets. In Chile,
competition  increased  in  2019,  as  VTR’s  fixed-line  competitors  upgraded  their  networks  at  a  faster  rate  than  in  prior  years.  For  additional  information
regarding the revenue impact of changes in the RGUs and ARPU of our reportable segments, see discussion below.

II-6

Results of Operations

The  comparability  of  our  operating  results  during  2020,  2019  and  2018  is  affected  by  acquisitions,  a  disposal  and  FX  effects.  As  we  use  the  term,

“organic” changes exclude FX and the impacts of acquisitions and disposals, each as further discussed below.

In  the  following  discussion,  we  quantify  the  estimated  impact  on  the  operating  results  of  the  periods  under  comparison  that  is  attributable  to
acquisitions and disposals. We (i) acquired (a) AT&T’s wireless and wireline operations in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands in October 2020, (b) a
small B2B operation in the Cayman Islands in July 2020, (c) UTS in March 2019 and (d) Cabletica in October 2018, and (ii) disposed of our operations in
the  Seychelles  in  November  2019.  With  respect  to  acquisitions,  organic  changes  and  the  calculations  of  our  organic  change  percentages  exclude  the
operating results of an acquired entity during the first 12 months following the date of acquisition. With respect to disposals, the prior-year operating results
of disposed entities are excluded from organic changes and the calculations of our organic change percentages to the same extent that those operations are
not included in the current year.

Changes in foreign currency exchange rates may have a significant impact on our operating results, as VTR, Cabletica and certain entities within C&W
have functional currencies other than the U.S. dollar. Our primary exposure to FX risk is to the Chilean peso, as a significant portion of our revenue is
derived from VTR. For example, the average FX rate (utilized to translate our consolidated financial statements) for the U.S. dollar per one Chilean peso
appreciated  by  12%  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020,  as  compared  to  2019,  and  appreciated  by  10%  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2019,  as
compared to 2018. The impacts to the various components of our results of operations that are attributable to changes in FX are highlighted below. For
information concerning our foreign currency risks and applicable foreign currency exchange rates, see Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures
About Market Risk—Foreign Currency Risk below. For information regarding foreign currency risk and implications resulting from the political unrest in
Chile, see Item 1A. Risk Factors and Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations—Overview each set
forth above.

The amounts presented and discussed below represent 100% of the revenue and expenses of each segment and our corporate operations. As we have
the ability to control certain subsidiaries that are not wholly-owned, we include 100% of the revenue and expenses of these entities in our consolidated
statements of operations despite the fact that third parties own significant interests in these entities. In October 2018, we acquired the remaining 40.0%
interest in LCPR that we did not already own. During the third quarter of 2019, we completed the UTS NCI Acquisition, as further defined and described in
note  19  to  our  consolidated  financial  statements.  The  noncontrolling  owners’  interests  in  the  operating  results  of  (i)  certain  subsidiaries  of  C&W,  (ii)
Cabletica  and  (iii)  prior  to  October  17,  2018,  LCPR,  are  reflected  in  net  earnings  or  loss  attributable  to  noncontrolling  interests  in  our  consolidated
statements of operations.

On April 1, 2019, certain B2B operations in Puerto Rico were transferred from our C&W Caribbean and Networks segment to our Liberty Puerto Rico
segment,  and  on  January  1,  2020,  our  captive  insurance  operation  was  transferred  from  our  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks  segment  to  our  corporate
operations. These transfers did not have a significant impact on the financial results of our C&W Caribbean and Networks or Liberty Puerto Rico segments.

We are subject to inflationary pressures with respect to certain costs and foreign currency exchange risk with respect to costs and expenses that are
denominated in currencies other than the respective functional currencies of our reportable segments. Any cost increases that we are not able to pass on to
our subscribers would result in increased pressure on our operating margins.

II-7

Year Ended December 31, 2020 as Compared with Year Ended December 31, 2019

Consolidated Adjusted OIBDA

On  a  consolidated  basis,  Adjusted  OIBDA  is  a  non-U.S.  GAAP  measure.  Adjusted  OIBDA  is  the  primary  measure  used  by  our  chief  operating
decision  maker  to  evaluate  segment  operating  performance.  Adjusted  OIBDA  is  also  a  key  factor  that  is  used  by  our  internal  decision  makers  to  (i)
determine how to allocate resources to segments and (ii) evaluate the effectiveness of our management for purposes of incentive compensation plans. As
we use the term, Adjusted OIBDA is defined as operating income or loss before share-based compensation, depreciation and amortization, provisions and
provision  releases  related  to  significant  litigation  and  impairment,  restructuring  and  other  operating  items.  Other  operating  items  include  (i)  gains  and
losses  on  the  disposition  of  long-lived  assets,  (ii)  third-party  costs  directly  associated  with  successful  and  unsuccessful  acquisitions  and  dispositions,
including  legal,  advisory  and  due  diligence  fees,  as  applicable,  and  (iii)  other  acquisition-related  items,  such  as  gains  and  losses  on  the  settlement  of
contingent consideration. Our internal decision makers believe Adjusted OIBDA is a meaningful measure because it represents a transparent view of our
recurring  operating  performance  that  is  unaffected  by  our  capital  structure  and  allows  management  to  (i)  readily  view  operating  trends,  (ii)  perform
analytical  comparisons  and  benchmarking  between  segments  and  (iii)  identify  strategies  to  improve  operating  performance  in  the  different  countries  in
which we operate. We believe our Adjusted OIBDA measure is useful to investors because it is one of the bases for comparing our performance with the
performance of other companies in the same or similar industries, although our measures may not be directly comparable to similar measures used by other
public companies. Adjusted OIBDA should be viewed as a measure of operating performance that is a supplement to, and not a substitute for, operating
income or loss, net earnings or loss and other U.S. GAAP measures of income (loss). A reconciliation of total operating income (loss), the nearest U.S.
GAAP measure, to Adjusted OIBDA on a consolidated basis, is presented below.

Operating income
Share-based compensation expense
Depreciation and amortization
Impairment, restructuring and other operating items, net

Consolidated Adjusted OIBDA

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

$

$

91.7  $
97.5 
914.6 
380.9 
1,484.7  $

353.8 
57.5 
871.0 
259.1 
1,541.4 

The following table sets forth organic and non-organic changes in Adjusted OIBDA for the period indicated:

Adjusted OIBDA for the twelve months

ending:

December 31, 2019
Organic changes related to:

Revenue
Programming and other direct costs
Other operating costs and expenses

Non-organic increases (decreases):

FX
Acquisitions/disposition, net

December 31, 2020

C&W
Caribbean
and Networks

C&W
Panama

VTR/Cabletica

Liberty Puerto
Rico
in millions

Corporate

Intersegment
eliminations

Consolidated

$

732.1  $

227.6  $

433.6  $

203.2  $

(55.1) $

—  $

1,541.4 

(58.2)
27.2 
30.3 

(82.5)
28.7 
3.4 

(11.8)
(6.4)
713.2  $

— 
— 
177.2  $

$

(21.5)
— 
(10.5)

(39.7)
— 
361.9  $

37.8 
(6.1)
(14.0)

2.7 
— 
7.9 

— 
56.0 
276.9  $

— 
— 
(44.5) $

(3.8)
3.3 
0.5 

— 
— 
—  $

(125.5)
53.1 
17.6 

(51.5)
49.6 
1,484.7 

II-8

 
 
 
 
Adjusted OIBDA Margin

The following table sets forth the Adjusted OIBDA margins (Adjusted OIBDA divided by revenue) of each of our reportable segments:

C&W Caribbean and Networks
C&W Panama
VTR/Cabletica
Liberty Puerto Rico

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

%

41.8 
35.4 
38.1 
44.4 

40.4 
39.1 
40.4 
49.3 

Adjusted OIBDA margin is impacted by organic changes in revenue, programming and other direct costs of services and other operating costs and
expenses, as further discussed below, which include the impacts relating to COVID-19. The organic changes in Adjusted OIBDA for the VTR market of
our VTR/Cabletica segment, was negatively impacted by $21 million from foreign currency impact of contracts denominated in U.S. dollars during the
year ended December 31, 2020, of which $15 million related to programming and the remaining in various other cost categories. The significant decrease
in the Adjusted OIBDA margin for Liberty Puerto Rico is primarily related to lower Adjusted OIBDA margins associated with the new mobile operations
at Liberty Puerto Rico following the closing of the AT&T Acquisition. For additional information regarding the impacts of COVID-19, see discussion in
Overview above.

Revenue

All of our segments derive their revenue primarily from (i) residential fixed services, including video, broadband internet and fixed-line telephony, (ii)
residential mobile services, including, beginning in November 2020, at Liberty Puerto Rico following the closing of the AT&T Acquisition, and (iii) B2B
services. C&W also provides wholesale communication services over its subsea and terrestrial fiber optic cable networks.

While not specifically discussed in the below explanations of the changes in revenue, we are experiencing significant competition in all of our markets.

This competition has an adverse impact on our ability to increase or maintain our RGUs and/or ARPU.

Variances in the subscription revenue that we receive from our customers are a function of (i) changes in the number of RGUs or mobile subscribers
during  the  period  and  (ii)  changes  in  ARPU.  Changes  in  ARPU  can  be  attributable  to  (i)  changes  in  prices,  (ii)  changes  in  bundling  or  promotional
discounts,  (iii)  changes  in  the  tier  of  services  selected,  (iv)  variances  in  subscriber  usage  patterns  and  (v)  the  overall  mix  of  fixed  and  mobile  products
during the period. In the following discussion, we discuss ARPU changes in terms of the net impact of the above factors on the ARPU that is derived from
our video, broadband internet, fixed-line telephony and mobile products.

For the 2020 and 2019 comparison below, revenue variances, including changes in ARPU, were influenced by the impacts of COVID-19, as further

discussed below and in the Overview above.

II-9

 
 
 
The following table sets forth revenue by reportable segment:    

C&W Caribbean and Networks
C&W Panama
VTR/Cabletica
Liberty Puerto Rico
Corporate
Intersegment eliminations

Total

N.M. — Not Meaningful.

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

Increase (decrease)
%
$

in millions, except percentages

$

$

1,706.8  $
500.2 
949.0 
624.1 
2.7 
(18.2)
3,764.6  $

1,812.8  $
582.7 
1,073.8 
412.1 
— 
(14.4)
3,867.0  $

(106.0)
(82.5)
(124.8)
212.0 
2.7 
(3.8)
(102.4)

(5.8)
(14.2)
(11.6)
51.4 
N.M.
N.M.
(2.6)

Consolidated. The decrease during 2020, as compared to 2019, includes (i) an increase of $209 million associated with the impact of acquisitions and
(ii)  a  decrease  of  $49  million  associated  with  the  impact  of  a  disposal  and  (iii)  a  decrease  of  $137  million  attributable  to  FX.  Excluding  the  effects  of
acquisitions, a disposal and FX, revenue decreased $126 million or 3.2%. The organic decrease primarily includes increases (decreases) of ($58 million),
($83 million), ($22 million) and $38 million at C&W Caribbean and Networks, C&W Panama, VTR/Cabletica and Liberty Puerto Rico, respectively, as
further discussed below.

C&W Caribbean and Networks. C&W Caribbean and Networks’s revenue by major category is set forth below:

Residential revenue:

Residential fixed revenue:
Subscription revenue:

Video
Broadband internet
Fixed-line telephony

Total subscription revenue

Non-subscription revenue

Total residential fixed revenue

Residential mobile revenue:
Service revenue
Interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other (a)

Total residential mobile revenue

Total residential revenue

B2B revenue:

Service revenue
Subsea network revenue
Total B2B revenue
Total

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

Increase (decrease)
%
$

in millions, except percentages

$

$

142.4  $
250.0 
74.6 
467.0 
42.2 
509.2 

294.1 
44.4 
338.5 
847.7 

150.1  $
225.1 
79.5 
454.7 
47.5 
502.2 

339.1 
65.3 
404.4 
906.6 

(7.7)
24.9 
(4.9)
12.3 
(5.3)
7.0 

(45.0)
(20.9)
(65.9)
(58.9)

600.4 
258.7 
859.1 
1,706.8  $

659.3 
246.9 
906.2 
1,812.8  $

(58.9)
11.8 
(47.1)
(106.0)

(5.1)
11.1 
(6.2)
2.7 
(11.2)
1.4 

(13.3)
(32.0)
(16.3)
(6.5)

(8.9)
4.8 
(5.2)
(5.8)

(a)

Revenue  from  inbound  roaming  was  $14  million  and  $34  million,  respectively.  For  additional  information  regarding  a  change  in  presentation  of
revenue by product, see note 21 to the consolidated financial statements.

II-10

 
 
 
 
 
The details of the changes in C&W Caribbean and Networks’s revenue during 2020, as compared to 2019, are set forth below (in millions):

Increase (decrease) in residential fixed subscription revenue due to change in:

Average number of RGUs (a)
ARPU (b)

Decrease in residential fixed non-subscription revenue (c)

Total increase in residential fixed revenue

Decrease in residential mobile service revenue (d)
Decrease in residential mobile interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other (e)
Decrease in B2B service revenue (f)
Increase in B2B subsea network revenue (g)

Total organic decrease

Net impact of acquisitions and a disposal
Impact of FX

Total

$

$

27.7 
(10.9)
(3.4)
13.4 
(29.2)
(20.9)
(38.0)
16.5 
(58.2)
(14.1)
(33.7)
(106.0)

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

(e)

(f)

(g)

The increase is attributable to higher average broadband internet and video RGUs. The increase in broadband internet RGUs is partially attributable
to an increase in telecommuting during COVID-19 due to work-from-home mandates.

The  decrease  is  primarily  due  to  the  net  effect  of  (i)  lower  ARPU  from  video  and  fixed-line  telephony  services  and  (ii)  higher  ARPU  from
broadband internet services.

The decrease is primarily attributable to lower volumes of interconnect revenue across our markets.

The decrease is primarily attributable to (i) lower ARPU from mobile services, as COVID-19 lockdowns and travel restrictions reduced (a) demand
for  mobile  data  services  and (b)  outbound  roaming  activity,  and  (ii)  lower  average  prepaid  mobile  subscribers,  primarily  due  to  declines  in  the
Bahamas, as a result of COVID-19 impacts, as further discussed in the Overview above.

The  decrease  is  primarily  attributable  to  an  organic  decrease  of  $18  million  in  inbound  roaming  fees,  primarily  related  to  travel  restrictions
associated with COVID-19.

The  decrease  is  primarily  due  to (i)  lower  revenues  from  mobile  and  fixed  services  partially  due  to  discounts  and  credits  related  to  reduced  or
suspended service across our markets as a result of the COVID-19 lockdowns and (ii) lower wholesale interconnect revenues.

The increase is primarily attributable to (i) an increase of $7 million associated with revenue recognized on a cash basis for services provided to a
significant customer and (ii) an increase in the demand for telecommunications capacity on our subsea network during COVID-19.

II-11

C&W Panama. C&W Panama’s revenue by major category is set forth below:

Residential revenue:

Residential fixed revenue:
Subscription revenue:

Video
Broadband internet
Fixed-line telephony

Total subscription revenue

Non-subscription revenue

Total residential fixed revenue

Residential mobile revenue:
Service revenue
Interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other (a)

Total residential mobile revenue

Total residential revenue

B2B service revenue

Total

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

Increase (decrease)
%
$

in millions, except percentages

$

$

27.8  $
39.0 
18.8 
85.6 
11.8 
97.4 

160.1 
41.0 
201.1 
298.5 
201.7 
500.2  $

31.0  $
34.9 
22.4 
88.3 
14.5 
102.8 

183.8 
56.8 
240.6 
343.4 
239.3 
582.7  $

(3.2)
4.1 
(3.6)
(2.7)
(2.7)
(5.4)

(23.7)
(15.8)
(39.5)
(44.9)
(37.6)
(82.5)

(10.3)
11.7 
(16.1)
(3.1)
(18.6)
(5.3)

(12.9)
(27.8)
(16.4)
(13.1)
(15.7)
(14.2)

(a)

Revenue  from  inbound  roaming  was  $2  million  and  $3  million,  respectively.  For  additional  information  regarding  a  change  in  presentation  of
revenue by product, see note 21 to the consolidated financial statements.

The details of the changes in C&W Panama’s revenue during 2020, as compared to 2019, are set forth below (in millions):

Increase (decrease) in residential fixed subscription revenue due to change in:

Average number of RGUs (a)
ARPU (b)

Decrease in residential fixed non-subscription revenue (c)

Total decrease in residential fixed revenue
Decrease in residential mobile service revenue (d)
Decrease in residential mobile interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other revenue (e)
Decrease in B2B service revenue (f)

Total organic decrease

$

$

8.4 
(11.1)
(2.7)
(5.4)
(23.7)
(15.8)
(37.6)
(82.5)

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

(e)

The  increase  is  primarily  attributable  to  higher  average  broadband  internet  RGUs,  partially  attributable  to  an  increase  in  telecommuting  during
COVID-19 due to work-from-home mandates.

The decrease is primarily due to lower ARPU from fixed-line telephony and video services.

The decrease is primarily attributable to (i) a decrease in payphone revenue and (ii) lower interconnect volumes.

The decrease is primarily attributable to (i) lower ARPU from mobile services, as COVID-19 lockdowns and travel restrictions negatively impacted
customers’ ability to recharge handset devices, and (ii) lower average mobile subscribers, primarily resulting from the impacts of COVID-19 and
competition, as further discussed in the Overview above.

The decrease is primarily attributable to (i) lower volumes of handset sales, as COVID-19 related lockdowns negatively impacted customers’ ability
to purchase handsets and (ii) lower interconnect volumes.

II-12

 
 
 
(f)

The decrease is primarily due to (i) lower revenues from managed services, primarily driven by certain non-recurring projects that have been put on
hold due to the economic uncertainty of the impact of COVID-19, (ii) lower revenues from mobile and fixed services partially due to discounts and
credits related to reduced or suspended service as a result of the COVID-19 lockdowns.

VTR/Cabletica. VTR/Cabletica’s revenue by major category is set forth below:

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

Increase (decrease)
%
$

in millions, except percentages

Residential revenue:

Residential fixed revenue:
Subscription revenue:

Video
Broadband internet
Fixed-line telephony

Total subscription revenue

Non-subscription revenue

Total residential fixed revenue

Residential mobile revenue:
Service revenue
Interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other

Total residential mobile revenue

Total residential revenue

B2B service revenue

Total

$

$

370.6  $
382.7 
77.2 
830.5 
24.3 
854.8 

55.7 
8.2 
63.9 
918.7 
30.3 
949.0  $

422.1  $
412.0 
100.7 
934.8 
34.3 
969.1 

62.7 
12.0 
74.7 
1,043.8 
30.0 
1,073.8  $

(51.5)
(29.3)
(23.5)
(104.3)
(10.0)
(114.3)

(7.0)
(3.8)
(10.8)
(125.1)
0.3 
(124.8)

The details of the changes in VTR/Cabletica’s revenue during 2020, as compared to 2019, are set forth below (in millions):

Increase (decrease) in residential fixed subscription revenue due to change in:

Average number of RGUs (a)
ARPU (b)

Decrease in residential fixed non-subscription revenue (c)

Total decrease in residential fixed revenue
Increase in residential mobile service revenue (d)
Decrease in residential mobile interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other revenue (e)
Increase in B2B service revenue (f)

Total organic decrease

Impact of FX

Total

$

$

(12.2)
(7.1)
(23.3)
(11.2)
(29.2)
(11.8)

(11.2)
(31.7)
(14.5)
(12.0)
1.0 
(11.6)

4.6 
(20.2)
(7.6)
(23.2)
0.3 
(2.8)
4.2 
(21.5)
(103.3)
(124.8)

(a)

(b)

(c)

The  increase  is  primarily  attributable  to  the  net  effect  of  (i)  higher  average  broadband  internet  RGUs,  partially  attributable  to  an  increase  in
telecommuting during COVID-19 due to work-from-home mandates, and (ii) lower average fixed-line telephony RGUs at VTR.

The  decrease,  which  relates  to  VTR,  is  primarily  due  to  lower  ARPU  from  (i)  video,  primarily  attributable  to  declines  associated  with  the
cancellation of live soccer matches broadcast on our premium programming, and (ii) fixed-line telephony.

The decrease is primarily attributable to (i) lower activations and installations at VTR as a result of COVID-19 and (ii) lower equipment sales at
Cabletica.

II-13

 
 
 
(d)

(e)

The increase, which relates to VTR, is due to the net effect of (i) higher average numbers of mobile subscribers and (ii) lower ARPU from mobile
services.

The decrease, which relates to VTR, is primarily attributable to declines in (i) interconnect revenue due to decreased rates, partially offset by higher
traffic, and (ii) handset sales due to the temporary closure of physical stores, as a result of COVID-19-related lockdowns.

(f)

The increase is largely attributable to higher broadband internet and fixed-line telephony services at VTR.

Liberty Puerto Rico Liberty Puerto Rico’s revenue by major category is set forth below:

Residential fixed revenue:
Subscription revenue:

Video
Broadband internet
Fixed-line telephony

Total subscription revenue

Non-subscription revenue

Total residential fixed revenue

Residential mobile revenue:
Service revenue
Interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other (a)

Total residential mobile revenue

Total residential revenue

B2B service revenue
Other revenue (b)

Total

N.M. — Not Meaningful.

Year ended December 31,
2020

2019

Increase (decrease)
%
$

in millions, except percentages

$

$

147.2 
204.7 
25.5 
377.4 
17.7 
395.1 

82.9 
50.6 
133.5 
528.6 
89.8 
5.7 
624.1 

$

$

140.9 
175.0 
23.4 
339.3 
21.7 
361.0 

— 
— 
— 
361.0 
51.1 
— 
412.1 

$

$

6.3 
29.7 
2.1 
38.1 
(4.0)
34.1 

82.9 
50.6 
133.5 
167.6 
38.7 
5.7 
212.0 

4.5 
17.0 
9.0 
11.2 
(18.4)
9.4 

N.M.
N.M.
N.M.
46.4 
75.7 
N.M.
51.4 

(a)

(b)

Revenue from inbound roaming was $11 million in 2020.

Amount relates to funds received from the FCC related to Liberty Mobile following the closing of the AT&T Acquisition.

II-14

 
 
 
The details of the changes in Liberty Puerto Rico’s revenue during the year ended December 31, 2020, as compared to 2019, are set forth below (in

millions):

Increase in residential fixed subscription revenue due to change in:

Average number of RGUs (a)
ARPU (b)

Decrease in residential fixed non-subscription revenue (c)

Total increase in residential fixed revenue

Increase in B2B service (d)

Total organic increase

Impact of an acquisition

Total

$

$

33.2 
4.9 
(4.0)

34.1 
3.7 
37.8 
174.2 
212.0 

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

The increase is primarily attributable to higher average broadband internet RGUs, as we experienced increased demand due in part to the impact of
COVID-19 work-from-home mandates.

The increase is primarily attributable to the net effect of (i) higher ARPU from broadband internet and video services and (ii) $2 million of credits
issued to customers in connection with the earthquakes that impacted Puerto Rico in January 2020.

The decrease is primarily due to reconnect and late fee revenues, as such fees were generally waived during the second and third quarters in response
to impacts of COVID-19.

The  increase  primarily  relates  to  the  transfer  of  certain  B2B  operations  in  Puerto  Rico  from  our  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks  segment  to  our
Liberty Puerto Rico segment.

Programming and other direct costs of services

Programming and other direct costs of services include programming and copyright costs, interconnect and access costs, commissions, costs of mobile
handsets and other devices, and other direct costs related to our operations. Programming and copyright costs, which represent a significant portion of our
operating costs, may increase in future periods as a result of (i) higher costs associated with the expansion of our digital video content, including rights
associated with ancillary product offerings and rights that provide for the broadcast of live sporting events, (ii) rate increases or (iii) growth in the number
of our video subscribers.

The following table sets forth the organic and non-organic changes in programming and other direct costs of services on a consolidated basis:

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

Increase
(decrease)

FX

Acquisition
(disposition), net

Organic

Increase (decrease) from:

Programming and copyright
Interconnect and commissions
Equipment and other

$

Total programming and other direct costs $

389.3 
249.9 
206.8 
846.0 

$

$

404.8  $
280.0 
193.0 
877.8  $

in millions

(15.5) $
(30.1)
13.8 
(31.8) $

(21.5) $
(12.2)
(2.8)
(36.5) $

(0.9) $
3.4 
55.3 
57.8  $

6.9 
(21.3)
(38.7)
(53.1)

II-15

 
 
 
C&W Caribbean and Networks. The following table sets forth the organic and non-organic changes in programming and other direct costs of services

for our C&W Caribbean and Networks segment.

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

Decrease

FX

Decrease from:

Acquisition
(disposition), net

Organic

Programming and copyright
Interconnect and commissions
Equipment and other

$

Total programming and other direct costs $

88.8 
163.0 
59.1 
310.9 

$

$

105.3  $
174.4 
75.0 
354.7  $

in millions

(16.5) $
(11.4)
(15.9)
(43.8) $

(1.3) $
(6.8)
(0.9)
(9.0) $

(2.8) $
(2.6)
(2.2)
(7.6) $

(12.4)
(2.0)
(12.8)
(27.2)

•

•

•

Programming and copyright: The organic decrease is primarily due to the net effect of (i) lower sports content costs and (ii) the net negative
impact of $9 million, resulting from the reassessment and release of various accruals in certain of our markets during 2020 and 2019.

Interconnect and commissions: The organic decrease is primarily due to the net effect of (i) lower wholesale call volumes and (ii) the negative
impact resulting from the reassessment of an accrual during 2019.

Equipment and other: The organic decrease is primarily due to lower volume of mobile handset sales.

C&W Panama. The following table sets forth the organic changes in programming and other direct costs of services for our C&W Panama segment.

Programming and copyright
Interconnect and commissions
Equipment and other

Total programming and other direct costs

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019
in millions

Organic decrease

$

$

13.9 
41.1 
74.0 
129.0 

$

$

14.6  $
52.0 
91.1 
157.7  $

(0.7)
(10.9)
(17.1)
(28.7)

•

•

Interconnect and commissions: The organic decrease is primarily due to lower wholesale call volumes.

Equipment and other: The organic decrease is primarily due to (i) lower volume of mobile handset sales and (ii) a decrease driven by certain
non-recurring projects that have been put on hold due to the economic uncertainty of the impact of COVID-19, .

VTR/Cabletica.  The  following  table  sets  forth  the  organic  and  non-organic  changes  in  programming  and  other  direct  costs  of  services  for  our

VTR/Cabletica segment.

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

Decrease
in millions

Increase (decrease) from:

FX

Organic

Programming and copyright
Interconnect and commissions
Equipment and other

Total programming and other direct costs

$

$

194.7 
45.0 
18.2 
257.9 

$

$

199.9  $
57.4 
28.1 
285.4  $

(5.2) $
(12.4)
(9.9)
(27.5) $

(20.2) $
(5.4)
(1.9)
(27.5) $

15.0 
(7.0)
(8.0)
— 

II-16

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
•

•

•

Programming and copyright: The organic increase, mostly in the VTR market, is primarily due to the net effect of (i) an increase of $15 million
in the foreign currency impact of programming contracts denominated in U.S. dollars, and (ii) a net decrease in certain premium and basic content
costs, primarily due to (a) a decline associated with the renegotiation of a programming contract that governs content rates for live soccer matches
that were cancelled, (b) an increase in rates in other premium and basic content cost and (c) lower subscribers of other premium and basic content.

Interconnect and commissions: The organic decrease, which relates to the VTR market, is primarily due to lower rates that were partially offset
by higher volumes.

Equipment and other: The organic decrease, mostly in the VTR market, is primarily due to the net effect of (i) lower volumes of equipment sales
as  a  result  of  changes  in  market  dynamics  and  customer  usage  due  to  COVID-19-related  restrictions  and  (ii)  an  increase  of  $3  million  in  the
foreign currency impact on costs of handsets sales.

Liberty Puerto Rico. The following table sets forth the organic changes in programming and other direct costs of services for our Liberty Puerto Rico

segment.

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

Increase from:

Increase
in millions

Acquisition

Organic

Programming and copyright
Interconnect and commissions
Equipment and other

Total programming and other direct costs

$

$

91.9 
14.2 
58.2 
164.3 

$

$

85.0  $
7.5 
0.3 
92.8  $

6.9  $
6.7 
57.9 
71.5  $

1.9  $
6.0 
57.5 
65.4  $

5.0 
0.7 
0.4 
6.1 

•

•

Programming and copyright: The organic increase is primarily due to (i) a higher average number of video subscribers, (ii) an accrual recorded
in the second quarter of 2020 related to an audit of programming services provided in 2018 and 2019 and (iii) higher programming rates.

Interconnect and commissions: The organic increase is primarily due to the transfer of certain B2B operations in Puerto Rico from our C&W
Caribbean and Networks segment to our Liberty Puerto Rico segment during the first quarter of 2019.

Other operating costs and expenses

Other operating costs and expenses set forth in the tables below comprise the following cost categories:

•

Personnel and contract labor-related costs, which primarily include salary-related and cash bonus expenses, net of capitalizable labor costs, and
temporary contract labor costs;

• Network-related expenses, which primarily include costs related to network access, system power, core network, and CPE repair, maintenance

and test costs;

•

Service-related costs, which primarily include professional services, information technology-related services, audit, legal and other services;

• Commercial, which primarily includes sales and marketing costs, such as advertising, commissions and other sales and marketing-related costs,

and customer care costs related to outsourced call centers;

•

•

Facility, provision, franchise and other, which primarily includes facility-related costs, provision for bad debt expense, franchise-related fees,
bank fees, insurance, travel and entertainment and other operating-related costs; and

Share-based compensation costs that relate to (i) SARs, RSUs and PSUs issued to our employees and Directors and (ii) bonus-related expenses
that will be paid in the form of equity.

II-17

 
 
 
Consolidated. The following table sets forth the organic and non-organic changes in other operating costs and expenses on a consolidated basis.

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

Increase
(decrease)

FX

Acquisition
(disposition), net

Organic

Increase (decrease) from:

$

Personnel and contract labor
Network-related
Service-related
Commercial
Facility, provision, franchise and other
Share-based compensation expense

Total other operating costs and expenses

$

483.6 
261.4 
161.7 
168.1 
359.1 
97.5 
1,531.4 

$

$

500.4  $
264.4 
149.9 
172.6 
360.5 
57.5 
1,505.3  $

in millions

(16.8) $
(3.0)
11.8 
(4.5)
(1.4)
40.0 
26.1  $

(13.0) $
(11.4)
(5.0)
(11.2)
(8.4)
(1.0)
(50.0) $

14.1  $
1.1 
9.7 
5.4 
22.4 
0.8 
53.5  $

(17.9)
7.3 
7.1 
1.3 
(15.4)
40.2 
22.6 

In the following section, we provide a discussion and analysis of the organic changes of other operating costs and expenses, which excludes, where
applicable, the impact of acquisitions, dispositions and FX for each of our reportable segments and our Corporate operations. For additional information
regarding our share-based compensation, see Results of Operations (below Adjusted OIBDA)—2020 compared to 2019 discussion and analysis below and
note 17 to our consolidated financial statements.

C&W Caribbean and Networks. The following table sets forth the organic and non-organic changes in other operating costs and expenses for our

C&W Caribbean and Networks segment.

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

Increase
(decrease)

FX

Acquisition
(disposition), net

Organic

Increase (decrease) from:

$

Personnel and contract labor
Network-related
Service-related
Commercial
Facility, provision, franchise and other
Share-based compensation expense

Total other operating costs and expenses

$

254.2 
140.5 
70.6 
45.4 
171.9 
28.4 
711.0 

$

$

270.6  $
147.3 
70.6 
57.4 
180.0 
16.5 
742.4  $

in millions

(16.4) $
(6.8)
— 
(12.0)
(8.1)
11.9 
(31.4) $

(5.1) $
(3.2)
(0.6)
(1.2)
(2.8)
(0.1)
(13.0) $

0.6  $
(1.4)
1.8 
(0.3)
(0.8)
0.8 
0.7  $

(11.9)
(2.2)
(1.2)
(10.5)
(4.5)
11.2 
(19.1)

•

Personnel and contract labor: The organic decrease is primarily due to the net effect of (i) lower salaries and other personnel costs, primarily
associated  with  the  benefit  of  certain  ongoing  restructuring  activities,  (ii)  $7  million  of  estimated  bonus-related  expenses  that  have  been
recognized as share-based compensation expense, as certain 2020 bonuses will be paid in the form of equity, as further discussed below under
Share-based compensation expense, and (iii) lower capitalized labor costs due to the curtailment of certain projects as a result of the impact of
COVID-19.

• Commercial: The organic decrease is primarily due to lower marketing and sales costs, largely due to reductions in promotional and sponsorship

costs, as a result of certain adverse economic impacts caused by the COVID-19 pandemic across our markets.

•

Facility, provision, franchise and other costs: The organic decrease is primarily due to the net effect of:

◦

lower (i) travel and entertainment costs and (ii) office-related expenses due to the curtailment of such costs as a result of the impact of
COVID-19;

II-18

 
 
 
 
 
 
◦

◦

◦

an increase due to the negative impact of a $10 million decline in 2019 associated with withholding taxes on third-party supplier services,
primarily related to the expiration of statute of limitations;

lower  insurance  costs  of  $4  million  due  in  part  to  our  Weather  Derivative,  as  further  described  below  and  in  notes  3  and  5  to  our
consolidated financial statements; and

bad debt expense, which remained relatively unchanged, as (i) higher bad debt provisions due to the impacts of COVID-19, which have
generally resulted in (a) delays in collections, (b) higher expected credit losses associated with certain B2B customers and (c) changes in
our general expectations related to our customers’ ability to pay, were offset by (ii) the beneficial impacts of (a) a $3 million provision in
2019 related to certain B2B customers and (b) a $2 million provision in 2019 related to the impact of Hurricane Dorian.

C&W Panama. The following table sets forth the organic changes in other operating costs and expenses for our C&W Panama segment.

Personnel and contract labor
Network-related
Service-related
Commercial
Facility, provision, franchise and other
Share-based compensation expense

Total other operating costs and expenses

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019
in millions

Organic increase
(decrease)

$

$

70.9  $
39.7 
13.3 
20.5 
49.6 
2.7 
196.7  $

70.2  $
43.0 
15.8 
22.0 
46.4 
0.9 
198.3  $

0.7 
(3.3)
(2.5)
(1.5)
3.2 
1.8 
(1.6)

•

•

Personnel  and  contract  labor:  The  organic  increase  is  net  of  the  impact  of  $1  million  of  estimated  bonus-related  expense  that  has  been
recognized as share-based compensation expense, as certain 2020 bonuses will be paid in the form of equity, as further discussed below under
Share-based compensation expense.

Facility, provision, franchise and other costs: The organic increase is primarily due to the net effect of (i) higher bad debt provisions during
2020, as the impacts of COVID-19 have generally resulted in (a) delays in collections, (b) higher expected credit losses associated with certain
B2B customers and (c) changes in our general expectations related to our customers’ ability to pay, and (ii) the beneficial impact of a $2 million
increase to the bad debt provision during 2019, primarily related to certain government customers.

VTR/Cabletica. The  following  table  sets  forth  the  organic  and  non-organic  changes  in  other  operating  costs  and  expenses  for  our  VTR/Cabletica

segment.

Personnel and contract labor
Network-related
Service-related
Commercial
Facility, provision, franchise and other
Share-based compensation expense

Total other operating costs and expenses

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

Increase
(decrease)
in millions

Increase (decrease) from:

FX

Organic

$

$

76.1  $
75.8 
38.4 
83.2 
55.7 
8.9 
338.1  $

91.5  $
71.1 
39.9 
82.3 
70.0 
4.9 
359.7  $

(15.4) $
4.7 
(1.5)
0.9 
(14.3)
4.0 
(21.6) $

(7.9) $
(8.2)
(4.4)
(10.0)
(5.6)
(0.9)
(37.0) $

(7.5)
12.9 
2.9 
10.9 
(8.7)
4.9 
15.4 

•

Personnel and contract labor: The organic decrease, mostly related to the VTR market, is primarily due to (i) a decrease in salary-related costs,
which  includes  $3  million  of  estimated  bonus-related  expense  that  has  been  recognized  as  share-based  compensation  expense,  as  certain  2020
bonuses will be paid in the form of equity, as further

II-19

 
 
 
 
 
 
discussed  below  under  Share-based  compensation  expense,  and  (ii)  higher  capitalized  labor  costs  associated  with  certain  development-related
projects.

• Network-related:  The  organic  increase,  mostly  related  to  the  VTR  market,  is  primarily  due  to  (i)  higher  volumes  of  network  access-related

contracted labor and (ii) higher costs related to CPE refurbishment activity.

•

Service-related: The organic increase, mostly related to the VTR market, is primarily due to (i) increased information technology costs associated
with software maintenance and support and (ii) higher professional consultancy services.

• Commercial: The  organic  increase  is  primarily  due  to  the  net  effect  of  (i)  an  increase  in  call  center  volumes  as  a  result  of  the  impact  from

COVID-19, (ii) a decrease in marketing and advertising expenses and (iii) higher sales commissions to third-party dealers.

•

Facility,  provision,  franchise  and  other  costs:  The  organic  decrease  is  primarily  due  to  (i)  lower  travel  and  entertainment  costs  due  to
curtailment of such costs as a result of the impact of COVID-19, (ii) lower bank-related fees and (iii) lower bad debt and collection expenses.

Liberty Puerto Rico. The following table sets forth the organic changes in other operating costs and expenses for our Liberty Puerto Rico segment.

Personnel and contract labor
Network-related
Service-related
Commercial
Facility, provision, franchise and other
Share-based compensation expense

Total other operating costs and expenses

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019

Increase (decrease) from:

Increase

in millions

Acquisition

Organic

$

$

62.1  $
6.7 
24.9 
19.0 
70.2 
5.1 
188.0  $

39.5  $
4.5 
10.6 
10.9 
50.6 
2.2 
118.3  $

22.6  $
2.2 
14.3 
8.1 
19.6 
2.9 
69.7  $

13.5  $
2.5 
7.9 
5.7 
23.2 
— 
52.8  $

9.1 
(0.3)
6.4 
2.4 
(3.6)
2.9 
16.9 

•

•

•

Personnel and contract labor: The organic increase is primarily due to the net effect of (i) annual salary increases, (ii) higher sales commissions
and (iii) $1 million of estimated bonus-related expense that has been recognized as share-based compensation expense, as certain 2020 bonuses
will be paid in the form of equity, as further discussed below under Share-based compensation expense.

Service-related: The organic increase is primarily due to integration costs of $6 million associated with the AT&T Acquisition.

Facility, provision, franchise and other: The organic decrease is primarily due to lower bad debt expense driven by improved collections.

II-20

 
 
 
Corporate. The following tables set forth the organic changes in other operating costs and expenses for our corporate operations.

Personnel and contract labor
Network-related
Service-related
Facility, provision, franchise and other
Share-based compensation expense

Total other operating costs and expenses

Year ended December 31,

2020

2019
in millions

Organic increase
(decrease)

$

$

20.3  $
1.1 
14.5 
11.7 
52.4 
100.0  $

28.6  $
— 
13.0 
13.5 
33.0 
88.1  $

(8.3)
1.1 
1.5 
(1.8)
19.4 
11.9 

•

•

Personnel  and  contract  labor:  The  organic  decrease  is  primarily  attributable  to  $6  million  of  estimated  bonus-related  expense  that  has  been
recognized as share-based compensation expense, as certain 2020 bonuses will be paid in the form of equity, as further discussed below under
Share-based compensation expense.

Facility, provision, franchise and other: The organic decrease is primarily attributable to the net effect of (i) lower travel and entertainment costs
due  to  curtailment  of  such  costs  as  a  result  of  the  impact  of  COVID-19  and  (ii)  higher  expenses  associated  with  a  mobile  handset  insurance
program that began during the fourth quarter of 2020 following the closing of the AT&T Acquisition.

Results of operations (below Adjusted OIBDA)—2020 compared to 2019

Share-based compensation expense (included in other operating costs and expenses)

Share-based compensation expense increased $40 million during 2020, as compared to 2019. This increase is primarily due to (i) an increase of $19
million related to estimated bonus-related expenses that will be paid in the form of equity. Accordingly, such expenses have been included in share-based
compensation  expense  effective  January  1,  2020  and  (ii)  an  increase  of  $7  million  related  to  the  extension  of  the  expiration  period  for  certain  Liberty
Global awards held by our employees.

For additional information regarding our share-based compensation, see note 17 to our consolidated financial statements.

Depreciation and amortization

Our  depreciation  and  amortization  expense  increased  $44  million  or  5.0%  during  2020,  as  compared  to  2019.  Excluding  the  impacts  of  FX,
acquisitions and a disposal, depreciation and amortization expense increased $48 million or 5.5%. The organic increase is primarily due to the net effect of
(i)  an  increase  in  property  and  equipment  additions,  primarily  associated  with  the  installation  of  CPE,  baseline  additions,  support-related  equipment
expenditures and the expansion and upgrade of our networks and other capital initiatives, and (ii) a decrease associated with certain assets becoming fully
depreciated.

Impairment, restructuring and other operating items, net

We recognized impairment, restructuring and other operating items, net, of $381 million and $259 million during 2020 and 2019, respectively.

The  2020  amount  primarily  includes  (i)  impairment  charges  of  $283  million,  (ii)  direct  acquisition  and  disposition  costs  of  $64  million  and  (iii)
restructuring charges of $28 million. The impairment charges, which are primarily due to the economic impacts associated with COVID-19, include (i)
$177 million related to an impairment of goodwill at C&W Panama and (ii) $99 million related to an impairment of goodwill at various reporting units
within the C&W Caribbean and Networks segment. The restructuring charges, which are primarily related to C&W Caribbean and Networks, VTR and
C&W  Panama,  include  employee  severance  and  termination  costs  related  to  certain  reorganization  activities  and  contract  termination  and  other  related
charges. The direct acquisition costs are primarily related to the AT&T Acquisition.

II-21

 
 
 
The  2019  amount  primarily  includes  (i)  impairment  charges  of  $199  million,  (ii)  restructuring  charges  of  $46  million,  (iii)  $10  million  of  direct
acquisition and disposition costs and (iv) a $3 million loss due to the Seychelles Disposition. The impairment charges primarily include (i) $182 million
related to an impairment of goodwill at C&W Panama and (ii) $16 million related to charges at C&W Caribbean and Networks primarily to reduce the
carrying value of property and equipment as a result of the impact of Hurricane Dorian. The restructuring charges, which are primarily at C&W Caribbean
and Networks and VTR, include employee severance and termination costs related to certain reorganization activities and contract termination and other
related  charges.  The  direct  acquisition  costs  and  disposition  costs  relate  to  the  AT&T  Acquisition  and,  to  a  lesser  extent,  the  UTS  Acquisition  and  the
Seychelles Disposition.

For additional information regarding our impairment and restructuring charges, see notes 9 and 12 to our consolidated financial statements.

Interest expense

Our interest expense increased $34 million during 2020, as compared to 2019. The increase is primarily due to (i) the net effect of (a) higher average
outstanding debt balances and (b) lower weighted-average interest rates and (ii) higher amortization of (a) discounts and premiums, net, and (b) deferred
financing costs.

For additional information regarding our outstanding indebtedness, see note 10 to our consolidated financial statements.

It is possible that the interest rates on (i) any new borrowings could be higher than the current interest rates on our existing indebtedness and (ii) our
variable-rate  indebtedness  could  increase  in  future  periods.  As  further  discussed  in  note  5  to  our  consolidated  financial  statements  and  under  Item  7A.
Qualitative and Quantitative Disclosures about Market Risk below, we use derivative instruments to manage our interest rate risks.

Realized and unrealized losses on derivative instruments, net

Our  realized  and  unrealized  gains  or  losses  on  derivative  instruments  primarily  include  (i)  unrealized  changes  in  the  fair  values  of  our  derivative
instruments that are non-cash in nature until such time as the derivative contracts are fully or partially settled and (ii) realized gains or losses upon the full
or partial settlement of the derivative contracts. The details of our realized and unrealized losses on derivative instruments, net, are as follows:

Cross-currency and interest rate derivative contracts (a) (b)
Foreign currency forward contracts
Weather Derivatives (c)

Total

Year ended December 31,
2019
2020

in millions

$

$

(328.6) $
(7.8)
(16.3)
(352.7) $

(21.0)
9.4 
(5.6)
(17.2)

(a)

(b)

The loss during 2020 includes a realized gain of $71 million associated with the settlement of certain cross-currency interest rate swaps at VTR in
June  2020  that  were  unwound  in  connection  with  the  July  2020  refinancing  of  certain  VTR  debt.  For  additional  information  regarding  the
refinancing, see note 10 to our consolidated financial statements.

The  loss  during  2020  is  primarily  attributable  to  the  net  effect  of  (i)  changes  in  interest  rates  and  (ii)  changes  in  FX  rates,  predominantly  due  to
changes in the value of the Chilean peso relative to the U.S. dollar. In addition, the loss during 2020 includes a net gain of $47 million resulting from
changes in our credit risk valuation adjustments, which are primarily due to increased credit risk stemming from market reaction to the COVID-19
outbreak. The loss during 2019 is primarily attributable to (i) changes in interest rates and (ii) changes in FX rates, predominantly due to changes in
the value of the Chilean peso relative to the U.S. dollar. In addition, the loss during 2019 includes a net gain of $4 million resulting from changes in
our credit risk valuation adjustments.

(c)

Amounts  represent  the  amortization  of  the  premiums  associated  with  our  Weather  Derivatives,  which  we  initially  entered  into  during  the  second
quarter of 2019.

For additional information concerning our derivative instruments, see notes 5 and 6 to our consolidated financial statements and Item 7A. Qualitative

and Quantitative Disclosures about Market Risk below.

II-22

 
 
 
Foreign currency transaction gains (losses), net

Our foreign currency transaction gains or losses primarily result from the remeasurement of monetary assets and liabilities that are denominated in
currencies  other  than  the  underlying  functional  currency  of  the  applicable  entity.  Unrealized  foreign  currency  transaction  gains  or  losses  are  computed
based on period-end exchange rates and are non-cash in nature until such time as the amounts are settled. The details of our foreign currency transaction
gains (losses), net, are as follows:

U.S. dollar-denominated debt issued by a Chilean peso functional currency entity
Intercompany payables and receivables denominated in a currency other than the entity’s functional currency
British pound sterling-denominated debt issued by a U.S. dollar functional currency entity
Other

Total

Losses on debt modification and extinguishment, net

Year ended December 31,
2019
2020

in millions

$

$

61.7  $
(53.2)
— 
(7.3)
1.2  $

(98.4)
(10.0)
(3.7)
(0.4)
(112.5)

We recognized losses on debt modification and extinguishment, net, of $45 million and $20 million during 2020 and 2019, respectively. The losses
during 2020 are associated with (i) the payment of redemption premiums and the write-off of unamortized deferred financing costs related to the repayment
of the VTR Finance Senior Notes and (ii) the write-off of unamortized discounts and deferred financing costs related to the repayment of the C&W Term
Loan B-4 Facility. The loss during 2019 primarily includes the payment of redemption premiums.

For additional information concerning our losses on debt modification and extinguishment, see note 10 to our consolidated financial statements.

Other income (expense), net

Our other income and expense, net, generally includes (i) certain amounts associated with our defined benefit plans, including interest expense and

expected return on plan assets, and (ii) interest income on cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash.

We recognized other income, net, of nil and $14 million during 2020 and 2019, respectively. The amount during 2020 primarily relates to the net effect
of (i) interest income, including interest on the AT&T Acquisition Restricted Cash, and (ii) other individually insignificant expenses. The amount during
2019 primarily relates to interest income.

For additional information regarding our defined benefit plans, see note 16 to our consolidated financial statements.

Income tax benefit (expense)

Liberty Latin America was formed as a corporation in Bermuda and, therefore, the “statutory” or “expected” tax rate for the 2020 and 2019 tax years is
0%  as  we  are  exempt  from  income  taxes  on  ordinary  income  and  capital  gains.  However,  a  majority  of  our  subsidiaries  operate  in  jurisdictions  where
income tax is imposed at local applicable statutory rates. For additional information, see note 15 to our consolidated financial statements.

We recognized income tax benefit of $29 million and $98 million during 2020 and 2019, respectively.

The income tax benefit attributable to our loss before income taxes during 2020 differs from the amounts computed using the statutory tax rate (based
on the Bermuda statutory tax rate of 0%), primarily due to the beneficial effects of (i) international rate differences, (ii) changes in enacted tax laws (but
which are nearly entirely offset by valuation allowance), and (iii) net favorable changes in uncertain tax positions. These beneficial impacts to our effective
tax  rate  were  partially  offset  by  the  negative  effects  of  (i)  increases  in  valuation  allowances,  (ii)  permanent  items,  such  as  non-deductible  goodwill
impairment and other non-deductible expenses, as well as (iii) the inclusion of withholding taxes on cross-border payments.

The income tax expense attributable to our loss before income taxes during 2019 differs from the amounts computed using the statutory tax rate (based
on the Bermuda statutory tax rate of 0%), primarily due to the beneficial effects of (i) net favorable changes in uncertain tax positions, (ii) international rate
differences, (iii) basis adjustments associated with investments in

II-23

 
 
 
Liberty Latin America entities and (iv) enacted tax rate changes, which are offset by the detrimental effects of (i) increases in valuation allowances, (ii)
non-deductible goodwill impairments and (iii) net unfavorable permanent difference.

For additional information regarding our income taxes, see note 15 to our consolidated financial statements.

Net loss

The following table sets forth selected summary financial information of our net loss:

Operating income

Net non-operating expenses

Income tax benefit

Net loss

Year ended December 31,
2019
2020

in millions

$

$

$

$

91.7  $

(929.9) $

29.3  $

(808.9) $

353.8 

(634.4)

98.2 

(182.4)

Gains  or  losses  associated  with  (i)  changes  in  the  fair  values  of  derivative  instruments  and  (ii)  movements  in  foreign  currency  exchange  rates  are
subject to a high degree of volatility and, as such, any gains from these sources do not represent a reliable source of income. In the absence of significant
gains in the future from these sources or from other non-operating items, our ability to achieve earnings is largely dependent on our ability to increase our
aggregate  Adjusted  OIBDA  to  a  level  that  more  than  offsets  the  aggregate  amount  of  our  (i)  share-based  compensation  expense,  (ii)  depreciation  and
amortization, (iii) impairment, restructuring and other operating items, (iv) interest expense, (v) other non-operating expenses and (vi) income tax expenses.

Due largely to the fact that we seek to maintain our debt at levels that provide for attractive equity returns, as discussed under Liquidity and Capital
Resources—Capitalization below, we expect that we will continue to report significant levels of interest expense for the foreseeable future. For information
concerning  our  expectations  with  respect  to  trends  that  may  affect  certain  aspects  of  our  operating  results  in  future  periods,  see  the  discussion  under
Overview above.

Net loss attributable to noncontrolling interests

We reported net losses attributable to noncontrolling interests of $122 million and $102 million during 2020 and 2019, respectively. The change during

2020, as compared to 2019, is primarily attributable to net increases in losses incurred by our less-than-wholly-owned subsidiaries at C&W.

Year Ended December 31, 2019 as Compared with Year Ended December 31, 2018

Consolidated Adjusted OIBDA

As further described above, consolidated Adjusted OIBDA is a non-U.S. GAAP measure. A reconciliation of total operating income (loss), the nearest

U.S. GAAP measure, to Adjusted OIBDA on a consolidated basis, is presented below.

Operating income (loss)
Share-based compensation expense
Depreciation and amortization
Impairment, restructuring and other operating items, net

Consolidated Adjusted OIBDA

II-24

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018

in millions

$

$

353.8  $
57.5 
871.0 
259.1 
1,541.4  $

(23.6)
39.8 
829.8 
640.5 
1,486.5 

 
 
 
 
 
 
The following table sets forth organic and non-organic changes in Adjusted OIBDA for the period indicated:

C&W
Caribbean
and Networks

C&W
Panama

VTR/Cabletica

Liberty Puerto
Rico
in millions

Corporate

Intersegment
eliminations

Consolidated

$

664.3  $

251.4  $

421.1  $

195.8  $

(46.1) $

—  $

1,486.5 

9.9 
25.9 
25.7 
(11.0)

(18.2)
(11.8)
6.1 
— 

20.2 
4.7 
(16.0)
— 

76.5 
(13.4)
(7.2)
(48.5)

— 
— 
(9.0)

(8.0)
25.3 
732.1  $

0.1 
— 
227.6  $

(33.3)
36.9 
433.6  $

— 
— 
203.2  $

— 
— 
(55.1) $

$

(1.1)
0.9 
0.2 
— 

— 
— 
—  $

87.3 
6.3 
(0.2)
(59.5)

(41.2)
62.2 
1,541.4 

Adjusted OIBDA for the twelve months

ending:

December 31, 2018
Organic changes related to:

Revenue
Programming and other direct costs
Other operating costs and expenses
Business interruption loss recovery

Non-organic increases (decreases):

FX
Acquisitions/disposition, net

December 31, 2019

Adjusted OIBDA Margin

The following table sets forth the Adjusted OIBDA margins of each of our reportable segments:

C&W Caribbean and Networks
C&W Panama
VTR/Cabletica
Liberty Puerto Rico

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018

%

40.4 
39.1 
40.4 
49.3 

38.2 
41.8 
40.3 
58.3 

Adjusted OIBDA margin is impacted by organic changes in revenue, programming and other direct costs of services and other operating costs and
expenses, as further discussed below. The decrease in Liberty Puerto Rico’s Adjusted OIBDA margin, is attributable to (i) a 1,460 basis point decrease
resulting  from  the  2018  insurance  settlement  related  to  the  2017  Hurricanes  and  (ii)  a  330  basis  point  decrease  due  to  funding  from  the  FCC  received
during 2018. Excluding the impacts of the insurance settlement and FCC funding, Liberty Puerto Rico’s Adjusted OIBDA margin increased, primarily due
to an increase in revenue following the recovery from the 2017 Hurricanes.

II-25

 
 
 
 
Revenue

The following table sets forth revenue by reportable segment:    

C&W Caribbean and Networks
C&W Panama
VTR/Cabletica
Liberty Puerto Rico
Intersegment eliminations

Total

N.M. — Not Meaningful.

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018

Increase (decrease)
%
$

in millions, except percentages

$

$

1,812.8  $
582.7 
1,073.8 
412.1 
(14.4)
3,867.0  $

1,738.7  $
600.9 
1,043.7 
335.6 
(13.2)
3,705.7  $

74.1 
(18.2)
30.1 
76.5 
(1.2)
161.3 

4.3 
(3.0)
2.9 
22.8 
N.M.
4.4 

Consolidated. The increase during 2019, as compared to 2018, includes (i) a net increase of $185 million attributable to the impacts of acquisitions and
a disposal and (ii) a decrease of $111 million attributable FX. Excluding the effects of acquisitions, a disposal and FX, revenue increased $87 million or
2.4%. The organic increase primarily includes increases (decreases) of $10 million, ($18 million), $20 million and $77 million at C&W Caribbean and
Networks, C&W Panama, VTR/Cabletica and Liberty Puerto Rico, respectively, as further discussed below.

C&W Caribbean and Networks. C&W Caribbean and Networks’s revenue by major category is set forth below:

Residential revenue:

Residential fixed revenue:
Subscription revenue:

Video
Broadband internet
Fixed-line telephony

Total subscription revenue

Non-subscription revenue

Total residential fixed revenue

Residential mobile revenue:
Service revenue
Interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other (a)

Total residential mobile revenue

Total residential revenue

B2B revenue:

Service revenue
Subsea network revenue
Total B2B revenue
Total

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018

Increase (decrease)
%
$

in millions, except percentages

$

$

150.1  $
225.1 
79.5 
454.7 
47.5 
502.2 

339.1 
65.3 
404.4 
906.6 

143.0  $
194.3 
76.6 
413.9 
50.0 
463.9 

344.5 
71.8 
416.3 
880.2 

659.3 
246.9 
906.2 
1,812.8  $

610.5 
248.0 
858.5 
1,738.7  $

7.1 
30.8 
2.9 
40.8 
(2.5)
38.3 

(5.4)
(6.5)
(11.9)
26.4 

48.8 
(1.1)
47.7 
74.1 

5.0 
15.9 
3.8 
9.9 
(5.0)
8.3 

(1.6)
(9.1)
(2.9)
3.0 

8.0 
(0.4)
5.6 
4.3 

(a)

Revenue  from  inbound  roaming  was  $34  million  and  $35  million,  respectively.  For  additional  information  regarding  a  change  in  presentation  of
revenue by product, see note 21 to the consolidated financial statements.

II-26

 
 
 
 
 
The details of the changes in C&W Caribbean and Networks’s revenue during 2019, as compared to 2018, are set forth below (in millions):

Increase (decrease) in residential fixed subscription revenue due to change in:

Average number of RGUs (a)
ARPU (b)

Decrease in residential fixed non-subscription revenue (c)

Total increase in residential fixed revenue

Decrease in residential mobile service revenue (d)
Decrease in residential mobile interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other (e)
Increase in B2B service revenue (f)
Increase in B2B subsea network revenue

Total organic increase

Net impact of an acquisition and a disposal
Impact of FX

Total

$

$

22.8 
(4.7)
(3.8)
14.3 
(23.4)
(10.4)
25.5 
3.9 
9.9 
86.4 
(22.2)
74.1 

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

(e)

(f)

The increase is primarily attributable to higher broadband internet and video RGUs. The increase is partially offset by a decrease in RGUs as a result
of Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas.

The  decrease  is  primarily  due  to  the  net  effect  of  (i)  lower  ARPU  from  fixed-line  telephony  and  video  services  and  (ii)  higher  ARPU  from
broadband internet services. The decrease also includes a reduction in ARPU as a result of Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas.

The decrease is primarily attributable to lower interconnect revenue, mainly due to lower (i) volumes in Barbados and other markets in this segment
and (ii) fixed termination rates in other markets in this segment.

The decrease is primarily attributable to lower ARPU in the Bahamas and other markets in this segment. In addition, the decrease in mobile service
revenue in the Bahamas includes an estimated $3 million attributable to the impact of Hurricane Dorian.

The decrease is primarily attributable to (i) lower handset sales, primarily a result of (a) decreased volumes in our Cayman Islands operations, the
Bahamas and other markets in this segment and (b) customers purchasing lower priced products in the Bahamas and other markets in this segment
and (ii) lower interconnect revenue, primarily associated with reduced rates.

The increase is primarily due to the net effect of (i) higher managed services revenue at Networks & LatAm and Jamaica, (ii) lower revenue from
fixed-line telephony services, primarily in Jamaica and the Bahamas and (iii) increased interconnect revenue, primarily driven by higher volumes in
Jamaica. The increase in B2B service revenue is partially offset by an estimated $3 million decrease related to the impact of Hurricane Dorian. The
change also includes a decrease related to the transfer of certain B2B operations in Puerto Rico from our C&W Caribbean and Networks segment to
our Liberty Puerto Rico segment.

II-27

C&W Panama. C&W Panama’s revenue by major category is set forth below:

Residential revenue:

Residential fixed revenue:
Subscription revenue:

Video
Broadband internet
Fixed-line telephony

Total subscription revenue

Non-subscription revenue

Total residential fixed revenue

Residential mobile revenue:
Service revenue
Interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other (a)

Total residential mobile revenue

Total residential revenue

B2B service revenue

Total

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018

Increase (decrease)
%
$

in millions, except percentages

$

$

31.0  $
34.9 
22.4 
88.3 
14.5 
102.8 

183.8 
56.8 
240.6 
343.4 
239.3 
582.7  $

29.0  $
31.0 
24.4 
84.4 
18.3 
102.7 

211.3 
56.2 
267.5 
370.2 
230.7 
600.9  $

2.0 
3.9 
(2.0)
3.9 
(3.8)
0.1 

(27.5)
0.6 
(26.9)
(26.8)
8.6 
(18.2)

6.9 
12.6 
(8.2)
4.6 
(20.8)
0.1 

(13.0)
1.1 
(10.1)
(7.2)
3.7 
(3.0)

(a)

Revenue  from  inbound  roaming  was  $3  million  and  $4  million,  respectively.  For  additional  information  regarding  a  change  in  presentation  of
revenue by product, see note 21 to the consolidated financial statements.

The details of the changes in C&W Panama’s revenue during 2019, as compared to 2018, are set forth below (in millions):

Increase (decrease) in residential fixed subscription revenue due to change in:

Average number of RGUs (a)
ARPU (b)

Decrease in residential fixed non-subscription revenue (c)

Total increase in residential fixed revenue

Decrease in residential mobile service revenue (d)
Increase in residential mobile interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other revenue
Increase in B2B service revenue (e)

Total organic decrease

$

$

10.1 
(6.2)
(3.8)
0.1 
(27.5)
0.6 
8.6 
(18.2)

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

(e)

The increase is primarily attributable to higher video and broadband internet RGUs.

The decrease is primarily due lower ARPU from fixed-line telephony and video services.

The decrease is primarily attributable to lower interconnect volumes.

The decrease is due to lower ARPU and average subscribers as a result of increased competition in our prepaid mobile business.

The increase is primarily due to the net effect of (i) higher managed services revenue, driven by an increase in nonrecurring projects and (ii) lower
revenue from fixed-line telephony services.

II-28

 
 
 
VTR/Cabletica. VTR/Cabletica’s revenue by major category is set forth below:

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018

Increase (decrease)
%
$

in millions, except percentages

Residential revenue:

Residential fixed revenue:
Subscription revenue:

Video
Broadband internet
Fixed-line telephony

Total subscription revenue

Non-subscription revenue

Total residential fixed revenue

Residential mobile revenue:
Service revenue
Interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other

Total residential mobile revenue

Total residential revenue

B2B service revenue

Total

$

$

422.1  $
412.0 
100.7 
934.8 
34.3 
969.1 

62.7 
12.0 
74.7 
1,043.8 
30.0 
1,073.8  $

401.4  $
386.5 
123.8 
911.7 
30.2 
941.9 

62.9 
13.2 
76.1 
1,018.0 
25.7 
1,043.7  $

The details of the changes in VTR/Cabletica’s revenue during 2019, as compared to 2018, are set forth below (in millions):

Increase (decrease) in residential fixed subscription revenue due to change in:

Average number of RGUs (a)
ARPU (b)

Decrease in residential fixed non-subscription revenue

Total increase in residential fixed revenue
Increase in residential mobile service revenue (c)
Decrease in residential mobile interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other revenue
Increase in B2B service revenue (d)

Total organic increase

Impact of the Cabletica Acquisition
Impact of FX

Total

20.7 
25.5 
(23.1)
23.1 
4.1 
27.2 

(0.2)
(1.2)
(1.4)
25.8 
4.3 
30.1 

$

$

5.2 
6.6 
(18.7)
2.5 
13.6 
2.9 

(0.3)
(9.1)
(1.8)
2.5 
16.7 
2.9 

5.7 
2.3 
(0.6)
7.4 
5.8 
(0.2)
7.2 
20.2 
98.3 
(88.4)
30.1 

(a)

The increase is attributable to the net effect of (i) higher broadband internet and video RGUs and (ii) lower fixed-line telephony RGUs.

(b)

The increase is due to the net effect of (i) higher ARPU from broadband internet services, (ii) an improvement in product mix and (iii) lower ARPU
from  video  and  fixed-line  telephony  services.  The  increase  in  ARPU  from  video  services  is  partially  offset  by  $2  million  in  discounts  given  to
customers due to content not provided as a result of civil unrest in Chile during the fourth quarter of 2019.

(c)

The increase is due to the net effect of (i) a higher average number of mobile subscribers and (ii) lower ARPU from mobile services.

(d)

The increase is primarily attributable to higher average numbers of broadband internet, video and fixed-line telephony RGUs.

II-29

 
 
 
Liberty Puerto Rico Liberty Puerto Rico’s revenue by major category is set forth below:

Residential fixed revenue:

Subscription revenue:

Video
Broadband internet
Fixed-line telephony

Total subscription revenue

Non-subscription revenue

Total residential fixed revenue

B2B service revenue
Other revenue

Total

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018

Increase (decrease)
%
$

in millions, except percentages

$

$

140.9  $
175.0 
23.4 
339.3 
21.7 
361.0 
51.1 
— 
412.1  $

118.9  $
132.5 
18.6 
270.0 
17.4 
287.4 
37.1 
11.1 
335.6  $

22.0 
42.5 
4.8 
69.3 
4.3 
73.6 
14.0 
(11.1)
76.5 

18.5 
32.1 
25.8 
25.7 
24.7 
25.6 
37.7 
(100.0)
22.8 

Liberty Puerto Rico’s revenue increased $77 million during 2019, as compared to 2018. Revenue during 2018 includes $11 million received from the
FCC  in  August  2018,  which  is  included  in  other  revenue.  The  FCC  granted  these  funds  to  help  restore  and  improve  coverage  and  service  quality  from
damages caused by the 2017 Hurricanes. The increase in revenue also includes $8 million related to the transfer of certain B2B operations in Puerto Rico
from our C&W Caribbean and Networks segment to our Liberty Puerto Rico segment. Excluding the impact of the FCC funding and the transfer of the
B2B operations discussed above, the increase is primarily attributable to recovery following the 2017 Hurricanes.

Programming and other direct costs of services

The following table sets forth the organic and non-organic changes in programming and other direct costs of services on a consolidated basis for the

period indicated:

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018

Increase
(decrease)

FX

Acquisition
(disposition), net

Organic

Increase (decrease) from:

Programming and copyright
Interconnect and commissions
Equipment and other

$

Total programming and other direct costs $

404.8 
280.0 
193.0 
877.8 

$

$

401.1  $
298.7 
177.4 
877.2  $

in millions

3.7  $

(18.7)
15.6 

0.6  $

(17.0) $
(9.4)
(3.8)
(30.2) $

25.1  $
6.5 
5.5 
37.1  $

(4.4)
(15.8)
13.9 
(6.3)

II-30

 
 
 
 
 
 
C&W Caribbean and Networks. The following table sets forth the organic and non-organic changes in programming and other direct costs of services

for our C&W Caribbean and Networks segment.

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018

Increase
(decrease)

FX

Acquisition
(disposition), net

Organic

Increase (decrease) from:

Programming and copyright
Interconnect and commissions
Equipment and other

$

Total programming and other direct costs $

105.3  $
174.4 
75.0 
354.7  $

128.4  $
175.8 
74.3 
378.5  $

in millions

(23.1) $
(1.4)
0.7 
(23.8) $

(0.1) $
(4.3)
(1.3)
(5.7) $

2.4  $
2.5 
2.9 
7.8  $

(25.4)
0.4 
(0.9)
(25.9)

•

•

Programming  and  copyright:  The  organic  decrease  is  primarily  due  to  the  net  effect  of  (i)  a  $13  million  benefit  during  2019  from  content
accrual  adjustments,  largely  related  to  the  entry  into  new  agreements  with  various  content  providers  and,  to  a  lesser  extent,  reassessments  of
content accruals, (ii) lower sports content costs, (iii) higher costs associated with an increase in subscribers during 2019, and (iv) a benefit from an
accrual adjustment related to settlement discussions on a copyright dispute.

Interconnect and commissions: The organic increase is primarily due to the net effect of (i) an increase in wholesale call volumes in Jamaica, (ii)
the beneficial impact of the reassessment of an accrual during the second quarter of 2019 and (iii) lower rates.

C&W Panama. The following table sets forth the organic and non-organic changes in programming and other direct costs of services for our C&W

Panama segment.

Programming and copyright
Interconnect and commissions
Equipment and other

Total programming and other direct costs

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018
in millions

Organic increase
(decrease)

$

$

14.6  $
52.0 
91.1 
157.7  $

12.2  $
56.3 
77.4 
145.9  $

2.4 
(4.3)
13.7 
11.8 

•

•

•

Programming and copyright: The organic increase is primarily due higher costs associated with an increase in video subscribers.

Interconnect and commissions: The organic decrease is primarily due to lower rates and wholesale call volumes.

Equipment and other: The organic increase primarily relates to costs associated with B2B managed services projects.

II-31

 
 
 
 
 
 
VTR/Cabletica.  The  following  table  sets  forth  the  organic  and  non-organic  changes  in  programming  and  other  direct  costs  of  services  for  our

VTR/Cabletica segment.

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018

Increase
(decrease)

FX

Acquisition

Organic

Increase (decrease) from:

Programming and copyright
Interconnect and commissions
Equipment and other

$

Total programming and other direct costs $

199.9  $
57.4 
28.1 
285.4  $

191.6  $
68.7 
25.0 
285.3  $

in millions

8.3  $

(11.3)
3.1 
0.1  $

(16.9) $
(5.1)
(2.5)
(24.5) $

22.7  $
4.0 
2.6 
29.3  $

2.5 
(10.2)
3.0 
(4.7)

•

•

•

Programming  and  copyright:  The  organic  increase  is  primarily  due  to  (i)  higher  costs  associated  with  video-on-demand  (VoD)  services  and
catch-up television, (ii) an increase in copyright costs and (iii) an increase in certain premium and basic content costs, primarily resulting from
higher  rates.  The  increase  in  certain  premium  and  basic  content  costs  is  partially  offset  by  $2  million  in  lower  costs  due  to  certain  premium
services that were not provided during the fourth quarter of 2019.

Interconnect and commissions: The organic decrease is primarily due to the net effect of (i) decreases in interconnect costs and MVNO charges
due to lower rates and (ii) the impact of a $3 million credit received during the fourth quarter of 2018 in connection with the renegotiation of our
MVNO contract.

Equipment and other: The organic increase is primarily due to the net effect of (i) higher mobile handset sales in VTR and (ii) lower equipment
sales at Cabletica.

Liberty Puerto Rico. The following table sets forth the organic changes in programming and other direct costs of services for our Liberty Puerto Rico

segment.

Programming and copyright
Interconnect and commissions
Equipment and other

Total programming and other direct costs

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018
in millions

Organic increase
(decrease)

$

$

85.0  $
7.5 
0.3 
92.8  $

68.9  $
9.8 
0.7 
79.4  $

16.1 
(2.3)
(0.4)
13.4 

•

•

Programming and copyright: The organic increase is mostly attributable to (i) the impact of $11 million in credits received from programming
vendors in 2018 resulting from the 2017 Hurricanes and (ii) higher programming rates.

Interconnect and commission: The organic decrease is primarily due to lower rates.

II-32

 
 
 
 
 
 
Other operating costs and expenses

The following table sets forth the organic and non-organic changes in other operating costs and expenses on a consolidated basis.

Year ended December 31,
2018
2019

Increase
(decrease)

FX

Acquisition
(disposition), net

Organic

Increase (decrease) from:

$

Personnel and contract labor
Network-related
Service-related
Commercial
Facility, provision, franchise and other
Share-based compensation expense

Total other operating costs and expenses $

500.4 
264.4 
149.9 
172.6 
360.5 
57.5 
1,505.3 

$

$

475.3  $
266.6 
144.5 
166.7 
348.4 
39.8 
1,441.3  $

in millions

25.1  $
(2.2)
5.4 
5.9 
12.1 
17.7 
64.0  $

(11.5) $
(7.9)
(4.0)
(8.4)
(7.5)
(0.4)
(39.7) $

31.6  $
16.2 
9.3 
3.6 
24.7 
— 
85.4  $

5.0 
(10.5)
0.1 
10.7 
(5.1)
18.1 
18.3 

In the following section, we provide a discussion and analysis of the organic changes of other operating costs and expenses, which excludes, where
applicable, the impact of acquisitions, dispositions and FX for each of our reportable segments and our Corporate operations. For additional information
regarding our share-based compensation, see Results of Operations (below Adjusted OIBDA) discussion and analysis below and note 17 to our consolidated
financial statements.

C&W Caribbean and Networks. The  following  table  sets  forth  the  organic  and  non-organic  changes  in  other  operating  costs  and  expenses  for  our

C&W Caribbean and Networks segment.

Year ended December 31,
2018
2019

Increase
(decrease)

FX

Acquisition
(disposition), net

Organic

Increase (decrease) from:

Personnel and contract labor
Network-related
Service-related
Commercial
Facility, provision, franchise and other
Share-based compensation expense

Total other operating costs and expenses

$

$

270.6  $
147.3 
70.6 
57.4 
180.0 
16.5 
742.4  $

249.8  $
144.5 
76.3 
61.2 
175.2 
11.5 
718.5  $

in millions

20.8  $
2.8 
(5.7)
(3.8)
4.8 
5.0 
23.9  $

(3.9) $
(1.8)
(0.4)
(0.7)
(1.9)
— 
(8.7) $

19.7  $
10.5 
8.0 
1.3 
13.8 
— 
53.3  $

5.0 
(5.9)
(13.3)
(4.4)
(7.1)
5.0 
(20.7)

•

Personnel and contract labor: The organic increase is primarily due to lower capitalized labor costs.

• Network-related: The organic decrease is primarily due to lower (i) maintenance costs and (ii) hurricane restoration costs.

•

Service-related: The organic decrease is primarily due to declines in professional service costs associated with legal and advisory-related services
and lower information and technology-related costs.

• Commercial:  The  organic  decrease  is  primarily  due  to  lower  marketing  and  sales  costs  mainly  due  to  lower  sponsorship  costs  and  sales

commissions.

II-33

 
 
 
 
 
 
•

Facility, provision, franchise and other costs: The organic decrease is primarily due to the net effect of:

◦

◦

◦

a decline of $10 million associated with withholding taxes on third-party supplier services, primarily related to the expiration of statute of
limitations;

an  increase  of  bad  debt  expense  primarily  due  to  the  net  effect  of  (i)  changes  in  provisions  during  2019,  including  (a)  a  $3  million
increase in provisions primarily related to certain B2B customers, (b) the release of certain other provisions and (c) a $2 million provision
related to the impact of Hurricane Dorian, (ii) improved collections in 2019 and (iii) a $3 million recovery in the first quarter of 2018
related to provisions established following the impacts of the 2017 Hurricanes; and

a decrease in insurance costs due in part to the impact of our Weather Derivative, as further described below and in notes 3 and 5 to our
consolidated financial statements.

C&W Panama.  The  following  table  sets  forth  the  organic  and  non-organic  changes  in  other  operating  costs  and  expenses  for  our  C&W  Panama

segment.

Personnel and contract labor
Network-related
Service-related
Commercial
Facility, provision, franchise and other
Share-based compensation expense

Total other operating costs and expenses

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018
in millions

Organic increase
(decrease)

$

$

70.2  $
43.0 
15.8 
22.0 
46.4 
0.9 
198.3  $

73.9  $
49.7 
18.9 
13.1 
47.9 
0.9 
204.4  $

(3.7)
(6.7)
(3.1)
8.9 
(1.5)
— 
(6.1)

•

Personnel and contract labor: The organic decrease is primarily due to lower staff levels largely stemming from various restructuring activities.

• Network-related: The organic decrease is primarily due to lower maintenance and utility costs.

• Commercial: The organic increase is primarily due to increases in (i) outsourced call center costs and (ii) marketing and sales costs.

•

Facility, provision, franchise and other costs: The organic decrease is primarily due to general declines in bad debt provisions, which was net of
the impact of a $2 million increase in provisions primarily related to certain government customers.

VTR/Cabletica. The  following  table  sets  forth  the  organic  and  non-organic  changes  in  other  operating  costs  and  expenses  for  our  VTR/Cabletica

segment.

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018

Increase
(decrease)

FX

Acquisition

Organic

Increase (decrease) from:

Personnel and contract labor
Network-related
Service-related
Commercial
Facility, provision, franchise and other
Share-based compensation expense

Total other operating costs and expenses

$

$

91.5  $
71.1 
39.9 
82.3 
70.0 
4.9 
359.7  $

86.7  $
71.3 
32.9 
79.7 
66.7 
3.4 
340.7  $

II-34

in millions

4.8  $
(0.2)
7.0 
2.6 
3.3 
1.5 
19.0  $

(7.6) $
(6.1)
(3.6)
(7.7)
(5.6)
(0.4)
(31.0) $

11.9  $
5.7 
1.3 
2.3 
10.9 
— 
32.1  $

0.5 
0.2 
9.3 
8.0 
(2.0)
1.9 
17.9 

 
 
 
 
 
 
• Network-related: These costs remained relatively flat on an organic basis as higher costs related to CPE materials and refurbishment activity was

mostly offset by a decrease resulting from higher proportions of capitalized labor associated with installation activities.

•

Service-related: The  organic  increase  is  primarily  due  to  (i)  increased  information  technology  costs  associated  with  the  implementation  of  a
business support system and (ii) higher professional consultancy services.

• Commercial: The organic increase is primarily due to increased call center volume in the VTR market.

•

Facility, provision, franchise and other costs: The organic decrease is primarily due to lower facility related costs.

Liberty Puerto Rico. The following table sets forth the organic changes in other operating costs and expenses for our Liberty Puerto Rico segment.

Personnel and contract labor
Network-related
Service-related
Commercial
Facility, provision, franchise and other
Share-based compensation expense

Total other operating costs and expenses

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018
in millions

Organic increase
(decrease)

$

$

39.5  $
4.5 
10.6 
10.9 
50.6 
2.2 
118.3  $

41.5  $
2.0 
7.8 
12.6 
45.0 
1.2 
110.1  $

(2.0)
2.5 
2.8 
(1.7)
5.6 
1.0 
8.2 

•

Personnel and contract labor: The organic decrease is primarily due to the net effect of (i) lower overtime-related personnel activities, as the
2018 period was impacted by the 2017 Hurricanes, and (ii) an increase resulting from a $2 million hurricane disaster relief credit received during
the third quarter of 2018 from the Puerto Rico Treasury Department, representing relief for wages paid to employees during the period of time our
business was inoperable as a result of the 2017 Hurricanes.

• Network-related: The organic increase is primarily due to (i) an increase in system power expenses, as the 2018 period was impacted by the 2017

Hurricanes and (ii) higher CPE repair costs.

•

Service-related: The organic increase is primarily due to information and technology-related expenses, mostly driven by new software services.

• Commercial: The organic decrease is driven by declines in outsourced call center costs.

•

Facility, provision, franchise and other: The organic change is primarily due to increased facility-related costs and franchise fees, as the 2018
period was impacted by the 2017 Hurricanes.

Corporate. The following tables set forth the organic changes in other operating costs and expenses for our corporate operations.

Personnel and contract labor
Service-related
Facility, provision, franchise and other
Share-based compensation expense

Total other operating costs and expenses

II-35

Year ended December 31,

2019

2018
in millions

Organic increase
(decrease)

$

$

28.6  $
13.0 
13.5 
33.0 
88.1  $

23.4  $
9.0 
13.6 
22.8 
68.8  $

5.2 
4.0 
(0.1)
10.2 
19.3 

 
 
 
 
 
 
•

•

Personnel and contract labor: The organic increase is primarily attributable to establishing our new operations center in Panama.

Service-related: The organic increase is primarily attributable to higher professional consultancy services.

Results of operations (below Adjusted OIBDA)—2019 compared to 2018

Share-based compensation expense (included in other operating costs and expenses)

Share-based compensation expense increased $18 million during 2019, as compared to 2018. This increase is primarily due to share-based incentive

awards granted during 2019 and 2018.

Depreciation and amortization

Our  depreciation  and  amortization  expense  increased  $41  million  or  5.0%  during  2019,  as  compared  to  2018.  Excluding  the  impacts  of  FX  and
acquisitions and a disposal, depreciation and amortization expense increased $25 million or 3.0%. The organic increase is primarily due to the net effect of
(i)  an  increase  resulting  from  property  and  equipment  additions,  largely  associated  with  the  expansion  and  upgrade  of  our  networks  and  other  capital
initiatives, the installation of CPE, and baseline and product and enablers-related additions, and (ii) a decrease associated with certain assets becoming fully
depreciated.

Impairment, restructuring and other operating items, net

We recognized impairment, restructuring and other operating items, net, of $259 million and $641 million during 2019 and 2018, respectively.

The  2019  amount  primarily  includes  (i)  impairment  charges  of  $199  million,  (ii)  restructuring  charges  of  $46  million,  (iii)  $10  million  of  direct
acquisition and disposition costs and (iv) a $3 million loss due to the Seychelles Disposition. The impairment charges primarily include (i) $182 million
related to an impairment of goodwill at C&W Panama and (ii) $16 million related to charges at C&W Caribbean and Networks primarily to reduce the
carrying value of property and equipment as a result of the impact of Hurricane Dorian. The restructuring charges, which are primarily at C&W Caribbean
and Networks and VTR, include (i) employee severance and termination costs related to certain reorganization activities and (ii) contract termination and
other related charges. The direct acquisition costs and disposition costs relate to the AT&T Acquisition and, to a lesser extent, the UTS Acquisition and the
Seychelles Disposition.

The 2018 amount primarily includes (i) impairment charges of $616 million, (ii) restructuring charges of $43 million, (iii) a $36 million benefit related
to the recovery of damaged or destroyed property and equipment and (iv) $18 million of direct acquisition and disposition costs. The impairment charges
include  $608  million  related  to  an  impairment  of  goodwill  at  C&W  Panama.  The  restructuring  charges,  which  are  primarily  at  C&W  Caribbean  and
Networks, include (i) employee severance and termination costs related to certain reorganization activities and (ii) contract termination and other related
charges. The direct acquisition costs and disposition costs primarily relate to the UTS Acquisition.

In December 2018, we settled our insurance claims for the 2017 Hurricanes, as further defined and described in note 8 to our consolidated financial

statements, resulting in, among other things, the recovery associated with damaged or destroyed property and equipment.

For additional information regarding our impairment and restructuring charges, see notes 9 and 12 to our consolidated financial statements.

Interest expense

Our interest expense increased $56 million during 2019, as compared to 2018. The increase is primarily due to (i) higher average outstanding debt
balances, largely due to borrowings related to the (a) AT&T Acquisition, (b) Cabletica Acquisition and (c) Convertible Notes, and (ii) higher amortization
of discounts and premiums, net, and deferred financing costs.

For additional information regarding our outstanding indebtedness, see note 10 to our consolidated financial statements.

II-36

Realized and unrealized gains (losses) on derivative instruments, net

The details of our realized and unrealized gains (losses) on derivative instruments, net, are as follows:

Cross-currency and interest rate derivative contracts (a)
Foreign currency forward contracts
Weather Derivatives (b)

Total

Year ended December 31,
2018
2019

in millions

$

$

(21.0) $
9.4 
(5.6)
(17.2) $

69.6 
25.2 
— 
94.8 

(a)

The loss during 2019 is primarily attributable to (i) changes in interest rates and (ii) changes in FX rates, predominantly due to changes in the value
of the Chilean peso relative to the U.S. dollar. In addition, the loss during 2019 includes a net gain of $4 million resulting from changes in our credit
risk valuation adjustments. The gain during 2018 is primarily attributable to (i) changes in FX rates, predominantly due to changes in the value of the
Chilean peso relative to the U.S. dollar, and (ii) changes in interest rates. In addition, the gain during 2018 includes a net loss of $23 million resulting
from changes in our credit risk valuation adjustments

(b)

Represents the amortization of the premiums associated with our Weather Derivatives, which we entered into during the second quarter of 2019.

For additional information concerning our derivative instruments, see notes 5 and 6 to our consolidated financial statements and Item 7A. Qualitative

and Quantitative Disclosures about Market Risk below.

Foreign currency transaction losses, net

The details of our foreign currency transaction losses, net, are as follows:

U.S. dollar-denominated debt issued by a Chilean peso functional currency entity
Intercompany payables and receivables denominated in a currency other than the entity’s functional currency
British pound sterling-denominated debt issued by a U.S. dollar functional currency entity
Other

Total

Losses on debt modification and extinguishment, net

Year ended December 31,
2018
2019

in millions

$

$

(98.4) $
(10.0)
(3.7)
(0.4)
(112.5) $

(164.0)
(17.0)
11.4 
(10.4)
(180.0)

We recognized losses on debt modification and extinguishment, net, of $20 million and $32 million during 2019 and 2018, respectively. The net loss
during 2019 primarily includes the payment of redemption premiums. The loss during 2018 primarily includes the payment of redemption premiums and
the write-off of unamortized premiums, discounts and deferred financing costs.

For additional information concerning our losses on debt modification and extinguishment, see note 10 to our consolidated financial statements.

Other income (expense), net

We recognized other income of $14 million and nil during 2019 and 2018, respectively. During 2019, other income primarily relates to interest income.
The amount during 2018, primarily includes the net effect of (i) a $16 million impairment charge on our investment in TSTT, (ii) pension-related credits of
$12 million and (iii) interest income of $10 million.

For  additional  information  regarding  our  defined  benefit  plans,  see  note  16  to  our  consolidated  financial  statements.  For  additional  information

regarding the impairment of our investment in TSTT, see note 7 to our consolidated financial statements.

II-37

 
 
 
 
 
 
Income tax benefit (expense)

We recognized income tax benefit (expense) of $98 million and ($51 million) during 2019 and 2018, respectively.

The  income  tax  benefit  attributable  to  our  loss  before  income  taxes  during  2019  differs  from  the  expected  income  tax  benefit  of  nil  (based  on  the
Bermuda statutory income tax rate of 0%), primarily due to the beneficial effects of (i) net favorable changes in uncertain tax positions, (ii) international
rate differences, (iii) basis adjustments associated with investments in Liberty Latin America entities and (iv) enacted tax rate changes, which are offset by
the detrimental effects of (i) increases in valuation allowances, (ii) non-deductible goodwill impairments and (iii) net unfavorable permanent differences.

The income tax expense attributable to our loss before income taxes during 2018 differs from the expected income tax benefit of nil (based on the
Bermuda statutory income tax rate of 0%), primarily due to (i) the beneficial effects of international rate differences, which are offset by (ii) the effect of
non-deductible goodwill impairments, (iii) increases in valuation allowances and (iv) net unfavorable permanent differences.

For additional information regarding our income taxes, see note 15 to our consolidated financial statements.

Net loss

The following table sets forth selected summary financial information of our net loss:

Operating income (loss)

Net non-operating expenses

Income tax benefit (expense)

Net loss

Net loss attributable to noncontrolling interests

Year ended December 31,
2018
2019

in millions

$

$

$

$

353.8  $

(634.4) $

98.2  $

(182.4) $

(23.6)

(561.1)

(51.1)

(635.8)

We reported net losses attributable to noncontrolling interests of $102 million and $291 million during 2019 and 2018, respectively. The change during
2019, as compared to 2018, is primarily attributable to (i) a decrease in losses of our less-than-wholly-owned subsidiaries at C&W, due in part to the net
effect of (a) a decline in the goodwill impairment charge incurred during 2019, as compared with 2018 at CWP, and (b) losses at C&W Bahamas associated
with Hurricane Dorian in 2019, and (ii) our acquisition of the remaining 40% partnership interests in Liberty Puerto Rico from Searchlight during October
2018.

For additional information on the goodwill impairment charge and noncontrolling interests acquisition activity, see notes 9 and 19, respectively, to our

consolidated financial statements.

II-38

 
 
 
Liquidity and Capital Resources

Sources and Uses of Cash

As of December 31, 2020, we have four primary “borrowing groups,” which include the respective restricted parent and subsidiary entities of C&W,
VTR, Liberty Puerto Rico and Cabletica. Our borrowing groups, which typically generate cash from operating activities, held a significant portion of our
consolidated cash and cash equivalents at December 31, 2020. Our ability to access the liquidity of these and other subsidiaries may be limited by tax and
legal considerations, the presence of noncontrolling interests, foreign currency exchange restrictions with respect to certain C&W subsidiaries and other
factors.

Cash and cash equivalents

The  details  of  the  U.S.  dollar  equivalent  balances  of  our  cash  and  cash  equivalents  at  December  31,  2020  are  set  forth  in  the  following  table  (in

millions):

Cash and cash equivalents held by:

Liberty Latin America and unrestricted subsidiaries:
Liberty Latin America (a)
Unrestricted subsidiaries (b)

Total Liberty Latin America and unrestricted subsidiaries

Borrowing groups (c):
C&W
VTR
Liberty Puerto Rico
Cabletica

Total borrowing groups

Total cash and cash equivalents

$

$

193.3 
54.1 
247.4 

485.5 
74.3 
79.4 
7.6 
646.8 
894.2 

(a)

(b)

Represents the amount held by Liberty Latin America on a standalone basis.

Represents the aggregate amount held by subsidiaries of Liberty Latin America that are outside of our borrowing groups. All of these companies rely
on funds provided by our borrowing groups to satisfy their liquidity needs.

(c)

Represents the aggregate amounts held by the parent entity of the applicable borrowing group and their restricted subsidiaries.

Liquidity and capital resources of Liberty Latin America and its unrestricted subsidiaries

Our current sources of corporate liquidity include (i) cash and cash equivalents held by Liberty Latin America and, subject to certain tax and legal
considerations, Liberty Latin America’s unrestricted subsidiaries, and (ii) interest and dividend income received on our and, subject to certain tax and legal
considerations,  our  unrestricted  subsidiaries’  cash  and  cash  equivalents  and  investments.  From  time  to  time,  Liberty  Latin  America  and  its  unrestricted
subsidiaries may also receive (i) proceeds in the form of distributions or loan repayments from Liberty Latin America’s borrowing groups upon (a) the
completion of recapitalizations, refinancings, asset sales or similar transactions by these entities or (b) the accumulation of excess cash from operations or
other means, (ii) proceeds upon the disposition of investments and other assets of Liberty Latin America and its unrestricted subsidiaries and (iii) proceeds
in  connection  with  the  incurrence  of  debt  by  Liberty  Latin  America  or  its  unrestricted  subsidiaries  or  the  issuance  of  equity  securities  by  Liberty  Latin
America. No assurance can be given that any external funding would be available to Liberty Latin America or its unrestricted subsidiaries on favorable
terms,  or  at  all.  As  noted  above,  various  factors  may  limit  our  ability  to  access  the  cash  of  our  borrowing  groups.  For  limitations  imposed  by  our
subsidiaries’ debt instruments at December 31, 2020, see note 10 to our consolidated financial statements.

Our corporate liquidity requirements include (i) corporate general and administrative expenses and (ii) other liquidity needs that may arise from time to
time.  In  addition,  Liberty  Latin  America  and  its  unrestricted  subsidiaries  may  require  cash  in  connection  with  (i)  the  repayment  of  third-party  and
intercompany debt, (ii) the satisfaction of contingent liabilities, (iii) acquisitions and other investment opportunities, (iv) the repurchase of debt securities,
(v) tax payments or (vi) any funding requirements of our consolidated subsidiaries.

II-39

In March 2020, our Directors approved a $100 million Share Repurchase Program. During 2020, the aggregate amount of our share repurchases was
$9 million. For additional information regarding our Share Repurchase Program, see note 19 to our consolidated financial statements and above Part II—
Item 5. Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities.

Liquidity and capital resources of borrowing groups

The cash and cash equivalents of our borrowing groups are detailed in the table above. In addition to cash and cash equivalents, the primary sources of
liquidity of our borrowing groups are cash provided by operations and borrowing availability under their respective debt instruments. For the details of the
borrowing availability of our borrowing groups at December 31, 2020, see note 10 to our consolidated financial statements. The aforementioned sources of
liquidity may be supplemented in certain cases by contributions and/or loans from Liberty Latin America and its unrestricted subsidiaries. The liquidity of
our borrowing groups generally is used to fund property and equipment additions, debt service requirements and income tax payments. From time to time,
our borrowing groups may also require liquidity in connection with (i) acquisitions and other investment opportunities, (ii) loans to Liberty Latin America,
(iii) capital distributions to Liberty Latin America and other equity owners or (iv) the satisfaction of contingent liabilities. No assurance can be given that
any  external  funding  would  be  available  to  our  borrowing  groups  on  favorable  terms,  or  at  all.  For  information  regarding  our  borrowing  groups’
commitments and contingencies, see note 20 to our consolidated financial statements.

For  additional  information  regarding  our  cash  flows,  see  the  discussion  under  Liquidity  and  Capital  Resources—Consolidated  Statements  of  Cash

Flows below.

Capitalization

We seek to maintain our debt at levels that provide for attractive equity returns without assuming undue risk. When it is cost effective, we generally
seek to match the denomination of the borrowings of our subsidiaries with the functional currency of the operations that support the respective borrowings.
As further discussed under Item 7A. Qualitative and Quantitative Disclosures about Market Risk and in note 5 to our consolidated financial statements, we
also use derivative instruments to mitigate foreign currency and interest rate risks associated with our debt instruments.

Our ability to service or refinance our debt and to maintain compliance with the leverage covenants in the credit agreements of our borrowing groups is
dependent  primarily  on  our  ability  to  maintain  covenant  EBITDA  of  our  operating  subsidiaries,  as  specified  by  our  subsidiaries’  debt  agreements
(Covenant  EBITDA),  and  to  achieve  adequate  returns  on  our  property  and  equipment  additions  and  acquisitions.  In  addition,  our  ability  to  obtain
additional  debt  financing  is  limited  by  incurrence-based  leverage  covenants  contained  in  the  various  debt  instruments  of  our  borrowing  groups.  For
example,  if  the  Covenant  EBITDA  of  C&W  were  to  decline,  our  ability  to  obtain  additional  debt  could  be  limited.  No  assurance  can  be  given  that  we
would  have  sufficient  sources  of  liquidity,  or  that  any  external  funding  would  be  available  on  favorable  terms,  or  at  all,  to  fund  any  such  required
repayment. At December 31, 2020, each of our borrowing groups was in compliance with its debt covenants. We do not anticipate any instances of non-
compliance  with  respect  to  the  debt  covenants  of  our  borrowing  groups  that  would  have  a  material  adverse  impact  on  our  liquidity  during  the  next  12
months.

At December 31, 2020, the outstanding principal amount of our debt, together with our finance lease obligations, aggregated $8,514 million, including
$162 million that is classified as current in our consolidated balance sheet and $7,225 million that is not due until 2026 or thereafter. At December 31,
2020, $8,108 million of our debt and finance lease obligations have been borrowed or incurred by our subsidiaries. Included in the outstanding principal
amount of our debt at December 31, 2020 is $168 million of vendor financing, which we use to finance certain of our operating expenses and property and
equipment additions. These obligations are generally due within one year, other than for certain licensing arrangements that generally are due over the term
of the related license. For additional information concerning our debt, including our debt maturities, see note 10 to our consolidated financial statements.

II-40

The  weighted  average  interest  rate  in  effect  at  December  31,  2020  for  all  borrowings  outstanding  pursuant  to  each  debt  instrument,  including  any
applicable margin, was 5.2%. The interest rate is based on stated rates and does not include the impact of derivative instruments, deferred financing costs,
original  issue  premiums  or  discounts  and  commitment  fees,  all  of  which  affect  our  overall  cost  of  borrowing.  The  weighted  average  impact  of  the
derivative instruments, excluding forward-starting derivative instruments, on our borrowing costs at December 31, 2020 was as follows:

Borrowing group

C&W
VTR
Liberty Puerto Rico
Cabletica

Liberty Latin America borrowing groups

Increase to
borrowing costs

0.67 %
0.67 %
0.86 %
1.24 %
0.69 %

Including the effects of derivative instruments, original issue premiums or discounts, including the discount on the Convertible Notes associated with
the  instrument’s  conversion  option,  and  commitment  fees,  but  excluding  the  impact  of  financing  costs,  the  weighted  average  interest  rate  on  our
indebtedness was 6.3% at December 31, 2020.

We  believe  that  we  have  sufficient  resources  to  repay  or  refinance  the  current  portion  of  our  debt  and  finance  lease  obligations  and  to  fund  our
foreseeable  liquidity  requirements  during  the  next  12  months.  However,  as  our  debt  maturities  grow  in  later  years,  we  anticipate  that  we  will  seek  to
refinance or otherwise extend our debt maturities. No assurance can be given that we will be able to complete refinancing transactions or otherwise extend
our debt maturities. In this regard, it is difficult to predict how political, economic and social conditions, sovereign debt concerns or any adverse regulatory
developments will impact the credit and equity markets we access and our future financial position. Our ability to access debt financing on favorable terms,
or at all, could be adversely impacted by (i) the financial failure of any of our counterparties, which could (a) reduce amounts available under committed
credit facilities and (b) adversely impact our ability to access cash deposited with any failed financial institution, and (ii) tightening of the credit markets. In
addition,  any  weakness  in  the  equity  markets  could  make  it  less  attractive  to  use  our  shares  to  satisfy  contingent  or  other  obligations,  and  sustained  or
increased competition, particularly in combination with adverse economic or regulatory developments, could have an unfavorable impact on our cash flows
and liquidity.

II-41

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

General.  Our  cash  flows  are  subject  to  variations  due  to  FX.  For  further  information,  see  related  discussion  under  Item  7A.  Quantitative  and

Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk—Foreign Currency Risk below.

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows—2020 compared to 2019

Summary. Our 2020 and 2019 consolidated statements of cash flows are summarized as follows:

Net cash provided by operating activities
Net cash used by investing activities
Net cash provided by financing activities
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash

Net increase (decrease) in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash

Year ended December 31,
2019
2020
in millions

Change

$

$

640.1  $

(2,450.8)
271.1 
(4.9)
(1,544.5) $

918.2  $
(635.3)
1,539.8 
(7.7)
1,815.0  $

(278.1)
(1,815.5)
(1,268.7)
2.8 
(3,359.5)

Operating Activities. The decrease in net cash provided by our operating activities is primarily attributable to the net effect of (i) $73 million of cash
used for the purchase of prepaid roaming services in conjunction with the AT&T Acquisition, (ii) a decrease of $61 million related to derivative activities,
(iii) a decrease from our consolidated Adjusted OIBDA (a non-GAAP measure), (iv) lower tax payments of $49 million, and (v) the negative impact for the
comparative period resulting from $33 million of the cash received during 2019 associated with the final insurance settlement for hurricanes Irma, Maria,
and Matthew that was reflected as an operating cash inflow. Additionally, the working capital changes in our consolidated statement of cash flows for the
2020 and 2019 periods include the negative impacts of a $33 million and $185 million release of an uncertain tax position liability, respectively, that have
been reflected as a tax benefit in our consolidated statements of operations, as further described in note 15 to our consolidated financial statements. For
additional information relating to the purchase of prepaid roaming services, see note 4 to our consolidated financial statements. For additional information
regarding  our  non-GAAP  measure  of  consolidated  Adjusted  OIBDA,  including  a  reconciliation  to  the  nearest  U.S.  GAAP  measure,  see  Results  of
Operations—Year ended December 31, 2020 as Compared with Year Ended December 31, 2019—Adjusted OIBDA above.

Investing Activities. Our cash used during 2020 primarily includes (i) $1,886 million primarily related the AT&T Acquisition, (ii) and $566 million
related to capital expenditures. Our cash used during 2019 primarily includes (i) $589 million of cash used related to capital expenditures, (ii) $161 million
of cash used for the UTS Acquisition in March 2019, (iii) $78 million of net cash received in connection with the Seychelles Disposition, and (iv) $34
million  of  cash  we  received  during  the  first  quarter  of  2019  related  to  the  recovery  on  damaged  or  destroyed  property  and  equipment  resulting  from
hurricanes Maria, Irma and Matthew. For additional information regarding the settlement of our insurance claims associated with these hurricanes, see note
8 to our consolidated financial statements. See below for additional information relating to cash used for capital expenditures.

The  capital  expenditures  that  we  report  in  our  consolidated  statements  of  cash  flows,  which  includes  cash  paid  for  property  and  equipment  and
intangible  assets  acquired  not  part  of  an  acquisition,  does  not  include  amounts  that  are  financed  under  capital-related  vendor  financing  or  finance  lease
arrangements. Instead, these amounts are reflected as non-cash additions to our property and equipment when the underlying assets are delivered and as
repayments of debt when the principal is repaid. In this discussion, we refer to (i) our capital expenditures, as reported in our consolidated statements of
cash flows, and (ii) our total property and equipment additions, which include our capital expenditures on an accrual basis and amounts financed under
capital-related vendor financing or finance lease arrangements.

II-42

 
 
 
A reconciliation of our property and equipment additions to our capital expenditures, as reported in our consolidated statements of cash flows, is set

forth below:

Property and equipment additions
Assets acquired under capital-related vendor financing arrangements
Acquisition of intangible assets
Assets acquired under finance leases
Changes in current liabilities related to capital expenditures

Capital expenditures

Year ended December 31,
2019
2020

in millions

$

$

631.1  $
(99.1)
7.8 
— 
26.0 
565.8  $

721.5 
(96.1)
— 
(0.2)
(36.1)
589.1 

The decrease in our property and equipment additions during 2020, as compared to 2019, is primarily due to a decrease in (i) new build & upgrade
equipment and (ii) customer premise equipment. During 2020 and 2019, our property and equipment additions represented 16.8% and 18.7% of revenue,
respectively.

We  expect  the  percentage  of  revenue  represented  by  our  aggregate  2021  property  and  equipment  additions  to  be  approximately  18%.  The  actual
amount  of  the  2021  consolidated  property  and  equipment  additions  may  vary  from  expected  amounts  for  a  variety  of  reasons,  including  (i)  potential
impacts from COVID-19, (ii) changes in (a) the competitive or regulatory environment, (b) business plans, (c) our expected future operating results and (d)
foreign  currency  exchange  rates  and,  (iii)  the  availability  of  sufficient  capital.  Accordingly,  no  assurance  can  be  given  that  our  actual  property  and
equipment additions will not vary materially from our expectations.

Financing Activities. During 2020, we generated $271 million of cash from financing activities primarily due to (i) $347 million related to the Rights
Offering and (ii) $183 million of net cash related to derivative instruments. These items were slightly offset by (i) $120 million of net repayment of debt
and (ii) $99 million related to payments of financing costs and debt premiums. The net cash received related to derivative instruments is primarily due to
the unwinding of cross-currency swaps held at our VTR borrowing group as further described in note 5 to the consolidated financial statements. During
2019, we received $1,540 million in net cash from financing activities, primarily due to $1,691 million of net borrowings of debt, which was slightly offset
by $55 million related to payments of financing costs and debt premiums, $46 million of cash used related to the purchase of Capped Calls, and $38 million
for  the  distribution  to  noncontrolling  interest  owners,  primarily  related  to  Panama  operations.  The  net  borrowings  of  debt  primarily  relates  to  the  $1.2
billion  principal  amount  of  2027  LPR  Senior  Secured  Notes  issued  related  to  the  then  pending  AT&T  Acquisition  and  the  issuance  of  the  Convertible
Notes, each as further described in note 10 to our consolidated financial statements.

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows—2019 compared to 2018

Summary. Our 2019 and 2018 consolidated statements of cash flows are summarized as follows:

Net cash provided by operating activities
Net cash used by investing activities
Net cash provided by financing activities
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash

Net increase in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash

Year ended December 31,
2018
2019
in millions

Change

$

$

918.2  $
(635.3)
1,539.8 
(7.7)
1,815.0  $

816.8  $
(980.5)
256.1 
(18.6)
73.8  $

101.4 
345.2 
1,283.7 
10.9 
1,741.2 

Operating Activities. The increase in net cash provided by our operating activities is primarily attributable to the net effect of (i) an increase from our
Adjusted  OIBDA,  (ii)  a  decrease  from  our  working  capital  items,  including  (a)  the  release  of  an  uncertain  tax  position  liability  of  approximately  $185
million that has been reflected as a tax benefit in our consolidated statement of operations, as further  described  in  note  15  to  our  consolidated  financial
statements, and (b) changes resulting from

II-43

 
 
 
insurance receipts as discussed below, (iii) increased interest payments, (iv) an increase in cash related to derivative instruments, as we received (paid) net
amounts of $11 million and ($16 million) during 2019 and 2018, respectively, and (v) decrease in cash paid for taxes. During the first quarter of 2019, $33
million of the cash received associated with the final insurance settlement for the 2017 Hurricanes was reflected as an operating cash inflow. During 2018,
we received $51 million of advanced payments, primarily related to the 2017 Hurricanes, $30 million of which was presented in operating cash flows in
our consolidated statement of operations upon settlement during the fourth quarter of 2018. For additional information regarding our insurance receipts, see
note 8 to our consolidated financial statements.

Investing Activities. The decrease in net cash used by our investing activities is primarily attributable to the net effect of (i) a decrease in cash used for
capital  expenditures,  as  further  discussed  below,  (ii)  $161  million  of  cash  used  for  the  UTS  Acquisition  in  March  2019,  (iii)  $78  million  of  net  cash
received in connection with the Seychelles Disposition and (iv) an increase of $13 million of cash received related to the recovery on damaged or destroyed
property and equipment resulting from the 2017 Hurricanes and Hurricane Matthew. During 2019, we received $34 million of cash, as compared with $21
million received during 2018. For additional information regarding the settlement of our insurance claims associated with these hurricanes, see note 8 to
our consolidated financial statements.

A reconciliation of our property and equipment additions to our capital expenditures, as reported in our consolidated statements of cash flows, is set

forth below:

Property and equipment additions
Assets acquired under capital-related vendor financing arrangements
Assets acquired under finance leases
Changes in current liabilities related to capital expenditures

Capital expenditures

Year ended December 31,
2018
2019

in millions

$

$

721.5  $
(96.1)
(0.2)
(36.1)
589.1  $

771.4 
(53.9)
(3.9)
62.8 
776.4 

The  decrease  in  our  property  and  equipment  additions  during  2019,  as  compared  to  2018,  is  primarily  due  to  the  net  effect  of  (i)  lower  additions
relating to hurricane restoration activities, as 2018 included $92 million and $27 million of these additions by Liberty Puerto Rico and C&W Caribbean and
Networks,  respectively,  and  (ii)  excluding  the  impact  of  hurricane  restoration  activities,  an  increase  in  additions  for  the  expansion  and  upgrade  of  our
networks and other capital initiatives. During 2019 and 2018, our property and equipment additions represented 18.7% and 20.8% of revenue, respectively.
Our property and equipment additions as a percentage of revenue decreased primarily due to declines in property and equipment additions at Liberty Puerto
Rico together with an increase in revenue at Liberty Puerto Rico following the recovery from the 2017 Hurricanes.

Financing Activities. During 2019, we received $1,540 million in net cash from financing activities, primarily due to $1,691 million of net borrowings
of debt, which was slightly offset by $55 million related to payments of financing costs and debt premiums, $46 million of cash used related to the purchase
of the Capped Calls, and $38 million for the distribution to noncontrolling interest owners, primarily related to Panama operations. The net borrowings of
debt primarily relates to the $1.2 billion principal amount of 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes issued related to the then pending AT&T Acquisition and the
issuance of the Convertible Notes, each as further described in note 10 to our consolidated financial statements. During 2018, we received $256 million in
net cash from financing activities, due in part to $310 million in net borrowings of debt, primarily at VTR, and $18 million in capital contributions from
funds affiliated with Searchlight. These cash inflows were partially offset by $39 million for financing cost and debt premiums, $23 million in distributions
to the noncontrolling interest owner and $21 million of cash used primarily in connection with the C&W Jamaica NCI Acquisition.

II-44

Adjusted Free Cash Flow

We define adjusted free cash flow, a non-GAAP measure, as net cash provided by our operating activities, plus (i) cash payments for third-party costs
directly  associated  with  successful  and  unsuccessful  acquisitions  and  dispositions,  (ii)  expenses  financed  by  an  intermediary,  (iii)  insurance  recoveries
related  to  damaged  and  destroyed  property  and  equipment  and  (iv)  certain  net  interest  payments  (receipts)  incurred  or  received,  including  associated
derivative instrument payments and receipts, in advance of a significant acquisition, less (a) capital expenditures, (b) distributions to noncontrolling interest
owners, (c) principal payments on amounts financed by vendors and intermediaries and (d) principal payments on finance leases. Additionally, as set forth
in  the  reconciliation  and  further  discussed  below,  we  have  excluded  the  portion  of  the  stated  purchase  price  for  the  AT&T  Acquisition  that  has  been
bifurcated and accounted for separately as the acquisition of future services from AT&T. See footnote to the table below for additional information. We
believe that our presentation of adjusted free cash flow provides useful information to our investors because this measure can be used to gauge our ability
to  service  debt  and  fund  new  investment  opportunities.  Adjusted  free  cash  flow  should  not  be  understood  to  represent  our  ability  to  fund  discretionary
amounts, as we have various mandatory and contractual obligations, including debt repayments, which are not deducted to arrive at this amount. Investors
should view adjusted free cash flow as a supplement to, and not a substitute for, U.S. GAAP measures of liquidity included in our consolidated statements
of cash flows.

The following table provides the details of our adjusted free cash flow:

Net cash provided by operating activities
Cash payments for direct acquisition and disposition costs
Expenses financed by an intermediary (a)
Capital expenditures
Recovery on damaged or destroyed property and equipment
Distributions to noncontrolling interest owners
Principal payments on amounts financed by vendors and intermediaries
Pre-acquisition net interest payments (receipts) (b)
Principal payments on finance leases
Credit for services in AT&T Acquisition (c)

Adjusted free cash flow

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

640.1  $
49.8 
108.1 
(565.8)
— 
(18.8)
(218.0)
81.5 
(2.2)
73.3 
148.0  $

918.2  $
4.8 
129.7 
(589.1)
33.9 
(37.7)
(224.5)
(3.5)
(8.7)
— 
223.1  $

816.8 
12.9 
171.7 
(776.4)
20.7 
(22.7)
(196.5)
— 
(7.7)
— 
18.8 

(a)

(b)

(c)

For  purposes  of  our  consolidated  statements  of  cash  flows,  expenses,  including  VAT,  financed  by  an  intermediary  are  treated  as  hypothetical
operating  cash  outflows  and  hypothetical  financing  cash  inflows  when  the  expenses  are  incurred.  When  we  pay  the  financing  intermediary,  we
record financing cash outflows in our consolidated statements of cash flows. For purposes of our adjusted free cash flow definition, we add back the
hypothetical operating cash outflow when these financed expenses are incurred and deduct the financing cash outflows when we pay the financing
intermediary.

Amount  during  2020  primarily  represents  interest  paid  on  pre-acquisition  debt  related  to  the  AT&T  Acquisition,  net  of  interest  received  on  the
AT&T Acquisition Restricted Cash. Amount during 2019 primarily relates to interest received on the AT&T Acquisition Restricted Cash.

In connection with the Acquisition Agreement, AT&T agreed to give us a $75 million credit against certain roaming services that AT&T provides to
the AT&T Acquired Entities for a seven-year period following the closing of the AT&T Acquisition. If the credits are not used for roaming services
in that time period, any remaining credit may be used to acquire certain other services from AT&T thereafter. For accounting purposes, we have
bifurcated the discounted value of these services from the stated purchase consideration for the AT&T Acquisition. The discounted value associated
with this asset is reflected as an outflow in our net cash provided by operating activities in our consolidated statement of cash flows, and is therefore
not accounted for as an investing activity related to the AT&T Acquisition. However, as this credit was negotiated as part of the overall Acquisition
Agreement, we have added this item back to arrive at adjusted free cash flow.

II-45

 
 
Off Balance Sheet Arrangements

In  the  ordinary  course  of  business,  we  may  provide  (i)  indemnifications  to  our  lenders,  our  vendors  and  certain  other  parties  and  (ii)  performance
and/or financial guarantees to local municipalities, our customers and vendors. Historically, these arrangements have not resulted in our company making
any material payments and we do not believe that they will result in material payments in the future.

Contractual Commitments

The following table sets forth the U.S. dollar equivalents of our commitments as of December 31, 2020:

2021

2022

2023

Payments due during
2024
in millions

2025

Thereafter

Total

Debt (excluding interest)
Finance leases (excluding interest)
Operating leases
Programming commitments
Network and connectivity commitments
Purchase commitments
Other commitments

Total (a)

Projected cash interest payments on debt and finance

lease obligations (b)

$

$

$

160.0  $
1.7 
78.7 
139.9 
57.5 
98.2 
9.4 
545.4  $

117.2  $
2.6 
62.7 
89.7 
13.7 
6.5 
1.9 
294.3  $

270.6  $
2.3 
51.4 
52.8 
10.0 
1.4 
1.6 
390.1  $

584.8  $
2.3 
44.4 
43.2 
9.1 
— 
1.5 
685.3  $

146.0  $
2.2 
34.6 
0.5 
6.3 
— 
1.4 
191.0  $

7,222.3  $
2.3 
136.9 
— 
9.5 
— 
8.4 
7,379.4  $

8,500.9 
13.4 
408.7 
326.1 
106.1 
106.1 
24.2 
9,485.5 

448.4  $

447.5  $

434.1  $

424.4  $

403.4  $

766.5  $

2,924.3 

(a)

(b)

The commitments included in this table do not reflect any liabilities that are included in our December 31, 2020 consolidated balance sheet other
than  (i)  debt  and  (ii)  finance  and  operating  lease  obligations.  Our  liability  for  uncertain  tax  positions,  including  accrued  interest,  in  the  various
jurisdictions in which we operate ($45 million at December 31, 2020) has been excluded from the table as the amount and timing of any related
payments are not subject to reasonable estimation. For additional information regarding our liability for uncertain tax positions, see note 15 to our
consolidated financial statements.

Amounts are based on interest rates, interest payment dates, commitment fees and contractual maturities in effect as of December 31, 2020. These
amounts are presented for illustrative purposes only and will likely differ from the actual cash payments required in future periods. In addition, the
amounts presented do not include the impact of our derivative contracts.

For information concerning our debt and finance lease obligations, operating leases and commitments, see notes 10, 11 and 20, respectively, to our

consolidated financial statements.

In addition to the commitments set forth in the table above, we have commitments under (i) derivative instruments and (ii) defined benefit plans and
similar agreements, pursuant to which we expect to make payments in future periods. For information regarding projected cash flows associated with our
derivative  instruments,  see  Item  7A.  Quantitative  and  Qualitative  Disclosures  About  Market  Risk—Projected  Cash  Flows  Associated  with  Derivative
Instruments below. For  information  regarding  our  derivative  instruments,  including  the  net  cash  paid  or  received  in  connection  with  these  instruments
during 2020, 2019 and 2018, see note 5 to our consolidated financial statements. For information regarding our defined benefit plans, see note 16 to our
consolidated financial statements.

II-46

 
 
Critical Accounting Policies, Judgments and Estimates

In connection with the preparation of our consolidated financial statements, we make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of
assets  and  liabilities,  revenue  and  expenses,  and  related  disclosure  of  contingent  assets  and  liabilities.  Critical  accounting  policies  are  defined  as  those
policies that are reflective of significant judgments, estimates and uncertainties, which would potentially result in materially different results under different
assumptions and conditions. We believe the following accounting policies are critical in the preparation of our consolidated financial statements because of
the judgment necessary to account for these matters and the significant estimates involved, which are susceptible to change:

•

•

•

•

Impairment of property and equipment and intangible assets (including goodwill);

Costs associated with construction and installation activities;

Fair value measurements in acquisition accounting; and

Income tax accounting.

For additional information concerning our significant accounting policies, see note 3 to our consolidated financial statements.

Impairment of Property and Equipment and Intangible Assets

The aggregate carrying value of our property and equipment and intangible assets (including goodwill) that was held for use comprised 80% of our

total assets at December 31, 2020.

When circumstances warrant, we review the carrying amounts of our property and equipment and our intangible assets (other than goodwill and other
indefinite-lived  intangible  assets)  to  determine  whether  such  carrying  amounts  continue  to  be  recoverable.  Such  changes  in  circumstance  may  include
(i) the impact of natural disasters such as hurricanes, (ii) an expectation of a sale or disposal of a long-lived asset or asset group, (iii) adverse changes in
market or competitive conditions, (iv) an adverse change in legal factors or business climate in the markets in which we operate and (v) operating or cash
flow losses. For purposes of impairment testing, long-lived assets are grouped at the lowest level for which cash flows are largely independent of other
assets  and  liabilities,  generally  at  or  below  the  reporting  unit  level  (see  below).  If  the  carrying  amount  of  the  asset  or  asset  group  is  greater  than  the
expected undiscounted cash flows to be generated by such asset or asset group, an impairment adjustment is recognized. Such adjustment is measured by
the amount that the carrying value of such asset or asset group exceeds its fair value. We generally measure fair value by considering (i) sale prices for
similar assets, (ii) discounted estimated future cash flows using an appropriate discount rate and/or (iii) estimated replacement cost. Assets to be disposed
of are recorded at the lower of their carrying amount or fair value less costs to sell.

We evaluate goodwill and other indefinite-lived intangible assets (primarily cable television franchise rights and spectrum licenses) for impairment at
least annually on October 1 and whenever facts and circumstances indicate that the fair value of a reporting unit or an indefinite-lived intangible asset may
be  less  than  its  carrying  value.  When  evaluating  impairment  with  respect  to  goodwill  and  other  indefinite-lived  intangibles,  we  first  make  a  qualitative
assessment to determine if the goodwill or other indefinite-lived intangible may be impaired. In the case of goodwill, if it is more-likely-than-not that a
reporting unit’s fair value is less than its carrying value, we then compare the fair value of the reporting unit to its respective carrying amount. A reporting
unit is an operating segment or one level below an operating segment (referred to as a “component”). Goodwill impairment is recorded as the excess of a
reporting unit’s carrying value over its fair value and is charged to operations. With respect to other indefinite-lived intangible assets, if it is more-likely-
than-not that the fair value of an indefinite-lived intangible asset is less than its carrying value, we then estimate its fair value and any excess of the carrying
value over the fair value is also charged to operations as an impairment loss.

When required, considerable management judgment is necessary to estimate the fair value of reporting units and underlying long-lived and indefinite-
lived assets. We typically determine fair value using a market-value approach or an income-based approach (discounted cash flows) based on assumptions
in our long-range business plans, or a combination of an income-based and market-value approach. With respect to our discounted cash flow analysis used
in the income-based approach, the timing and amount of future cash flows under these business plans require estimates of, among other items, subscriber
growth  and  retention  rates,  rates  charged  per  product,  expected  gross  margins  and  Adjusted  OIBDA  margins  and  expected  property  and  equipment
additions. The development of these cash flows, and the discount rate applied to the cash flows, is subject to inherent uncertainties, and actual results could
vary significantly from such estimates. Our determination of the discount rate is based on a weighted average cost of capital approach, which uses a market
participant’s cost of equity and after-tax cost of debt and reflects certain risks inherent in the future cash flows. With respect to a market-value approach,
the

II-47

fair value of a reporting unit is estimated based upon a market multiple typically applied to the reporting unit’s Adjusted OIBDA. We determine the market
multiple  for  each  reporting  unit  taking  the  following  into  consideration:  (i)  public  company  trading  multiples  for  entities  with  similar  business
characteristics  as  the  respective  reporting  unit,  adjusted  to  reflect  an  appropriate  control  premium  or  discount,  a  “trading  multiple;”  and  (ii)  multiples
derived  from  the  value  of  recent  transactions  for  businesses  with  similar  operations  and  in  geographically  similar  locations,  a  “transaction  multiple.”
Changes in the underlying assumptions used in both the income-based and market-value valuation methods can result in materially different determinations
of fair value.

During  2020  we  recorded  goodwill  impairments  of  $177  million  and  $99  million  related  to  C&W  Panama  and  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks,
respectively.  During  2019  and  2018,  we  recorded  goodwill  impairments  of  $182  million  and  $608  million,  respectively,  related  to  C&W  Panama.  A
hypothetical increase/(decrease) of 0.1% in the discount rate used in the goodwill impairment assessment that resulted in our 2020 goodwill impairment
charges would have resulted in an increase/(decrease) of approximately $33 million/($30 million) in aggregate to the goodwill impairment. For additional
information regarding impairments recorded during 2020, 2019 and 2018, see notes 6 and 9 to our consolidated financial statements.

Costs Associated with Construction and Installation Activities

We  capitalize  costs  associated  with  the  construction  of  new  cable  and  mobile  transmission  and  distribution  facilities,  the  installation  of  new  cable
services and the development of software supporting our operations. Installation activities that are capitalized include (i) the initial connection (or drop)
from our cable system to a customer location, (ii) the replacement of a drop and (iii) the installation of equipment for additional services, such as digital
cable, telephone or broadband internet service. The costs of other customer-facing activities, such as reconnecting customer locations where a drop already
exists, disconnecting customer locations and repairing or maintaining drops, are expensed as incurred.

The nature and amount of labor and other costs to be capitalized with respect to construction and installation activities involves significant judgment.
In  addition  to  direct  external  and  internal  labor  and  materials,  we  also  capitalize  other  costs  directly  attributable  to  our  construction  and  installation
activities, including dispatch costs, quality-control costs, vehicle-related costs and certain warehouse-related costs. The capitalization of these costs is based
on  time  sheets,  time  studies,  standard  costs,  call  tracking  systems  and  other  verifiable  means  that  directly  link  the  costs  incurred  with  the  applicable
capitalizable  activity.  We  continuously  monitor  the  appropriateness  of  our  capitalization  policies  and  update  the  policies  when  necessary  to  respond  to
changes in facts and circumstances, such as the development of new products and services and changes in the manner that installations or construction
activities are performed.

Fair Value Measurements in Acquisition Accounting

The  application  of  acquisition  accounting  requires  that  we  make  fair  value  determinations  as  of  the  applicable  valuation  date.  In  making  these
determinations, we are required to make estimates and assumptions that affect the recorded amounts, including, but not limited to, expected future cash
flows, market comparables and discount rates, remaining useful lives of long-lived assets, replacement or reproduction costs of property and equipment and
the  amounts  to  be  recovered  in  future  periods  from  acquired  net  operating  losses  and  other  deferred  tax  assets.  To  assist  us  in  making  these  fair  value
determinations,  we  may  engage  third-party  valuation  specialists.  Our  estimates  in  this  area  impact,  among  other  items,  the  amount  of  depreciation  and
amortization and income tax expense or benefit that we report. Our estimates of fair value are based upon assumptions we believe to be reasonable, but
which are inherently uncertain. A significant portion of our long-lived assets were initially recorded through the application of acquisition accounting. For
additional  information,  including  the  specific  weighted  average  discount  rates  we  used  to  complete  certain  nonrecurring  valuations,  see  note  6  to  our
consolidated  financial  statements.  For  information  regarding  our  acquisitions  and  long-lived  assets,  see  notes  4  and  9,  respectively,  to  our  consolidated
financial statements.

Income Tax Accounting

We are required to estimate the amount of tax payable or refundable for the current year and the deferred tax assets and liabilities for the future tax
consequences attributable to differences between the financial statement carrying amounts and income tax basis of assets and liabilities and the expected
benefits of utilizing net operating loss and tax credit carryforwards, using enacted tax rates in effect for each taxing jurisdiction in which we operate for the
year in which those temporary differences are expected to be recovered or settled. This process requires our management to make assessments regarding
the timing and probability of the ultimate tax impact of such items.

Net deferred tax assets are reduced by a valuation allowance if we believe it is more-likely-than-not such net deferred tax assets will not be realized.
Establishing or reducing a tax valuation allowance requires us to make assessments about the timing of future events, including the probability of expected
future taxable income and available tax planning strategies. At

II-48

December 31, 2020, the aggregate valuation allowance provided against deferred tax assets was $1,631 million. The actual amount of deferred income tax
benefits realized in future periods will likely differ from the net deferred tax assets reflected in our December 31, 2020 consolidated balance sheet due to,
among other factors, possible future changes in income tax law or interpretations thereof in the jurisdictions in which we operate and differences between
estimated  and  actual  future  taxable  income.  Any  such  factors  could  have  a  material  effect  on  our  current  and  deferred  tax  positions.  A  high  degree  of
judgment is required to assess the impact of possible future outcomes on our current and deferred tax positions.

Tax laws in jurisdictions in which we have a presence are subject to varied interpretation, and tax positions we may take could be subject to significant
uncertainty  regarding  whether  the  position  will  be  ultimately  sustained  after  review  by  the  relevant  tax  authority.  We  recognize  the  financial  statement
effects of a tax position when it is more-likely-than-not, based on technical merits, that the position will be sustained upon examination. The determination
of whether the tax position meets the more-likely-than-not threshold requires a facts-based judgment using all information available. In a number of cases,
we have concluded that the more-likely-than-not threshold is not met and, accordingly, the amount of tax benefit recognized in our consolidated financial
statements is different than the amount taken or expected to be taken in our tax returns. As of December 31, 2020, the amount of unrecognized tax benefits
for financial reporting purposes, but taken or expected to be taken in our tax returns, was $32 million, all of which would have a favorable impact on our
effective income tax rate if ultimately recognized, after considering amounts that we would expect to be offset by valuation allowances.

We are required to continually assess our tax positions, and the results of tax examinations or changes in judgment can result in substantial changes to

our unrecognized tax benefits.

For additional information concerning our income taxes, see note 15 to our consolidated financial statements.

II-49

Item 7A.    QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK

We are exposed to market risk in the normal course of our business operations due to our investments in various countries and ongoing investing and
financing activities. Market risk refers to the risk of loss arising from adverse changes in foreign currency exchange rates, interest rates and stock prices.
The risk of loss can be assessed from the perspective of adverse changes in fair values, cash flows and future earnings. As further described below, we have
established policies, procedures and processes governing our management of market risks and the use of derivative instruments to manage our exposure to
such risks.

Cash and Investments

We invest our cash in highly liquid instruments that meet high credit quality standards. We are exposed to exchange rate risk to the extent that the
denominations  of  our  cash  and  cash  equivalent  balances,  revolving  lines  of  credit  and  other  short-term  sources  of  liquidity  do  not  correspond  to  the
denominations of Liberty Latin America’s short-term liquidity requirements. In order to mitigate this risk, we actively manage the denominations of our
cash  balances  in  consideration  of  Liberty  Latin  America’s  forecasted  liquidity  requirements.  At  December  31,  2020,  $74  million  or  8.3%  of  our  cash
balance was denominated in Chilean pesos.

Foreign Currency Risk

We are exposed to foreign currency exchange rate risk with respect to our debt in situations where our debt is denominated in a currency other than the
functional currency of the operations whose cash flows support our ability to service, repay or refinance such debt. Although we generally seek to match
the denomination of our borrowings with the functional currency of the operations that are supporting the respective borrowings, market conditions or other
factors may cause us to enter into borrowing arrangements that are not denominated in the functional currency of the underlying operations (unmatched
debt).  Our  policy  is  generally  to  provide  for  an  economic  hedge  against  foreign  currency  exchange  rate  movements,  whenever  possible  and  when  cost
effective  to  do  so,  by  using  derivative  instruments  to  synthetically  convert  unmatched  debt  into  the  applicable  underlying  currency.  For  additional
information concerning the terms of our derivative instruments, see note 5 to our consolidated financial statements.

In  addition  to  the  exposure  that  results  from  unmatched  debt,  we  are  exposed  to  foreign  currency  risk  to  the  extent  that  we  enter  into  transactions
denominated  in  currencies  other  than  our  operating  subsidiaries’  respective  functional  currencies  (non-functional  currency  risk),  such  as  equipment
purchases and programming contracts. Changes in exchange rates with respect to amounts recorded in our consolidated balance sheet related to these items
will  result  in  unrealized  (based  upon  period-end  exchange  rates)  or  realized  foreign  currency  transaction  gains  and  losses  upon  settlement  of  the
transactions. Moreover, to the extent that our revenue, costs and expenses are denominated in currencies other than our respective functional currencies, we
will experience fluctuations in our revenue, costs and expenses solely as a result of changes in foreign currency exchange rates. Generally, we will consider
hedging non-functional currency risks when the risks arise from agreements with third parties that involve the future payment or receipt of cash or other
monetary  items  to  the  extent  that  we  can  reasonably  predict  the  timing  and  amount  of  such  payments  or  receipts  and  the  payments  or  receipts  are  not
otherwise hedged. In this regard, we have entered into foreign currency forward contracts to hedge certain of these risks. Certain non-functional currency
risks related to our programming and other direct costs of services and other operating costs and expenses and property and equipment additions were not
hedged as of December 31, 2020. For additional information concerning our foreign currency forward contracts, see note 5 to our consolidated financial
statements.

We  also  are  exposed  to  unfavorable  and  potentially  volatile  fluctuations  of  the  U.S.  dollar  (our  reporting  currency)  against  the  currencies  of  our
operating  subsidiaries  when  their  respective  financial  statements  are  translated  into  U.S.  dollars  for  inclusion  in  our  consolidated  financial  statements.
Cumulative  translation  adjustments  are  recorded  in  accumulated  other  comprehensive  earnings  or  loss as  a  separate  component  of  equity.  Any  increase
(decrease) in the value of the U.S. dollar against any foreign currency that is the functional currency of one of our operating subsidiaries will cause us to
experience unrealized foreign currency translation losses (gains) with respect to amounts already invested in such foreign currencies. Accordingly, we may
experience a negative impact on our comprehensive earnings or loss and equity with respect to our holdings solely as a result of FX. Our primary exposure
to FX risk during 2020 was to the Chilean peso as 21.5% of our reported revenue during the period was derived from VTR, whose functional currency is
the Chilean peso. In addition, our reported operating results are impacted by changes in the exchange rates for other local currencies in Latin America and
the  Caribbean.  We  generally  do  not  hedge  against  the  risk  that  we  may  incur  non-cash  losses  upon  the  translation  of  the  financial  statements  of  our
operating subsidiaries and affiliates into U.S. dollars.

II-50

The relationship between (i) the Chilean peso, the Jamaican dollar and the Costa Rican colón and (ii) the U.S. dollar, which is our reporting currency,

is shown below, per one U.S. dollar:

Spot rates:

Chilean peso
Jamaican dollar
Costa Rican colón

Average rates:
Chilean peso
Jamaican dollar
Costa Rican colón (a)

As of December 31,

2020

2019

711.78 
142.41 
613.19 

751.85 
132.28 
571.33 

Year ended December 31,
2019

2018

2020

791.70 
142.08 
585.79 

703.92 
133.48 
587.78 

642.17 
129.26 
603.26 

(a) The rate for 2018 is the average rate during the fourth quarter of 2018, as we acquired Cabletica on October 1, 2018.

Inflation and Foreign Investment Risk

We  are  subject  to  inflationary  pressures  with  respect  to  labor,  programming  and  other  costs.  While  we  attempt  to  increase  our  revenue  to  offset
increases  in  costs,  there  is  no  assurance  that  we  will  be  able  to  do  so.  Therefore,  costs  could  rise  faster  than  associated  revenue,  thereby  resulting  in  a
negative impact on our operating results, cash flows and liquidity. The economic environment in the respective countries in which we operate is a function
of government, economic, fiscal and monetary policies and various other factors beyond our control that could lead to inflation. We are unable to predict,
with any meaningful long term degree of certainty, the extent that price levels might be impacted in future periods by the current state of the economies in
the countries in which we operate.

Interest Rate Risks

We are exposed to changes in interest rates primarily as a result of our borrowing activities, which include fixed-rate and variable-rate borrowings by
our borrowing groups. Our primary exposure to variable-rate debt is through the LIBOR-indexed debt of C&W and Liberty Puerto Rico and, to a lesser
extent, Cabletica. In July 2017, the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority (the authority that regulates LIBOR) announced that it intends to stop compelling
banks to submit rates for the calculation of LIBOR after 2021. On November 30, 2020, the administrator of U.S. dollar LIBOR announced a delay in the
phase out of a majority of the U.S. dollar LIBOR publications until June 30, 2023, with the remainder of LIBOR publications still being phased out at the
end of 2021. Currently, it is not possible to predict the exact transitional arrangements, or associated timelines, for calculating applicable reference rates
that may be made in the U.K., the U.S., or elsewhere given that a number of outcomes are possible, including the cessation of the publication of one or
more reference rates. Our loan documents contain customary provisions that contemplate alternative calculations of the applicable base rate once LIBOR is
no longer available. Currently, we do not expect that these alternative calculations will be materially different from what would have been calculated under
LIBOR. Additionally, no mandatory prepayment or redemption provisions would be triggered under our loan agreements in the even that the LIBOR rate is
not available.

Also, it is possible that a new reference rate that applies to our LIBOR-indexed debt could be different than a new reference rate that applies to our
LIBOR-indexed  derivative  instruments.  We  anticipate  managing  any  increased  variable-rate  exposure  caused  by  this  possible  difference  through
modifications to our debt and/or derivative instrument agreements, however, future market conditions may not allow immediate implementation of desired
modifications, and we may incur significant associated costs.

In general, we seek to enter into derivative instruments to protect against increases in the interest rates on our variable-rate debt. Accordingly, we have
entered  into  various  derivative  transactions  to  reduce  exposure  to  increases  in  interest  rates.  We  use  interest  rate  derivative  contracts  to  exchange,  at
specified  intervals,  the  difference  between  fixed  and  variable  interest  rates  calculated  by  reference  to  an  agreed-upon  notional  principal  amount.  At
December  31,  2020,  we  paid  a  fixed  rate  of  interest  on  97%  of  our  total  debt,  which  includes  the  impact  of  interest  rate  derivative  contracts.  The  final
maturity dates of our various portfolios of interest rate derivative instruments generally fall short of the respective maturities of the underlying variable-rate
debt. In this regard, we use judgment to determine the appropriate maturity dates of our portfolios of interest rate derivative

II-51

 
 
instruments,  taking  into  account  the  relative  costs  and  benefits  of  different  maturity  profiles  in  light  of  current  and  expected  future  market  conditions,
liquidity  issues  and  other  factors.  For  additional  information  concerning  the  impacts  of  these  interest  rate  derivative  instruments,  see  note  5  to  our
consolidated financial statements.

Weighted Average Variable Interest Rate. At December 31, 2020, the outstanding principal amount of our variable-rate indebtedness aggregated $2,998
million,  and  the  weighted  average  interest  rate  (including  margin)  on  such  variable-rate  indebtedness  was  approximately  3.8%,  excluding  the  effects  of
interest rate derivative contracts, deferred financing costs, original issue premiums or discounts and commitment fees, all of which affect our overall cost of
borrowing. Assuming no change in the amount outstanding, and without giving effect to any interest rate derivative contracts, deferred financing costs,
original  issue  premiums  or  discounts  and  commitment  fees,  a  hypothetical  50  basis  point  (0.50%)  increase  (decrease)  in  our  weighted  average  variable
interest rate would increase (decrease) our annual interest expense and cash outflows by $15 million. As discussed above and in note 5 to our consolidated
financial statements, we use interest rate derivative contracts to manage our exposure to increases in variable interest rates. In this regard, increases in the
fair value of these contracts generally would be expected to offset most of the economic impact of increases in the variable interest rates applicable to our
indebtedness to the extent and during the period that principal amounts are matched with interest rate derivative contracts.

Counterparty Credit Risk

We are exposed to the risk that the counterparties to the derivative instruments, undrawn debt facilities and cash investments of our borrowing groups
will default on their obligations to us. We manage these credit risks through the evaluation and monitoring of the creditworthiness of, and concentration of
risk with, the respective counterparties. In this regard, credit risk associated with our derivative instruments and undrawn debt facilities is spread across a
relatively broad counterparty base of banks and financial institutions. Collateral has not been posted by either party under the derivative instruments of our
borrowing groups. We generally invest our cash at Liberty Latin America and its unrestricted subsidiaries in AAA rated money market funds, including
funds  that  invest  in  government  obligations  or  repurchase  agreements  serviced  by  such  obligations.  Where  local  financial  sector  constraints  restrict  our
ability  to  meet  the  above  criteria  for  our  cash  holdings,  cash  may  be  deposited  with  one  of  the  three  highest  rated  financial  institutions  locally  for
operational  purposes  until  such  time  as  the  above  investments  are  made.  To  date,  neither  the  access  to  nor  the  value  of  our  cash  and  cash  equivalent
balances have been significantly adversely impacted by liquidity problems of financial institutions.

At  December  31,  2020,  our  exposure  to  counterparty  credit  risk  included  (i)  cash  and  cash  equivalent  balances  of  $894  million  and  (ii)  aggregate

undrawn credit facilities of $1,173 million.

Each  of  our  borrowing  groups  has  entered  into  derivative  instruments  under  agreements  with  each  counterparty  that  contain  master  netting
arrangements that are applicable in the event of early termination by either party to such derivative instrument. The master netting arrangements under each
of these master agreements are limited to the derivative instruments governed by the relevant master agreement within each individual borrowing group
and are independent of similar arrangements of our other subsidiary borrowing groups.

While we currently have no specific concerns about the creditworthiness of any counterparty for which we have material credit risk exposures, the
current economic conditions and uncertainties in global financial markets have increased the credit risk of our counterparties and we cannot rule out the
possibility that one or more of our counterparties could fail or otherwise be unable to meet its obligations to us. Any such instance could have an adverse
effect on our cash flows, results of operations, financial condition and/or liquidity.

Although we actively monitor the creditworthiness of our key vendors, the financial failure of a key vendor could disrupt our operations and have an

adverse impact on our revenue and cash flows.

II-52

Sensitivity Information

Information concerning the sensitivity of the fair value of certain of our more significant derivative instruments to changes in market conditions is set
forth below. The potential changes in fair value set forth below do not include any amounts associated with the remeasurement of the derivative asset or
liability into the applicable functional currency. For additional information, see notes 5 and 6 to our consolidated financial statements.

VTR Cross-currency and Interest Rate Derivative Contracts

Holding all other factors constant, at December 31, 2020:

i.  An  instantaneous  increase  (decrease)  of  10%  in  the  value  of  the  Chilean  peso  relative  to  the  U.S.  dollar  would  have  decreased  (increased)  the

aggregate fair value of the VTR cross-currency derivative contracts by approximately CLP 127 billion or $178 million.

ii. An instantaneous increase (decrease) in the relevant based rate of 100 basis points (1.0%) would have increased (decreased) the aggregate fair value

of the VTR cross-currency and interest rate derivative contracts by approximately CLP 12 billion or $17 million.

C&W Cross-currency and Interest Rate Derivative Contracts

Holding  all  other  factors  constant,  at  December  31,  2020,  an  instantaneous  increase  (decrease)  in  the  relevant  base  rate  of  100  basis  points  (1.0%)
would have increased (decreased) the aggregate fair value of the C&W cross-currency and interest rate derivative contracts by approximately $139 million.

Liberty Puerto Rico Interest Rate Derivative Contracts

Holding  all  other  factors  constant,  at  December  31,  2020,  an  instantaneous  increase  (decrease)  in  the  relevant  base  rate  of  100  basis  points  (1.0%)

would have increased (decreased) the aggregate fair value of the Liberty Puerto Rico interest rate derivative contracts by approximately $60 million.

Projected Cash Flows Associated with Derivative Instruments

The following table provides information regarding the projected cash flows associated with our derivative instruments. The U.S. dollar equivalents
presented below are based on interest rates and exchange rates that were in effect as of December 31, 2020. These amounts are presented for illustrative
purposes  only  and  will  likely  differ  from  the  actual  cash  payments  required  in  future  periods.  For  additional  information  regarding  our  derivative
instruments, including our counterparty credit risk, see note 5 to our consolidated financial statements.

Payments (receipts) due during:

2021

2022

2023

2024
in millions

2025

Thereafter

Total

Projected derivative cash payments (receipts), net:

Interest-related (a)
Principal-related (b)
Other (c)
Total

$

$

69.8  $
— 
3.2 
73.0  $

71.1  $
(1.5)
— 
69.6  $

63.2  $
— 
— 
63.2  $

65.3  $
— 
— 
65.3  $

65.3  $
— 
— 
65.3  $

123.4  $
163.1 
— 
286.5  $

458.1 
161.6 
3.2 
622.9 

(a)

(b)

(c)

Includes the interest-related cash flows of our cross-currency and interest rate derivative contracts.

Includes the principal-related cash flows of our cross-currency derivative contracts.

Includes amounts related to our foreign currency forward contracts.

II-53

 
 
 
Item 8.    FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

The consolidated financial statements of Liberty Latin America are filed under this Item, beginning on page II-57. Financial statement schedules are

filed under Item 15 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Item 9.    CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

None.

Item 9A.    CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

Evaluation of disclosure controls and procedures

We maintain disclosure controls and procedures, as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended
(the  Exchange  Act),  that  are  designed  to  ensure  that  information  required  to  be  disclosed  in  the  reports  we  file  or  submit  under  the  Exchange  Act  is
recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the SEC’s rules and forms, and that such information is accumulated and
communicated to our management, including our Principle Executive Officer and our Principal Financial Officer (the Executives), as appropriate to allow
timely  decisions  regarding  required  disclosure.  In  designing  and  evaluating  the  disclosure  controls  and  procedures,  the  Executives  recognize  that  any
controls and procedures, no matter how well designed and operated, can provide only reasonable assurance of achieving the desired control objectives, and
management is required to apply judgment in evaluating the cost-benefit relationship of possible controls and objectives.

Our management, with the participation of the Executives, evaluated the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures as of December 31,
2020. Based on that evaluation, the Executives concluded that our disclosure controls and procedures are not effective as of December 31, 2020 due to
material  weaknesses  in  internal  control  over  financial  reporting,  as  described  below.  Notwithstanding  such  material  weaknesses  in  internal  control  over
financial reporting, our management concluded that our consolidated financial statements in this Annual Report on Form 10-K present fairly, in all material
respects,  the  company’s  financial  position,  results  of  operations  and  cash  flows  as  of  the  dates,  and  for  the  periods  presented,  in  conformity  with  U.S.
GAAP.

Management’s Annual Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting

Our management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting as defined in Rule 13a-15(f) and
15d-15(f)  under  the  Exchange  Act.  Our  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  is  designed  to  provide  reasonable  assurance  regarding  the  reliability  of
financial  reporting  and  the  preparation  of  consolidated  financial  statements  for  external  purposes  in  accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting
principles.  Our  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  includes  those  policies  and  procedures  that  (i)  pertain  to  the  maintenance  of  records  that,  in
reasonable  detail,  accurately  and  fairly  reflect  transactions  and  dispositions  of  assets,  (ii)  provide  reasonable  assurance  that  transactions  are  recorded  as
necessary to permit preparation of consolidated financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, (iii) provide reasonable
assurance that receipts and expenditures are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors, and (iv) provide reasonable
assurance  regarding  prevention  or  timely  detection  of  unauthorized  acquisition,  use  or  disposition  of  assets  that  could  have  a  material  effect  on  the
consolidated financial statements.

Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. In addition, projections of any
evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree
of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

A  material  weakness  is  a  deficiency,  or  a  combination  of  deficiencies,  in  internal  control  over  financial  reporting,  such  that  there  is  a  reasonable

possibility that a material misstatement of the Company’s annual or interim financial statements will not be prevented or detected on a timely basis.

Our management, with the participation of the Executives and Board of Directors, assessed the effectiveness of the Company's internal control over
financial reporting as of December 31, 2020, using the criteria in Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring
Organizations of the Treadway Commission. Our evaluation of

II-54

internal control over financial reporting did not include the internal control over financial reporting of the AT&T Acquired Entities, which were acquired
in 2020. The amount of total assets and revenue included in our consolidated financial statements as of and for the year ended December 31, 2020 that is
attributable to the AT&T Acquired Entities was $2,707 million and $174 million, respectively.

In  our  Annual  Report  on  Form  10-K  for  our  fiscal  year  ended  December  31,  2018,  management  identified  the  following  material  weaknesses  in

internal control over financial reporting, which continue to exist as of December 31, 2020:

•

•

•

•

•

The Company did not have a sufficient number of trained resources with the appropriate skills and knowledge with assigned responsibilities and
accountability for the design and operation of internal controls over financial reporting.

The Company did not have an effective risk assessment process that successfully identified and assessed risks of misstatement to ensure controls
were  designed  and  implemented  to  respond  to  those  risks.  The  Company  did  not  adequately  communicate  the  changes  necessary  in  financial
reporting and related internal controls throughout its organization and to affected third parties.

The Company did not have an effective monitoring process to assess the consistent operation of internal control over financial reporting and to
remediate known control deficiencies.

The Company did not have an effective information and communication process to identify, capture and process relevant information necessary
for financial accounting and reporting.

The  Company  did  not  i)  establish  effective  general  information  technology  controls  (GITCs), specifically program change controls and access
controls, commensurate with financial and IT personnel job responsibilities that support the consistent operation of the Company’s IT operating
systems,  databases  and  IT  applications,  and  end  user  computing  over  all  financial  reporting,  ii)  have  policies  and  procedures  through  which
general information technology controls are deployed across the organization. Automated process-level controls and manual controls dependent
upon the accuracy and completeness of information derived from information technology systems were also rendered ineffective because they are
affected by the lack of GITCs.

As a consequence, the Company did not effectively design, implement and operate process-level control activities related to order-to-cash (including
revenue,  trade  receivables,  and  deferred  revenue),  procure-to-pay  (including  operating  expenses,  prepaid  expenses,  accounts  payable,  and  accrued
liabilities), hire-to-pay (including compensation expense and accrued liabilities), long-lived assets, inventory and other financial reporting processes.

These control deficiencies resulted in immaterial misstatements, some of which were corrected, in our consolidated financial statements as of and for
the  year  ended  December  31,  2020.  These  control  deficiencies  create  a  reasonable  possibility  that  a  material  misstatement  to  the  consolidated  financial
statements will not be prevented or detected on a timely basis, and therefore we conclude that the deficiencies represent material weaknesses in internal
control over financial reporting and our internal control over financial reporting is not effective as of December 31, 2020.

Our independent registered public accounting firm, KPMG, LLP, who audited the consolidated financial statements included in this Annual Report on
Form 10-K, has expressed an adverse report on the operating effectiveness of the Company's internal control over financial reporting. KPMG LLP's report
is included herein on page II-57.

Management’s Remediation Plan

We,  with  the  oversight  from  the  Audit  Committee  of  the  Board  of  Directors  continue  to  implement  the  remediation  plans  for  the  aforementioned

material weaknesses in internal control over financial reporting as follows:

• Hire additional individuals and retain employees with appropriate skills and experience and provide further training related to internal control over

financial reporting and the design and implementation of information technology solutions.

• Design and implement a comprehensive and continuous risk assessment process to identify and assess risks of material misstatement and ensure
that the impacted financial reporting processes and related internal controls are properly designed and in place to respond to those risks in our
financial reporting.

•

Implement  monitoring  controls  to  oversee  the  remediation  and  the  consistent  operation  of  control  activities,  including  those  performed  by  our
service providers.

II-55

•

Enhance information and communication processes, including through information technology solutions of which include, but are not limited to,
implementing new enterprise resource planning software, to ensure that information needed for financial reporting is accurate, complete, relevant,
reliable, and communicated in a timely manner.

• Design and implement GITCs, including the system development lifecycle controls, and ensure they are operating effectively to support process-

level automated and manual control activities that are dependent upon information derived from IT systems.

•

Enhance the design of existing control activities and implement additional process-level control activities (including controls over the order-to-
cash, procure-to-pay, hire-to-pay, long-lived assets, inventory, and other financial reporting processes) and ensure they are properly evidenced and
operating effectively.

We believe that these actions and the improvements we expect to achieve, when fully implemented, will strengthen our internal control over financial

reporting and remediate the remaining material weaknesses.

We are committed to making further progress in our remediation efforts during 2021; however, if our remedial measures are insufficient to address the
material weaknesses, or if one or more additional material weaknesses in our internal controls over financial reporting are discovered, we may be required
to take additional remedial measures from our plan as disclosed above.

Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting

Except as listed below, there have been no changes in our internal control over financial reporting identified in connection with the evaluation required
by Rules 13a-15(d) and 15d-15(d) of the Exchange Act that occurred during our fourth quarter of 2020 that have materially affected, or are reasonably
likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.

During our fourth quarter, changes in our internal control over financial reporting include that we:
•

implemented  additional  procedures  and  controls  to  enhance  our  internal  control  process  through  a  combination  of  preventative  and  detective
controls,
developed  specific  roles  and  responsibilities  for  certain  internal  control  activities  of  the  Technology  and  Information  group  at  two  of  our
components,
provided personal coaching regarding performance of business process controls and GITCs,
designed  and  implemented  certain  manual  controls  to  support  the  newly  implemented  enterprise  resource  planning  software  at  two  of  our
components; and,
designed and implemented certain GITCs for the IT systems used at two of our components.

•

•
•

•

Item 9B.    OTHER INFORMATION

Not applicable.

II-56

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Shareholders and Board of Directors
Liberty Latin America Ltd.:

Opinion on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting

We have audited Liberty Latin America Ltd. and subsidiaries’ (the Company) internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020, based on
criteria  established  in  Internal  Control  –  Integrated  Framework  (2013)  issued  by  the  Committee  of  Sponsoring  Organizations  of  the  Treadway
Commission. In our opinion, because of the effect of the material weaknesses, described below, on the achievement of the objectives of the control criteria,
the  Company  has  not  maintained  effective  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  as  of  December  31,  2020,  based  on  criteria  established  in  Internal
Control – Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission.

We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB), the consolidated
balance sheets of the Company as of December 31, 2020 and 2019, the related consolidated statements of operations, comprehensive loss, equity, and cash
flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended December 31, 2020, and the related notes and financial statement schedule I (collectively, the
consolidated financial statements), and our report dated March 1, 2021 expressed an unqualified opinion on those consolidated financial statements.

The Company acquired AT&T Mobility Puerto Rico Inc., AT&T Mobility Virgin Islands Inc. & Beach Holding Corporation (the AT&T Acquired Entities)
during 2020, and management excluded from its assessment of the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December
31, 2020, the AT&T Acquired Entities’ internal control over financial reporting associated with total assets of $2,707 million and total revenues of $174
million included in the consolidated financial statements of the Company as of and for the year ended December 31, 2020. Our audit of internal control
over financial reporting of the Company also excluded an evaluation of the internal control over financial reporting of the AT&T Acquired Entities.

A material weakness is a deficiency, or a combination of deficiencies, in internal control over financial reporting, such that there is a reasonable possibility
that a material misstatement of the company’s annual or interim financial statements will not be prevented or detected on a timely basis. The following
material weaknesses have been identified and included in management’s assessment:

•

•

•

•

•

•

The Company did not have a sufficient number of trained resources with the appropriate skills and knowledge with assigned responsibilities and
accountability for the design and operation of internal controls over financial reporting.

The Company did not have an effective risk assessment process that successfully identified and assessed risks of misstatement to ensure controls
were  designed  and  implemented  to  respond  to  those  risks.  The  Company  did  not  adequately  communicate  the  changes  necessary  in  financial
reporting and related internal controls throughout its organization and to affected third parties.

The Company did not have an effective monitoring process to assess the consistent operation of internal control over financial reporting and to
remediate known control deficiencies.

The Company did not have an effective information and communication process to identify, capture and process relevant information necessary
for financial accounting and reporting.

The  Company  did  not  i)  establish  effective  general  information  technology  controls  (GITCs),  specifically  program  change  controls  and  access
controls, commensurate with financial and IT personnel job responsibilities that support the consistent operation of the Company’s IT operating
systems,  databases  and  IT  applications,  and  end  user  computing  over  all  financial  reporting,  ii)  have  policies  and  procedures  through  which
general information technology controls are deployed across the organization. Automated process-level controls and manual controls dependent
upon the accuracy and completeness of information derived from information technology systems were also rendered ineffective because they are
affected by the lack of GITCs.

The Company did not effectively design, implement and operate process-level control activities related to order-to-cash (including revenue, trade
receivables, and deferred revenue), procure-to-pay (including operating expenses,

II-57

prepaid  expenses,  accounts  payable,  and  accrued  liabilities),  hire-to-pay  (including  compensation  expense  and  accrued  liabilities),  long-lived
assets, inventory, and other financial reporting processes.

The material weaknesses were considered in determining the nature, timing, and extent of audit tests applied in our audit of the 2020 consolidated financial
statements, and this report does not affect our report on those consolidated financial statements.

Basis for Opinion

The Company’s management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of
internal control over financial reporting, included in the accompanying Management’s Annual Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting in Item
9A. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company’s internal control over financial reporting based on our audit. We are a public accounting
firm registered with the PCAOB and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and
the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.

We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance  about  whether  effective  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  was  maintained  in  all  material  respects.  Our  audit  of  internal  control  over
financial reporting included obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, and
testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk. Our audit also included performing such other
procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

Definition and Limitations of Internal Control Over Financial Reporting

A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting
and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control
over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (1) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly
reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit
preparation  of  financial  statements  in  accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting  principles,  and  that  receipts  and  expenditures  of  the  company  are
being  made  only  in  accordance  with  authorizations  of  management  and  directors  of  the  company;  and  (3)  provide  reasonable  assurance  regarding
prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial
statements.

Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of
effectiveness  to  future  periods  are  subject  to  the  risk  that  controls  may  become  inadequate  because  of  changes  in  conditions,  or  that  the  degree  of
compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

/s/ KPMG LLP

Denver, Colorado
March 1, 2021

II-58

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Shareholders and Board of Directors
Liberty Latin America Ltd.:

Opinion on the Consolidated Financial Statements

We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of Liberty Latin America Ltd. and subsidiaries (the Company) as of December 31, 2020
and 2019, the related consolidated statements of operations, comprehensive loss, equity, and cash flows for each of the years in the three‑year period ended
December  31,  2020,  and  the  related  notes  and  financial  statement  schedule  I  (collectively,  the  consolidated  financial  statements).  In  our  opinion,  the
consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Company as of December 31, 2020 and 2019, and the
results  of  its  operations  and  its  cash  flows  for  each  of  the  years  in  the  three‑year  period  ended  December  31,  2020,  in  conformity  with  U.S.  generally
accepted accounting principles.

We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB), the Company’s
internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020, based on criteria established in Internal Control – Integrated Framework (2013) issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission, and our report dated March 1, 2021 expressed an adverse opinion on the
effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.

Change in Accounting Principle

As discussed in Note 2 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company has changed its method of accounting for leases as of January 1, 2019 due to
the adoption of Accounting Standards Update No. 2016-02, Leases.

Basis for Opinion

These  consolidated  financial  statements  are  the  responsibility  of  the  Company’s  management.  Our  responsibility  is  to  express  an  opinion  on  these
consolidated financial statements based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the PCAOB and are required to be independent with
respect  to  the  Company  in  accordance  with  the  U.S.  federal  securities  laws  and  the  applicable  rules  and  regulations  of  the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission and the PCAOB.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance  about  whether  the  consolidated  financial  statements  are  free  of  material  misstatement,  whether  due  to  error  or  fraud.  Our  audits  included
performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the consolidated financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing
procedures  that  respond  to  those  risks.  Such  procedures  included  examining,  on  a  test  basis,  evidence  regarding  the  amounts  and  disclosures  in  the
consolidated financial statements. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as
well as evaluating the overall presentation of the consolidated financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

Critical Audit Matters

The  critical  audit  matters  communicated  below  are  matters  arising  from  the  current  period  audit  of  the  consolidated  financial  statements  that  were
communicated or required to be communicated to the audit committee and that: (1) relate to accounts or disclosures that are material to the consolidated
financial statements and (2) involved our especially challenging, subjective, or complex judgments. The communication of critical audit matters does not
alter in any way our opinion on the consolidated financial statements, taken as a whole, and we are not, by communicating the critical audit matters below,
providing separate opinions on the critical audit matters or on the accounts or disclosures to which they relate.

Capitalization of costs into property and equipment

As  discussed  in  Note  3  to  the  consolidated  financial  statements,  the  Company  capitalizes  costs  associated  with  the  construction  of  new  cable  and
mobile  transmission  and  distribution  facilities,  the  installation  of  new  cable  services  and  the  development  of  software  supporting  its  operations.
Capitalization, rather than expensing of costs, may result in a more favorable operating income (loss) in a given year. As of December 31, 2020, the
property and equipment, net balance was $4,911 million.

II-59

We identified the assessment of external costs capitalized into property and equipment as a critical audit matter. A high degree of auditor judgment was
required  to  assess  the  nature  of  the  supporting  documentation.  Third  party  technology  related  invoices  can  lack  specificity  of  the  item  acquired  or
activity performed to support that the costs qualified for capitalization.

The following are the primary procedures we performed to address this critical audit matter. We selected a sample of costs capitalized and inspected
the related invoices. For those invoices selected lacking specificity, we inspected additional underlying documentation, such as the related statement of
work or contract.

Valuation of goodwill for certain reporting units

As discussed in Note 3 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company tests for impairment of goodwill at least annually and whenever facts
and circumstances indicate that the carrying value of a reporting unit might exceed its fair value. Fair value of each reporting unit was measured using
an income approach, utilizing a discounted cash flow model valuation technique. As of December 31, 2020, the goodwill balance was $4,886 million
and the Company recorded impairments totaling $276 million.

We  identified  the  assessment  of  the  fair  value  of  certain  reporting  units  as  a  critical  audit  matter.  There  was  a  high  degree  of  subjective  auditor
judgment  required  in  assessing  the  Company’s  key  assumptions  in  measuring  the  fair  value.  Depending  on  the  reporting  unit,  the  key  assumptions
were projected revenues, projected direct costs, projected operating expenses, projected capital expenditures, discount rates and terminal growth rates.
For these reporting units, certain valuations were sensitive to minor changes in these inputs which could have a significant impact on the estimated fair
value.

The following are the primary procedures we performed to address this critical audit matter. We performed procedures to test the projected revenues,
direct costs, operating expenses, and capital expenditures by comparing them with the historical results of the respective reporting unit and assessing
the impacts of internal and/or external economic factors considering the available information. We involved valuation professionals with specialized
skills  and  knowledge,  who  assisted  in:  evaluating  the  discount  rates  used  in  the  valuations  by  comparing  them  against  independently  developed
discount rates using publicly available market data; evaluating the terminal growth rates used in the valuations by comparing them to publicly available
market data, and comparing the implied market multiples from the Company’s fair value estimates using the income approach to the observed range of
market multiples derived from comparable companies.

Preliminary valuation of property and equipment and intangible assets associated with the acquisition of the AT&T Acquired Entities

As discussed in Note 4 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company acquired the wireless and wireline operations of AT&T, Inc. located in
Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands on October 31, 2020, for consideration of $1,931 million. Based on the preliminary allocation of the purchase
price, the Company recorded $711 million of acquired property and equipment, $1,329 million of acquired intangible assets, including $894 million of
spectrum,  and  $83  million  of  customer  relationships.  The  information  that  was  available  to  the  Company  to  allocate  consideration  to  the  acquired
property and equipment and intangible assets was affected by the proximity of the acquisition date to the Company’s fiscal year-end date of December
31, 2020. As a result, the Company determined the preliminary fair value of property and equipment based on the historical cost basis of AT&T, Inc.,
the  acquired  spectrum  intangible  asset  based  on  a  range  of  prices  indicated  by  an  initial  analysis  of  available  market  data,  and  the  customer
relationships based on a multi-period excess earnings method. Key assumptions used to value the customer relationships included the discount rate and
required rates of return on property and equipment (including return of and on) and spectrum intangible assets.

We identified the preliminary valuation of the acquired intangible assets of spectrum and customer relationships along with property and equipment
associated with the acquisition of the AT&T Acquired Entities as a critical audit matter. Due to the extent of the information available as of the end of
the  reporting  period,  evaluating  the  preliminary  valuation  of  these  intangible  assets  and  property  and  equipment  involved  a  high  degree  of  auditor
judgment. Testing the key assumptions used to estimate the fair value of the customer relationship intangible assets, also involved a high degree of
auditor judgment due to its sensitivity to changes in the key assumptions.

The  following  are  the  primary  procedures  we  performed  to  address  this  critical  audit  matter.  We  evaluated  the  design  and  tested  the  operating
effectiveness of certain internal controls related to the critical audit matter. This included controls related to the determination of the preliminary fair
value of the acquired intangible assets and property and equipment and

II-60

the development of the key assumptions noted above. Based on the consideration and extent of the information available as of the end of the reporting
period,  we  evaluated  the  reasonableness  of  the  preliminary  fair  value  of  the  acquired  intangible  assets  and  property  and  equipment.  We  involved  a
valuation professional with specialized skills and knowledge who assisted in:

•

•

evaluating  the  discount  rate  used  to  determine  the  preliminary  fair  value  of  the  customer  relationships  acquired  by  comparing  the  Company’s
inputs to the discount rate to publicly available data for comparable entities and assessing the resulting discount rate, and

evaluating the required rates of return on property and equipment (including return of and on) and spectrum intangible assets used to estimate the
preliminary fair value of the customer relationships acquired by assessing the required rates of return considering the weighted-average cost of
capital and the implied rate of return of the transaction.

/s/ KPMG LLP

We have served as the Company’s auditor since 2016.

Denver, Colorado
March 1, 2021

II-61

LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS

ASSETS

Current assets:

Cash and cash equivalents
Trade receivables, net of allowances of $100.0 million and $87.3 million, respectively
Prepaid expenses
Other current assets, net
Total current assets

Goodwill
Property and equipment, net
Restricted cash
Intangible assets subject to amortization, net
Intangible assets not subject to amortization
Other assets, net

Total assets

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

$

$

894.2  $
560.7 
62.6 
434.4 
1,951.9 

4,885.5 
4,911.4 
17.3 
858.9 
1,465.6 
1,139.4 
15,230.0  $

1,183.8 
585.2 
58.9 
227.3 
2,055.2 

4,906.4 
4,301.1 
1,272.2 
969.2 
560.8 
872.6 
14,937.5 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
II-62

 
 
LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS – (Continued)

LIABILITIES AND EQUITY

Current liabilities:

Accounts payable
Current portion of deferred revenue
Current portion of debt and finance lease obligations
Accrued capital expenditures
Accrued interest
Accrued payroll and employee benefits
Derivative instruments
Other accrued and current liabilities

Total current liabilities

Long-term debt and finance lease obligations
Deferred tax liabilities
Deferred revenue
Other long-term liabilities
Total liabilities

Commitments and contingencies

Equity:

Liberty Latin America shareholders:
Class A, $0.01 par value; 500,000,000 shares authorized; 49,303,401 and 49,009,585 shares issued and outstanding,

respectively, at December 31, 2020 and 48,795,552 shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 2019

Class B, $0.01 par value; 50,000,000 shares authorized; 1,932,386 shares issued and outstanding at December 31,

2020 and 1,934,686 shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 2019

Class C, $0.01 par value; 500,000,000 shares authorized; 181,786,924 and 181,113,766 shares issued and

outstanding, respectively, at December 31, 2020 and 131,181,371 shares issued and outstanding at December 31,
2019

Undesignated preference shares, $0.01 par value; 50,000,000 shares authorized; nil shares issued and outstanding at

each period

Treasury shares, at cost; 966,974 and nil shares, respectively
Additional paid-in capital
Accumulated deficit
Accumulated other comprehensive loss, net of taxes

Total Liberty Latin America shareholders

Noncontrolling interests

Total equity

Total liabilities and equity

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

$

$

351.7  $
184.9 
161.9 
73.6 
132.3 
97.8 
90.2 
612.6 
1,705.0 
8,195.3 
619.9 
185.3 
1,080.8 
11,786.3 

0.5 

— 

1.8 

— 
(9.5)
4,982.0 
(2,134.5)
(125.6)
2,714.7 
729.0 
3,443.7 
15,230.0  $

346.6 
160.9 
180.2 
72.1 
132.6 
88.9 
35.4 
559.3 
1,576.0 
8,189.8 
401.8 
210.9 
579.1 
10,957.6 

0.5 

— 

1.3 

— 
— 
4,569.9 
(1,447.1)
(14.8)
3,109.8 
870.1 
3,979.9 
14,937.5 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
II-63

 
 
LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions, except per share amounts

2018

Revenue
Operating costs and expenses (exclusive of depreciation and amortization, shown separately below):

$

3,764.6  $

3,867.0  $

3,705.7 

Programming and other direct costs of services
Other operating costs and expenses
Business interruption loss recovery
Depreciation and amortization
Impairment, restructuring and other operating items, net

Operating income (loss)

Non-operating income (expense):

Interest expense
Realized and unrealized gains (losses) on derivative instruments, net
Foreign currency transaction gains (losses), net
Losses on debt modification and extinguishment, net
Other income (expense), net

Loss before income taxes
Income tax benefit (expense)

Net loss

Net loss attributable to noncontrolling interests

 Net loss attributable to Liberty Latin America shareholders

Basic and diluted net loss per share attributable to Liberty Latin America shareholders

846.0 
1,531.4 
— 
914.6 
380.9 
3,672.9 
91.7 

(533.4)
(352.7)
1.2 
(45.1)
0.1 
(929.9)
(838.2)
29.3 
(808.9)
121.7 
(687.2) $

877.8 
1,505.3 
— 
871.0 
259.1 
3,513.2 
353.8 

(499.2)
(17.2)
(112.5)
(19.8)
14.3 
(634.4)
(280.6)
98.2 
(182.4)
102.3 
(80.1) $

877.2 
1,441.3 
(59.5)
829.8 
640.5 
3,729.3 
(23.6)

(443.7)
94.8 
(180.0)
(32.1)
(0.1)
(561.1)
(584.7)
(51.1)
(635.8)
290.6 
(345.2)

(3.51) $

(0.43) $

(1.96)

$

$

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
II-64

 
 
 
LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE LOSS

Net loss
Other comprehensive earnings (loss), net of taxes:

Foreign currency translation adjustments
Reclassification adjustments included in net loss
Pension-related adjustments and other, net
Other comprehensive earnings (loss)

Comprehensive loss

Comprehensive loss attributable to noncontrolling interests

Comprehensive loss attributable to Liberty Latin America shareholders

$

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

(808.9) $

(182.4) $

(635.8)

(119.0)
0.6 
6.8 
(111.6)
(920.5)
122.5 
(798.0) $

1.8 
(3.0)
2.4 
1.2 
(181.2)
102.6 
(78.6) $

2.7 
2.2 
34.5 
39.4 
(596.4)
291.9 
(304.5)

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
II-65

 
 
 
 
LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF EQUITY

Liberty Latin America shareholders

Common shares

Class A Class B Class C

Additional
paid-in
capital

Accumulated
deficit

Accumulated
other
comprehensive
loss,
net of taxes

Total
Liberty
Latin
America
shareholders

Non-
controlling
interests

Total
equity

in millions

Balance at January 1, 2018

$ 0.5  $ —  $ 1.2  $ 4,402.8  $ (1,010.7) $

Accounting change (note 2)
Balance at January 1, 2018, as adjusted for

accounting change

Net loss
Other comprehensive earnings
C&W Jamaica NCI Acquisition
Impact of the Cabletica Acquisition
Capital contributions from noncontrolling

— 

0.5 
— 
— 
— 
— 

interest owner

— 
— 
LPR NCI Acquisition
Distributions to noncontrolling interest owners — 
— 
Shared-based compensation
— 
Other

— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 

1.2 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
0.1 
— 
— 
— 

— 

(11.1)

4,402.8 
— 
— 
(13.7)
— 

— 
68.2 
— 
35.2 
1.6 

(1,021.8)
(345.2)
— 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

Balance at December 31, 2018

$ 0.5  $ —  $ 1.3  $ 4,494.1  $ (1,367.0) $

(64.2) $
— 

(64.2)
— 
40.7 
7.2 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
(16.3) $

3,329.6  $ 1,361.0  $ 4,690.6 
(7.5)

(11.1)

3.6 

3,318.5 
(345.2)
40.7 
(6.5)
— 

1,364.6 
(290.6)
(1.3)
(15.1)
25.1 

4,683.1 
(635.8)
39.4 
(21.6)
25.1 

— 
68.3 
— 
35.2 
1.6 

18.0 
— 
(22.7)
36.3 
1.6 
3,112.6  $ 1,010.8  $ 4,123.4 

18.0 
(68.3)
(22.7)
1.1 
— 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
II-66

 
 
 
LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF EQUITY – (Continued)

Liberty Latin America shareholders

Common shares

Class A Class B Class C

Additional
paid-in
capital

Accumulated
deficit

Accumulated
other
comprehensive
loss,
net of taxes

Total
Liberty
Latin
America
shareholders

Non-
controlling
interests

Total
equity

in millions

Balance at January 1, 2019

$ 0.5  $ —  $ 1.3  $ 4,494.1  $ (1,367.0) $

— 
Net loss
— 
Other comprehensive earnings
Impact of the UTS Acquisition
— 
Distributions to noncontrolling interest owners — 
— 
Conversion Option, net
— 
Capped Calls
— 
UTS NCI Acquisition
— 
Share-based compensation
— 
Other

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
77.3 
(45.6)
0.1 
44.0 
— 

(80.1)
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

Balance at December 31, 2019

$ 0.5  $ —  $ 1.3  $ 4,569.9  $ (1,447.1) $

(16.3) $
— 
1.5 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 
(14.8) $

3,112.6  $ 1,010.8  $ 4,123.4 
(182.4)
(102.3)
1.2 
(0.3)
11.6 
11.6 
(37.7)
(37.7)
77.3 
— 
(45.6)
— 
(11.6)
(11.7)
44.0 
— 
(0.3)
(0.3)
870.1  $ 3,979.9 

(80.1)
1.5 
— 
— 
77.3 
(45.6)
0.1 
44.0 
— 
3,109.8  $

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
II-67

 
 
LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF EQUITY – (Continued)

Liberty Latin America shareholders

Common shares

Class
A

Class
B

Class
C

Treasury
Stock

Additional
paid-in
capital

Accumulated
deficit
in millions

Accumulated
other
comprehensive
loss,
net of taxes

Total
Liberty
Latin
America
shareholders

Non-
controlling
interests

Total
equity

Balance at January 1, 2020

Accounting change (note 2)
Balance at January 1, 2020, as

adjusted for accounting change

Net loss
Other comprehensive loss
Repurchase of Liberty Latin
America common shares

Issuance of Liberty Latin America

common shares, net

Distributions to noncontrolling

interest owners

Share-based compensation
Other

$ 0.5  $ —  $ 1.3  $ —  $ 4,569.9  $ (1,447.1) $
— 

—  — 

(0.2)

— 

— 

0.5 
— 
— 

— 

— 

— 
— 
— 

— 
1.3 
—  — 
—  — 

— 
— 
— 

4,569.9 
— 
— 

(1,447.3)
(687.2)
— 

—  — 

(9.5)

— 

— 

0.5 

—  — 
—  — 
—  — 

— 

— 
— 
— 

344.6 

— 
66.6 
0.9 

— 

— 

— 
— 
— 

Balance at December 31, 2020

$ 0.5  $ —  $ 1.8  $

(9.5) $ 4,982.0  $ (2,134.5) $

(14.8) $
— 

3,109.8  $
(0.2)

870.1  $3,979.9 
— 

0.2 

(14.8)
— 
(110.8)

— 

— 

3,109.6 
(687.2)
(110.8)

(9.5)

345.1 

870.3 
(121.7)
(0.8)

3,979.9 
(808.9)
(111.6)

— 

— 

(9.5)

345.1 

— 
— 
— 
(125.6) $

— 
66.6 
0.9 
2,714.7  $

(18.8)
— 
— 

(18.8)
66.6 
0.9 
729.0  $3,443.7 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
II-68

 
LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

Cash flows from operating activities:

Net loss
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash provided by operating activities:
Share-based compensation expense
Depreciation and amortization
Impairment
Amortization of debt financing costs, premiums and discounts, net
Realized and unrealized losses (gains) on derivative instruments, net
Foreign currency transaction losses (gains), net
Losses on debt modification and extinguishment, net
Loss on the Seychelles Disposition
Unrealized loss due to change in fair value of investment
Deferred income tax benefit
Changes in operating assets and liabilities, net of the effect of acquisitions and a disposition:

Receivables and other operating assets
Payables and accruals
Net cash provided by operating activities

Cash flows from investing activities:

Capital expenditures
Cash paid in connection with acquisitions, net of cash acquired
Recovery on damaged or destroyed property and equipment
Proceeds from the Seychelles Disposition, net
Other investing activities, net

Net cash used by investing activities

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

(808.9) $

(182.4) $

(635.8)

97.5 
914.6 
283.1 
30.4 
352.7 
(1.2)
45.1 
— 
— 
(65.1)

(122.9)
(85.2)
640.1 

57.5 
871.0 
199.4 
16.8 
17.2 
112.5 
19.8 
2.8 
— 
(32.7)

(11.9)
(151.8)
918.2 

(565.8)
(1,886.1)
— 
— 
1.1 
(2,450.8) $

$

(589.1)
(161.2)
33.9 
77.5 
3.6 
(635.3) $

39.8 
829.8 
615.7 
(0.3)
(94.8)
180.0 
32.1 
— 
16.4 
(32.9)

(66.2)
(67.0)
816.8 

(776.4)
(226.4)
20.7 
— 
1.6 
(980.5)

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
II-69

 
 
 
 
LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS – (Continued)

Cash flows from financing activities:

Borrowings of debt
Payments of principal amounts of debt and finance lease obligations
Issuance of Liberty Latin America common shares, net
Net cash received (paid) related to derivative instruments
Capped Calls
Distributions to noncontrolling interest owners
Payment of financing costs and debt premiums
Repurchase of Liberty Latin America common shares
Cash payments for the acquisition of noncontrolling interest
Capital contributions from noncontrolling interest owner
Other financing activities, net

Net cash provided by financing activities

Effect of exchange rate changes on cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash

Net increase (decrease) in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash

Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash:

Beginning of year

End of year

Cash paid for interest

Net cash paid for taxes

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

$

$

1,319.0  $
(1,439.4)
347.0 
182.5 
— 
(18.8)
(99.0)
(9.5)
(5.6)
— 
(5.1)
271.1 

2,966.9  $
(1,275.9)
— 
(0.3)
(45.6)
(37.7)
(55.1)
— 
(5.1)
— 
(7.4)
1,539.8 

(4.9)

(7.7)

(1,544.5)

1,815.0 

2,457.0 

912.5  $

642.0 
2,457.0  $

484.3  $

81.6  $

444.9  $

130.1  $

1,235.3 
(925.2)
— 
10.0 
— 
(22.7)
(39.3)
— 
(20.9)
18.0 
0.9 
256.1 

(18.6)

73.8 

568.2 
642.0 

418.2 

145.6 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.
II-70

 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

(1)    Basis of Presentation

General

Liberty Latin America Ltd. (Liberty Latin America) is a registered company in Bermuda that primarily includes:

(i)

Cable  &  Wireless  Communications  Limited  and  its  subsidiaries  (collectively  C&W),  which  includes  Cable  &  Wireless  Panama,  S.A.
(CWP);

(ii) VTR Finance N.V. and its subsidiaries (collectively VTR);

(iii) Liberty  Communications  PR  Holding  LP  (Liberty  Communications)  and  its  subsidiaries  (collectively  Liberty  Puerto  Rico),  which
include  Liberty  Communications  of  Puerto  Rico  LLC  (LCPR)  and,  as  of  October  31,  2020  and  as  further  described  in  note  4,  Liberty
Mobile Inc. (Liberty Mobile) and its subsidiaries; and

(iv) LBT CT Communications, S.A. (a less than wholly-owned entity) and its subsidiary, Cabletica S.A. (Cabletica).

VTR, Liberty Communications and LCPR were formerly known as VTR Finance B.V., Leo Cable LP and Liberty Cablevision of Puerto Rico LLC,
respectively. C&W owns less than 100% of certain of its consolidated subsidiaries, including The Bahamas Telecommunications Company Limited (C&W
Bahamas), Cable & Wireless Jamaica Limited (C&W Jamaica), and CWP.

We  are  an  international  provider  of  fixed,  mobile  and  subsea  telecommunications  services.  We  provide  residential  and  business-to-business  (B2B)
services in (i) over 20 countries across Latin America and the Caribbean through two of our reportable segments, “C&W Caribbean and Networks” and
“C&W Panama”, (ii) Chile and Costa Rica, through our reportable segment, “VTR/Cabletica”, and (iii) Puerto Rico, through our reportable segment,
Liberty Puerto Rico. Through our “Networks & LatAm” business, C&W Caribbean and Networks also provides (i) B2B services in certain other countries
in Latin America and the Caribbean and (ii) wholesale communication services over its subsea and terrestrial fiber optic cable networks that connect over
40 markets in that region.

The accompanying consolidated financial statements have been prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United
States (U.S. GAAP).  In  these  notes,  the  terms  “we,” “our,” “our company”  and  “us”  may  refer,  as  the  context  requires,  to  Liberty  Latin  America  or
collectively  to  Liberty  Latin  America  and  its  subsidiaries.  Unless  otherwise  indicated,  ownership  percentages  and  convenience  translations  into  United
States (U.S.) dollars are calculated as of December 31, 2020.

(2)    Accounting Changes and Recent Accounting Pronouncements

Accounting Changes

ASU 2019-12

In December 2019, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued Accounting Standards Update (ASU) No. 2019-12, Income Taxes (Topic
740): Simplifying the Accounting for Income Taxes (ASU 2019-12), which (i) simplifies the accounting for income taxes by removing certain exceptions
for  recognizing  deferred  taxes  for  investments,  performing  intraperiod  allocations  and  calculating  income  taxes  in  interim  periods,  and  (ii)  reduces  the
complexity  in  certain  areas  of  existing  tax  guidance,  including  the  recognition  of  deferred  taxes  for  tax  goodwill  and  allocating  taxes  to  members  of  a
consolidated  group.  We  early  adopted  ASU  2019-12  effective  December  31,  2020  and  it  did  not  have  a  material  impact  on  our  consolidated  financial
statements.

ASU 2018-15

In  August  2018,  the  FASB  issued  ASU  No.  2018-15,  Intangibles—Goodwill  and  Other—Internal-Use  Software—Customer’s  Accounting  for

Implementation Costs Incurred in a Cloud Computing Arrangement That Is a Service Contract

II-71

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

(ASU 2018-15). ASU 2018-15 provides additional guidance on ASU No. 2015-05, Intangibles—Goodwill and Other—Internal-Use Software—Customer’s
Accounting for Fees Paid in a Cloud Computing Arrangement, which was issued to help entities evaluate the accounting for fees paid by a customer in a
cloud computing arrangement (hosting arrangement) by providing guidance for determining when the arrangement includes a software license. ASU 2018-
15  aligns  the  requirements  for  capitalizing  implementation  costs  incurred  in  a  hosting  arrangement  that  is  a  service  contract  with  the  requirements  for
capitalizing  implementation  costs  incurred  to  develop  or  obtain  internal-use  software  (and  hosting  arrangements  that  include  an  internal-use  software
license). The guidance (i) provides criteria for determining which implementation costs to capitalize as an asset related to the service contract and which
costs to expense, (ii) requires an entity (customer) to expense the capitalized implementation costs of a hosting arrangement that is a service contract over
the term of the hosting arrangement and (iii) clarifies the presentation requirements for reporting such costs in the entity’s financial statements. We adopted
ASU 2018-15 effective January 1, 2020 on a prospective basis for all implementation costs incurred after the date of adoption and it did not have a material
impact on our consolidated financial statements.

ASU 2016-13

In June 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-13, Financial  Instruments—Credit  Losses—Measurement  of  Credit  Losses  on  Financial  Instruments
(ASU 2016-13), as amended by (i) ASU No. 2019-10, Financial Instruments—Credit Losses (Topic 326), Derivatives and Hedging (Topic 815), and Leases
(Topic  842):  Effective  Dates,  which  amended  certain  effective  dates,  and  (ii)  ASU  No.  2019-11,  Codification  Improvements  to  Topic  326,  Financial
Instruments—Credit  Losses,  which  clarifies  guidance  around  how  to  report  expected  recoveries.  ASU  2016-13  replaces  the  incurred  loss  impairment
methodology  for  recognizing  credit  losses  with  a  methodology  that  reflects  expected  credit  losses  and  requires  consideration  of  a  broader  range  of
reasonable and supportable information to inform credit loss estimates. We are required to use a forward-looking expected credit loss model for accounts
receivables, loans and other financial instruments. We adopted ASU 2016-13 effective January 1, 2020 using a modified retrospective approach through a
cumulative-effect adjustment to retained earnings to align our credit loss methodology with the new standard. The comparative information has not been
restated and continues to be reported under the accounting standards in effect for that period.

Under the new model, we segment our receivables, unbilled revenue and contract assets based on days past due and record an allowance for current
expected credit losses using average rates applied against each account’s applicable aggregate balance for each aging bucket. We establish the average rates
based  on  consideration  of  the  actual  credit  loss  experience  over  the  prior  12-month  period,  recent  collection  trends,  current  economic  conditions  and
reasonable expectations of future payment delinquency.

The cumulative effect of the changes to our consolidated balance sheet as of January 1, 2020 was not material.

ASU 2016-02

In  February  2016,  the  FASB  issued  ASU  No.  2016-02,  Leases (ASU 2016-02),  as  amended  by  ASU  No.  2018-11,  Targeted  Improvements,  which
provides an option to use one of two modified retrospective approaches in the adoption of ASU 2016-02. ASU 2016-02, for most leases, results in lessees
recognizing right-of-use assets and lease liabilities on the balance sheet and additional disclosures. We adopted ASU 2016-02 effective January 1, 2019
using the effective date transition method. A number of optional practical expedients were applied in transition, as further described below.

The main impact of the adoption of this standard was the recognition of right-of-use assets and lease liabilities in our consolidated balance sheet as of
January 1, 2019 for those leases classified as operating leases under ASU 2016-02. We did not recognize right-of-use assets or lease liabilities for leases
with a term of 12 months or less, as permitted by the short-term lease practical expedient in the standard. In transition, we applied the practical expedients
that permit us not to reassess (i) whether expired or existing contracts are or contain a lease under the new standard, (ii) the lease classification for expired
or existing leases, (iii) whether previously-capitalized initial direct costs would qualify for capitalization under the new standard and (iv) whether existing
or expired land easements that were not previously accounted for as leases are or contain a lease. We also applied the practical expedient that permits us to
account for customer service revenue contracts that include both non-lease and lease components as a single component in all instances where the non-lease
component is the predominant component of the arrangement and the other applicable criteria are met. In addition, we did not use hindsight during the
transition.

We  implemented  internal  controls  to  ensure  we  adequately  evaluate  our  contracts  and  properly  assessed  the  impact  of  ASU  2016-02  on  our

consolidated financial statements. We do not believe such controls represent significant changes to our internal control over financial reporting.

II-72

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

For information regarding our accounting policies for leases following the adoption of ASU 2016-02, see note 3.

ASU 2014-09

In May 2014, the FASB issued ASU No. 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with Customers (ASU 2014-09), which requires an entity to recognize the
amount  of  revenue  to  which  it  expects  to  be  entitled  for  the  transfer  of  promised  goods  or  services  to  customers.  We  adopted  ASU  2014-09  effective
January 1, 2018 by recording the cumulative effect to the opening balance of our accumulated deficit. We applied the new standard to contracts that were
not complete as of January 1, 2018.

The most significant impacts of ASU 2014-09 on our revenue recognition policies relate to our accounting for (i) long-term capacity contracts, (ii)

subsidized handset plans and (iii) certain installation and other upfront fees, each as set forth below:

• We  enter  into  certain  long-term  capacity  contracts  with  customers  where  the  customer  pays  the  transaction  consideration  at  inception  of  the
contract.  Under  previous  accounting  standards,  we  did  not  impute  interest  for  advance  payments  from  customers  related  to  services  that  are
provided over time. Under ASU 2014-09, payment received from a customer significantly in advance of the provision of services is indicative of a
financing component within the contract. If the financing component is significant, interest expense is accreted over the life of the contract with a
corresponding increase to revenue.

• ASU 2014-09 requires the identification of deliverables in contracts with customers that qualify as performance obligations. The transaction price
consideration  from  customers  is  allocated  to  each  performance  obligation  under  the  contract  on  the  basis  of  relative  standalone  selling  price.
Under  previous  accounting  standards,  when  we  offered  discounted  equipment,  such  as  handsets  under  a  subsidized  contract,  upfront  revenue
recognition was limited to the upfront cash collected from the customer as the remaining monthly fees to be received from the customer, including
fees  associated  with  the  equipment,  were  contingent  upon  delivering  future  airtime.  This  limitation  is  not  applied  under  ASU  2014-09.  The
primary impact on revenue reporting is that when we sell discounted equipment together with airtime services to customers, revenue allocated to
equipment and recognized when control of the device passes to the customer will increase and revenue recognized as services are delivered will
decrease.

• When we enter into contracts to provide services to our customers, we often charge installation or other upfront fees. Under previous accounting
standards,  installation  fees  related  to  services  provided  over  our  fixed  networks  were  recognized  as  revenue  during  the  period  in  which  the
installation occurred to the extent those fees were equal to or less than direct selling costs. Under ASU 2014-09, these fees are generally deferred
and  recognized  as  revenue  over  the  contractual  period  for  those  contracts  with  substantive  termination  penalties,  or  for  the  period  of  time  the
upfront fees convey a material right for month-to-month contracts and contracts that do not include substantive termination penalties.

ASU 2014-09 also impacted our accounting for certain upfront costs directly associated with obtaining and fulfilling customer contracts. Under our
previous  policy,  these  costs  were  expensed  as  incurred  unless  the  costs  were  in  the  scope  of  other  accounting  standards  that  allowed  for  capitalization.
Under  ASU  2014-09,  the  upfront  costs  associated  with  contracts  that  have  substantive  termination  penalties  and  a  term  of  longer  than  one  year  are
recognized as assets and amortized to other operating expenses over the applicable period benefited.

We  implemented  internal  controls  to  ensure  we  adequately  evaluated  our  contracts  and  properly  assessed  the  impact  of  ASU  2014-09  on  our

consolidated financial statements. We do not believe such new controls represent significant changes to our internal control over financial reporting.

For information regarding our accounting policies for revenue following the adoption of ASU 2014-09 and our contract assets and deferred revenue

balances, see note 3. For our disaggregated revenue by product, see note 21.

II-73

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

The impact of our adoption of ASU 2014-09 to our consolidated statement of operations for the year ended December 31, 2018 is as follows:

Revenue

Other operating costs and expenses

Non-operating expenses – interest expense

Income tax expense

Net loss

Recent Accounting Pronouncements

ASU 2018-14

Before adoption of
ASU 2014-09

$

$

$

$

$

3,697.3  $

1,442.0  $

424.6  $

52.6  $

627.3  $

Impact of ASU
2014-09
Increase
(decrease)
in millions

As reported

8.4  $

(0.7) $

19.1  $

(1.5) $

8.5  $

3,705.7 

1,441.3 

443.7 

51.1 

635.8 

In August 2018, the FASB issued ASU No. 2018-14, Disclosure Framework-Changes to the Disclosure Requirements for Defined Benefit Plans (ASU
2018-14),  which  removes  and  modifies  certain  existing  disclosure  requirements  and  adds  new  disclosure  requirements  related  to  employer  sponsored
defined benefit pension or other postretirement plans. ASU 2018-14 is effective for annual reporting periods after December 15, 2020, including interim
periods within those fiscal years, with early adoption permitted. ASU 2018-14 will not have a material impact on our consolidated financial statements.

ASU 2020-04 and ASU 2021-01

In  March  2020,  the  FASB  issued  ASU  No.  2020-04,  Reference  Rate  Reform  (Topic  848):  Facilitation  of  the  Effects  of  Reference  Rate  Reform  on
Financial  Reporting  (ASU  2020-04),  which  provides  optional  guidance  for  a  limited  time  to  ease  the  potential  accounting  burden  associated  with
transitioning  away  from  reference  rates,  such  as  the  London  Inter-Bank  Offered  Rate  (LIBOR),  which  regulators  in  the  United  Kingdom  (U.K.)  have
announced will be phased out by the end of 2021. In January 2021, the FASB issued ASU No. 2021-01, Reference Rate Reform (Topic 848) (ASU 2021-
01), which clarifies certain optional expedients and exceptions in ASC 848. The expedients and exceptions provided by ASU 2020-04 and ASU 2021-01
are for the application of U.S. GAAP to contracts, hedging relationships and other transactions affected by the rate reform, and will not be available after
December 31, 2022, other than for certain hedging relationships entered into before December 31, 2022. We do not currently expect that the phase out of
LIBOR will have a material impact on our consolidated financial statements.

ASU 2020-06

In August 2020, the FASB issued ASU No. 2020-06, Debt—Debt with Conversion and Other Options and Derivatives and Hedging—Contracts in
Entity’s Own Equity: Accounting for Convertible Instruments and Contracts in an Entity’s Own Equity (ASU 2020-06), which (i) reduces the number of
accounting  models  for  convertible  instruments  and  allows  more  contracts  to  qualify  for  equity  classification  and  (ii)  makes  targeted  improvements  to
convertible instruments and earnings-per-share disclosure requirements. ASU 2020-06 is effective for annual reporting periods after December 15, 2021,
including interim periods within those fiscal years, with early adoption permitted, but no earlier than annual and interim periods in fiscal years beginning
after  December  15,  2020.  While  we  are  still  evaluating  the  impact  of  ASU  2020-06,  we  do  not  currently  expect  it  will  have  a  material  impact  on  our
consolidated financial statements.

(3)    Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

Estimates

The  preparation  of  financial  statements  in  conformity  with  U.S.  GAAP  requires  management  to  make  estimates  and  assumptions  that  affect  the
reported amounts of assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the reporting
period. Estimates and assumptions are used in accounting for, among

II-74

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

other things, the valuation of acquisition-related assets and liabilities, allowances for credit losses, programming and copyright expenses, deferred income
taxes  and  related  valuation  allowances,  loss  contingencies,  fair  value  measurements,  impairment  assessments,  capitalization  of  internal  costs  associated
with  construction  and  installation  activities,  useful  lives  of  long-lived  assets  and  actuarial  liabilities  associated  with  certain  benefit  plans.  Actual  results
could differ from those estimates.

Reclassifications

Certain prior year amounts have been reclassified to conform to the current year presentation. During 2020, we changed the presentation of certain
operating  costs  and  expenses  in  our  consolidated  statements  of  operations  in  order  to  better  align  with  management’s  approach  to  monitoring  and
evaluating such costs. Specifically, we have combined the costs previously reported in the consolidated statement of operations’ captions “other operating”
and “selling, general and administrative” into one line, which is now referred to as “other operating costs and expenses.” In conjunction with this change,
we have provided additional disclosure of the nature of other operating costs and expenses by function, as set forth in note 14. This change in presentation
did not have any impact on operating income or loss, net loss or any of our key performance metrics. In addition, we have provided additional disclosure of
the nature of our programming and other direct costs of services, as set forth in note 13.

Principles of Consolidation

The  accompanying  consolidated  financial  statements  include  our  accounts  and  the  accounts  of  all  voting  interest  entities  where  we  exercise  a
controlling financial interest through the ownership of a direct or indirect controlling voting interest and variable interest entities for which our company is
the primary beneficiary. Intercompany accounts have been eliminated in consolidation.

Cash, Cash Equivalents and Restricted Cash

Cash equivalents consist of money market funds and other investments that are readily convertible into cash and have maturities of three months or
less at the time of acquisition. We record money market funds at the net asset value as there are no restrictions on our ability, contractual or otherwise, to
redeem our investments.

Restricted cash consists of cash held in restricted accounts, including cash held as collateral for acquisitions, debt and other compensating balances, as
applicable.  Cash  that  is  restricted  to  a  specific  use  is  classified  as  current  or  long-term  based  on,  among  other  things,  the  expected  use  and  timing  of
disbursement of the restricted cash. At December 31, 2020 and 2019, our current and long-term restricted cash balances aggregated $18 million and $1,273
million, respectively. For additional information regarding restricted cash that was used during 2020 to partially fund the AT&T Acquisition, see note 10.
Our current restricted cash balances are included in other current assets, net, in our consolidated balance sheets.

Receivables

We have trade and note receivables that are each reported net of an allowance for credit losses.

Our notes receivable, which we maintain following the closing of the AT&T Acquisition, consist of equipment installment-plan (EIP) receivables due
from customers under contracts over a period of up to 30 months. The short and long-term portions of our notes receivable, net of allowance, are incurred
in other current assets, net and other assets, net, respectively, in our consolidated balance sheets.

The allowances on each of our trade and notes receivable are established using our best estimates of current expected credit losses based upon, among
other  things,  actual  credit  loss  experience  over  the  prior  12-month  period,  recent  collection  trends,  prevailing  and  anticipated  economic  conditions  and
specific  customer  credit  risk.  Receivables  outstanding  greater  than  30  days  are  considered  past  due  and  we  generally  write-off  receivables  after  they
become past due for 365 days, with the exception of amounts due from certain governments.

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

The changes in our trade receivables allowance for credit losses are set forth below:

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

Beginning balance

Provision for expected losses
Write-offs
Foreign currency translation adjustments and other

Ending balance

$

$

87.3  $
62.6 
(60.3)
10.4 
100.0  $

144.4  $
61.8 
(113.9)
(5.0)
87.3  $

The change in our notes receivable allowance for credit losses for the year ended December 31, 2020 are set forth below (in millions):

Beginning balance

Additions upon acquisition
Provision for expected losses

Ending balance

$

$

142.2 
52.6 
(48.5)
(1.9)
144.4 

— 
14.9 
1.3 
16.2 

Concentration of credit risk with respect to trade receivables is limited due to the large number of customers and their dispersion across many different

countries, with the exception of $72 million and $89 million at December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively, due from a single government.

Investments

We  hold  an  equity  security  in  Telecommunications  Services  of  Trinidad  and  Tobago  Limited  (TSTT)  for  which  the  fair  value  is  not  readily
determinable. Accordingly, we measure this investment at cost minus impairment, plus or minus changes resulting from observable price changes. When
indicators of impairment exist, we estimate the fair value and record an impairment charge if the carrying value of the investment exceeds its estimated fair
value. Any impairment charges are recorded in other income (expense), net, in our consolidated statements of operations.

We  account  for  our  investment  in  United  Kingdom  (U.K.)  Government  Gilts  using  the  available-for-sale  method.  Available-for-sale  securities  are
measured at fair value. Changes in the fair value of available-for-sale securities are reflected in other comprehensive income or loss until sold or other-than-
temporarily  impaired,  at  which  time  the  amounts  are  reclassified  from  accumulated  other  comprehensive  income  or  loss  into  non-operating  income  or
expense in our consolidated statements of operations.

For additional information regarding our fair value measurements, see note 6. For additional information regarding our investment in TSTT and the

U.K. Government Gilts, see notes 7 and 16, respectively.

Financial Instruments

Due  to  the  short  maturities  of  cash  and  cash  equivalents,  trade  and  other  receivables,  other  current  assets,  accounts  payable,  accrued  liabilities  and
other accrued and current liabilities, their respective carrying values approximate their respective fair values. For information concerning the fair values of
our derivative and debt instruments, see notes 5 and 10, respectively. For information regarding how we arrive at certain of our fair value measurements,
see note 6.

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Derivative Instruments

Derivative Instruments Recorded at Fair Value

Our derivative instruments, excluding our weather derivative contracts (Weather Derivatives), as discussed below, are recorded on our consolidated
balance sheets at fair value, whether designated as a hedge or not. If the derivative instrument is not designated as a hedge, changes in the fair value of the
derivative instrument are recognized in earnings. If the derivative instrument is designated as a cash flow hedge, the effective portions of changes in the fair
value of the derivative instrument are recorded in other comprehensive earnings or loss and subsequently reclassified into our consolidated statements of
operations when the hedged forecasted transaction affects earnings. Ineffective portions of changes in the fair value of cash flow hedges are recognized in
realized  and  unrealized  gains  or  losses  on  derivative  instruments  in  our  consolidated  statements  of  operations.  With  the  exception  of  certain  foreign
currency forward contracts, we do not apply hedge accounting to our derivative instruments.

The  net  cash  received  or  paid  related  to  our  derivative  instruments  is  classified  as  an  operating,  investing  or  financing  activity  in  our  consolidated

statements of cash flows based on the objective of the derivative instrument and the classification of the applicable underlying cash flows, as follows:

• Cross-currency and interest rate derivative contracts: The net cash paid or received related to principal and current interest is classified as a

financing or operating activity, respectively.

• Foreign  currency  forward  contracts  that  are  used  to  hedge  capital  expenditures:  The  net  cash  paid  or  received  is  reflected  in  capital

expenditures, which are classified as an investing activity.

• Foreign  currency  forward  contracts  that  are  used  to  hedge  principal  exposure  on  foreign  currencies:  The  net  cash  paid  or  received  is

classified as a financing activity.

• Derivative  contracts  that  are  terminated  prior  to  maturity:  The  cash  paid  or  received  upon  termination  that  relates  to  future  periods  is

classified as a financing activity.

Weather Derivatives

Our Weather Derivatives provide us with insurance coverage for certain weather-related events and are not accounted for at fair value. The premiums
paid  associated  with  the  Weather  Derivatives  are  recorded  in  other  current  assets,  net,  in  our  consolidated  balance  sheets,  and  the  amortization  of  the
premiums is included in realized and unrealized gains or losses on derivative instruments, net, in our consolidated statements of operations. The cash paid
associated with the premiums is classified as an operating activity in our consolidated statements of cash flows. In the event of a payout under our Weather
Derivatives, the cash received would be classified as an operating activity in our consolidated statements of cash flows.

For information regarding our derivative instruments, see note 5.

Property and Equipment

Property and equipment are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation. We capitalize costs associated with the construction of new cable and mobile
transmission and distribution facilities and the installation of new cable services. The nature and amount of labor and other costs to be capitalized with
respect  to  construction  and  installation  activities  involves  significant  judgment.  In  addition  to  direct  external  and  internal  labor  and  materials,  we  also
capitalize other costs directly attributable to our construction and installation activities, including dispatch costs, quality-control costs, vehicle-related costs
and certain warehouse-related costs. The capitalization of these costs is based on time sheets, time studies, standard costs, call tracking systems and other
verifiable  means  that  directly  link  the  costs  incurred  with  the  applicable  capitalizable  activity.  We  continuously  monitor  the  appropriateness  of  our
capitalization policies and update the policies when necessary to respond to changes in facts and circumstances, such as the development of new products
and services and changes in the manner that installations or construction activities are performed. Installation activities that are capitalized include (i) the
initial connection (or drop) from our cable system to a customer location, (ii) the replacement of a drop and (iii) the installation of equipment for additional
services,  such  as  digital  cable,  telephone  or  broadband  internet  service.  The  costs  of  other  customer-facing  activities,  such  as  reconnecting  and
disconnecting customer locations and repairing or maintaining drops, are expensed as incurred.

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

We  capitalize  internal  and  external  costs  directly  associated  with  the  development  of  internal-use  software.  Capitalized  internal-use  software  is
included  as  a  component  of  property  and  equipment.  We  also  capitalize  costs  associated  with  the  purchase  of  software  licenses.  Costs  associated  with
software obtained in a hosting arrangement are expensed over the life of the service contract, unless we have the right to take possession of the software at
any time without significant penalty and it is feasible to run the software on our own hardware or contract with another party unrelated to the vendor to host
the software. Maintenance and training costs, as well as costs incurred during the preliminary stage of an internal-use software development project, are
expensed as incurred.

Depreciation  is  computed  using  the  straight-line  method  over  the  estimated  useful  life  of  the  underlying  asset.  Equipment  under  finance  leases  is
amortized on a straight-line basis over the shorter of the lease term or estimated useful life of the asset and is included in depreciation and amortization in
our  consolidated  statements  of  operations.  Useful  lives  used  to  depreciate  our  property  and  equipment  are  assessed  periodically  and  are  adjusted  when
warranted.  The  useful  lives  of  cable  and  mobile  distribution  systems  that  are  undergoing  a  rebuild  are  adjusted  such  that  property  and  equipment  to  be
retired will be fully depreciated by the time the rebuild is completed. For additional information regarding the useful lives of our property and equipment,
see note 9.

Additions, replacements and improvements that extend the asset life are capitalized. Repairs and maintenance are expensed as incurred.

We recognize a liability for asset retirement obligations in the period in which it is incurred if sufficient information is available to make a reasonable
estimate  of  fair  values.  Asset  retirement  obligations  primarily  relate  to  assets  placed  on  leased  wireless  towers  and  other  premises.  Asset  retirement
obligations  of  $41  million  and  $38  million  at  December  31,  2020  and  2019,  respectively,  are  included  in  other  long-term  liabilities  in  our  consolidated
balance sheets.

Intangible Assets

Our primary intangible assets relate to goodwill, customer relationships, cable television franchise rights and spectrum licenses. Goodwill represents
the  excess  purchase  price  over  the  fair  value  of  the  identifiable  net  assets  acquired  in  a  business  combination.  Customer  relationships,  cable  television
franchise rights and spectrum licenses that are acquired in connection with a business combination are initially recorded at their fair values.

Goodwill and other intangible assets with indefinite useful lives are not amortized, but instead are tested for impairment at least annually. Intangible
assets with finite lives are amortized on a straight-line basis over their respective estimated useful lives to their estimated residual values, and reviewed for
impairment.

We do not amortize our cable television franchise rights or spectrum licenses as these assets have indefinite lives.

The spectrum licenses provide us with the exclusive right to utilize a certain radio frequency spectrum to provide wireless communications services.
While  spectrum  licenses  are  issued  for  only  a  fixed  time  (generally,  ten  years),  renewals  of  spectrum  licenses  occur  routinely  and  at  nominal  cost.
Moreover, we believe there are currently no significant legal, regulatory, contractual, competitive, economic or other factors limiting the useful lives of our
spectrum licenses, and therefore we treat the spectrum licenses as indefinite-lived intangible assets. We believe we will be able to meet all requirements
necessary to secure renewal of our spectrum licenses.

For additional information regarding the useful lives of our intangible assets, see note 9.

Impairment of Property and Equipment and Intangible Assets

When circumstances warrant, we review the carrying amounts of our property and equipment and our intangible assets (other than goodwill and other
indefinite-lived  intangible  assets)  to  determine  whether  such  carrying  amounts  continue  to  be  recoverable.  Such  changes  in  circumstance  may  include
(i) the impact of natural disasters, such as hurricanes, (ii) an expectation of a sale or disposal of a long-lived asset or asset group, (iii) adverse changes in
market or competitive conditions, (iv) an adverse change in legal factors or business climate in the markets in which we operate and (v) operating or cash
flow losses. For purposes of impairment testing, long-lived assets are grouped at the lowest level for which cash flows are largely independent of other
assets  and  liabilities,  generally  at  or  below  the  reporting  unit  level  (see  below).  If  the  carrying  amount  of  the  asset  or  asset  group  is  greater  than  the
expected undiscounted cash flows to be generated by such asset or asset group, an impairment adjustment is recognized. Such adjustment is measured by
the amount that the carrying value of such asset or asset

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

group exceeds its fair value. We generally measure fair value by considering (i) sale prices for similar assets, (ii) discounted estimated future cash flows
using an appropriate discount rate and/or (iii) estimated replacement cost. Assets to be disposed of are recorded at the lower of their carrying amount or fair
value less costs to sell.

We evaluate goodwill and other indefinite-lived intangible assets (primarily cable television franchise rights and spectrum licenses) for impairment at
least annually on October 1 and whenever facts and circumstances indicate that the fair value of a reporting unit or an indefinite-lived intangible asset may
be less than its carrying value. For impairment evaluations with respect to both goodwill and other indefinite-lived intangibles, we first make a qualitative
assessment to determine if the goodwill or other indefinite-lived intangible may be impaired. In the case of goodwill, if it is more-likely-than-not that a
reporting unit’s fair value is less than its carrying value, we then compare the fair value of the reporting unit to its respective carrying amount. A reporting
unit is an operating segment or one level below an operating segment. Goodwill impairment is recorded as the excess of a reporting unit’s carrying value
over its fair value and is charged to operations as an impairment loss. With respect to other indefinite-lived intangible assets, if it is more-likely-than-not
that the fair value of an indefinite-lived intangible asset is less than its carrying value, we then estimate its fair value and any excess of the carrying value
over the fair value is also charged to operations as an impairment loss. For additional information regarding the fair value measurements of our property
and equipment and intangible assets, see note 6. For additional information regarding impairments, see note 9.

Contract Assets

When we transfer goods or services to a customer but do not have an unconditional right to payment, we record a contract asset. Contract assets are
reclassified to trade receivables, net, in our consolidated balance sheet at the point in time we have the unconditional right to payment. Our contract assets
were $82 million and $22 million as of December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively. The current and long-term portion of contract assets are included in
other current assets, net and other assets, net, respectively, in our consolidated balance sheets.

Deferred Contract Costs

Incremental  costs  to  obtain  a  contract  with  a  customer,  such  as  incremental  sales  commissions,  are  recognized  as  an  asset  and  amortized  to  other
operating  costs  and  expenses  over  the  applicable  period  benefited,  which  is  the  longer  of  the  contract  life  or  the  economic  life  of  the  commission.  If,
however, the amortization period is one year or less, we expense such costs in the period incurred. Costs to obtain a contract that would have been incurred
regardless of whether the contract was obtained are recognized as an expense when incurred. Our deferred contract costs were $15 million and $8 million
as of December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively. The current and long-term portion of deferred contract costs are included in other current assets, net and
other assets, net, respectively, in our consolidated balance sheets.

Deferred Revenue

We record deferred revenue when we have received payment prior to transferring goods or services to a customer. Deferred revenue primarily relates
to (i) advanced payments on fixed subscription services, mobile airtime services and long-term capacity contracts and (ii) deferred installation and other
upfront fees. Our aggregate current and long-term deferred revenue as of December 31, 2020 and 2019 was $370 million and $372 million, respectively.
Long-term deferred revenue is included in other long-term liabilities in our consolidated balance sheets.

Operating Leases

Our operating leases primarily consist of (i) property leases for mobile tower locations that generally have initial terms of five to ten years with one or
more renewal options and (ii) lease commitments for (a) retail stores, offices and facilities, (b) other network assets and (c) other equipment. It is expected
that  in  the  normal  course  of  business,  operating  leases  that  expire  generally  will  be  renewed  or  replaced  by  similar  leases.  For  additional  information
regarding our leases, see note 11.

We classify leases with a term of greater than 12 months where substantially all risks and rewards incidental to ownership are retained by the third-
party lessors as operating leases. We record a right-of-use asset and an operating lease liability at inception of the lease at the present value of the lease
payments  plus  certain  other  payments,  including  variable  lease  payments  and  amounts  probable  of  being  owed  by  us  under  residual  value  guarantees.
Payments made under operating leases, net of any incentives received from the lessors, are recognized to expense on a straight-line basis over the term of
the lease. Initial direct costs incurred in negotiating and arranging operating leases are recognized to expense when incurred. Contingent rental payments
are recognized to expense when incurred. Our right-of-use assets are included in other assets, net, in our consolidated

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

balance sheets. Our current and non-current operating lease liabilities are included in other accrued and current liabilities and other  long-term  liabilities,
respectively, in our consolidated balance sheets.

We use a credit-adjusted discount rate to measure our operating lease liabilities. We derive the discount rates associated with each of our borrowing
groups starting with a risk free rate, generally the U.S. Treasury Bill rate. To determine credit risk, we create an industry benchmark credit default swap
(CDS) curve from an observable high-yield debt index using comparable telecommunication companies as a proxy. We then determine the maximum curve
shift  against  this  CDS  curve  derived  from  our  own  tradable  debt  within  each  borrowing  group,  and  make  adjustments  to  correct  for  the  collateralized
interest rate spread by comparing unsecured debt to asset-backed securities (secured debt) trades, which is based on the spread between the BB- and B+
industrial curves. We determine the discount factor from this adjusted curve for each borrowing group.

Income Taxes

The income taxes of Liberty Latin America are presented on a standalone basis, and each tax paying entity or group within Liberty Latin America is
presented on a separate return basis. Income taxes are accounted for under the asset and liability method. We recognize deferred tax assets and liabilities for
the future tax consequences attributable to differences between the financial statement carrying amounts and income tax basis of assets and liabilities and
the expected benefits of utilizing net operating loss and tax credit carryforwards, using enacted tax rates in effect for each taxing jurisdiction in which we
operate  for  the  year  in  which  those  temporary  differences  are  expected  to  be  recovered  or  settled.  We  recognize  the  financial  statement  effects  of  a  tax
position when it is more-likely-than-not, based on technical merits, that the position will be sustained upon examination. Net deferred tax assets are then
reduced by a valuation allowance if we believe it is more-likely-than-not that such net deferred tax assets will not be realized. Certain of our valuation
allowances and tax uncertainties are associated with entities that we acquired in business combinations. The effect on deferred tax assets and liabilities of a
change in tax rates is recognized in earnings in the period that includes the enactment date. Deferred tax liabilities related to investments in foreign entities
and foreign corporate joint ventures that are essentially permanent in duration are not recognized until it becomes apparent that such amounts will reverse
in the foreseeable future. In order to be considered essentially permanent in duration, sufficient evidence must indicate that the foreign entity has invested
or will invest its undistributed earnings indefinitely, or that earnings will be remitted in a tax-free liquidation. Interest and penalties related to income tax
liabilities are included in income tax benefit or expense in our consolidated statements of operations.

For additional information regarding our income taxes, see note 15.

Employee Benefit Plans

Certain of our subsidiaries maintain various employee defined benefit plans. Defined benefit pension plan costs are determined using actuarial methods
and are accounted for using the projected unit credit method, which incorporates management’s best estimates of future salary levels, other cost escalations,
retirement ages of employees, and other actuarial factors. Our net asset or liability in respect of defined benefit pension plans represents the fair value of the
plan  assets,  less  the  present  value  of  the  defined  benefit  obligations.  The  fair  value  of  plan  assets  and  the  projected  benefit  obligation  for  each  plan  is
calculated annually by independent qualified actuaries. Defined benefit assets are only recognized to the extent they are deemed recoverable. For additional
information regarding our defined benefit plans, see note 16.

Certain of our subsidiaries participate in externally managed defined contribution pension plans. A defined contribution plan is a pension plan under
which we have no further obligation once the fixed defined contribution has been paid to the third-party administrator of the plan. Contributions under our
defined contribution pension plans are recognized as incurred in other operating costs and expenses in our consolidated statements of operations.

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Foreign Currency Translation and Transactions

The reporting currency of Liberty Latin America is the U.S. dollar. The functional currency of our foreign operations is the applicable local currency
for each foreign entity. Assets and liabilities of our foreign subsidiaries (including intercompany balances for which settlement is not anticipated in the
foreseeable future) are translated at the spot rate in effect at the applicable reporting date. With the exception of certain material transactions, the amounts
reported  in  our  consolidated  statements  of  operations  are  translated  at  the  average  exchange  rates  in  effect  during  the  applicable  period.  The  resulting
unrealized cumulative translation adjustment, net of applicable income taxes, is recorded as a component of accumulated other comprehensive earnings or
loss in our consolidated statements of equity. With the exception of certain material transactions, the cash flows from our operations in foreign countries are
translated  at  the  average  rate  for  the  applicable  period  in  our  consolidated  statements  of  cash  flows.  The  impacts  of  material  transactions  generally  are
recorded at the applicable spot rates in our consolidated statements of operations and cash flows. The effect of exchange rates on cash balances held in
foreign currencies are separately reported in our consolidated statements of cash flows.

Transactions denominated in currencies other than our or our subsidiaries’ functional currencies are recorded based on exchange rates at the time such
transactions arise. Changes in exchange rates with respect to amounts recorded in our consolidated balance sheets related to these non-functional currency
transactions  result  in  transaction  gains  and  losses  that  are  reflected  in  our  consolidated  statements  of  operations  as  unrealized  (based  on  the  applicable
period end exchange rates) or realized upon settlement of the transactions.

Revenue Recognition

We  categorize  revenue  into  two  major  categories:  (i)  residential  revenue,  which  includes  revenue  from  fixed  and  mobile  services  provided  to
residential customers, and (ii) B2B revenue, which includes B2B service and subsea network revenue. For additional information regarding our revenue by
major category, see note 21. Our revenue recognition policies are as follows.

General. Most of our fixed and mobile residential contracts are not enforceable or do not contain substantive early termination penalties. Accordingly,
revenue relating to these customers is recognized on a basis consistent with customers that are not subject to contracts. We account for customer service
revenue  contracts  that  include  both  non-lease  and  lease  components  as  a  single  component  in  all  instances  where  the  non-lease  component  is  the
predominant component of the arrangement and the other applicable criteria are met.

Residential Fixed and B2B Service Revenue – Fixed Networks. We recognize revenue from video, broadband internet and fixed-line telephony services
over our fixed networks to customers in the period the related residential fixed or B2B services are provided. Installation or other upfront fees related to
services  provided  over  our  fixed  networks  are  generally  deferred  and  recognized  as  subscription  revenue  over  the  contractual  period,  or  longer  if  the
upfront fee results in a material renewal right. We defer upfront installation and certain nonrecurring fees received on B2B contracts where we maintain
ownership of the installed equipment. The deferred fees are amortized into revenue on a straight-line basis over the term of the arrangement or the expected
period of performance.

We may also sell video, broadband internet and fixed-line telephony services to our customers in bundled packages at a rate lower than if the customer
purchased each product on a standalone basis. Arrangement consideration from bundled packages generally is allocated proportionally to the individual
service based on the relative standalone price for each respective product or service.

Mobile Revenue – General. Consideration  from  mobile  contracts  is  allocated  to  airtime  services  and  handset  sales  based  on  the  relative  standalone

prices of each performance obligation.

Mobile Revenue – Airtime Services. We recognize revenue from mobile services in the period the related services are provided. Payments received
from prepay customers are recorded as deferred revenue prior to the commencement of services and are recognized as revenue as the services are rendered
or usage rights expire.

Mobile Revenue – Handset Revenue. Arrangement consideration allocated to handsets is recognized as revenue when the goods have been transferred

to the customer.

Mobile  Revenue  –  Handset  Insurance  Revenue.  We  recognize  revenue  associated  with  handset  insurance  on  a  straight-line  basis  over  the  coverage

period.

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

B2B Subsea Network Revenue – Long-term Capacity Contracts. We enter into certain long-term capacity contracts with customers where the customer
either pays a fixed fee over time or prepays for the capacity upfront and pays a portion related to operating and maintenance of the network over time. We
assess whether prepaid capacity contracts contain a significant financing component. If the financing component is significant, interest expense is accreted
over the life of the contract using the effective interest method. The revenue associated with prepaid capacity contracts is deferred and generally recognized
on a straight-line basis over the life of the contract. As of December 31, 2020, we have approximately $410 million of unfulfilled performance obligations
relating to our long-term capacity contracts, primarily subsea contracts, that generally will be recognized as revenue over an average remaining life of six
years.

Government Funding Revenue. From time to time, we received funds from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), primarily in Puerto Rico,
related to hurricane restoration efforts. The FCC does not meet the definition of a “customer,” accordingly, we recognized the funds granted from the FCC
as other revenue in the period in which we are entitled to receive the funds.

Sales, Use and Other Value-Added Taxes (VAT). Revenue is recorded net of applicable sales, use and other value-added taxes.

Share-based Compensation

We recognize compensation expense associated with share-based incentive awards based on their grant-date fair values. The grant-date fair values for
stock appreciation rights (SARs)  are  estimated  using  the  Black-Scholes-Merton  valuation  model  and  the  grant-date  fair  values  for  restricted  stock  units
(RSUs) and performance-based restricted stock units (PSUs) are based upon the closing market price of our stock on the date of grant. We may also settle
annual  bonus-related  obligations  in  the  form  of  equity.  We  use  the  liability-based  method  of  accounting  in  such  situation,  as  the  equity  to  be  issued  is
variable. We use the legal life of the award for the expected life of SARs granted to executives. For SARs granted to non-executives, the expected life is
calculated using the “simplified method.” We believe the simplified method is appropriate for these awards as we do not have historical exercise data for
periods  prior  to  our  December  2017  split-off  from  our  former  parent  company  (the  Split-Off),  Liberty  Global,  Plc  (Liberty  Global).  The  expected
volatility  of  SARs  is  based  on  a  weighted  average  calculation  that  may  include  (i)  data  from  a  comparable  group  of  peer  companies,  (ii)  Liberty  Latin
America’s  share  trading  history  and/or  (iii)  the  implied  volatility  from  traded  LILA  and  LILAK  options.  We  recognize  the  grant-date  fair  value  of
outstanding awards as a charge to operations over the requisite service period, which is generally the vesting period, and account for forfeitures as they
occur. We use the straight-line method to recognize share-based compensation expense for share-based incentive awards that do not contain a performance
condition and the accelerated expense attribution method for our share-based incentive awards that contain a performance condition and vest on a graded
basis.

For additional information regarding our share-based compensation, see note 17.

Earnings (Loss) per Share

Basic earnings (loss) per share (EPS) is computed by dividing net earnings (loss) attributable to Liberty Latin America shareholders by the weighted
average number of Liberty Latin America common shares (Liberty Latin America Shares) during the years presented, as further described below. Diluted
EPS presents the dilutive effect, if any, on a per share basis of potential shares as if they had been exercised, vested or converted at the beginning of the
periods presented.

The details of our weighted average shares outstanding are set forth below:

Year ended December 31,
2019

2018

2020

Weighted average shares outstanding - basic and dilutive

195,535,301 

184,369,078 

176,001,049 

We  reported  losses  attributable  to  Liberty  Latin  America  shareholders  during  2020,  2019  and  2018.  As  a  result,  the  potentially  dilutive  effect  at
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018 of the following items was not included in the computation of diluted loss per share for such periods because their
inclusion would have been anti-dilutive to the computation or, in the case of certain PSUs, because such awards had not yet met the applicable performance
criteria: (i) using the if-converted method, the aggregate number of shares potentially issuable under our Convertible Notes of approximately 19.5 million,
18.1 million and nil, respectively, (ii) the aggregate number of shares issuable pursuant to outstanding options, SARs and RSUs of

II-82

 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

approximately 19.1 million, 15.2 million and 13.1 million, respectively, and (iii) the aggregate number of shares issuable pursuant to outstanding PSUs of
approximately 1.1 million, 2.0 million and 2.1 million, respectively. A portion of these amounts relate to Liberty Latin America Shares held by employees
of Liberty Global.

Litigation Costs

Legal fees and related litigation costs are expensed as incurred.

(4)    Acquisitions and Disposition

Pending Acquisition

Telefónica. On  July  30,  2020,  we  entered  into  a  definitive  agreement  to  acquire  Telefónica  S.A.’s  wireless  operations  in  Costa  Rica  in  an  all-cash
transaction  based  upon  an  enterprise  value  of  $500  million  on  a  cash-  and  debt-free  basis  (the  Telefónica-Costa  Rica  Acquisition).  The  transaction  is
subject to certain customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals, and is expected to close in the first half of 2021.

2020 Acquisition

AT&T.  On  October  9,  2019,  Liberty  Communications  and  Liberty  Latin  America  entered  into  a  stock  purchase  agreement  (the  Acquisition
Agreement)  with  certain  subsidiaries  of  AT&T  Inc.  (AT&T)  to  acquire  AT&T’s  wireless  and  wireline  operations  in  Puerto  Rico  and  the  U.S.  Virgin
Islands (the AT&T Acquisition) in an all-cash transaction. Pursuant to the Acquisition Agreement, we agreed to acquire directly or indirectly, all of the
outstanding  shares  of  AT&T  Mobility  Puerto  Rico  Inc.,  AT&T  Mobility  Virgin  Islands  Inc.  and  Beach  Holding  Corporation,  collectively  the  "AT&T
Acquired Entities," which are also referred to as Liberty Mobile and its subsidiaries in note 1. The AT&T Acquisition closed on October 31, 2020. The
operations  acquired  in  the  AT&T  Acquisition  provide  consumer  mobile  and  B2B  services  in  Puerto  Rico  and  the  U.S.  Virgin  Islands.  The  AT&T
Acquisition was valued at an enterprise value of $1,950 million on a cash- and debt-free basis, subject to certain adjustments. We financed this acquisition,
including related fees and expenses, through a combination of net proceeds from the 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes, the 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes
Add-on, the 2026 SPV Credit Facility and available liquidity. For further information about our debt and available liquidity, see note 10.

As a regulatory condition to close the AT&T Acquisition, we were required by the Department of Justice (the DOJ) to divest certain B2B operations
that are a part of our existing operations in Puerto Rico. To meet the conditions of the DOJ, we entered into an agreement during the fourth quarter of 2020
to divest those B2B operations in Puerto Rico for a stated purchase price of $22 million. The disposal of this B2B business closed in early January 2021.

AT&T  will  provide  ongoing  support  to  the  AT&T  Acquired  Entities  under  a  transition  services  agreement  (the  TSA) for a period up to 36 months
following the closing of the AT&T Acquisition. Services under the TSA include, but are not limited to, (i) network operations, (ii) customer service, (iii)
finance and accounting, (iv) information technology, (v) sales and marketing and (vi) content-related services. We may terminate any services under the
TSA upon sixty business days’ notice to AT&T in accordance with the terms and conditions of the TSA.

The following table sets forth a reconciliation of the stated purchase price included in the Acquisition Agreement to the “Accounting Purchase Price”

(in millions):

Stated Acquisition Agreement purchase price

Less: Purchase price allocated to purchase of prepaid roaming services (a)
Working capital and other purchase price adjustments:

Preliminary closing adjustments (b)
Additional working capital consideration (c)

Net cash paid for the AT&T Acquisition (d)
Contingent purchase price consideration (e)

Accounting Purchase Price

II-83

$

$

1,950.0 
(73.3)

(51.7)
61.0 
1,886.0 
44.8 
1,930.8 

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

(e)

Represents the portion of the stated Acquisition Agreement purchase price that has been allocated to the purchase of prepaid roaming services. In
connection with the Acquisition Agreement, AT&T agreed to give us a $75 million credit against certain roaming services that AT&T provides to the
AT&T Acquired Entities for a seven-year period following the closing of the AT&T Acquisition. If the credits are not used for roaming services in
that  time  period,  any  remaining  credit  may  be  used  to  acquire  certain  other  services  from  AT&T  thereafter.  For  accounting  purposes,  we  have
bifurcated  the  discounted  value  of  these  services  from  the  stated  purchase  consideration,  of  which  $11  million  and  $62  million  are  included  in
prepaid  expenses  and  other  assets,  net,  respectively,  in  our  December  31,  2020  consolidated  balance  sheet.  The  total  amount  allocated  to  the
purchase of prepaid roaming, $73 million, has been included in net cash provided by operating activities in our consolidated statement of cash flows.

Represents preliminary closing adjustments to the purchase price pursuant to the terms of the Acquisition Agreement for (i) closing working capital
balances, (ii) outstanding indebtedness and (iii) shortfalls in equipment subsidies made by AT&T prior to the closing of the AT&T Acquisition.

Represents cash paid subsequent to the closing of the AT&T Acquisition related to certain liabilities of the AT&T Acquired Entities that were not
assumed by us under the terms of the Acquisition Agreement.

The net cash paid for the AT&T Acquisition is comprised of (i) the AT&T Acquisition Restricted Cash, as defined and described in note 10, which
comprised $1,353 million and was released upon consummation of the AT&T Acquisition, and (ii) $533 million of cash and cash equivalents from
available liquidity.

Prior to the closing of the AT&T Acquisition, AT&T made prepayments to the tax authorities of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. We expect
that we will utilize these prepayments, which are reflected in income tax receivable on the consolidated balance sheet, against our future income tax
liabilities. Pursuant to the Acquisition Agreement, if we utilize such prepayments to reduce our future income tax liabilities, we are required to pay
AT&T additional purchase consideration. The fair value of this contingent purchase consideration has been included in other accrued and current
liabilities in our consolidated balance sheet.

We  have  accounted  for  the  AT&T  Acquisition  as  a  business  combination  using  the  acquisition  method  of  accounting,  whereby  the  Accounting
Purchase Price was allocated to the acquired identifiable net assets of the AT&T Acquired Entities based on assessments of their respective fair values,
and  the  excess  of  the  Accounting  Purchase  Price  over  the  fair  values  of  these  identifiable  net  assets  was  allocated  to  goodwill.  The  purchase  price
allocation to the assets acquired and liabilities assumed, including the residual amount allocated to goodwill, is based on preliminary information. This
preliminary  information  is  subject  to  change  as  we  obtain  additional  facts,  primarily  related  to  the  acquired  property  and  equipment,  intangible  assets,
leases and income taxes. The information available to us to allocate consideration to acquired property and equipment and intangible assets is impacted as
follows:

• Property and equipment: the proximity of the acquisition date to our fiscal year-end date of December 31, 2020 and contractual restrictions set

forth in the terms of the Acquisition Agreement that limit our ability to access certain historical cost information.

• Spectrum intangible assets: the proximity of the acquisition date to our fiscal year-end date of December 31, 2020, which has limited our ability

to obtain all necessary information regarding the assets acquired, resulting in the on-going analysis of market data to establish an estimate.

As a result of these factors, we expect the valuation of property and equipment and the spectrum intangible assets, which are each currently based

upon the historical values of the AT&T Acquired Entities, will require the following:

• Property and equipment: the use of an indirect cost approach, which utilizes trends based on historical cost information, supplemented with a

market and direct replacement cost method for certain assets.

• Spectrum intangible assets: the  anticipated  use  of  either  an  adjusted  “market”  approach,  which  requires  the  calibration  of  observable  market
inputs  to  reflect  the  fair  value  of  the  assets  acquired,  or  a  combination  of  an  adjusted  market-based  approach  with  an  income-based  approach,
which requires a wide range of assumptions and inputs, including forecasting costs associated with building a complementary asset base.

II-84

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Additionally, the valuation of the customer relationship intangible assets, which is currently based upon a preliminary multi-period excess earnings
valuation  method,  will  require  updates  to  assumptions  and  inputs  used,  including  the  determination  of  contributory  asset  charges  dependent  on  the
valuation  of  the  property  and  equipment  and  spectrum  intangible  assets.  For  additional  information  regarding  fair  value  methods  used  in  acquisition
accounting, see note 6.

During the measurement period, we will adjust the values attributed to our preliminary opening balance sheet, most notably acquired property and
equipment, intangible assets, leases and income taxes, as additional information is obtained about facts and circumstances that existed as of the closing
date of the AT&T Acquisition. A summary of the preliminary opening balance sheet of the AT&T Acquired Entities at the October 31, 2020 acquisition
date is presented in the following table (in millions):

Trade receivables
Prepaid expenses
Other current assets (a)
Goodwill (b)
Property and equipment
Intangible assets subject to amortization, net (c)
Intangible assets not subject to amortization (d)
Other assets (a) (e)
Accounts payable
Current portion of debt and finance lease obligations
Other accrued and current liabilities (e)
Long-term debt and finance lease obligations
Non-current deferred tax liabilities
Other long-term liabilities (e)

Total purchase price (f)

$

$

51.0 
0.1 
102.7 
352.2 
711.4 
82.7 
894.4 
286.6 
(3.0)
(0.2)
(64.3)
(10.6)
(304.9)
(167.3)
1,930.8 

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

(e)

(f)

Other current assets and other assets include $67 million and $39 million, respectively, in EIP receivables, as further described in note 3.

The  goodwill  recognized  in  connection  with  the  AT&T  Acquisition  is  primarily  attributable  to  (i)  the  ability  to  take  advantage  of  the  AT&T
Acquired  Entities’  existing  mobile  network  to  gain  immediate  access  to  potential  customers  and  (ii)  synergies  that  are  expected  to  be  achieved
through the integration of the AT&T Acquired Entities with Liberty Latin America. Due to the nature of the AT&T Acquisition, no tax deductions
related to goodwill are expected.

Amount includes intangible assets related to customer relationships. At October 31, 2020 the weighted average useful life of the acquired customer
relationship intangible assets was approximately 10 years.

Amount represents spectrum licenses.

Other  assets,  other  accrued  and  current  liabilities  and  other  long-term  liabilities  include  $196  million,  $33  million  and  $163  million  related  to
operating lease right-of-use assets, current operating lease obligations and non-current operating lease obligations, respectively.

Amount  excludes  $56  million  of  direct  acquisition  costs,  including  $5  million  incurred  during  2019.  Direct  acquisition  costs  are  included  in
impairment, restructuring and other operating items, net, in our consolidated statements of operations.

Our  consolidated  statement  of  operations  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020  includes  revenue  of  $174  million  and  net  loss  of  $83  million

attributable to the AT&T Acquired Entities.

II-85

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Supplemental Pro Forma Information

The following unaudited pro forma financial information is based on the historical carve-out financial statements of the AT&T Acquired Entities and is
intended to provide information about how the AT&T Acquisition may have affected Liberty Latin America’s historical consolidated financial statements if
it  had  closed  as  of  January  1,  2019.  The  pro  forma  financial  information  below  is  based  on  available  information  and  assumptions  that  we  believe  are
reasonable. The pro forma financial information is for illustrative and informational purposes only and is not intended to represent or be indicative of what
our results of operations would have been had the AT&T Acquisition occurred on the date indicated nor should it be considered representative of our future
financial condition or results of operations.

Revenue

Net loss attributable to Liberty Latin America shareholders

Year ended December 31,
2019
2020

in millions

$

$

4,501.8  $

4,753.5 

(554.8) $

(8.1)

The pro forma information set forth in the table above includes tax-effected pro forma adjustments primarily related to:

i.

the impact of estimated costs associated with the TSA that replaced parent-company allocations included in the historical financial statements
of the AT&T Acquired Entities;

ii.

the impact of new rate agreements associated with roaming, subsea and ethernet services;

iii.

the alignment of accounting policies;

iv.

interest expense related to additional borrowings in conjunction with the AT&T Acquisition; and

v.

the elimination of direct acquisition costs.

2019 Acquisition

UTS. Effective March 31, 2019, we completed the acquisition of an 87.5% interest in United Telecommunication Services N.V. (UTS) for an initial
cash purchase price of $162 million, which was subject to certain potential post-closing adjustments, based on an enterprise value of $189 million (the UTS
Acquisition). As noted below, during the first quarter of 2020, the purchase price was reduced by $6 million due to certain post-closing working capital
adjustments. During the third quarter of 2019, we increased our ownership interest in UTS from 87.5% to 100%. UTS provides fixed and mobile services
to the island nations of Curaçao, St. Maarten, St. Martin, Bonaire, St. Barths, St. Eustatius and Saba. The UTS Acquisition was funded through a $170
million draw on the C&W Revolving Credit Facility, as defined in note 10.

II-86

 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

We have accounted for the UTS Acquisition as a business combination using the acquisition method of accounting, whereby the total purchase price
was allocated to the acquired identifiable net assets of UTS based on assessments of their respective fair values, and the excess of the purchase price over
the fair values of these identifiable net assets was allocated to goodwill. A summary of the purchase price and opening balance sheet of UTS at the effective
March 31, 2019 acquisition date is presented in the following table. The opening balance sheet presented below reflects our final purchase price allocation
(in millions):

Cash
Trade receivables
Other current assets
Property and equipment
Goodwill (a)
Intangible assets subject to amortization
Other assets
Accounts payable
Other accrued and current liabilities
Other long-term liabilities
Noncontrolling interest (b)

Total purchase price (c)

$

$

2.7 
19.0 
6.7 
158.4 
17.1 
24.0 
18.2 
(27.9)
(31.9)
(18.8)
(11.6)
155.9 

(a)

(b)

(c)

The  goodwill  recognized  in  connection  with  the  UTS  Acquisition  is  primarily  attributable  to  (i)  the  ability  to  take  advantage  of  UTS’s  existing
broadband communications and mobile networks to gain immediate access to potential customers, and (ii) synergies that are expected to be achieved
through the integration of UTS with C&W’s existing business in Curacao.

Amount represents the estimated aggregate fair value of the noncontrolling interest in UTS as of March 31, 2019.

Excludes  $3  million  of  direct  acquisition  costs,  including  $1  million  incurred  during  2018.  Direct  acquisition  costs  are  included  in  impairment,
restructuring and other operating items, net, in our consolidated statements of operations.

Our  consolidated  statement  of  operations  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2019  includes  revenue  of  $96  million  and  net  earnings  of  $4  million
attributable  to  UTS.  Supplemental  pro  forma  information  related  to  the  UTS  Acquisition  has  not  been  included  as  it  would  not  have  had  a  significant
impact on our results of operations during 2019.

2019 Disposition

During the fourth quarter of 2019, we disposed of our operations in the Seychelles (the Seychelles Disposition) at an enterprise value of $104 million.

As a result of the Seychelles Disposition, we received $78 million of net cash inflows and recorded a loss on disposition of $3 million.

2018 Acquisition

Cabletica. On February 12, 2018, we entered into a definitive agreement to acquire certain assets and liabilities related to Televisora de Costa Rica
S.A.’s (Televisora) cable operations in Costa Rica based on an enterprise value of $252 million, subject to certain customary adjustments. As part of the
agreement, the owners of Televisora retained a 20% ownership interest in Cabletica. On October 1, 2018, we completed the acquisition of our 80% interest
(the Cabletica Acquisition)  for  an  effective  purchase  price  of  $226  million,  after  working  capital  adjustments  and  deducting  the  value  of  Televisora’s
retained equity interest. The Cabletica Acquisition was financed through a combination of debt and existing cash.

II-87

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

We have accounted for the Cabletica Acquisition as a business combination using the acquisition method of accounting, whereby the total purchase
price was allocated to the acquired identifiable net assets of Cabletica based on assessments of their respective fair values, and the excess of the purchase
price over the fair values of these identifiable net assets was allocated to goodwill. A summary of the purchase price and opening balance sheet of Cabletica
at the October 1, 2018 acquisition date is presented in the following table. The opening balance sheet presented below reflects our final purchase price
allocation (in millions):

Other current assets
Property and equipment
Goodwill (a)
Intangible assets subject to amortization (b)
Other assets
Other accrued and current liabilities
Non-current deferred tax liabilities
Other long-term liabilities
Noncontrolling interest (c)

Total purchase price (d)

$

$

6.3 
65.8 
159.6 
52.7 
0.1 
(17.7)
(14.6)
(0.7)
(25.1)
226.4 

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

The goodwill recognized in connection with the Cabletica Acquisition is primarily attributable to the ability to take advantage of Cabletica’s existing
advanced broadband communications network as a base on which to expand our footprint in the region, and to gain immediate access to potential
customers.

Amount primarily includes intangible assets related to customer relationships. As of October 1, 2018, the weighted average useful life of Cabletica’s
intangible assets was approximately eleven years.

Amount represents the fair value of Televisora’s interest in Cabletica as of the October 1, 2018 acquisition date.

Excludes $5 million of direct acquisition costs, including $3 million incurred during 2018.

(5)    Derivative Instruments

In general, we seek to enter into derivative instruments to protect against (i) increases in the interest rates on our variable-rate debt and (ii) foreign
currency movements, particularly with respect to borrowings that are denominated in a currency other than the functional currency of the borrowing entity.
In this regard, through our subsidiaries, we have entered into various derivative instruments to manage interest rate exposure and foreign currency exposure
with respect to the U.S. dollar ($), the Chilean peso (CLP), the Colombian peso (COP)  and  the  Jamaican  dollar  (JMD).  With  the  exception  of  certain
foreign currency forward contracts, we do not apply hedge accounting to our derivative instruments. Accordingly, changes in the fair values of most of our
derivative instruments are recorded in realized and unrealized gains or losses on derivative instruments in our consolidated statements of operations.

II-88

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

The following table provides details of the fair values of our derivative instrument assets and liabilities:

Current (a)

December 31, 2020
Long-term (a)

Total

Current (a)

in millions

December 31, 2019
Long-term (a)

Total

Assets:

Cross-currency and interest rate derivative

contracts (b)

Foreign currency forward contracts

Total

Liabilities:

Cross-currency and interest rate derivative

contracts (b)

Foreign currency forward contracts

Total

$

$

$

$

0.7  $
— 
0.7  $

71.4  $
18.8 
90.2  $

4.4  $
— 
4.4  $

5.1  $
— 
5.1  $

403.0  $
— 
403.0  $

474.4  $
18.8 
493.2  $

23.4  $
9.8 
33.2  $

34.9  $
0.5 
35.4  $

126.9  $
— 
126.9  $

99.6  $
— 
99.6  $

150.3 
9.8 
160.1 

134.5 
0.5 
135.0 

(a)

Our current derivative assets, long-term derivative assets and long-term derivative liabilities are included in other current assets, net, other assets,
net, and other long-term liabilities, respectively, in our consolidated balance sheets.

(b) We  consider  credit  risk  relating  to  our  and  our  counterparties’  nonperformance  in  the  fair  value  assessment  of  our  derivative  instruments.  In  all
cases,  the  adjustments  take  into  account  offsetting  liability  or  asset  positions  within  each  of  our  primary  borrowing  groups  (see  note  10).  The
changes in the credit risk valuation adjustments associated with our cross-currency and interest rate derivative contracts resulted in net gains (losses)
of $47 million, $4 million and ($23 million) during 2020, 2019 and 2018, respectively. The gain during the 2020 period is primarily due to increased
credit risk stemming from market reaction to the COVID-19 outbreak, as further described and defined in note 9. These amounts are included in
realized and unrealized gains (losses) on derivative instruments, net, in our consolidated statements of operations. For further information regarding
our fair value measurements, see note 6.

The derivative assets set forth in the table above exclude our Weather Derivatives, as they are not accounted for at fair value.

The details of our realized and unrealized gains (losses) on derivative instruments, net, are as follows:

Cross-currency and interest rate derivative contracts (a)
Foreign currency forward contracts
Weather Derivatives

Total

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

(328.6) $
(7.8)
(16.3)
(352.7) $

(21.0) $
9.4 
(5.6)
(17.2) $

69.6 
25.2 
— 
94.8 

(a)

The losses for 2020 include a realized gain of $71 million associated with the settlement of certain cross-currency interest rate swaps at VTR in June
2020 that were unwound in connection with the July 2020 refinancing of certain VTR debt. For additional information regarding the refinancing, see
note 10.

II-89

 
 
 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

The following table sets forth the classification of the net cash inflows (outflows) of our derivative instruments:

Operating activities
Investing activities
Financing activities (a)

Total

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

(50.1) $
7.4 
182.5 
139.8  $

11.2  $
6.5 
(0.3)
17.4  $

(15.9)
(2.3)
10.0 
(8.2)

(a)

The 2020 amount is primarily related to the settlement of certain cross-currency interest rate swaps at VTR. The settlement proceeds were used in
part to redeem certain VTR debt in July 2020, as further described in note 10.

Counterparty Credit Risk

We are exposed to the risk that the counterparties to the derivative instruments of our borrowing groups will default on their obligations to us. We
manage these credit risks through the evaluation and monitoring of the creditworthiness of, and concentration of risk with, the respective counterparties. In
this regard, credit risk associated with our derivative instruments is spread across a relatively broad counterparty base of banks and financial institutions.
Collateral  has  not  been  posted  by  either  party  under  the  derivative  instruments  of  our  borrowing  groups.  At  December  31,  2020,  our  exposure  to
counterparty credit risk resulting from our net derivative position was not material.

Each  of  our  borrowing  groups  has  entered  into  derivative  instruments  under  agreements  with  each  counterparty  that  contain  master  netting
arrangements that are applicable in the event of early termination by either party to such derivative instrument. The master netting arrangements under each
of these master agreements are limited to the derivative instruments governed by the relevant master agreement within each individual borrowing group
and are independent of similar arrangements of our other subsidiary borrowing groups.

Details of our Derivative Instruments

Cross-currency Derivative Contracts

As  noted  above,  we  are  exposed  to  foreign  currency  exchange  rate  risk  in  situations  where  our  debt  is  denominated  in  a  currency  other  than  the
functional currency of the operations whose cash flows support our ability to service, repay or refinance such debt. Although we generally seek to match
the denomination of our borrowings with the functional currency of the operations that are supporting the respective borrowings, market conditions or other
factors may cause us to enter into borrowing arrangements that are not denominated in the functional currency of the underlying operations (unmatched
debt).  Our  policy  is  generally  to  provide  for  an  economic  hedge  against  foreign  currency  exchange  rate  movements,  whenever  possible  and  when  cost
effective to do so, by using derivative instruments to synthetically convert unmatched debt into the applicable underlying currency. The following table sets
forth the total notional amounts and the related weighted average remaining contractual lives of our cross-currency swap contracts at December 31, 2020:

Borrowing group

C&W

VTR

Notional amount
due from
counterparty

Notional amount
due to
counterparty

Weighted average
remaining life
in years

1,817.5 
197,014.1 

933,800.0 

2.0
5.6

5.5

in millions

14.3 
JMD
56.3  COP

1,150.0  CLP

$
$

$

II-90

 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Interest Rate Derivative Contracts

Interest Rate Swaps

As noted above, we enter into interest rate swaps to protect against increases in the interest rates on our variable-rate debt. Pursuant to these derivative
instruments, we typically pay fixed interest rates and receive variable interest rates on specified notional amounts. The following table sets forth the total
U.S.  dollar  equivalents  of  the  notional  amounts  and  the  related  weighted  average  remaining  contractual  lives  of  our  interest  rate  swap  contracts  at
December 31, 2020:

Borrowing group

C&W (a)

VTR

Liberty Puerto Rico

Cabletica

(a)

Includes forward-starting derivative instruments.

Basis Swaps

Notional amount due
from counterparty
in millions

Weighted average
remaining life
in years

$

$

$

$

2,250.0 

198.0 

1,000.0 

53.5 

6.7

2.1

5.6

2.5

Basis  swaps  involve  the  exchange  of  attributes  used  to  calculate  our  floating  interest  rates,  including  (i)  the  benchmark  rate,  (ii)  the  underlying
currency and/or (iii) the borrowing period. We typically enter into these swaps to optimize our interest rate profile based on our current evaluations of yield
curves,  our  risk  management  policies  and  other  factors.  The  following  table  sets  forth  the  total  U.S.  dollar  equivalents  of  the  notional  amounts  and  the
related weighted average remaining contractual lives of our basis swap contracts at December 31, 2020:

Borrowing group

C&W

Liberty Puerto Rico

Foreign Currency Forwards Contracts

Notional amount due
from counterparty
in millions

Weighted average
remaining life
in years

$

$

1,510.0 

1,000.0 

0.7

0.1

We  enter  into  foreign  currency  forward  contracts  with  respect  to  non-functional  currency  exposure.  At  December  31,  2020,  our  foreign  currency
forward contracts had total notional amounts due from and to counterparties of $205 million and CLP 159 billion, respectively, with a weighted average
remaining contractual life of 0.5 years. All of our foreign currency forward contracts are held by our VTR borrowing group.

(6)    Fair Value Measurements

General

We use the fair value method to account for most of our derivative instruments and the available-for-sale method to account for our investment in U.K.
Government Gilts. The reported fair values of our derivative instruments as of December 31, 2020 likely will not represent the value that will be paid or
received upon the ultimate settlement or disposition of these assets and liabilities, as we expect that the values realized generally will be based on market
conditions at the time of

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

settlement, which may occur at the maturity of the derivative instrument or at the time of the repayment or refinancing of the underlying debt instrument.

U.S. GAAP provides for a fair value hierarchy that prioritizes the inputs to valuation techniques used to measure fair value into three broad levels.
Level  1  inputs  are  quoted  market  prices  in  active  markets  for  identical  assets  or  liabilities  that  the  reporting  entity  has  the  ability  to  access  at  the
measurement date. Level 2 inputs are inputs other than quoted market prices included within Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either
directly or indirectly. Level 3 inputs are unobservable inputs for the asset or liability.

All of our Level 2 inputs (interest rate futures, swap rates and certain of the inputs for our weighted average cost of capital calculations) and certain of
our Level 3 inputs (non-interest rate curves and credit spreads) are obtained from pricing services. These inputs, or interpolations or extrapolations thereof,
are used in our internal models to calculate, among other items, yield curves, forward interest and currency rates and weighted average cost of capital rates.
In the normal course of business, we receive market value assessments from the counterparties to our derivative contracts. Although we compare these
assessments to our internal valuations and investigate unexpected differences, we do not otherwise rely on counterparty quotes to determine the fair values
of our derivative instruments. The midpoints of applicable bid and ask ranges generally are used as inputs for our internal valuations.

Recurring Fair Value Measurements

Derivatives

In order to manage our interest rate and foreign currency exchange risk, we have entered into various derivative instruments, as further described in
note 5. The recurring fair value measurements of these derivative instruments are determined using discounted cash flow models. Most of the inputs to
these discounted cash flow models consist of, or are derived from, observable Level 2 data for substantially the full term of these derivative instruments.
This  observable  data  mostly  includes  interest  rate  futures  and  swap  rates,  which  are  retrieved  or  derived  from  available  market  data.  Although  we  may
extrapolate or interpolate this data, we do not otherwise alter this data in performing our valuations. We incorporate a credit risk valuation adjustment in our
fair  value  measurements  to  estimate  the  impact  of  both  our  own  nonperformance  risk  and  the  nonperformance  risk  of  our  counterparties.  Our  and  our
counterparties’ credit spreads represent our most significant Level 3 inputs, and these inputs are used to derive the credit risk valuation adjustments with
respect  to  these  instruments.  Notwithstanding  the  impact  of  COVID-19  on  our  credit  risk,  we  generally  would  not  expect  changes  in  our  or  our
counterparties’ credit spreads to have a significant impact on the valuations of these instruments. As a result, we have determined that these valuations
continue  to  fall  under  Level  2  of  the  fair  value  hierarchy.  Our  credit  risk  valuation  adjustments  with  respect  to  our  interest  rate  and  cross-currency
derivative contracts are quantified and further explained in note 5. Due to the lack of Level 2 inputs for the valuation of the U.S. dollar to the Jamaican
dollar cross-currency swaps (the Sable Currency Swaps) held periodically by Sable International Finance Limited (Sable), a wholly-owned subsidiary of
C&W, we believe this valuation falls under Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy. The Sable Currency Swaps are our only Level 3 financial instruments. The
fair  values  of  the  Sable  Currency  Swaps  at  December  31,  2020  and  2019  were  $1  million and  ($30  million),  respectively,  which  are  included  in  other
assets, net, and long-term liabilities, respectively, in our consolidated balance sheets. The change in the fair values of the Sable Currency Swaps resulted in
net gains (losses) of $31 million, $6 million and ($14 million) during 2020, 2019 and 2018, respectively, which are reflected in realized and unrealized
gains (losses) on derivative instruments, net, in our consolidated statements of operations.

Available-for-sale Investments

Our investment in U.K. Government Gilts falls under Level 1 of the fair value hierarchy. At December 31, 2020 and 2019, the carrying values of our
investment  in  U.K.  Government  Gilts,  which  are  included  in  other  assets,  net,  in  our  consolidated  balance  sheets,  were  $38  million  and  $37  million,
respectively.

Nonrecurring Fair Value Measurements

Fair  value  measurements  are  also  used  for  purposes  of  nonrecurring  valuations  performed  in  connection  with  our  Convertible  Notes,  acquisition

accounting and impairment assessments.

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Conversion Option – Convertible Notes

As further described and defined in note 10, our Convertible Notes include a Conversion Option that we bifurcated from the Convertible Notes and
recorded at fair value upon issuance as an equity component in our 2019 consolidated statement of equity. The fair value of the liability component was
calculated by measuring the fair value of a similar liability that does not have an associated convertible feature, which was established using the present
value of cash flows associated with such instrument based on a 5-year tenor and an estimated yield rate of 6.7%, which is a Level 2 input. The fair value of
the equity component was determined by deducting the fair value of the liability component from the proceeds received on issuance of the Convertible
Notes.

Acquisition Accounting

The nonrecurring valuations associated with acquisition accounting, which use significant unobservable inputs and therefore fall under Level 3 of the

fair value hierarchy, primarily include the valuation of property and equipment, customer relationships and spectrum licenses, as further described below:

•

•

•

Property and equipment. The valuation of property and equipment may use an indirect cost approach, which utilizes trends based on historical cost
information, or a combination of indirect cost approach, market approach and direct replacement cost method, which considers factors such as
current prices of the same or similar equipment, the age of the equipment and economic obsolescence.

Customer  relationships.  The  valuation  of  customer  relationships  is  primarily  based  on  an  excess  earnings  methodology,  which  is  a  form  of  a
discounted cash flow analysis. The excess earnings methodology for customer relationship intangible assets requires us to estimate the specific
cash  flows  expected  from  the  acquired  customer  relationships,  considering  such  factors  as  estimated  customer  life,  the  revenue  expected  to  be
generated over the life of the customer relationships, contributory asset charges and other factors.

Spectrum intangible assets.  The  valuation  of  spectrum  intangible  assets  may  use  either  an  adjusted  market-based  approach,  which  requires  the
calibration of observable market inputs to reflect the fair value of the assets acquired, or a combination of an adjusted market-based approach with
other  methods,  such  as  an  income-based  approach  (e.g.  the  “greenfield”  valuation  method),  which  requires  a  wide  range  of  assumptions  and
inputs, including forecasting costs associated with building a complementary asset base.

During the fourth quarter of 2020, we performed a nonrecurring valuation related to the preliminary acquisition accounting for the AT&T Acquisition.
For additional information related to the status of valuation work associated with property and equipment and intangible assets acquired in connection with
the AT&T Acquisition, see note 4.

In connection with the AT&T Acquisition, we performed a nonrecurring valuation related to the preliminary acquisition accounting for the assets and

liabilities acquired. The weighted average discount rate used in the valuation of the customer relationships acquired was approximately 10.5%.

In  March  2020,  we  performed  a  nonrecurring  valuation  related  to  the  final  acquisition  accounting  for  the  UTS  Acquisition.  The  weighted  average

discount rate used in the valuation of the customer relationships acquired was approximately 13.5%.

During September 2019, we performed a nonrecurring valuation related to the final acquisition accounting for the Cabletica Acquisition. The weighted

average discount rate used in the valuation of the customer relationships acquired was approximately 14%.

Impairment Assessments

The nonrecurring valuations associated with impairment assessments, which use significant unobservable inputs and therefore fall under Level 3 of the
fair value hierarchy, primarily include the valuation of reporting units for the purpose of testing for goodwill impairment. Unless a reporting unit has a
readily determinable fair value, we estimate the fair value of the reporting unit using either a market-based or income-based approach.

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

As  part  of  our  annual  goodwill  impairment  assessment  in  the  fourth  quarter  of  2020,  we  first  made  a  qualitative  assessment  to  determine  potential

impairment and concluded that no events or circumstances indicated that the fair value of any of our reporting units is less than its carrying amount.

During  the  second  quarter  of  2020,  primarily  due  to  the  ongoing  economic  impacts  associated  with  COVID-19  and  organizational  restructuring  of
certain  markets  within  our  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks  segment,  we  performed  goodwill  impairment  analyses  of  several  reporting  units  within  the
C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks  segment  and  the  C&W  Panama  segment.  We  used  an  income  approach  to  determine  the  estimated  fair  values  of  these
reporting units. Under this approach, we utilized a discounted cash flow model as the valuation technique to estimate the fair values of the reporting units
from a market participant’s perspective. This approach uses certain inputs and assumptions that require estimates and judgments, including forecasted cash
flows and appropriate discount rates. Forecasts of future cash flows are largely based on our assumptions using Level 3 inputs, which we consider to be
consistent with a market participant’s approach. We used the weighted-average cost of capital for each reporting unit as the basis for the discount rate to
establish the present value of the expected cash flows for the respective reporting unit. The inputs for our weighted average cost of capital calculations
include  Level  2  and  Level  3  inputs,  generally  derived  from  third-party  pricing  services.  We  used  discount  rates  ranging  from  8.9%  to  10.3%  in  the
valuation of the various reporting units within our C&W Caribbean and Networks segment and 9.8% in the valuation of our C&W Panama segment.

During  the  third  quarter  of  2019,  based  on  declines  in  the  operating  results  of  our  C&W  Panama  segment,  we  conducted  a  goodwill  impairment
assessment of that reporting unit. We used a market-based valuation approach to determine the fair value of this reporting unit. The fair value of a reporting
unit using a market-based approach is estimated based upon a market multiple typically applied to the reporting unit’s Adjusted OIBDA, as defined in note
21. We determined the market multiple for each reporting unit taking the following into consideration: (i) public company trading multiples for entities
with similar business characteristics as the respective reporting unit, adjusted to reflect an appropriate control premium or discount, a “trading multiple,”
and (ii) multiples derived from the value of recent transactions for businesses with similar operations and in geographically similar locations, a “transaction
multiple.”

As part of our annual goodwill impairment assessment in the fourth quarter of 2018, we used a market-based valuation approach, as described above,

to determine the fair value of certain reporting units within C&W Caribbean and Networks and our C&W Panama segment.

For additional information regarding goodwill impairment charges resulting from these impairment analyses, see note 9.

(7)    Investments

We  hold  a  49%  interest  in  TSTT.  Our  investment  in  TSTT  is  included  in  other  assets,  net,  in  our  consolidated  balance  sheets.  Pursuant  to  certain
conditions to the regulatory approval of the acquisition of Columbus International, Inc. by C&W in 2015, we are required to dispose of our investment in
TSTT, subject to certain terms and conditions. During the third quarter of 2018, we recorded an impairment charge of $16 million due to a decline in the
estimated fair value of this investment. As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, the carrying value of our investment in TSTT was $77 million. We cannot
predict when, or if, we will be able to dispose of this investment at an acceptable price. As such, no assurance can be given that we will be able to recover
the carrying value of our investment in TSTT.

(8)    Insurance Recoveries

The  2017  Hurricanes  impacted  a  number  of  our  markets  in  the  Caribbean,  resulting  in  varying  degrees  of  damage  to  homes,  businesses  and
infrastructure  in  these  markets.  In  October  2016,  our  operations  in  the  Bahamas,  which  is  part  of  our  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks  segment,  were
significantly impacted by Hurricane Matthew.

In  December  2018,  we  settled  our  insurance  claims  for  the  2017  Hurricanes  and  Hurricane  Matthew  as  follows:  (i)  $109  million  for  the  2017

Hurricanes, after deducting $30 million of self-insurance, and (ii) $12 million for Hurricane Matthew, after deducting $15 million of self-insurance.

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

The following table summarizes the impact of the insurance settlements to our consolidated statement of operations for the year ended December 31,

2018 (in millions):

Other operating costs and expenses
Business interruption loss recovery (a)
Impairment, restructuring and other operating items, net (a)

Total

(a)

Each amount includes $3 million attributable to Hurricane Matthew.

$

$

4.6 
59.5 
35.7 
99.8 

During  2018,  we  received  net  advance  payments  related  to  the  2017  Hurricanes  and  Hurricane  Matthew  from  our  third-party  insurance  provider
totaling $51 million, of which $21 million is presented as a cash inflow from investing activities on our consolidated statement of cash flows. With respect
to the net advance payments, $45 million was provided to Liberty Puerto Rico and $6 million was provided to C&W Caribbean and Networks.

During the first quarter of 2019, we received the then outstanding insurance settlement amount of $67 million, of which $33 million and $34 million
have been presented as operating and investing activities, respectively, in our consolidated statement of cash flows. With respect to the cash received, $37
million, $27 million and $3 million was provided to C&W Caribbean and Networks, Liberty Puerto Rico and our Corporate operations, respectively.

(9)    Long-lived Assets

Impairment Charges

The following table sets forth the details of our impairment charges:

Year ended December 31, 2020:

Goodwill
Property and equipment and other

Total impairment charges

Year ended December 31, 2019:

Goodwill
Property and equipment and other

Total impairment charges

Year ended December 31, 2018:

Goodwill
Property and equipment and other

Total impairment charges

C&W Caribbean
and Networks

C&W Panama

VTR/Cabletica
in millions

Liberty Puerto
Rico

Total

$

$

$

$

$

$

99.0  $
3.9 
102.9  $

—  $

17.2 
17.2  $

2.5  $
5.0 
7.5  $

177.0  $
— 
177.0  $

181.9  $
— 
181.9  $

607.5  $
— 
607.5  $

—  $
1.7 
1.7  $

—  $
0.3 
0.3  $

—  $
0.3 
0.3  $

—  $
1.5 
1.5  $

—  $
— 
—  $

—  $
0.4 
0.4  $

276.0 
7.1 
283.1 

181.9 
17.5 
199.4 

610.0 
5.7 
615.7 

We evaluate goodwill and other indefinite-lived intangible assets (primarily spectrum licenses and cable television franchise rights) for impairment at
least annually on October 1 and whenever facts and circumstances indicate that their carrying amounts may not be recoverable as further outlined in note 3.
Based upon our October 1, 2020 evaluation, we did not identify any impairments of such assets. However, declines in the estimated fair value of certain
reporting units within our C&W Caribbean and Networks segment or our C&W Panama segment could result in the need to record goodwill impairment
charges.  If,  among  other  factors,  (i)  our  equity  values  were  to  decline  significantly  or  (ii)  the  adverse  impacts  stemming  from  COVID-19  (as  defined
below), competition, economic, regulatory or other factors, including macro-economic and demographic trends, were to cause our results of operations or
cash flows to be worse than anticipated, we could conclude in future periods

II-95

 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

that impairment charges are required in order to reduce the carrying values of the goodwill and, to a lesser extent, other long-lived assets of our C&W
Caribbean and Networks segment or our C&W Panama segment. Any such impairment charges could be significant.

COVID-19. During  the  first  quarter  of  2020,  the  World  Health  Organization  declared  the  outbreak  of  a  novel  strain  of  Coronavirus  (COVID-19) a
“pandemic,” pointing to the sustained risk of further global spread. COVID-19 has negatively impacted our results of operations and resulted in systemic
disruption of the worldwide equity markets, and the market values of our publicly-traded equity declined significantly beginning in late February 2020. As
a result of the impact of COVID-19 on our results of operations, we evaluated whether the facts and circumstances and available information resulted in the
need for an impairment assessment for any of our long-lived assets, including goodwill, and during the second quarter of 2020 concluded assessments were
required  with  respect  to  our  goodwill,  which  resulted  in  goodwill  impairments  in  our  C&W  Caribbean  and  Networks  segment  and  our  C&W  Panama
segment.

C&W Panama.  During  our  2018  annual  goodwill  impairment  test,  we  concluded  a  $608  million  impairment  was  necessary  for  our  C&W  Panama
segment and during the third quarter of 2019 we concluded that an additional $182 million goodwill impairment charge was necessary based on further
deterioration  in  the  C&W  Panama  segment's  operating  results.  These  impairments  primarily  resulted  from  the  impact  of  a  significant  increase  in
competition,  particularly  with  respect  to  our  prepaid  mobile  business.  The  accumulation  of  prepaid  mobile  subscriber  losses,  together  with  associated
adverse impacts to average monthly subscription revenue per mobile subscriber, negatively impacted the actual results during these periods and the then
expected future financial performance of the Panamanian reporting unit, resulting in the impairments during 2018 and 2019.

Hurricane Dorian. In September 2019, our operations in the Bahamas, which is part of our C&W Caribbean and Networks segment, were impacted by
Hurricane Dorian resulting in significant damage to homes, businesses and infrastructure. Based on our initial estimates of the impacts of the hurricane to
our operations, during the third quarter of 2019, we recorded an impairment charge of $16 million to write-off the net carrying amount of property and
equipment that was damaged beyond repair.

For additional information regarding the fair value methods and related assumptions used in our impairment assessments, see note 6.

Goodwill

Changes in the carrying amount of our goodwill during 2020 are set forth below:

C&W Caribbean and Networks
C&W Panama
VTR/Cabletica
Liberty Puerto Rico

Total

January 1, 2020

Acquisitions
and related
adjustments

Foreign currency
translation
adjustments and
other
in millions

Impairments (a)

December 31,
2020

$

$

3,316.7  $
794.1 
517.9 
277.7 
4,906.4  $

(12.0) $
— 
— 
352.2 
340.2  $

(93.7) $
— 
8.6 
— 
(85.1) $

(99.0) $

(177.0)
— 
— 
(276.0) $

3,112.0 
617.1 
526.5 
629.9 
4,885.5 

(a)

Amounts represent impairment charges associated with various reporting units based primarily on the economic impacts associated with COVID-19,
as further described above.

II-96

 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Changes in the carrying amount of our goodwill during 2019 are set forth below:

January 1, 2019

Acquisitions and
related adjustments

Disposition

Foreign
currency
translation
adjustments
and other

Impairments (a)

December 31,
2019

C&W Caribbean and Networks $
C&W Panama
VTR/Cabletica
Liberty Puerto Rico

Total

$

3,349.6  $
976.0 
530.0 
277.7 
5,133.3  $

37.1  $
— 
8.3 
— 
45.4  $

in millions

(33.6) $
— 
— 
— 
(33.6) $

(36.4) $
— 
(20.4)
— 
(56.8) $

—  $

(181.9)
— 
— 
(181.9) $

3,316.7 
794.1 
517.9 
277.7 
4,906.4 

(a)

Amount  primarily  relates  to  an  impairment  charge  associated  with  the  deterioration  of  the  C&W  Panama  segment’s  operating  results,  as  further
described above.

At December 31, 2020 and 2019, our accumulated goodwill impairments were $1,624 million and $1,348 million, respectively.

Property and Equipment, Net

The details of our property and equipment and the related accumulated depreciation are set forth below:

Distribution systems
Customer premises equipment
Support equipment, buildings and land

Accumulated depreciation

Net carrying amount

Estimated useful
life at
December 31, 2020

3 to 25 years
3 to 5 years
3 to 40 years

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

$

$

5,082.9  $
1,935.5 
1,721.3 
8,739.7 
(3,828.3)
4,911.4  $

4,299.6 
1,763.8 
1,530.9 
7,594.3 
(3,293.2)
4,301.1 

Depreciation  expense  related  to  our  property  and  equipment  was  $731  million,  $697  million  and  $641  million  during  2020,  2019  and  2018,

respectively.

We recorded non-cash increases to our property and equipment related to vendor financing arrangements of $99 million, $96 million and $54 million

during 2020, 2019 and 2018, respectively.

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Intangible Assets Subject to Amortization, Net

The details of our intangible assets subject to amortization, which had estimated useful lives ranging from four to 15 years at December 31, 2020, are

set forth below:

Gross carrying amount:
Customer relationships
Licenses and other
Total gross carrying amount

Accumulated amortization:
Customer relationships
Licenses and other
Total accumulated amortization

Net carrying amount

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

$

$

1,554.8  $
159.4 
1,714.2 

(813.0)
(42.3)
(855.3)
858.9  $

1,482.9 
170.1 
1,653.0 

(645.5)
(38.3)
(683.8)
969.2 

Amortization expense related to intangible assets with finite useful lives was $184 million, $174 million and $189 million during 2020, 2019 and 2018,

respectively.

Based on our amortizable intangible asset balance at December 31, 2020, we expect that amortization expense will be as follows for the next five years

and thereafter (in millions):

2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
Thereafter

Total

Intangible Assets Not Subject to Amortization

The details of our intangible assets not subject to amortization are set forth below:

Spectrum licenses (a)
Cable television franchise rights (b)
Other

Total intangible assets not subject to amortization

$

$

184.6 
164.3 
143.9 
108.9 
65.2 
192.0 
858.9 

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

$

$

909.7  $
540.0 
15.9 
1,465.6  $

8.4 
540.0 
12.4 
560.8 

(a)

The 2020 amount includes an estimated $894 million attributable to the AT&T Acquisition. For additional information regarding the assets acquired
as part of the AT&T Acquisition, see note 4.

(b)

Cable television franchise rights are held by Liberty Puerto Rico.

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

(10)    Debt and Finance Lease Obligations

The U.S. dollar equivalents of the components of our debt are as follows:

December 31, 2020

Unused borrowing capacity (b)

Estimated fair value (c)

Weighted
average
interest
rate (a)

Borrowing
currency

US $
equivalent

December 31,

Principal amount

December 31,

2020

2019

2020

2019

in millions

Convertible Notes (d)
C&W Notes
C&W Credit Facilities
VTR Notes
VTR Credit Facilities
LPR Senior Secured Notes
LPR Credit Facilities
Cabletica Credit Facilities (g)
Vendor financing (h)

Total debt before premiums,

discounts and deferred financing
costs

2.00 % $
6.74 %
2.81 %
5.72 %
4.78 %
6.75 %
5.14 % $
8.39 % $
2.50 %

—  $
— 

— 

(e)

(f)

— 
125.0 
15.0 
— 

—  $
— 
769.7 
— 
263.2 
— 
125.0 
15.0 
— 

381.8  $

430.1  $

402.5  $

2,435.8 
1,834.7 
1,239.7 
243.8 
1,389.4 
1,002.5 
119.3 
168.1 

2,270.9 
2,017.1 
1,290.9 
229.7 
1,278.3 
1,012.1 
123.8 
167.7 

2,270.0 
1,856.2 
1,150.0 
244.5 
1,290.0 
1,000.0 
119.6 
168.1 

402.5 
2,120.0 
2,006.1 
1,260.0 
231.4 
1,200.0 
1,000.0 
124.8 
167.7 

5.22 %

$

1,172.9  $

8,815.1  $

8,820.6  $

8,500.9  $

8,512.5 

The  following  table  provides  a  reconciliation  of  total  debt  before  premiums,  discounts  and  deferred  financing  costs  to  total  debt  and  finance  lease

obligations:

Total debt before premiums, discounts and deferred financing costs
Premiums, discounts and deferred financing costs, net (d)

Total carrying amount of debt

Finance lease obligations

Total debt and finance lease obligations

Less: Current maturities of debt and finance lease obligations

Long-term debt and finance lease obligations

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

$

$

8,500.9  $
(157.1)
8,343.8 
13.4 
8,357.2 
(161.9)
8,195.3  $

8,512.5 
(146.1)
8,366.4 
3.6 
8,370.0 
(180.2)
8,189.8 

(a)

(b)

Represents  the  weighted  average  interest  rate  in  effect  at  December  31,  2020  for  all  borrowings  outstanding  pursuant  to  each  debt  instrument,
including any applicable margin. The interest rates presented represent stated rates and do not include the impact of derivative instruments, deferred
financing costs, original issue premiums or discounts and commitment fees, all of which affect our overall cost of borrowing.

Unused  borrowing  capacity  represents  the  maximum  availability  under  the  applicable  facility  at  December  31,  2020  without  regard  to  covenant
compliance  calculations  or  other  conditions  precedent  to  borrowing.  At  December  31,  2020,  the  full  amount  of  unused  borrowing  capacity  was
available to be borrowed under each of the respective subsidiary facilities, both before and after completion of the December 31, 2020 compliance
reporting  requirements,  except  for  available  capacity  under  the  VTR  Revolving  Credit  Facilities  that  is  currently  limited  to  $185  million.  At
December  31,  2020,  and  except  as  may  be  limited  by  tax  and  legal  considerations,  the  presence  of  noncontrolling  interests,  foreign  currency
exchange restrictions with respect to certain C&W subsidiaries and other factors, there were no restrictions on

II-99

 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

(c)

(d)

(e)

(f)

(g)

(h)

the respective subsidiary’s ability to upstream cash from this availability to Liberty Latin America or its subsidiaries or other equity holders.

The estimated fair values of our debt instruments are determined using the average of applicable bid and ask prices (mostly Level 1 of the fair value
hierarchy) or, when quoted market prices are unavailable or not considered indicative of fair value, discounted cash flow models (mostly Level 2 of
the fair value hierarchy). The discount rates used in the cash flow models are based on the market interest rates and estimated credit spreads of the
applicable entity, to the extent available, and other relevant factors. For additional information regarding fair value hierarchies, see note 6.

The interest rate reflects the stated rate of the Convertible Notes. The effective interest rate of the Convertible Notes is 6.7%, which considers the
impact of the discount recorded in connection with the Conversion Option, as further described below.

The C&W Credit Facilities unused borrowing capacity comprise certain U.S. dollar and Trinidad & Tobago dollar revolving credit facilities. For
further information, see C&W Credit Facilities below.

The  VTR  Credit  Facilities  comprise  certain  CLP  term  loans  and  U.S.  dollar  and  CLP  revolving  credit  facilities,  including  unused  borrowing
capacity. For further information, see VTR Credit Facilities below.

The Cabletica Credit Facilities comprise certain Costa Rican colón (CRC) and U.S. dollar term loans and a U.S. dollar revolving credit facility. For
further information, see Cabletica Credit Facilities below.

Represents amounts owed pursuant to interest-bearing vendor financing arrangements that are used to finance certain of our operating expenses and
property and equipment additions. These obligations are generally due within one year and include VAT that was paid on our behalf by the vendor.
Our operating expenses include $108 million, $130 million and $172 million for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018, respectively,
that were financed by an intermediary and are reflected on the borrowing date as a hypothetical cash outflow within net cash provided by operating
activities and a hypothetical cash inflow within net cash provided by financing activities in our consolidated statements of cash flows. Repayments
of vendor financing obligations are included in payments of principal amounts of debt and finance lease obligations in our consolidated statements
of cash flows.

General Information

At December 31, 2020, except for our Convertible Notes (as defined and described below), all of our outstanding debt had been incurred by one of our

four primary “borrowing groups”: C&W, VTR, Liberty Puerto Rico and Cabletica.

Credit Facilities. Each of our borrowing groups has entered into one or more credit facility agreements with certain financial institutions. Each of these

credit facilities contain certain covenants, the more notable of which are as follows:

• Our credit facilities contain certain net leverage ratios, as specified in the relevant credit facility, which are required to be complied with on an

incurrence and/or maintenance basis;

• Our credit facilities contain certain restrictions which, among other things, restrict the ability of the entities of the relevant borrowing group to (i)
incur or guarantee certain financial indebtedness, (ii) make certain disposals and acquisitions, (iii) create certain security interests over their assets,
in each case, subject to certain customary and agreed exceptions, and (iv) make certain restricted payments to their direct and/or indirect parent
companies through dividends, loans or other distributions, subject to compliance with applicable covenants;

• Our  credit  facilities  require  that  certain  entities  of  the  relevant  borrowing  group  guarantee  the  payment  of  all  sums  payable  under  the  relevant
credit  facility  and  such  entities  are  required  to  have  first-ranking  security  granted  over  their  shares  and,  in  certain  borrowing  groups,  over
substantially all of their assets to secure the payment of all sums payable thereunder;

•

In addition to certain mandatory prepayment events, the instructing group of lenders under the relevant credit facility may cancel the commitments
thereunder and declare the loans thereunder due and payable after the applicable notice period following the occurrence of a change of control (as
specified in the relevant credit facility);

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

• Our  credit  facilities  contain  certain  customary  events  of  default,  the  occurrence  of  which,  subject  to  certain  exceptions  and  materiality
qualifications, would allow the instructing group of lenders to (i) cancel the total commitments, (ii) accelerate all outstanding loans and terminate
their commitments thereunder and/or (iii) declare that all or part of the loans be payable on demand;

• Our credit facilities require entities of the relevant borrowing group to observe certain affirmative and negative undertakings and covenants, which

are subject to certain materiality qualifications and other customary and agreed exceptions; and

•

In  addition  to  customary  default  provisions,  our  credit  facilities  generally  include  certain  cross-default  and  cross-acceleration  provisions  with
respect to other indebtedness of entities of the relevant borrowing group, subject to agreed minimum thresholds and other customary and agreed
exceptions.

Senior  and  Senior  Secured  Notes.  Our  C&W,  VTR  and  Liberty  Puerto  Rico  borrowing  groups  have  issued  senior  and/or  senior  secured  notes.  In
general, our senior and senior secured notes (i) are senior obligations of each respective issuer within the relevant borrowing group that rank equally with
all of the existing and future debt of such issuer and, in the case of our senior secured notes, are senior to all existing and future subordinated debt of each
respective issuer within the relevant borrowing group, (ii) contain, in most instances, guarantees from other entities of the relevant borrowing group (as
specified in the applicable indenture) and (iii) are secured by pledges over the shares of certain entities of the relevant borrowing group and, in certain
instances,  over  substantially  all  of  the  assets  of  those  entities.  In  addition,  the  indentures  governing  our  senior  and  senior  secured  notes  contain  certain
covenants, the more notable of which are as follows:

• Our notes contain certain customary incurrence-based covenants. In addition, our notes provide that any failure to pay principal prior to expiration
of  any  applicable  grace  period,  or  any  acceleration  with  respect  to  other  indebtedness  of  the  issuer  or  certain  other  members  of  the  relevant
borrowing group, over agreed minimum thresholds (as specified under the applicable indenture), is an event of default under the respective notes;

• Our notes contain certain restrictions that, among other things, restrict the ability of the entities of the relevant borrowing group to (i) incur or
guarantee certain financial indebtedness, (ii) make certain disposals and acquisitions, (iii) create certain security interests over their assets, in each
case, subject to certain customary and agreed exceptions and (iv) make certain restricted payments to its direct and/or indirect parent companies
through dividends, loans or other distributions, subject to compliance with applicable covenants; and

•

If the relevant issuer or certain of its subsidiaries (as specified in the applicable indenture) sell certain assets, such issuer must offer to repurchase
the applicable notes at par, or if a change of control (as specified in the applicable indenture) occurs, such issuer must offer to repurchase all of the
relevant notes at a redemption price of 101%.

Liberty Latin America – Convertible Notes

In  June  2019,  Liberty  Latin  America  issued  $403  million  principal  amount  of  2.0%  convertible  senior  notes  (the  Convertible Notes)  due  July  15,
2024. Interest on the Convertible Notes is payable semi-annually on January 15 and July 15. The Convertible Notes are general unsecured obligations of
the Company and are structurally subordinated to all the debt and other liabilities of our subsidiaries.

Conversion  Rights.  Subject  to  certain  conditions,  and  adjustments  if  certain  events  occur  (as  specified  in  the  indenture  governing  the  Convertible
Notes), including the Rights Offering (as discussed further below), as of December 31, 2020, the Convertible Notes may be converted at a conversion rate
equal to 48.4315 Class C common shares per $1,000 principal amount of the Convertible Notes (equivalent to a conversion price of approximately $20.65
per Class C common share), the “Conversion Option”. Any conversions of the Convertible Notes may be settled, at the election of the Company, in cash,
Class C common shares or a combination thereof.

In  September  2020,  we  completed  a  Rights  Offering,  as  defined  and  further  described  in  note  19,  whereby  we  issued  49,049,073  of  our  Class  C
common shares. In connection with the Rights Offering, subject to certain anti-dilution provisions in the indenture governing the Convertible Notes, the
conversion rate for the Convertible Notes was adjusted from 44.9767 to 48.4315 Class C common shares per $1,000 principal amount of the Convertible
Notes.

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

The Convertible Notes may be converted at the option of the holders at any time prior to the close of business on January 12, 2024, only under the

following circumstances:

• during any calendar quarter (and only during such calendar quarter), if the last reported sale price of our Class C common shares for at least 20
trading  days  (whether  or  not  consecutive)  during  the  period  of  30  consecutive  trading  days  ending  on  and  including  the  last  trading  day  of  the
immediately  preceding  calendar  quarter  is  greater  than  or  equal  to  130%  of  the  applicable  conversion  price  of  the  Convertible  Notes  on  each
applicable trading day;

• during the five consecutive business day period immediately after any five consecutive trading day period (the “measurement period”), in which the
trading  price  per  $1,000  principal  amount  of  the  Convertible  Notes  for  each  trading  day  of  that  measurement  period  was  less  than  98%  of  the
product of the last reported sale price of our Class C common shares and the conversion rate on each such trading day;

•

if we give notice of redemption, as described below; or

• upon the occurrence of specified corporate transactions.

On and after January 15, 2024 until the close of business on the second scheduled trading day immediately preceding the maturity date, holders of the

Convertible Notes may convert their notes at any time, regardless of the foregoing circumstances.

We  determined  the  Conversion  Option  should  be  bifurcated  from  the  debt  host  instrument  (the  Convertible  Notes)  and  accounted  for  as  a  separate
financial  instrument  that  qualifies  for  equity  classification.  Accordingly,  we  bifurcated  the  Conversion  Option  from  the  Convertible  Notes  and  initially
recorded the estimated fair value of $78 million as additional paid-in capital and debt discount. The debt discount will be accreted through interest expense,
using the effective interest method, through maturity of the Convertible Notes or when the Conversion Option no longer qualifies for equity classification,
if ever. At December 31, 2020, the carrying value of the Convertible Notes was $342 million and the unamortized debt discount on the Convertible Notes
was $58 million.

Redemption Rights. Other than a redemption for a change in certain tax laws, we may not redeem the Convertible Notes prior to July 19, 2022. On or
after July 19, 2022 but prior to the 85  scheduled trading day immediately preceding July 15, 2024, we may redeem all or a portion of the notes for cash, if
the last reported sale price of our Class C common shares has been at least 130% of the conversion price then in effect on (i) each of at least 20 trading days
(whether or not consecutive) during the 30 consecutive trading day period ending on, and including, the trading day immediately preceding the date on
which we provide notice of redemption and (ii) the trading day immediately preceding the date we provide such notice.

th

Other. If a fundamental change (as defined in the indenture) occurs, holders of the Convertible Notes may require the Company to repurchase all or a
portion of their notes for cash at a price equal to 100% of the principal amount of the notes to be repurchased, plus any accrued and unpaid interest to, but
excluding,  the  fundamental  change  repurchase  date.  In  addition,  following  certain  corporate  transactions  that  occur  prior  to  the  maturity  date  of  the
Convertible Notes or the delivery of a notice of redemption, we will increase the applicable conversion rate for a holder who elects to convert in connection
with such corporate transactions or notice of redemption in certain circumstances by a number of additional Class C common shares, as described in the
related indenture.

We used the net proceeds from the issuance of the Convertible Notes to (i) fund the cost of the Capped Calls, as defined and further described in note

19, and (ii) for other general corporate purposes, including funding a portion of the AT&T Acquisition.

II-102

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

C&W Notes

The details of the outstanding C&W Notes as of December 31, 2020 are summarized in the following table:

C&W Notes

Senior Secured Notes:

Maturity

Interest
rate

Borrowing
currency

U.S. $
equivalent
in millions

Carrying
value (a)

Outstanding
principal amount

2027 C&W Senior Secured Notes

September 7, 2027

5.750 % $

550.0  $

550.0  $

548.8 

Senior Notes:

2026 C&W Senior Notes
2027 C&W Senior Notes

Total

October 15, 2026
September 15, 2027

7.500 % $
6.875 % $

500.0 
1,220.0 

500.0 
1,220.0 
2,270.0  $

494.8 
1,217.1 
2,260.7 

$

(a)

Amounts are inclusive or net of original issue premiums, discounts and deferred financing costs, as applicable.

Financing and Refinancing Transactions

C&W Borrowing Group Refinancing Transactions. In January 2020, C&W completed a series of transactions contemplated by and permitted under its
existing debt agreements (the C&W Borrowing Group Refinancing Transactions) that ultimately resulted in the 2026 C&W Senior Notes and the 2027
C&W  Senior  Notes  (previously  issued  by  C&W  Senior  Financing  Designated  Activity  Company)  instead  being  directly  issued  by  a  wholly-owned
subsidiary of C&W, C&W Senior Finance Limited (C&W Senior Finance). In connection with the C&W Borrowing Group Refinancing Transactions, the
loans previously made by C&W Senior Financing Designated Activity Company are  no  longer  outstanding.  The  terms  and  conditions  applicable  to  the
2026 C&W Senior Notes and the 2027 C&W Senior Notes otherwise remain substantively unchanged.

2027 C&W Senior Secured Notes. In April 2019, Sable issued $400 million principal amount of 5.750% senior secured notes, at 99.195% of par, due
September 7, 2027 (the 2027 C&W Senior Secured Notes). Interest on the 2027 C&W Senior Secured Notes is payable semi-annually on January 7 and
July 7.

The net proceeds from the 2027 C&W Senior Secured Notes were primarily used to (i) redeem $150 million of aggregate principal amount under the
2022 C&W Senior Notes, as further described below, according to the redemption terms of the indenture, comprising (a) the 105.156% redemption price
and  (b)  accrued  and  unpaid  interest  on  the  redeemed  notes,  and  (ii)  repay  $235  million  of  aggregate  principal  amount  under  the  C&W  Term  Loan  B-4
Facility. In connection with this transaction, we recognized a net loss on debt modification and extinguishment of $6 million, which primarily includes the
net effect of redemption premiums paid and the write-off of unamortized premiums and discounts.

2027  C&W  Senior  Secured  Notes  Add-on.  In  January  2020,  Sable  issued  an  additional  $150  million  aggregate  principal  amount,  at  106.0%  of  par,
under the existing 2027 C&W Senior Secured Notes indenture (the 2027 C&W Senior Secured Notes Add-on). The terms and conditions of the 2027
C&W Senior Secured Notes Add-on are consistent with the original indenture.

The net proceeds from the C&W Term Loan B-5 Facility (as defined and described below) and the 2027 C&W Senior Secured Notes Add-on were
primarily used to repay in full the $1,640 million outstanding principal amount under the C&W Term Loan B-4 Facility (as defined and described below),
including accrued and unpaid interest. In connection with these transactions, we recognized a loss on debt modification and extinguishment of $3 million,
which primarily includes the write-off of unamortized discounts and deferred financing costs.

2026  C&W  Senior  Notes.  In  October  2018,  the  2026  C&W  Senior  Notes  were  issued.  Interest  on  the  2026  C&W  Senior  Notes  is  payable  semi-

annually on April 15 and October 15.

The  net  proceeds  from  the  2026  C&W  Senior  Notes  were  partially  used  to  (i)  repurchase  £63  million  ($80  million,  at  the  applicable  rate)  of
outstanding principal under the 2019 C&W Senior Notes, as further described below, and (ii) redeem $275 million of outstanding principal under the 2022
C&W Senior Notes. In connection with these transactions, we recognized a net

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Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

loss  on  debt  modification  and  extinguishment  of  $13  million,  which  primarily  includes  the  net  effect  of  redemption  premiums  paid,  the  write-off  of
unamortized premiums, discounts and deferred financing costs and the payment of third-party costs.

2027 C&W Senior Notes Add-on A. In April 2019, an additional $300 million aggregate principal amount was issued, at 99.205% of par, under the

existing 2027 C&W Senior Notes indenture (the 2027 C&W Senior Notes Add-on A).

The net proceeds from the 2027 C&W Senior Notes Add-on A were primarily used to (i) repay in full the $170 million outstanding principal amount
under the C&W Revolving Credit Facility and (ii) redeem $115 million of aggregate principal amount of the 2022 C&W Senior Notes according to the
redemption  terms  of  the  related  indenture,  comprising  (a)  a  105.156%  redemption  price  and  (b)  accrued  and  unpaid  interest  on  the  redeemed  notes.  In
connection  with  this  transaction,  we  recognized  a  net  loss  on  debt  modification  and  extinguishment  of  $4  million,  which  includes  the  net  effect  of
redemption premiums paid and the write-off of unamortized premiums.

2027 C&W Senior Notes Add-on B. In July 2019, an additional $220 million aggregate principal amount was issued, at 103.625% of par, under the

existing 2027 C&W Senior Notes indenture (the 2027 C&W Senior Notes Add-on B).

The net proceeds from the 2027 C&W Senior Notes Add-on B were primarily used to redeem the remaining aggregate principal amount of the 2022
C&W  Senior  Notes  of  $210  million  according  to  the  redemption  terms  of  the  related  indenture,  comprising  (a)  a  103.438%  redemption  price  and  (b)
accrued and unpaid interest on the redeemed notes. In connection with this transaction, we recognized a net loss on debt modification and extinguishment
of $4 million, which primarily includes the net effect of redemption premiums paid and the write-off of unamortized premiums.

Redemption Rights. Subject to the circumstances described below:

•

The  2026  C&W  Senior  Notes,  2027  C&W  Senior  Notes  and  2027  C&W  Senior  Secured  Notes  are  non-callable  until  October  15,  2021,
September 15, 2022 and September 7, 2022, respectively.

• At any time prior to (i) October 15, 2021 in the case of the 2026 C&W Senior Notes, (ii) September 15, 2022 in the case of the 2027 C&W Senior
Notes  and  (iii)  September  7,  2022  in  the  case  of  the  2027  C&W  Senior  Secured  Notes,  Sable  and  C&W  Senior  Finance  (as  applicable)  may
redeem some or all of the applicable notes by paying a price equal to 100% of the principal amount of the applicable notes redeemed plus accrued
and  unpaid  interest  and  a  “make-whole”  premium,  which  is  generally  the  present  value  of  all  remaining  scheduled  interest  payments  to
October  15,  2021,  September  15,  2022  or  September  7,  2022  (as  applicable)  using  the  discount  rate  (as  specified  in  the  indenture)  as  of  the
redemption date plus 50 basis points.

• At any time prior to (i) October 15, 2021 in the case of the 2026 C&W Senior Notes, (ii) September 15, 2022 in the case of the 2027 C&W Senior
Notes and (iii) September 7, 2022 in the case of the 2027 C&W Senior Secured Notes, subject to certain restrictions (as specified in the applicable
indenture), up to 40% of each of the 2026 C&W Senior Notes, 2027 C&W Senior Notes and 2027 C&W Senior Secured Notes may be redeemed
with the net proceeds of one or more specified equity offerings at a redemption price equal to 107.500%, 106.875% and 105.750%, respectively,
of the principal amount redeemed, plus accrued and unpaid interest and additional amounts (as specified in the applicable indenture), if any, to the
applicable redemption date.

•

Prior to September 7, 2022, during each 12-month period commencing on April 5, 2019, up to 10% of the principal amount of the 2027 C&W
Senior Secured Notes may be redeemed at a redemption price equal to 103% of the principal amount redeemed plus accrued and unpaid interest to
the redemption date.

II-104

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Sable and C&W Senior Finance (as applicable) may redeem some or all of the 2026 C&W Senior Notes, 2027 C&W Senior Notes and 2027 C&W
Senior Secured Notes, respectively, at the following redemption prices (expressed as a percentage of the principal amount) plus accrued and unpaid interest
and additional amounts (as specified in the indenture), if any, to the applicable redemption date, as set forth below:

12-month period commencing:

October 15

September 15

September 7

2026 C&W Senior Notes

2027 C&W Senior Notes

2027 C&W Senior
Secured Notes

Redemption Price

2021
2022
2023
2024
2025 and thereafter

103.750%
101.875%
100.000%
100.000%
100.000%

N.A.
103.438%
101.719%
100.859%
100.000%

N.A.
102.875%
101.438%
100.000%
100.000%

2022 C&W Senior Notes. In November 2018, C&W completed the redemption of $275 million of aggregate principal amount of the 6.875% secured
notes due August 1, 2022 (the 2022 C&W Senior Notes)  for  total  consideration  of  $294  million,  including  (i)  the  105.156%  redemption  price  and  (ii)
accrued and unpaid interest on the redeemed notes. In connection with this transaction, we recognized a net loss on debt modification and extinguishment
of $11 million, which primarily includes the net effect of redemption premiums paid and the write-off of unamortized premiums.

2019 C&W Senior Notes. In October 2018, C&W launched a tender offer to repurchase, for cash, any and all of its outstanding 2019 C&W Senior
Notes (the Tender Offer). The price of the Tender Offer was 103% of the principal amount of the bonds tendered, plus accrued and unpaid interest up to,
but not including, the payment date. Pursuant to the Tender Offer, which was completed on October 31, 2018, we paid total consideration of £68 million
($87 million at the transaction date), including accrued interest of £3 million ($4 million at the transaction date), for 43.0% of the outstanding 2019 C&W
Senior Notes and cancelled the 2019 C&W Senior Notes that were tendered.

In March 2019, C&W repaid in full the outstanding principal amount under the 2019 C&W Senior Notes for total consideration of £91 million ($120

million at the transaction date), including accrued interest of £7 million ($9 million at the transaction date).

C&W Credit Facilities

The C&W Credit Facilities are the senior secured credit facilities of certain subsidiaries of C&W. The details of our borrowings under the C&W Credit

Facilities as of December 31, 2020 are summarized in the following table:

C&W Credit Facilities

Maturity

Interest rate

Unused borrowing capacity
Borrowing
currency

US $
equivalent

Outstanding principal amount

Borrowing
currency
in millions

US $
equivalent

Carrying
value (a)

C&W Revolving Credit
Facility (b)
C&W Term Loan B-5 Facility

C&W Regional Facilities (d)

Total

January 30, 2026
January 31, 2028
various dates ranging
from 2021 to 2038

LIBOR (c) + 3.25% $
$

LIBOR + 2.25%

625.0  $
— 

625.0  $
—  $

—  $

—  $

1,510.0 

1,510.0 

4.60% (e)

(f)

144.7 
769.7 

$

(g)

346.2 
1,856.2  $

$

— 
1,492.2 

345.1 
1,837.3 

(a)

Amounts are net of discounts and deferred financing costs, as applicable.

II-105

 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

(b)

(c)

(d)

(e)

(f)

(g)

Includes $50 million that matures on June 30, 2023. The C&W Revolving Credit Facility has a fee on unused commitments of 0.5% per year.

London Interbank Offered Rate.

Primarily  represents  credit  facilities  at  CWP,  C&W  Jamaica  and  Columbus  Communications  Trinidad  Limited  (collectively,  the  C&W Regional
Facilities).

Represents a weighted average rate for all C&W Regional Facilities.

The unused borrowing capacity on the C&W Regional Facilities comprise certain U.S. dollar and Trinidad & Tobago dollar denominated revolving
credit facilities.

The outstanding principal amount on the C&W Regional Facilities comprise certain U.S. dollar, JMD and East Caribbean dollar denominated credit
facilities.

Financing and Refinancing Transactions

C&W Term Loan B-5 Facility. In January 2020, Coral-US Co-Borrower LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of C&W, entered into a LIBOR plus 2.25%
$1,510 million principal amount term loan facility (the C&W Term Loan B-5 Facility), issued at par, due January 31, 2028. Interest is payable monthly
beginning on February 28, 2020. As further described above, the net proceeds from the C&W Term Loan B-5 Facility and the 2027 C&W Senior Secured
Notes Add-on were primarily used to repay in full the $1,640 million outstanding principal amount under the C&W Term Loan B-4 Facility, including
accrued and unpaid interest.

C&W Term Loan B-4 Facility. In February 2018, C&W entered into a $1,875 million principal amount term loan facility (the C&W Term Loan B-4
Facility). The net proceeds of the C&W Term Loan B-4 Facility were used to repay in full the $1,825 million then outstanding principal amount of the
C&W  Term  Loan  B-3  Facility  and  repay  $40  million  drawn  under  the  C&W  Revolving  Credit  Facility.  The  exchange  in  principal  amounts  of  $1,825
million was treated as a non-cash transaction in our consolidated statement of cash flows. In connection with this transaction, we recognized a loss on debt
modification and extinguishment of $13 million, which includes the write-off of unamortized discounts and deferred financing costs.

C&W Revolving Credit Facility. In January 2020, the maturity date associated with $575 million of the existing $625 million C&W Revolving Credit

Facility was extended to January 30, 2026. All other terms and conditions of the revolving credit facility remain unchanged.

In March 2020, we borrowed $313 million under the C&W Revolving Credit Facility. This drawdown was fully repaid in 2020.

In connection with the UTS Acquisition during the first quarter of 2019, C&W borrowed $170 million under the C&W Revolving Credit Facility. The

outstanding principal amount of the C&W Revolving Credit Facility, including accrued interest, was repaid in full in 2019.

In March 2018, we amended and restated the credit agreement originally dated May 16, 2016, as amended and restated as of May 26, 2017, providing

for the additional C&W Term Loan B-4 Facility and a $625 million revolving credit facility.

C&W  Regional  Facilities.  In  January  2018,  CWP  entered  into  a  $100  million  principal  amount  term  loan  facility  that  bears  interest  at  4.35%  per
annum, payable on a quarterly basis, and matures in January 2023. The proceeds from the term loan were primarily used to repay existing CWP debt. In
June  2020,  CWP  refinanced  this  term  loan  facility  to  extend  the  maturity  to  March  17,  2025.  All  other  terms  and  conditions  of  this  facility  remain
unchanged.

II-106

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

VTR Notes

The details of our outstanding VTR Notes as of December 31, 2020 are summarized in the following table:

2028 VTR Senior Secured Notes
2028 VTR Senior Notes

(a)

Amounts are net of deferred financing costs.

Financing and Refinancing Transactions

Maturity

Interest Rate

Outstanding principal
amount

Carrying value
(a)

January 15, 2028
July 15, 2028

5.125 % $
6.375 %

$

in millions

600.0  $
550.0 
1,150.0  $

596.6 
533.7 
1,130.3 

2028  VTR  Senior  Secured  Notes.  In  July  2020,  VTR  Comunicaciones  SpA,  a  wholly-owned  subsidiary  of  VTR,  issued  $600  million  aggregate
principal amount, at par, of 5.125% senior secured notes (the 2028 VTR Senior Secured Notes) due January 15, 2028. Interest on the 2028 VTR Senior
Secured Notes is payable semi-annually on January 15 and July 15, commencing on January 15, 2021.

The  net  proceeds  of  $1,133  million  from  the  2028  VTR  Senior  Secured  Notes  and  the  2028  VTR  Senior  Notes  (as  defined  and  described  further
below), together with $187 million of proceeds from the unwinding of certain derivative instruments, were used to redeem $1,260 million of outstanding
principal amount under the then outstanding VTR Finance Senior Notes (as defined and discussed further below), including accrued and unpaid interest
and a $29 million redemption premium. In connection with these transactions, (i) $550 million was treated as a non-cash transaction in our consolidated
statement of cash flows and (ii) we recognized a loss on debt modification and extinguishment of $42 million, which primarily includes the payment of the
aforementioned redemption premium and the write-off of unamortized deferred financing costs.

Redemption Rights. The 2028 VTR Senior Secured Notes may be redeemed, in whole or in part, at any time prior to July 15, 2023 at a price equal to
100%  of  the  principal  amount  of  the  notes  redeemed,  plus  accrued  and  unpaid  interest  to  (but  excluding)  the  redemption  date,  and  a  “make  whole”
premium, as described in the 2028 VTR Senior Secured Notes indenture. The 2028 VTR Senior Secured Notes may be redeemed, in whole or in part, at
any time on or after July 15, 2023 at the following redemption prices (expressed as a percentage of the principal amount), plus accrued and unpaid interest
and additional amounts, if any, to the applicable redemption date, as set forth below:

12-month period commencing July 15:

2023
2024
2025 and thereafter

Redemption Price

102.563%
101.281%
100.000%

In addition, at any time prior to July 15, 2023, subject to certain conditions specified in the 2028 VTR Senior Secured Notes indenture, we may redeem
up to 40% of the aggregate principal amount of the 2028 VTR Senior Secured Notes with the net proceeds of one or more specified equity offerings at a
redemption price equal to 105.125% of the principal amount of the notes redeemed, plus accrued and unpaid interest and additional amounts, if any, to the
applicable  redemption  date.  Prior  to  July  15,  2023,  during  each  12-month  period  commencing  on  the  July  1,  2020,  we  may  redeem  up  to  10%  of  the
aggregate principal amount of the 2028 VTR Senior Secured Notes at a redemption price equal to 103% of the principal amount of the notes redeemed,
plus accrued and unpaid interest to (but excluding) the redemption date.

The 2028 VTR Senior Secured Notes are guaranteed by VTR.com SpA (VTR.com), a wholly-owned subsidiary of VTR, and are the senior obligations
of VTR Comunicaciones SpA and VTR.com. The 2028 VTR Senior Secured Notes are secured by first-ranking pledges over (i) all of the capital stock of
the VTR Comunicaciones SpA and VTR.com and (ii) certain subordinated shareholder loans.

II-107

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

2028 VTR Senior Notes. In July 2020, VTR Finance N.V. issued $550 million aggregate principal amount, at par, of 6.375% senior notes (the 2028
VTR  Senior  Notes)  due  July  15,  2028.  Interest  on  the  2028  VTR  Senior  Notes  is  payable  semi-annually  on  January  15  and  July  15,  commencing  on
January 15, 2021.

Redemption Rights. The 2028 VTR Senior Notes may be redeemed, in whole or in part, at any time prior to July 15, 2023 at a price equal to 100% of
the principal amount of the notes redeemed, plus accrued and unpaid interest to (but excluding) the redemption date, and a “make whole” premium, as
described in the 2028 VTR Senior Notes indenture. The 2028 VTR Senior Notes may be redeemed, in whole or in part, at any time on or after July 15,
2023 at the following redemption prices (expressed as a percentage of the principal amount), plus accrued and unpaid interest and additional amounts, if
any, to the applicable redemption date, as set forth below:

12-month period commencing July 15:

2023
2024
2025 and thereafter

Redemption Price

103.188%
101.594%
100.000%

In addition, at any time prior to July 15, 2023, subject to certain conditions specified in the 2028 VTR Senior Notes indenture, we may redeem up to
40% of the aggregate principal amount of the 2028 VTR Senior Notes with the net proceeds of one or more specified equity offerings at a redemption price
equal  to  106.375%  of  the  principal  amount  of  the  notes  redeemed,  plus  accrued  and  unpaid  interest  and  additional  amounts,  if  any,  to  the  applicable
redemption date.

The 2028 VTR Senior Notes are the senior obligations of VTR and are secured by a pledge over all the shares of VTR.

VTR Finance Senior Notes. In January 2014, VTR issued $1.4 billion principal amount of senior notes (the VTR Finance Senior Notes), due January

15, 2024.

In October 2018, VTR redeemed $140 million of aggregate principal amount of the VTR Finance Senior Notes for total consideration of $147 million,
including (i) the 103% redemption price and (ii) accrued and unpaid interest on the redeemed notes. In connection with this transaction, VTR recognized a
loss  on  debt  modification  and  extinguishment  of  $6  million,  which  includes  the  net  effect  of  redemption  premiums  paid  and  the  write-off  of  deferred
financing costs.

In July 2020, as further described above, VTR redeemed the remaining $1,260 million principal amount of the VTR Finance Senior Notes.

VTR Credit Facilities

In May 2018, VTR.com entered into (i) the VTR TLB-1 Facility and the VTR TLB-2 Facility (collectively, the VTR Term Loan Facilities) and (ii)
new U.S. dollar and CLP revolving credit facilities (collectively, the VTR Revolving Credit Facilities and together with the VTR Term Loan Facilities,
the VTR Credit Facilities). Upon closing of the VTR Credit Facilities, the previously existing credit facility at VTR.com was cancelled.

II-108

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

The details of our borrowings under the VTR Credit Facilities as of December 31, 2020 are summarized in the following table:

VTR Credit Facilities

Maturity

Interest rate

Borrowing currency

US $
equivalent

Unused borrowing
capacity

Outstanding principal amount
US $
equivalent

Borrowing currency

Carrying
value (a)

in millions

VTR TLB-1 Facility
VTR TLB-2 Facility
VTR RCF–A (d)
VTR RCF–B (f)

Total

(b)
May 23, 2023
May 23, 2023
June 15, 2026

ICP (c) + 3.80%
7.00%
TAB (e) + 3.35%
LIBOR + 2.75%

CLP
CLP
CLP

$

—  $
— 
45,000.0 
200.0 

$

— 
— 
63.2 
200.0 
263.2 

CLP
CLP
CLP

$

140,900.0  $
33,100.0 
— 
— 

$

198.0  $
46.5 
— 
— 
244.5  $

195.5 
45.9 
— 
— 
241.4 

(a)    Amounts are net of deferred financing costs.

(b)        Under  the  terms  of  the  credit  agreement,  VTR.com  is  obligated  to  repay  50%  of  the  outstanding  aggregate  principal  amount  of  the  VTR  TLB-1
Facility  on  November  23,  2022,  with  the  remaining  principal  amount  due  on  May  23,  2023,  which  represents  the  ultimate  maturity  date  of  the
facility.

(c)    Índice de Cámara Promedio rate.

(d)    The VTR RCF – A has a fee on unused commitments of 1.34% per year.

(e)    Tasa Activa Bancaria rate.

(f)    Includes a $1 million credit facility that matures on May 23, 2023. The VTR RCF – B has a fee on unused commitments of 1.10% per year.

Financing and Refinancing Transactions

VTR RCF – A. In March 2019, the commitment under the VTR RCF – A was increased to CLP 45 billion ($63 million).

VTR  RCF  –  B.  In  March  2020,  we  borrowed  $92  million  under  the  VTR  RCF  –  B.  In  June  2020,  (i)  the  drawdown  was  fully  repaid  and  (ii)  the

commitment under the VTR RCF – B was increased to $200 million and the term was extended to June 15, 2026.

LPR Senior Secured Notes

In  October  2019,  LCPR  Senior  Secured  Financing  Designated  Activity  Company  (LCPR Senior Secured Financing) issued $1.2 billion principal
amount, at par, of 6.75% senior secured notes, due October 15, 2027 (the 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes). Interest is payable semi-annually on April 15
and October 15. LCPR Senior Secured Financing is a special purpose financing entity, created for the primary purpose of facilitating the issuance of certain
debt offerings. Liberty Mobile is required to consolidate LCPR Senior Secured Financing as a result of certain variable interests in LCPR Senior Secured
Financing, of which Liberty Mobile is considered the primary beneficiary.

Subject to the circumstances described below:

•

The 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes are non-callable until October 15, 2022.

• At any time prior to October 15, 2022, LCPR Senior Secured Financing may redeem some or all of the 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes by paying
a price equal to 100% of the principal amount of the 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes redeemed plus accrued and unpaid interest and a “make-
whole” premium, which is generally the present value of all

II-109

 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

remaining scheduled interest payments to October 15, 2022 using the discount rate (as specified in the indenture) as of the redemption date plus 50
basis points.

• At any time prior to October 15, 2022, subject to certain restrictions (as specified in the indenture), up to 40% of the 2027 LPR Senior Secured
Notes may be redeemed with the net proceeds of one or more specified equity offerings at a redemption price equal to 106.750% of the principal
amount redeemed, plus accrued and unpaid interest and additional amounts (as specified in the indenture), if any, to the redemption date.

•

Prior to October 15, 2022, during each 12-month period commencing on October 9, 2019, up to 10% of the principal amount of the 2027 LPR
Senior Secured Notes may be redeemed at a redemption price equal to 103% of the principal amount redeemed, plus accrued and unpaid interest
and additional amounts (as specified in the indenture), if any, to the redemption date.

On  and  after  October  15,  2022,  LCPR  Senior  Secured  Financing  may  redeem  some  or  all  of  the  2027  LPR  Senior  Secured  Notes  at  the  following
redemption prices (expressed as a percentage of principal amount) plus accrued and unpaid interest and additional amounts (as specified in the indenture),
if any, to the applicable redemption date:

12-month period commencing October 15:

2022
2023
2024 and thereafter

Redemption Price

103.375%
101.688%
100.000%

The net proceeds from the 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes, the 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes Add-on (as defined and described below) and the
SPV  Escrowed  Proceeds  (as  defined  and  described  below)  were  deposited  into  escrow  (collectively,  the  “AT&T  Acquisition  Restricted  Cash”),
subsequently released upon consummation of the AT&T Acquisition and used to fund one or more loans to a wholly-owned subsidiary of Liberty Puerto
Rico. The payment of all obligations under such loans are guaranteed by LCPR and certain of its affiliates and their respective significant subsidiaries, and
all the issued capital stock or share capital of LCPR and each guarantor, and substantially all assets of LCPR and each guarantor is pledged to secure the
payment of such obligations. Such loans and a capital contribution from Liberty Latin America were used to finance the AT&T Acquisition and to pay
related fees and expenses. At December 31, 2019, the AT&T Acquisition Restricted Cash was included in restricted cash in our consolidated balance sheet.

At December 31, 2020, the carrying value of the 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes was $1,265 million.

Financing Transactions

2027  LPR  Senior  Secured  Notes  Add-on.  In  May  2020,  LCPR  Senior  Secured  Financing  Designated  Activity  Company  (LCPR  Senior  Secured
Financing) issued an additional $90 million aggregate principal amount, at 102.5% of par, under the existing 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes indenture
(the 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes Add-on). The terms and conditions of the 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes Add-on are consistent with the original
indenture.

As further described above, the net proceeds from the 2027 LPR Senior Secured Notes Add-on were deposited into escrow and subsequently released

upon consummation of the AT&T Acquisition.

II-110

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

LPR Credit Facilities

The LPR Credit Facilities are the senior secured credit facilities of Liberty Puerto Rico. The details of our borrowings under the LPR Credit Facilities

as of December 31, 2020 are summarized in the following table:

LPR Credit Facilities

Maturity

Interest rate

LPR Revolving Credit Facility (b)
2026 SPV Credit Facility

October 15, 2025
October 15, 2026

LIBOR + 3.50%
LIBOR + 5.0%

$
$

Total

(a)

(b)

Amounts are net of discounts and deferred financing costs.

The LPR Revolving Credit Facility has a fee on unused commitments of 0.5% per year.

Facility
amount
(in borrowing
currency)

Unused
borrowing
capacity

Outstanding
principal
amount

Carrying
value (a)

in millions

125.0  $
— 
125.0  $

125.0  $

1,000.0 

$

—  $

1,000.0 
1,000.0  $

— 
985.5 
985.5 

Financing Transactions

2026  SPV  Credit  Facility.  In  October  2019,  LCPR  Loan  Financing  LLC  (LCPR  Loan  Financing)  entered  into  a  LIBOR  plus  5.0%  $1.0  billion
principal amount term loan facility, issued at 99.0% of par, due October 15, 2026 (the 2026 SPV Credit Facility). Interest on the 2026 SPV Credit Facility
is currently payable monthly. LCPR Loan Financing is a special purpose financing entity, created for the primary purpose of facilitating the issuance of
certain term loan debt. LCPR is required to consolidate LCPR Loan Financing as a result of certain variable interests in LCPR Loan Financing, for which
LCPR is considered the primary beneficiary.

LCPR Loan Financing used the proceeds from the 2026 SPV Credit Facility to (i) fund a new $947 million term loan (the LPR Financing Loan) to
LCPR and (ii) deposit $53 million into escrow (the SPV Escrowed Proceeds), which was ultimately used to fund a portion of the AT&T Acquisition. The
terms and conditions, including maturity and applicable interest rate, for the LPR Financing Loan are the same as those for the 2026 SPV Credit Facility.
LCPR Loan Financing’s obligations under the 2026 SPV Credit Facility are secured by interests over various assets, as further described in the 2026 SPV
Credit Facility agreement.

The net proceeds from the LPR Financing Loan were used to redeem, in full, the $923 million then outstanding principal amount of the LPR Bank
Facility. This borrowing and repayment activity was treated as a non-cash transaction in our consolidated statement of cash flows. In connection with this
transaction,  we  recognized  a  loss  on  debt  modification  and  extinguishment  of  $7  million,  which  includes  the  write-off  of  unamortized  discounts  and
deferred financing costs.

LPR Revolving Credit Facility. In October 2019, LCPR entered into a LIBOR plus 3.5%, 6-year senior secured credit facility agreement providing for
$125 million of revolving commitments (the LPR Revolving Credit Facility). Upon closing of the LPR Revolving Credit Facility, the previously existing
revolving credit facility at LCPR was cancelled.

In March 2020, we borrowed $63 million under the LPR Revolving Credit Facility. This drawdown was fully repaid in 2020.

II-111

 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Cabletica Credit Facilities

In  October  2018,  in  connection  with  the  completion  of  the  Cabletica  Acquisition,  Cabletica  entered  into  certain  senior  secured  credit  facilities  (the

Cabletica Credit Facilities).

The details of our borrowings under the Cabletica Credit Facilities as of December 31, 2020 are summarized in the following table:

Cabletica Credit

Facilities

Maturity

Interest rate

Unused borrowing capacity
U.S. $
Borrowing
equivalent
currency

Outstanding principal

Borrowing
currency

in millions

U.S. $
equivalent

Carrying
value (a)

Cabletica Term Loan B-1

Facility

Cabletica Term Loan B-2

Facility

Cabletica Revolving
Credit Facility (e)

(b)

(b)

LIBOR + 5.50% (c)

$

—  $

TBP (d) + 6.75%

CRC

— 

August 1, 2024

LIBOR + 4.25%

$

15.0 

$

— 

— 

15.0 
15.0 

$

49.2  $

49.2  $

CRC

43,177.4 

70.4 

$

— 

— 
119.6  $

$

44.4 

68.7 

— 
113.1 

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

(e)

Amounts are net of deferred financing costs.

Under the terms of the credit agreement, Cabletica is obligated to repay 50% of the outstanding aggregate principal amounts of the Cabletica Term
Loan B-1 Facility and the Cabletica Term Loan B-2 Facility on February 1, 2024, with the remaining respective principal amounts due on August 1,
2024, which represents the ultimate maturity date of each facility.

Subject to a LIBOR floor of 75 basis points.

Tasa Básica Pasiva rate.

The Cabletica Revolving Credit Facility has a fee on unused commitments of 1.70% per year.

Financing and Refinancing Transactions

In November 2020, we amended and restated the Cabletica Credit Facilities credit agreement, which included (i) an upsize of the Cabletica Term Loan
B-1  Facility  by  $228  million,  (ii)  an  upsize  of  the  Cabletica  Term  Loan  B-2  Facility  by  $59  million,  which  is  expected  to  be  converted  to  the  CRC
denominated facility upon close of the Telefónica-Costa Rica Acquisition, and (iii) replacing the existing Cabletica Revolving Credit Facility with a new
$15 million revolving credit facility. The upsize commitments under the Cabletica Term Loan B-1 Facility and Cabletica Term Loan B-2 Facility remain
undrawn  at  December  31,  2020  and  are  contingent  upon  closing  of  the  Telefónica-Costa  Rica  Acquisition.  These  undrawn  amounts  are  also  subject  to
ticking fees, currently estimated to be approximately 2% per year through the closing date of the Telefónica-Costa Rica Acquisition.

II-112

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Maturities of Debt

Maturities  of  our  debt  as  of  December  31,  2020  are  presented  below.  Amounts  presented  below  represent  U.S.  dollar  equivalents  based  on

December 31, 2020 exchange rates.

C&W

VTR

Liberty Puerto
Rico

Cabletica

Liberty Latin
America (a)

Consolidated

Years ending December 31:

2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
Thereafter
Total debt maturities

Premiums, discounts and deferred

financing costs, net

Total debt

Current portion

Noncurrent portion

$

$

$

$

59.9  $
17.6 
124.3 
62.2 
146.0 
3,782.3 
4,192.3 

(28.2)
4,164.1  $

59.9  $

99.6  $
99.0 
145.5 
— 
— 
1,150.0 
1,494.1 

(22.8)
1,471.3  $

99.6  $

in millions

—  $
— 
— 
— 
— 
2,290.0 
2,290.0 

(39.1)
2,250.9  $

—  $

4,104.2  $

1,371.7  $

2,250.9  $

—  $
— 
— 
119.6 
— 
— 
119.6 

(6.5)
113.1  $

—  $

113.1  $

0.5  $
0.6 
0.8 
403.0 
— 
— 
404.9 

(60.5)
344.4  $

0.5  $

343.9  $

160.0 
117.2 
270.6 
584.8 
146.0 
7,222.3 
8,500.9 

(157.1)
8,343.8 

160.0 

8,183.8 

(a)

Represents the amount held by Liberty Latin America on a standalone basis plus the aggregate amount held by subsidiaries of Liberty Latin America
that are outside our borrowing groups.

(11)    Leases

The following table provides details of our operating lease expense:

Operating lease expense:
Operating lease cost
Short-term lease cost

Total operating lease expense

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018 (a)

$

$

52.8  $
13.5 
66.3  $

45.7  $
10.4 
56.1  $

48.2 
— 
48.2 

(a)       Amounts  reflect  operating  lease  expense  recorded  under  ASC  840,  Leases,  prior  to  adoption  of  ASU  2016-02  on  January  1,  2019.  Accordingly,

amounts are not comparable.

II-113

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Certain other details of our operating leases are set forth below:

Operating lease right-of-use assets
Operating lease liabilities:

Current
Noncurrent

Total operating lease liabilities

Weighted-average remaining lease term

Weighted-average discount rate

Operating cash flows from operating leases

Right-of-use assets obtained in exchange for new operating lease liabilities (a)

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

328.6  $

150.9 

63.2  $
269.7 
332.9  $

7.2 years

5.6 %

31.5 
119.2 
150.7 

6.4 years

6.6 %

Year ended December 31,
2019
2020

in millions

47.0  $

230.5  $

46.2 

48.0 

$

$

$

$

$

(a)

Represents non-cash transactions associated with operating leases entered into during the year, including $196 million acquired in connection with
the AT&T Acquisition.

Maturities of Operating Leases

Maturities of our operating lease liabilities as of December 31, 2020 are presented below. Amounts presented below represent U.S. dollar equivalents

(in millions) based on December 31, 2020 exchange rates.

Years ending December 31:

2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
Thereafter
Total operating lease liabilities on an undiscounted basis

Amount representing interest

Present value of operating lease liabilities

II-114

$

$

78.7 
62.7 
51.4 
44.4 
34.6 
136.9 
408.7 
(75.8)
332.9 

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

(12)    Restructuring Liabilities

A summary of changes in our restructuring liabilities during 2020 is set forth in the table below:

Restructuring liability as of January 1, 2020

Restructuring charges

UTS liabilities at acquisition date (a)

Cash paid

Foreign currency translation adjustments

Restructuring liability as of December 31, 2020

Current portion

Noncurrent portion

Total

Employee
severance
and
termination

Contract
termination
and other
in millions

Total

$

$

$

$

19.0 

13.2 

2.1 

(25.7)

(5.0)
3.6 

3.6 

— 
3.6 

$

$

$

$

13.3 

11.6 

— 

(10.4)

2.1 
16.6 

14.3 

2.3 
16.6 

$

$

$

$

32.3 

24.8 

2.1 

(36.1)

(2.9)
20.2 

17.9 

2.3 
20.2 

(a)    Represents an adjustment related to the completion of our purchase price accounting for the UTS Acquisition, as further discussed in note 4.

Our restructuring charges during 2020 primarily relate to reorganization programs at C&W Panama, C&W Caribbean and Networks and VTR. Current
and noncurrent restructuring liabilities are included in other accrued and current liabilities and other long-term liabilities, respectively, in our consolidated
balance sheets.

A summary of changes in our restructuring liabilities during 2019 is set forth in the table below:

Restructuring liability as of January 1, 2019

Restructuring charges
UTS liabilities at acquisition date
Cash paid
Foreign currency translation adjustments

Restructuring liability as of December 31, 2019

Current portion
Noncurrent portion

Total

Employee
severance
and
termination

Contract
termination
and other
in millions

Total

$

$

$

$

7.6 
30.9 
8.3 
(27.6)
(0.2)
19.0 

13.1 
5.9 
19.0 

$

$

$

$

18.0 
9.3 
— 
(13.0)
(1.0)
13.3 

10.5 
2.8 
13.3 

$

$

$

$

25.6 
40.2 
8.3 
(40.6)
(1.2)
32.3 

23.6 
8.7 
32.3 

Our restructuring charges during 2019 primarily relate to employee severance and termination costs associated with reorganization programs at VTR,

C&W Caribbean and Networks and C&W Panama.

II-115

 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

A summary of changes in our restructuring liabilities during 2018 is set forth in the table below:

Restructuring liability as of January 1, 2018

Restructuring charges
Cash paid
Foreign currency translation adjustments

Restructuring liability as of December 31, 2018

Employee
severance
and
termination

Contract
termination and
other
in millions

Total

$

$

6.2  $

25.6 
(24.3)
0.1 
7.6  $

25.4  $
8.8 
(13.5)
(2.7)
18.0  $

31.6 
34.4 
(37.8)
(2.6)
25.6 

Our restructuring charges during 2018 primarily relate to employee severance and termination costs associated with reorganization programs at C&W

Caribbean and Networks, VTR and C&W Panama.

In addition to the restructuring charges set forth in the tables above, we also incurred $3 million, $5 million and $9 million during 2020, 2019 and
2018, respectively, in restructuring charges related to employee severance and termination costs at C&W Caribbean and Networks, which impacted our net
pension liability. For additional information, see note 16.

(13)    Programming and Other Direct Costs of Services

Programming and other direct costs of services include programming and copyright costs, interconnect and access costs, commissions, costs of mobile

handsets and other devices, and other direct costs related to our operations.

Our programming and other direct costs of services by major category are set forth below.

Programming and copyright
Interconnect and commissions
Equipment and other

Total programming and other direct costs

(14)    Other Operating Costs and Expenses

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

389.3 
249.9 
206.8 
846.0 

$

$

404.8  $
280.0 
193.0 
877.8  $

401.1 
298.7 
177.4 
877.2 

Other operating costs and expenses set forth in the table below comprise the following cost categories:

•

Personnel and contract labor-related costs, which primarily include salary-related and cash bonus expenses, net of capitalizable labor costs, and
temporary contract labor costs;

• Network-related expenses, which primarily include costs related to network access, system power, core network, and CPE repair, maintenance

and test costs;

•

Service-related costs, which primarily include professional services, information technology-related services, audit, legal and other services;

• Commercial, which primarily includes sales and marketing costs, such as advertising, commissions and other sales and marketing-related costs,

and customer care costs related to outsourced call centers;

II-116

 
 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

•

•

Facility, provision, franchise and other, which primarily includes facility-related costs, provision for bad debt expense, franchise-related fees,
bank fees, insurance, travel and entertainment and other operating-related costs; and

Share-based compensation costs that relate to (i) SARs, RSUs and PSUs (each as defined in note 3) issued to our employees and Directors (as
defined in note 17) and (ii) bonus-related expenses that will be paid in the form of equity (as further described in note 17).

Our other operating costs and expenses by major category are set forth below.

Personnel and contract labor
Network-related
Service-related
Commercial
Facility, provision, franchise and other
Share-based compensation expense

Total other operating costs and expenses

(15)    Income Taxes

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

483.6 
261.4 
161.7 
168.1 
359.1 
97.5 
1,531.4 

$

$

500.4  $
264.4 
149.9 
172.6 
360.5 
57.5 
1,505.3  $

475.3 
266.6 
144.5 
166.7 
348.4 
39.8 
1,441.3 

On July 11, 2017, Liberty Latin America was formed as a corporation in Bermuda where a Tax Assurance Certificate has been granted to guarantee
that any imposition of income or other taxes will not be applicable to Liberty Latin America through March 31, 2035. Accordingly, Liberty Latin America
does not file a primary corporate income tax return in Bermuda, although various subsidiaries in other jurisdictions are taxable operations and file income
tax returns in their respective jurisdictions. The income taxes of Liberty Latin America are presented on a standalone basis, and each tax paying entity or
group within Liberty Latin America is presented on a separate return basis, unless a combined or consolidated tax return regime is permitted.

We maintain a tax sharing agreement with Liberty Global (the Tax Sharing Agreement) that became effective upon consummation of the Split-Off.
The Tax Sharing Agreement governs the parties’ respective rights, responsibilities and obligations with respect to taxes and tax benefits, the filing of tax
returns, the control of audits and other tax matters. Pursuant to the Tax Sharing Agreement, tax liabilities and benefits relating to taxable periods before and
after  the  Split-Off  will  be  computed  and  apportioned  between  Liberty  Latin  America  and  Liberty  Global,  and  responsibility  for  payment  of  those  tax
liabilities  (including  any  taxes  attributable  to  the  Split-Off  and  related  internal  restructurings)  and  use  of  those  tax  benefits,  will  be  allocated  between
Liberty Latin America and Liberty Global. Furthermore, the Tax Sharing Agreement sets forth the rights of Liberty Latin America and Liberty Global with
respect to the preparation and filing of tax returns, the handling of audits or other tax proceedings and assistance and cooperation and other matters, in each
case, for taxable periods ending on or before or that otherwise include the date of the Split-Off.

The components of our loss before income taxes are as follows:

Domestic (a)
Foreign (b) (c)

Total

(a)

Liberty Latin America is considered a stand-alone Bermuda entity.

II-117

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

(67.3) $

(770.9)
(838.2) $

(46.0) $

(234.6)
(280.6) $

(32.5)
(552.2)
(584.7)

 
 
 
 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

(b)

(c)

Amounts  for  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020,  include  impairment  charges  of  $177  million  and  $99  million  at  our  C&W  Panama  and  C&W
Caribbean and Networks reporting units, respectively. Amounts for the years ended December 31, 2019 and 2018 include impairment charges at our
Panamanian reporting unit of $182 million and $608 million, respectively. For additional information regarding asset impairments, see note 9.

For  the  year  ended  December  31,  2020,  material  jurisdictions  that  comprise  the  “foreign”  component  of  our  loss  before  income  taxes  include
Bahamas,  Barbados,  Chile,  Costa  Rica,  Jamaica,  the  Netherlands,  Panama,  Puerto  Rico,  Trinidad,  the  U.K.  and  the  U.S.  For  the  year  ended
December  31,  2019,  material  jurisdictions  that  comprise  the  “foreign”  component  of  our  loss  before  income  taxes  include  Bahamas,  Barbados,
Chile, Costa Rica, Jamaica, the Netherlands, Panama, Puerto Rico, Trinidad, the U.K. and the U.S. For the year ended December 31, 2018, material
jurisdictions that comprise the “foreign” component of our loss before income taxes include Barbados, Chile, the Netherlands, Panama, Puerto Rico
and the U.K.

Income tax benefit (expense) consists of:

Year ended December 31, 2020:

Domestic
Foreign

Total

Year ended December 31, 2019:

Domestic
Foreign

Total

Year ended December 31, 2018:

Domestic
Foreign

Total

Current

Deferred
in millions

Total

$

$

$

$

$

$

—  $

(35.8)
(35.8) $

—  $

65.5 
65.5  $

—  $

(84.0)
(84.0) $

—  $

65.1 
65.1  $

—  $

32.7 
32.7  $

—  $

32.9 
32.9  $

— 
29.3 
29.3 

— 
98.2 
98.2 

— 
(51.1)
(51.1)

Income tax benefit (expense) attributable to our earnings (loss) before income taxes differs from the amounts computed by using the applicable tax rate

as a result of the following:

Computed expected tax benefit (a)
Permanent differences (b)
Basis and other differences in the treatment of items associated with investments in Liberty Latin

America entities

Increases in valuation allowances
International rate differences (a) (c)
Changes in uncertain tax positions
Enacted tax law and rate changes (d) (e) (f) (g)
Effect of non-deductible goodwill impairments
Withholding Tax
Other, net

Total income tax benefit (expense)

II-118

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

—  $

(17.7)

0.5 
(223.0)
180.7 
33.4 
149.4 
(70.3)
(40.0)
16.3 
29.3  $

—  $

(13.9)

19.9 
(60.9)
56.0 
161.7 
11.3 
(43.8)
(15.8)
(16.3)
98.2  $

— 
(23.3)

0.4 
(23.8)
130.3 
8.9 
1.5 
(157.0)
(13.2)
25.1 
(51.1)

 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

(e)

(f)

(g)

On July 11, 2017, Liberty Latin America was formed as a corporation in Bermuda where the company is exempt from income taxes on ordinary
income and capital gains, and therefore has a “statutory” or “expected” tax rate of 0% in 2020, 2019, and 2018. The majority of our subsidiaries
operate  in  jurisdictions  where  income  tax  is  imposed  at  local  applicable  rates,  resulting  in  “international  rate  differences,”  as  shown  in  the  table
above that reflect the computed tax benefit (expense) of pre-tax book income (loss) in the respective taxable jurisdiction.

Permanent differences primarily relate to various non-taxable income or non-deductible expenses, such as CARICOM treaty income, limitations on
deductible management fees, or executive compensation, among others.

The  2020  corporate  tax  rates  applicable  to  our  primary  tax  jurisdictions  are  as  follows:  Chile,  27%;  Costa  Rica,  30%;  Jamaica,  33.33%;  the
Netherlands, 25%; Panama, 25%; Puerto Rico, 37.5%; the U.K., 19%; and the U.S., 21%.

In  March  2020,  the  United  Kingdom  enacted  budget  confirmed  that  its  corporate  tax  rate  would  maintain  at  19%  as  opposed  to  a  previously
announced reduction to 17% which was to be effective from April 1, 2020. While deferred tax assets were re-valued, there is a net nil tax impact of
this on total tax result due to a full valuation allowance on all deferred tax items in the U.K.

During  2018,  legislation  was  enacted  that  changed  the  income  tax  rate  in  Barbados  from  25.0%  to  30.0%  on  Regular  Barbados  Companies.
Substantially all of the impact of this rate change on our deferred tax balances was recorded during the fourth quarter of 2018 when the change in
law was enacted. During 2019, legislation was enacted that changed the income tax rate in Barbados from 30.0% on Regular Business Companies to
a regressive tax rate ranging from 5.5% to 1% applicable to all Barbados companies, dependent upon taxable income levels. Substantially all of the
impact of this rate change on our deferred tax balances was recorded during the first quarter of 2019 when the change in law was enacted.

On  December  27,  2019,  legislation  was  enacted  in  Colombia  that  replaces  tax  reform  which  had  previously  been  enacted  in  2018  but  had  been
declared unconstitutional due to procedural flaws. The legislation confirms provisions from the original 2018 reform, including a phasing down of
the corporate tax rates through 2022, whereby the rate will be 30% going forward. Substantially all of the impact of this rate change on our deferred
tax balances was recorded during the fourth quarter of 2019 when the change in law was enacted.

On December 10, 2018, legislation was enacted that changed the total corporate income tax rate in Puerto Rico from 39.0% to 37.5% for tax years
beginning  after  December  31,  2018.  Substantially  all  of  the  impact  of  this  rate  change  on  our  deferred  balances  was  recorded  during  the  fourth
quarter of 2018 when the change in law was enacted.

Deferred  income  taxes  reflect  the  impact  of  temporary  differences  between  the  amount  of  assets  and  liabilities  recognized  for  financial  reporting

purposes and such amounts recognized for tax purposes. The components of our deferred tax assets (liabilities) are as follows:

Deferred tax assets
Deferred tax liabilities

Net deferred tax liability

II-119

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

$

$

41.9  $

(619.9)
(578.0) $

55.7 
(401.8)
(346.1)

 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

The tax effects of temporary differences that give rise to significant portions of the deferred tax assets and deferred tax liabilities are presented below:

Deferred tax assets:

Net operating losses, credits and other carryforwards
Deferred revenue
Unrealized gains and losses
Accrued expenses
Other future deductible amounts
Deferred tax assets
Valuation allowance

Deferred tax assets, net of valuation allowance

Deferred tax liabilities:

Investments
Intangible assets
Property and equipment, net
Un-remitted foreign earnings
Other future taxable amounts
Deferred tax liabilities

Net deferred tax liability

The changes in our valuation allowances are summarized below: 

Balance at beginning of period

Net tax expense related to operations
Translation adjustments
Business acquisitions and other

Balance at end of period

II-120

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

$

2,085.8  $
16.8 
24.8 
15.5 
2.4 
2,145.3 
(1,630.9)
514.4 

(205.7)
(618.0)
(266.3)
(2.4)
— 
(1,092.4)

$

(578.0) $

1,520.2 
— 
64.9 
23.7 
2.3 
1,611.1 
(1,402.8)
208.3 

(224.1)
(168.6)
(158.1)
(3.1)
(0.5)
(554.4)
(346.1)

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

1,402.8  $
223.0 
0.3 
4.8 
1,630.9  $

1,308.9  $
60.9 
8.8 
24.2 
1,402.8  $

1,282.2 
23.8 
2.9 
— 
1,308.9 

 
 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Deferred  tax  assets  related  to  net  operating  losses  may  be  used  to  offset  future  taxable  income.  The  significant  components  of  our  tax  loss

carryforwards at December 31, 2020 are as follows:

Country

U.K.:

Amount attributable to capital losses
Amount attributable to net operating losses

Barbados
Jamaica
Curacao
Chile
Puerto Rico
U.S.
Netherlands
Other

Total

Tax loss
carryforward

Related
tax asset

Expiration
date

in millions

5,031.5  $
1,414.1 
1,086.2 
443.0 
213.0 
146.4 
135.8 
135.6 
110.8 
105.4 
8,821.8  $

956.0 
267.7 
29.1 
146.9 
48.5 
39.5 
50.9 
34.0 
27.7 
28.4 
1,628.7 

$

$

Indefinite
Indefinite
2021 - 2027
Indefinite
2021 - 2030
Indefinite
2024 - 2037
2029 - 2037
2024 - 2026
Various

As of December 31, 2020, a valuation allowance of $1,489 million has been recorded on the net operating loss carryforwards where we do not expect

to generate future taxable income, or where certain losses may be limited in use due to change in control or same-business tests.

Our tax loss carryforwards within each jurisdiction combine all companies’ tax losses (both capital and ordinary losses) in that jurisdiction; however,
certain tax jurisdictions limit the ability to offset taxable income of a separate company or different tax group with the tax losses associated with another
separate company or group. Further, tax jurisdictions restrict the type of taxable income that the above losses are able to offset.

In 2020 and 2019, we have foreign tax credit carryforwards of $24 million and $25 million, respectively, which are available in the U.S. Substantially
all  credits  not  utilized  will  expire  at  the  end  of  2027.  Other  credit  carry  forwards  at  the  end  of  2020  and  2019,  in  the  amounts  of  $50  million  and
$17 million, respectively, predominantly represent alternative minimum tax credits attributable to our operations in Puerto Rico for which the current tax
law provides no period of expiration.

Through our consolidated subsidiaries, we maintain a presence in many countries. Many of these countries maintain highly complex tax regimes. We
have accounted for the effect of these taxes based on what we believe is reasonably expected to apply to us and our consolidated subsidiaries based on tax
laws currently in effect and reasonable interpretations of these laws. Because some jurisdictions do not have systems of taxation that are as well established
as the system of income taxation used in other major industrialized countries, it may be difficult to anticipate how other jurisdictions will tax our and our
consolidated subsidiaries’ current and future operations.

Although we intend to take reasonable tax planning measures to limit our tax exposures, no assurance can be given that we will be able to do so.

We file income tax returns in various jurisdictions. In the normal course of business, our income tax filings are subject to review by various taxing
authorities. In connection with such reviews, disputes could arise with the taxing authorities over the interpretation or application of certain income tax
rules related to our business in that tax jurisdiction. Such disputes may result in future tax and interest and penalty assessments by these taxing authorities.
The ultimate resolution of tax contingencies will take place upon the earlier of (i) the settlement date with the applicable taxing authorities in either cash or
agreement of income tax positions or (ii) the date when the tax authorities are statutorily prohibited from adjusting the company’s tax computations.

In general, tax returns filed by, or that include, entities comprising Liberty Latin America for years prior to 2009 are no longer subject to examination

by tax authorities. We are currently undergoing income tax audits in Chile, Panama, Trinidad and

II-121

 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Tobago and certain other jurisdictions within the Caribbean and Latin America. Except as noted below, any adjustments that might arise from the foregoing
examinations are not expected to have a material impact on our consolidated financial position or results of operations.

The changes in our unrecognized tax benefits are summarized below: 

Balance at January 1

Additions for tax positions of prior years
Effects of business acquisitions
Additions based on tax positions related to the current year
Lapse of statute of limitations
Foreign currency translation
Decrease for settlement with tax authorities
Reductions for tax positions of prior years

Balance at December 31

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

64.1  $
2.6 
— 
1.6 
(16.7)
(0.8)
— 
(18.8)
32.0  $

249.0  $
20.3 
3.1 
1.0 
(2.7)
(11.5)
(42.0)
(153.1)

64.1  $

264.5 
26.2 
— 
29.6 
(10.7)
(29.9)
— 
(30.7)
249.0 

No assurance can be given that any of these unrecognized tax benefits will be recognized or realized.

As of December 31, 2020, all of our unrecognized tax benefits would have a favorable impact on our effective income tax rate if ultimately recognized.

During 2021, it is reasonably possible that the resolution of ongoing examinations by tax authorities as well as expiration of statutes of limitation could
result in reductions to our unrecognized tax benefits related to tax positions taken as of December 31, 2020. Other than the potential impacts of ongoing
examinations and the expected expiration of certain statutes of limitation, we do not expect any material changes to our unrecognized tax benefits during
2021. No assurance can be given as to the nature or impact of any changes in our unrecognized tax positions during 2021.

During  2020,  2019  and  2018,  our  income  tax  benefit  (expense)  includes  interest  releases  of  $2  million  and  $33  million  and  interest  expense  of  $8
million,  respectively,  representing  the  net  accrual  of  interest  and  penalties  incurred  during  the  respective  period.  Our  other  long-term  liabilities  include
accrued interest and penalties of $13 million and $15 million at December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively.

II-122

 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

(16)    Pension Plans

Defined Benefit Plans

C&W maintains various funded defined benefit plans for its employees, including (i) the Cable & Wireless Superannuation Fund (CWSF), which is
C&W’s largest defined benefit plan, and (ii) plans in the Bahamas, Jamaica, Barbados and Curacao. A significant portion of these defined benefit plans are
closed to new entrants, and existing participants do not accrue any additional benefits.

C&W also operates unfunded defined benefit arrangements in the U.K., which are governed by individual trust deeds (the U.K. unfunded plans). One
arrangement incorporates a covenant requiring C&W to hold security against the value of the liabilities. The security is in the form of U.K. Government
Gilts, which are included in other assets, net, in our consolidated balance sheets. At December 31, 2020 and 2019, the carrying value of our investment in
the U.K. Government Gilts was $38 million and $37 million, respectively.

Prior to the UTS Acquisition, UTS had unfunded defined benefit liabilities for certain of its employees. In connection with the UTS Acquisition, an
insurance policy was purchased for 64 million Netherlands Antillean Guilders (ANG) ($36 million). The payments from this policy effectively match the
corresponding obligations to the UTS employees.

Annual  service  cost  for  these  employee  benefit  plans  is  determined  using  the  projected  unit  credit  actuarial  method.  The  C&W  subsidiaries  that
maintain  funded  plans  have  established  investment  policies  for  plan  assets.  The  investment  strategies  are  long-term  in  nature  and  generally  designed  to
meet the following objectives:

•

ensure that funds are available to pay benefits as they become due;

• maximize the total returns on plan assets subject to prudent risk taking; and

•

preserve or improve the funded status of the trusts over time.

The weighted average assumptions used in determining our benefit obligations and net periodic pension cost are as follows:

Expected rate of salary increase
Discount rate
Return on plan assets
Retail price index inflation rate
Consumer price index inflation rate

II-123

December 31,

2020

1.0%
2.4%
2.4%
2.9%
2.1%

2019

0.8%
3.0%
3.0%
3.0%
2.1%

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

The  present  value  of  the  CWSF  vested  benefit  obligations  has  been  calculated  and,  together  with  the  U.K.  unfunded  plans,  represents  77%  of  the
overall projected benefit obligation as of December 31, 2020. Assumptions used are best estimates from a range of possible actuarial assumptions, which
may not necessarily be borne out in practice. The assumptions related to mortality rates for the CWSF and the U.K. unfunded plans are based upon the third
series of Self-Administered Pension Scheme and the actual experience of the plan participants and dependents. In addition, allowance was made for future
mortality  improvements  in  line  with  the  2019  Continuous  Mortality  Investigation  core  projections  with  a  long-term  rate  of  improvement  of  1.25%  per
annum. Based on these assumptions, the life expectancies of participants aged 60 at the following dates are as follows:

Male participants and dependents
Female participants
Female dependents

Risk

2020

27
28
28

December 31,
2030
years

28
28
29

2040

29
29
30

Through our defined benefit pension plans, we are exposed to a number of risks, the most significant of which are detailed below. The net pension

liability can be significantly influenced by short-term market factors.

The  calculation  of  the  net  surplus  or  deficit  of  the  respective  plans  depends  on  factors  that  are  beyond  our  control,  principally  (i)  the  value  at  the
balance  sheet  date  of  equity  securities  in  which  the  respective  plan  has  invested  and  (ii)  long-term  interest  rates,  which  are  used  to  discount  future
liabilities. Generally, the long-term interest rates are based on applicable AA corporate bond yields over the period for which the pension obligations are
expected to be settled. The funding of the respective plans is based on long-term trends and assumptions relating to market growth, as advised by qualified
actuaries and investment advisors, including:

•

•

•

Investment returns: Our net pension assets (liabilities) and contribution requirements are heavily dependent upon the return on the invested assets;

Longevity: The cost to the company of the pensions promised to members is dependent upon the expected term of these payments. To the extent
that members live longer than expected this will increase the cost of these arrangements; and

Inflation rate risk: In the U.K., pension obligations are impacted by inflation and, as such, higher inflation will lead to higher pension liabilities.

At December 31, 2020, the above risks have been mitigated for approximately 66% of the CWSF’s liabilities, 68% of the Jamaican plan’s liabilities
and 100% of the UTS liabilities through the purchase of insurance policies, the payments from which match the corresponding obligations to employees.
The remaining investment risks in the plans have also been mitigated to a reasonable extent by a combination of matching assets and diversification of the
return-seeking assets.

II-124

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Sensitivity analysis

The following table summarizes (i) the impact a 1.0% increase or decrease in the applicable actuarial assumed rate would have on the valuation of our
pension plans, (ii) the impact a 1.0% increase or decrease in the assumed inflation rate would have on the valuation of the CWSF and the U.K. unfunded
plans and (iii) the impact of plan participants living, on average, one year longer or one year less than assumed would have on the valuation of our pension
plans. The sensitivity analysis is based on a standalone change in each assumption while holding all other assumptions constant.

CWSF and U.K. unfunded arrangements

Discount rate:
Effect on defined benefit obligation
Effect on defined benefit obligation, net of annuity insurance policies
Inflation (and related increases):
Effect on defined benefit obligation
Effect on defined benefit obligation, net of annuity insurance policies
Life expectancy:
Effect on defined benefit obligation
Effect on defined benefit obligation, net of annuity insurance policies

Other plans

Effect on defined benefit obligation:
Discount rate
Life expectancy

Increase

Decrease

in millions

$
$

$
$

$
$

$
$

(233) $
(102) $

168  $
79  $

102  $
24  $

(53) $
12  $

290 
133 

(154)
(70)

(99)
(24)

65 
(12)

Using the projected unit credit method for the valuation of liabilities, the current service cost is expected to increase when expressed as a percentage of

pensionable payroll as the members of the plans approach retirement.

II-125

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

The following tables summarize the activities of the C&W pension plans for 2020, 2019 and 2018, as applicable.

The following is a summary of the funded status of our defined benefit plans:

Projected benefit obligation at beginning of period

UTS acquisition (a)
Service cost
Prior service cost
Contributions by plan participants
Interest cost
Actuarial loss
Benefits paid
Other
Effect of changes in foreign currency exchange rates

Projected benefit obligation at end of period

Accumulated benefit obligation at end of period

Fair value of plan assets at beginning of period

UTS acquisition (a)
Actual return on plan assets
Contributions by employer
Contributions by plan participants
Benefits paid
Other
Effect of changes in foreign currency exchange rates

Fair value of plan assets at end of period

Net pension liability

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

2,313.4  $
— 
4.3 
2.8 
1.3 
63.9 
163.1 
(116.1)
2.4 
45.4 
2,480.5  $

2,470.2  $

2,263.4  $
— 
214.4 
6.5 
1.3 
(116.1)
0.6 
48.4 
2,418.5  $

(62.0) $

2,096.7 
36.0 
4.6 
— 
1.2 
73.5 
148.3 
(114.4)
3.6 
63.9 
2,313.4 

2,302.5 

2,068.1 
36.0 
197.0 
6.9 
1.2 
(114.4)
0.6 
68.0 
2,263.4 

(50.0)

$

$

$

$

$

$

(a)

2019  amounts  represent  the  initial  projected  benefit  obligation  of  the  UTS  unfunded  defined  benefit  plan  at  the  UTS  Acquisition  date  and  a
corresponding plan asset associated with the expected cash flows from the insurance policy covering the projected benefit obligation.

During 2018, C&W Bahamas recognized a net pension liability that is largely indemnified by the Commonwealth of The Bahamas. At December 31,
2020  and  2019,  the  indemnification  asset  balance  was  $182  million  and  $155  million,  respectively,  which  is  included  in  other  assets,  net,  in  our
consolidated balance sheets.

Defined benefit plan amounts included in our consolidated balance sheets are as follows:

Other assets, net
Other long-term liabilities

  Net pension liability

II-126

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

$

$

210.2  $
(272.2)

(62.0) $

184.9 
(234.9)
(50.0)

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

The asset allocation by asset category, asset mix and fair value hierarchy level (as further described in note 6) of our defined benefit plan assets are as

follows:

Equity securities
Bonds (b)
Insurance annuity contracts (c)
Real estate
Private equity
Cash

Total

Equity securities
Bonds (b)
Insurance annuity contracts (c)
Real estate
Private equity
Cash

Total

Asset
mix (a)
%

Asset
mix (a)
%

Total

Level 1

Level 2

Level 3

December 31, 2020

8.9  $

32.4 
56.2 
1.1 
0.2 
1.2 
100.0  $

212.0  $
784.1 
1,360.0 
27.3 
4.9 
30.2 
2,418.5  $

in millions

155.0  $
771.6 
— 
12.1 
— 
30.2 
968.9  $

57.0  $
12.5 
141.2 
1.1 
— 
— 
211.8  $

— 
— 
1,218.8 
14.1 
4.9 
— 
1,237.8 

Total

Level 1

Level 2

Level 3

December 31, 2019

11.5  $
28.6 
56.8 
1.2 
0.4 
1.5 
100.0  $

259.1  $
646.9 
1,285.5 
28.0 
9.9 
34.0 
2,263.4  $

in millions

157.0  $
633.9 
— 
12.5 
— 
34.0 
837.4  $

102.1  $
13.0 
142.0 
1.6 
— 
— 
258.7  $

— 
— 
1,143.5 
13.9 
9.9 
— 
1,167.3 

(a)    We review the asset allocations within the respective portfolios on a regular basis. Generally, the plans do not have explicit asset mix targets other than
for  the  equity  securities  and  bond  portfolios  within  the  CWSF  on  a  consolidated  basis.  The  asset  mix  is  primarily  subject  to,  among  other
considerations, a de-risking plan related to the CWSF.

(b)    Amounts primarily include (i) fixed-interest and index-linked U.K. Government Gilts held by the CWSF and (ii) bonds held by the Bahamas and

Jamaica plans.

(c)    The trustees of the CWSF, Jamaica plan and UTS unfunded liabilities have each purchased annuity policies pursuant to which the insurer assumed
responsibility for the benefits payable to certain participants of the CWSF, Jamaica plan and UTS liabilities. The liabilities in the CWSF, Jamaica
plan and at UTS are matched by related annuity policy assets, which reduces our funding risk for these plans, as follows:

CWSF
Jamaica plan
UTS

II-127

December 31,

2020

2019

66 %
68 %
100 %

67 %
66 %
100 %

 
 
 
 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

A reconciliation of the beginning and ending balances of our plan assets measured at fair value using Level 3 inputs is as follows:

Balance at beginning of year

Gains relating to assets still held at year-end
Purchases, sales and settlements of investments, net
Foreign currency translation adjustments

Balance at end of year

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

$

$

1,167.3  $
97.6 
(62.2)
35.1 
1,237.8  $

1,052.9 
94.9 
(24.9)
44.4 
1,167.3 

The components of net periodic pension expense (benefit) recorded in our consolidated statements of operations are as follows:

Included in operating income – service costs

Other income (expense), net:

Interest costs
Expected return on plan assets
Other

Total net periodic pension expense (benefit)

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

2.9  $

3.4  $

3.7 

48.3 
(49.5)
1.1 
(0.1)
2.8  $

57.6 
(59.6)
— 
(2.0)
1.4  $

64.5 
(74.8)
(1.9)
(12.2)
(8.5)

In addition to the net periodic pension expense in 2020, 2019 and 2018, we incurred (i) administrative expenses of $2 million each year associated with
certain of our defined benefit plans and (ii) $3 million, $5 million and $9 million, respectively, in restructuring charges related to employee severance and
termination costs at C&W, which impacted our net pension liability. For information on our restructuring charges, see note 12.

The net actuarial gain (loss) recognized in accumulated other comprehensive loss during each period and not yet recognized as a component of net

period benefit cost at each period end is as follows:

Balance at beginning of year

Actuarial gain (loss) on projected benefit obligation
Actuarial gain (loss) on plan assets (a)
Prior service costs and other

Balance at end of year

(a)    Represents the actual less expected return on plan assets.

II-128

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

8.6  $

(148.3)
158.7 
1.0 
20.0  $

10.7  $

(134.5)
131.9 
0.5 
8.6  $

(19.8)
81.9 
(51.1)
(0.3)
10.7 

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Based on December 31, 2020 exchange rates, the benefits that we currently expect to pay during the next five years and in the aggregate for the five

years thereafter with respect to our defined benefit plans are as follows (in millions):

Year ending December 31:

2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026 – 2030

2021 Expected Contributions

$

116.9 
118.9 
123.1 
124.6 
130.4 
701.8 

Based on December 31, 2020 foreign exchange rates, we expect to make contributions of $9 million in aggregate to our defined benefit plans in 2021.

Defined Contribution Plans

We have established various defined contribution benefit plans for our employees. Our aggregate expense for matching contributions under the various

defined contribution employee benefit plans was $14 million, $13 million and $10 million during 2020, 2019 and 2018, respectively.

(17)    Share-based Compensation

Our  share-based  compensation  expense  includes  amounts  related  to  share-based  incentive  awards  held  by  our  employees  and  employees  of  our

subsidiaries.

The following table summarizes certain information related to the share-based incentive awards granted and exercised:

Assumptions used to estimate fair value of SARs granted:

Risk-free interest rate
Expected life
Expected volatility
Expected dividend yield

Weighted average grant-date fair value per share of awards granted:

SARs
RSUs
PSUs

Income tax benefit related to share-based compensation (in millions)

2020

0.18 - 0.88%
4.5 - 7.0 years
48.1 - 90.6%
none

Year ended December 31,
2019

1.69 - 2.41%
4.6 - 7.0 years
33.1 - 36.4%
none

2018

2.24 - 3.05%
4.6 - 7.0 years
29.8 - 38.2%
none

$
$
$
$

5.39  $
10.07  $
—  $
4.9  $

6.86  $
19.75  $
16.95  $
3.8  $

7.05 
18.41 
19.49 
6.2 

As of December 31, 2020, we have $58 million of total unrecognized compensation expense related to awards held by our employees that is expected

to be recognized as a future expense over a weighted-average period of approximately 2.0 years.

Equity Incentive Plans

In 2017, we adopted the Liberty Latin America Ltd. 2018 Incentive Plan (the Employee Incentive Plan) and the Liberty Latin America Ltd. 2018
Nonemployee  Director  Incentive  Plan  (the  Nonemployee  Director  Incentive  Plan).  Options,  SARs,  RSUs,  cash  awards,  performance  awards  or  any
combination of the foregoing may be granted under the Employee Incentive Plan and the Nonemployee Director Incentive Plan. The maximum number of
Liberty Latin America common shares that may be issued under the Employee Incentive Plan and the Nonemployee Director Incentive Plan is 25 million
(of which no more

II-129

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

than 10 million shares may consist of Class B shares) and 5 million, respectively, in each case subject to anti-dilution and other adjustment provisions in the
respective plans. Liberty Latin America common shares issuable pursuant to awards will be made available from either authorized but unissued shares or
shares that have been issued but reacquired by Liberty Latin America.

Prior to 2020, RSUs and SARs granted under the Employee Incentive Plan generally vested 12.5% on the seven-month anniversary of the grant date
and then vested at a rate of 6.25% each quarter thereafter over a four year term. Awards granted in 2020 vest 33.3% on the anniversary of the grant date
over a three year vesting term. All SARs granted under the Employee Incentive Plan expire seven years after the grant date and may be granted with an
exercise price at or above the fair market value of the shares on the date of grant in any class of common shares. RSUs issued under the Nonemployee
Director Incentive Plan vest on the first anniversary of the grant date.

Liberty Latin America Ltd. Transitional Share Conversion Plan

Prior to the Split-Off, share-based incentive awards were granted in respect to Liberty Global's “LiLAC Shares.” Liberty Global's LiLAC Shares were
tracking  shares,  which  were  intended  to  reflect  or  "track"  the  economic  performance  of  Liberty  Global's  "LiLAC  Group"  rather  than  the  economic
performance  of  Liberty  Global  as  a  whole.  The  LiLAC  Group  comprised  the  same  entities  as  Liberty  Latin  America  at  the  time  of  the  aforementioned
Split-Off. In connection with the Split-Off on December 29, 2017, share-based incentive awards in respect to LiLAC Shares were cancelled and replaced
with  corresponding  share-based  incentive  awards  in  respect  to  shares  of  Liberty  Latin  America  pursuant  to  the  Liberty  Latin  America  Ltd.  Transitional
Share  Conversion  Plan  (the  Transition Plan).  Specifically,  each  option,  SAR,  RSU  and  PSU  outstanding  as  of  December  29,  2017  was  cancelled  and
replaced with the same number of corresponding Liberty Latin America awards. The PSUs granted in connection with the Transition Plan covered a three-
year performance period ending December 31, 2018 and included a performance target metric based on the achievement of specified compound annual
growth rates (CAGR) in a consolidated Adjusted OIBDA metric. Participants earned 80% of their targeted awards under the Transition Plan PSUs, which
vested 50% on each of April 1 and October 1 of 2019.

Performance Awards

The following is a summary of the material terms and conditions with respect to our performance-based awards for certain executive officers and key

employees.

Equity  awards  are  granted  to  executive  officers  and  key  employees  based  on  a  target  annual  equity  value  for  each  executive  and  key  employee,  of
which  approximately  two-thirds  would  be  delivered  in  the  form  of  PSUs  and  approximately  one-third  in  the  form  of  an  annual  award  of  SARs.  Each
currently-outstanding  PSU  represents  the  right  to  receive  one  Liberty  Latin  America  Class  A  or  Class  C  common  share,  as  applicable,  subject  to
performance and vesting.

PSUs are granted to executive officers and key employees, generally annually, pursuant to performance plans that are based on the achievement of
specified CAGRs of our Adjusted OIBDA (as defined in note 21) during a 2-year period (Adjusted  OIBDA  CAGR).  The  performance  targets  will  be
adjusted for events such as acquisitions, dispositions and changes in foreign currency exchange rates that affect comparability. These PSUs require delivery
of a specified Adjusted OIBDA during the applicable two-year performance periods, with adjustments to the payout should the Adjusted OIBDA exceed or
fail to meet the target, as applicable. A performance range of 50% to 125% or more of the applicable target Adjusted OIBDA CAGR generally results in
award recipients earning 50% to 150% of their target PSU subject to reduction or forfeiture based on individual performance. The earned PSUs generally
vest 50% on each of April 1, and October 1, of the year following the end of the performance period.

Liability-Based Awards

Our  share-based  compensation  expense  during  2020  includes  estimated  bonus-related  expenses  for  the  2020  year  that  will  be  paid  in  the  form  of
equity. Accordingly, such expenses have been included in share-based compensation expense effective January 1, 2020 and are being accounted for using
the liability-based method.

Modification

Prior to the Split-Off, certain of our employees received share-based incentive awards in shares of Liberty Global that had a legal life of seven years.
During 2020, the expiration period for certain of these awards related to Liberty Global shares held by our employees was extended from 7 years to 10
years, which resulted in incremental expense of $7 million.

II-130

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Share-based Incentive Awards

The  following  tables  summarize  the  share-based  incentive  award  activity  during  2020  with  respect  to  Liberty  Latin  America  awards  held  by  our

employees and our board of directors (Directors).

SARs – Class A shares

Outstanding at January 1, 2020

Granted
Forfeited
Exercised

Outstanding at December 31, 2020

Exercisable at December 31, 2020

SARs – Class C shares

Outstanding at January 1, 2020

Granted
Forfeited
Exercised

Outstanding at December 31, 2020

Exercisable at December 31, 2020

RSUs – Class A shares

Outstanding at January 1, 2020

Granted
Forfeited
Released from restrictions

Outstanding at December 31, 2020

Number of
shares

Weighted
average
base price

3,427,663  $
2,110,072  $
(280,226) $
(1,443) $
5,256,066  $

1,986,355  $

21.80 
10.42 
22.38 
18.63 
17.20 

22.68 

Number of
shares

Weighted
average
base price

6,904,412  $
4,244,786  $
(638,593) $
(873) $
10,509,732  $

3,970,651  $

21.87 
10.47 
22.76 
18.24 
17.22 

22.70 

Weighted
average
remaining
contractual
term
in years

5.0

3.9

Weighted
average
remaining
contractual
term
in years

5.0

3.9

Number of
shares

Weighted
average
grant-date fair
value per share

245,826  $
666,067  $
(27,241) $
(429,400) $
455,252  $

20.23 
10.42 
15.75 
13.14 
12.83 

Aggregate
intrinsic value
in millions

$

$

$

$

1.5 

— 

Aggregate
intrinsic value
in millions

2.5 

— 

Weighted
average
remaining
contractual
term
in years

1.8

II-131

 
 
 
 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Number of
shares

Weighted
average
grant-date fair
value per share

491,325  $
1,825,771  $
(51,914) $
(1,354,931) $
910,251  $

20.25 
10.00 
15.99 
11.56 
12.87 

Number of
shares

Weighted
average
grant-date fair
value per share

678,848  $
—  $
(22,941) $
(311,479) $
344,428  $

18.08 
— 
17.00 
19.39 
16.97 

Number of
shares

Weighted
average
grant-date fair
value per share

1,357,696  $
30,365  $
(56,509) $
(612,715) $
718,837  $

18.19 
— 
19.09 
19.53 
16.21 

Weighted
average
remaining
contractual
term
in years

1.8

Weighted
average
remaining
contractual
term
in years

0.8

Weighted
average
remaining
contractual
term
in years

0.8

RSUs – Class C shares

Outstanding at January 1, 2020

Granted
Forfeited
Released from restrictions

Outstanding at December 31, 2020

PSUs – Class A shares

Outstanding at January 1, 2020

Granted
Forfeited
Released from restrictions

Outstanding at December 31, 2020

PSUs – Class C shares

Outstanding at January 1, 2020

Granted (a)
Forfeited
Released from restrictions

Outstanding at December 31, 2020

(a) Due  to  the  dilutive  impact  of  the  Rights  Offering  (as  defined  and  further  described  in  note  19),  holders  of  outstanding  Class  C  PSU  awards
received additional awards following completion of the Rights Offering. As the number of additional awards issued reflects the dilution impact of
the Rights Offering, there is a zero grant-date fair value for these issued awards.

II-132

 
 
 
 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

(18)    Accumulated Other Comprehensive Loss

Accumulated other comprehensive loss included in our consolidated balance sheets and statements of equity reflect the aggregate impact of foreign
currency translation adjustments and pension-related adjustments and other. The changes in the components of accumulated other comprehensive loss, net
of taxes, are summarized as follows:

Liberty Latin America shareholders
Pension-
related
adjustments and
other

Foreign
currency
translation
adjustments

Accumulated
other
comprehensive
loss
in millions

Non-
controlling
interests

Total
accumulated
other
comprehensive loss

Balance at January 1, 2018
Other comprehensive earnings
Impact of the C&W Jamaica NCI Acquisition
Balance at December 31, 2018
Other comprehensive earnings
Balance at December 31, 2019
Other comprehensive loss
Balance at December 31, 2020

$

$

(42.4) $
5.6 
7.0 
(29.8)
4.3 
(25.5)
(117.7)
(143.2) $

II-133

(21.8) $
35.1 
0.2 
13.5 
(2.8)
10.7 
6.9 
17.6  $

(64.2) $
40.7 
7.2 
(16.3)
1.5 
(14.8)
(110.8)
(125.6) $

—  $

(1.3)
(7.2)
(8.5)
(0.3)
(8.8)
(0.8)
(9.6) $

(64.2)
39.4 
— 
(24.8)
1.2 
(23.6)
(111.6)
(135.2)

 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

The  components  of  other  comprehensive  earnings  (loss),  net  of  taxes,  are  reflected  in  our  consolidated  statements  of  comprehensive  loss.  The
following  table  summarizes  the  tax  effects  related  to  each  component  of  other  comprehensive  earnings  (loss),  net  of  amounts  reclassified  to  our
consolidated statements of operations:

Year ended December 31, 2020:
Foreign currency translation adjustments
Pension-related adjustments and other

Other comprehensive loss

Other comprehensive loss attributable to noncontrolling interests (a)

Other comprehensive loss attributable to Liberty Latin America shareholders

Year ended December 31, 2019:

Foreign currency translation adjustments
Pension-related adjustments and other
Other comprehensive earnings

Other comprehensive loss attributable to noncontrolling interests (a)

Other comprehensive earnings attributable to Liberty Latin America shareholders

Year ended December 31, 2018:

Foreign currency translation adjustments
Pension-related adjustments and other
Other comprehensive earnings

Other comprehensive loss attributable to noncontrolling interests (a)

Other comprehensive earnings attributable to Liberty Latin America shareholders

Pre-tax
amount

Tax benefit
(expense)
in millions

Net-of-tax
amount

$

$

$

$

$

$

(118.5) $
4.9 
(113.6)
0.8 
(112.8) $

1.8  $
(1.5)
0.3 
0.3 
0.6  $

2.7  $

37.9 
40.6 
1.3 
41.9  $

—  $
2.0 
2.0 
— 
2.0  $

—  $
0.9 
0.9 
— 
0.9  $

—  $

(1.2)
(1.2)
— 
(1.2) $

(118.5)
6.9 
(111.6)
0.8 
(110.8)

1.8 
(0.6)
1.2 
0.3 
1.5 

2.7 
36.7 
39.4 
1.3 
40.7 

(a)

Amounts represent the noncontrolling interest owners’ share of our foreign currency translation adjustments and pension-related adjustments.

II-134

 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

(19)    Equity

Share Capital

A summary of the changes in our share capital during 2020, 2019 and 2018 is set forth in the table below:

Balance at January 1, 2018
LPR NCI Acquisition
Issued in connection with share-based compensation plans
Issued in connection with 401(k) company match
Conversion of Class B to Class A

Balance at December 31, 2018

Balance at January 1, 2019

Issued in connection with share-based compensation plans
Issued in connection with 401(k) company match
Conversion of Class B to Class A

Balance at December 31, 2019

Balance at January 1, 2020

Issued in connection with the Rights Offering
Repurchase of Liberty Latin America common shares
Issued in connection with share-based compensation plans
Issued in connection with 401(k) company match
Conversion of Class B to Class A

Balance at December 31, 2020

Class A

Class B

Class C

48,428,841 
— 
68,718 
— 
4,244 
48,501,803 

48,501,803 
292,486 
— 
1,263 
48,795,552 

48,795,552 
— 
(293,816)
505,549 
— 
2,300 
49,009,585 

1,940,193 
— 
— 
— 
(4,244)
1,935,949 

1,935,949 
— 
— 
(1,263)
1,934,686 

1,934,686 
— 
— 
— 
— 
(2,300)
1,932,386 

120,843,539 
9,500,000 
153,629 
28,990 
— 
130,526,158 

130,526,158 
596,153 
59,060 
— 
131,181,371 

131,181,371 
49,049,074 
(673,158)
1,460,334 
96,145 
— 
181,113,766 

Voting rights. Holders of Class A common shares and Class B common shares vote together as a single class on all matters submitted to a vote of
Liberty Latin America’s shareholders. The holders of Class A common shares have one vote per share; the holders of Class B common shares have 10
votes per share; and the holders of Class C common shares generally have no votes per share. In the event a right to vote is required under applicable law,
holders of Class C common shares will vote as a single class with the holders of Class A common shares and Class B common shares and will be entitled to
1/100 of a vote on such matter for each Class C common share. Each Class B common share is convertible at the option of the holder for one Class A
common share.

Share Repurchase Program

On March 16, 2020, our Directors approved a share repurchase program (the Share Repurchase Program), which authorizes us to repurchase from
time  to  time  up  to  $100  million  of  our  Class  A  common  shares  and/or  Class  C  common  shares  through  March  2022,  subject  to  certain  limitations  and
conditions.  The  Share  Repurchase  Program  does  not  obligate  us  to  repurchase  any  of  our  Class  A  or  C  common  shares.  Under  the  Share  Repurchase
Program,  we  may  repurchase  our  common  shares  from  time  to  time  in  open  market  purchases  at  prevailing  market  prices,  in  privately  negotiated
transactions,  in  block  trades,  derivative  transactions  and/or  through  other  legally  permissible  means.  At  December  31,  2020,  the  remaining  amount
authorized for share repurchases was $91 million.

Rights Offering

On August 5, 2020, our Directors authorized the distribution (the Rights Distribution) of pro rata subscription rights to holders of our Class A, Class

B and Class C common shares (the "Class C Rights") to acquire Class C common shares

II-135

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

("LILAK" or “Class C”), in a rights offering (the "Rights Offering"). In the Rights Distribution, we distributed 0.269 of a Class C Right for each share of
Class A, Class B or Class C common shares held as of September 8, 2020, which was the record date for the Rights Distribution. Fractional Class C Rights
were rounded up to the nearest whole right. Each whole Class C Right entitled the holder to purchase, pursuant to the basic subscription privilege, one
share of LILAK at a subscription price of $7.14, which was equal to an approximate 25% discount to the volume weighted average trading price of LILAK
for the 3-day trading period ending on and including September 2, 2020. Each Class C Right also entitled the holder to subscribe for additional shares of
LILAK that were unsubscribed for in the Rights Offering pursuant to an over-subscription privilege. The Rights Offering commenced on September 11,
2020, which was also the ex-dividend date for the Rights Distribution. The Rights Offering expired in accordance with its terms on September 25, 2020 and
was fully subscribed with 49,049,073 shares of LILAK issued to those rights holders exercising basic and, if applicable, over-subscription privileges. The
proceeds from the Rights Offering, which aggregated $350 million before expenses, are expected to be used to finance acquisitions, including our recently
announced Telefónica-Costa Rica Acquisition, and for other general corporate purposes.

Capped Calls

In connection with the issuance of our Convertible Notes, Liberty Latin America entered into capped call option contracts (the Capped Calls). The
Capped Calls are used as an economic hedge to reduce or offset potential dilution to our Class C common shares upon any conversion of the Convertible
Notes and/or offset any cash payments we are required to make in excess of the principal amount of such converted notes, as the case may be, with such
reduction  and/or  offset  subject  to  a  cap.  Collectively,  the  Capped  Calls  cover  the  number  of  the  Company’s  Class  C  common  shares  underlying  the
Convertible Notes, or 19.5 million of Class C common shares, as adjusted for the impact of the Rights Offering as described below. The Capped Calls had
an  initial  strike  price  of  $22.2337  per  Class  C  common  share  and  an  initial  cap  price  of  $31.7625  per  Class  C  common  share,  subject  to  anti-dilution
adjustments substantially similar to those applicable to the conversion rate of the Convertible Notes, and expire on July 15, 2024. Following the completion
of the Rights Offering, the strike price of the Capped Calls is $20.65 per Class C common share and the cap price per Class C common share ranges from
$28.00 to $29.50. The Capped Calls are not considered a derivative instrument under ASC 815, Derivatives and Hedging, as the contracts are indexed to
our Class C common shares and therefore classified within shareholders’ equity. The aggregate premiums paid for the Capped Calls of $46 million are
included in additional paid-in capital in our consolidated statement of equity for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2019.

Conversion Option – Convertible Notes

In connection with the issuance of the Convertible Notes, we recorded $77 million in additional paid-in capital in our consolidated statement of equity
for the Conversion Option, which represents the fair value of the Conversion Option at issuance less $1 million of allocated transaction fees and costs. For
additional information, see notes 6 and 10.

Noncontrolling interests

During  2019,  we  increased  our  ownership  interest  in  UTS  from  87.5%  to  100.0%  (the  UTS  NCI  Acquisition).  We  paid  $5  million  in  2019  and

$6 million in 2020, respectively, related to the UTS NCI Acquisition.

During 2018, we increased our ownership in C&W Jamaica from 82.0% to 92.3% by acquiring 1,727,047,174 of the issued and outstanding ordinary
stock  units  of  C&W  Jamaica  that  we  did  not  already  own  (the  C&W Jamaica NCI Acquisition)  for  JMD  1.45  per  share  or  JMD  2,504  million  ($20
million at the transaction dates) of paid consideration.

On  October  17,  2018,  we  acquired  the  remaining  40.0%  partnership  interests  in  LCPR  from  Searchlight  Capital  Partners,  L.P.  (Searchlight)  in
exchange  for  9,500,000  unregistered  Liberty  Latin  America  Class  C  common  shares  (the  LPR  NCI  Acquisition).  In  connection  with  the  LPR  NCI
Acquisition  (i)  we  entered  into  a  registration  rights  agreement  with  Searchlight  related  to  the  Class  C  common  shares  and  (ii)  Searchlight  is  subject  to
certain restrictions regarding the transfer of the shares issued in the transaction for a period of up to two years, which expired in October 2020.

Liberty Puerto Rico Equity Commitment

In December 2017, and in connection with challenging circumstances that Liberty Puerto Rico experienced as a result of the damage caused by the
2017 Hurricanes, the LPR Credit Agreements were amended to provide for, among other things, a commitment from Liberty Puerto Rico’s shareholders
through December 31, 2018 to fund potential liquidity shortfalls. During 2018, prior to the LPR NCI Acquisition, capital contributions aggregating $45
million were provided to Liberty Puerto Rico

II-136

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

consisting  of  $27  million  from  us  and  $18  million  from  investment  funds  affiliated  with  Searchlight.  The  capital  contributions  from  Searchlight  are
included in our consolidated statement of equity as an increase to noncontrolling interests.

(20)    Commitments and Contingencies

Commitments

In the normal course of business, we have entered into agreements that commit our company to make cash payments in future periods with respect to
programming contracts, network and connectivity commitments, purchases of customer premises and other equipment and services, and other items. The
following table sets forth the U.S. dollar equivalents of such commitments as of December 31, 2020:

2021

2022

Payments due during:
2023

2024

in millions

2025

Thereafter

Total

Programming commitments
Network and connectivity commitments
Purchase commitments
Other commitments

Total (a)

$

$

139.9  $
57.5 
98.2 
9.4 
305.0  $

89.7  $
13.7 
6.5 
1.9 
111.8  $

52.8  $
10.0 
1.4 
1.6 
65.8  $

43.2  $
9.1 
— 
1.5 
53.8  $

0.5  $
6.3 
— 
1.4 
8.2  $

—  $
9.5 
— 
8.4 
17.9  $

326.1 
106.1 
106.1 
24.2 
562.5 

(a)     The commitments included in this table do not reflect any liabilities that are included in our December 31, 2020 consolidated balance sheet.

Programming commitments consist of obligations associated with certain contracts including channels, programming, and sports rights contracts with
a wide range of providers that are enforceable and legally binding on us, as we have agreed to pay minimum fees without regard to (i) the actual number of
subscribers to the programming services, (ii) whether we terminate service to a portion of our subscribers or dispose of a portion of our distribution systems
or (iii) whether we discontinue our premium sports services. In addition, programming commitments do not include increases in future periods associated
with contractual inflation or other price adjustments that are not fixed. Accordingly, the amounts reflected in the above table with respect to these contracts
are  significantly  less  than  the  amounts  we  expect  to  pay  in  these  periods  under  these  contracts.  Historically,  payments  to  programming  vendors  have
represented a significant portion of our operating costs, and we expect that this will continue to be the case in future periods.

Network and connectivity commitments include (i) domestic network service agreements with certain other telecommunications companies and (ii)
VTR’s mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) agreement. The amounts reflected in the above table with respect to our MVNO commitment represent
fixed  minimum  amounts  payable  under  this  agreement  and,  therefore,  may  be  significantly  less  than  the  actual  amounts  VTR  ultimately  pays  in  these
periods.

Purchase commitments include unconditional and legally-binding obligations related to (i) the purchase of customer premises and other equipment and

(ii) certain service-related commitments, including call center, information technology and maintenance services.

In addition to the commitments set forth in the table above, we have commitments under (i) derivative instruments and (ii) defined benefit plans and
similar agreements, pursuant to which we expect to make payments in future periods. For information regarding our derivative instruments, including the
net cash paid or received in connection with these instruments during 2020, 2019 and 2018, see note 5. For information concerning our defined benefit
plans, see note 16.

Guarantees and Other Credit Enhancements

In  the  ordinary  course  of  business,  we  may  provide  (i)  indemnifications  to  our  lenders,  our  vendors  and  certain  other  parties  and  (ii)  performance
and/or financial guarantees to local municipalities, our customers and vendors. Historically, these arrangements have not resulted in our company making
any material payments and we do not believe that they will result in material payments in the future.

II-137

 
 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Legal and Regulatory Proceedings and Other Contingencies

VTR  Class  Action.  On  August  25,  2020,  VTR  was  notified  that  the  Chilean  National  Consumer  Authority  (“SERNAC”,  the  Spanish  acronym  for
Servicio Nacional del Consumidor) had filed a class action complaint against VTR in the 14th Civil Court of Santiago. The complaint relates to consumer
complaints regarding VTR’s broadband service and capacity during the pandemic and raises claims regarding, among other things, VTR’s disclosure of its
broadband speeds and aggregate capacity availability and VTR’s response to address the causes of service instability during the pandemic. VTR was also
notified  in  August  about  two  additional  class  action  complaints  filed  by  two  Chilean  consumer  associations  (ODECU  and  AGRECU)  making  similar
claims and allegations. The class action complaint of ODECU was filed in the 21st Civil Court of Santiago, and the class action complaint of AGRECU
was filed in the 26th Civil Court of Santiago. The complaint of SERNAC and ODECU seeks (i) the Court declare that VTR has infringed the rules of the
Consumer Protection Law; (ii) the responsibility of VTR for such infractions and, if so, establish the corresponding fines; and (iii) compensatory damages.
In the case of AGRECU, the complaint only seeks compensatory damages. On October 22, 2020, VTR was notified of a fourth class action complaint filed
by Conadecus in the 16  Civil Court of Santiago alleging that VTR did not adhere to certain call center, technical visit and service level requirements under
applicable law. We believe that the allegations contained in the complaints are without merit, in particular as it relates to VTR’s service and response during
the  pandemic  and  intend  to  defend  the  complaints  vigorously.  We  cannot  predict  at  this  point  the  length  of  time  that  these  actions  will  be  ongoing.
Additionally, a liability, if any, or a reasonable range of loss is not currently determinable based upon the current facts and circumstances of these claims.

th

Regulatory Issues. Video distribution, broadband internet, fixed-line telephony and mobile businesses are regulated in each of the countries in which
we operate. The scope of regulation varies from country to country. Adverse regulatory developments could subject our businesses to a number of risks.
Regulation,  including  conditions  imposed  on  us  by  competition  or  other  authorities  as  a  requirement  to  close  acquisitions  or  dispositions,  could  limit
growth,  revenue  and  the  number  and  types  of  services  offered  and  could  lead  to  increased  operating  costs  and  property  and  equipment  additions.  In
addition,  regulation  may  restrict  our  operations  and  subject  them  to  further  competitive  pressure,  including  pricing  restrictions,  interconnect  and  other
access obligations, and restrictions or controls on content, including content provided by third parties. Failure to comply with current or future regulation
could expose our businesses to various penalties.

In  addition  to  the  foregoing  items,  we  have  contingent  liabilities  related  to  matters  arising  in  the  ordinary  course  of  business,  including  (i)  legal
proceedings, (ii) issues involving wage, property, withholding and other tax issues and (iii) disputes over interconnection, programming and copyright fees.
While we generally expect that the amounts required to satisfy these contingencies will not materially differ from any estimated amounts we have accrued,
no assurance can be given that the resolution of one or more of these contingencies will not result in a material impact on our results of operations, cash
flows or financial position in any given period. Due, in general, to the complexity of the issues involved and, in certain cases, the lack of a clear basis for
predicting outcomes, we cannot provide a meaningful range of potential losses or cash outflows that might result from any unfavorable outcomes.

(21)    Segment Reporting

Our  reportable  segments  derive  their  revenue  primarily  from  residential  and  B2B  services,  including  video,  broadband  internet  and  fixed-line
telephony services and mobile services. Our corporate category includes our corporate operations. We generally identify our reportable segments as those
operating segments that represent 10% or more of our revenue, Adjusted OIBDA (as defined below) or total assets.

During the fourth quarter of 2020, we completed an organizational change with respect to our C&W operations whereby management of the CWP
subsidiary of C&W now reports directly to the President and Chief Operating Officer of Liberty Latin America and no longer reports to the former C&W
segment  decision  maker.  As  a  result,  CWP  is  now  a  separate  operating  and  reportable  segment,  herein  referred  to  as  the  C&W  Panama  segment.
Accordingly, as of December 31, 2020, our reportable segments are as follows:

•

•

C&W Caribbean and Networks;

C&W Panama;

• VTR/Cabletica; and

•

Liberty Puerto Rico.

II-138

Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

For each of the respective years in the tables set forth below, the amounts presented exclude the pre-acquisition revenue, Adjusted OIBDA, property
and equipment additions and long-lived assets of Cabletica, UTS and the AT&T Acquired Entities, which were acquired on October 1, 2018, March 31,
2019 and October 31, 2020, respectively. For more information regarding our acquisitions, see note 4.

Performance Measures of our Reportable Segments

We evaluate performance and make decisions about allocating resources to our reportable segments based on financial measures such as revenue and

Adjusted OIBDA. In addition, we review non-financial measures such as subscriber growth.

Adjusted OIBDA is the primary measure used by our chief operating decision maker to evaluate segment operating performance. Adjusted OIBDA is
also a key factor that is used by our internal decision makers to (i) determine how to allocate resources to segments and (ii) evaluate the effectiveness of our
management for purposes of incentive compensation plans. As we use the term, “Adjusted OIBDA” is defined as operating income or loss before share-
based  compensation,  depreciation  and  amortization,  provisions  and  provision  releases  related  to  significant  litigation  and  impairment,  restructuring  and
other operating items. Other operating items include (i) gains and losses on the disposition of long-lived assets, (ii) third-party costs directly associated with
successful and unsuccessful acquisitions and dispositions, including legal, advisory and due diligence fees, as applicable, and (iii) other acquisition-related
items,  such  as  gains  and  losses  on  the  settlement  of  contingent  consideration.  Our  internal  decision  makers  believe  Adjusted  OIBDA  is  a  meaningful
measure because it represents a transparent view of our recurring operating performance that is unaffected by our capital structure and allows management
to  (i)  readily  view  operating  trends,  (ii)  perform  analytical  comparisons  and  benchmarking  between  segments  and  (iii)  identify  strategies  to  improve
operating  performance  in  the  different  countries  in  which  we  operate.  A  reconciliation  of  total  Adjusted  OIBDA  to  operating  income  (loss)  and  to  loss
before income taxes is presented below.

The amounts presented below represent 100% of the revenue and Adjusted OIBDA of each of our reportable segments and our corporate operations.
As further described in note 1, as we have the ability to control Cabletica and certain subsidiaries of C&W that are not wholly owned, we include 100% of
the revenue and expenses of these entities in our consolidated statements of operations despite the fact that third parties own significant interests in these
entities. On October 17, 2018, we acquired the remaining 40.0% interest in LCPR that we did not already own. The noncontrolling owners’ interests in the
operating results of (i) certain subsidiaries of C&W, (ii) Cabletica and (iii) prior to October 17, 2018, LCPR, are reflected in net earnings or loss attributable
to noncontrolling interests in our consolidated statements of operations.

C&W Caribbean and Networks
C&W Panama
VTR/Cabletica
Liberty Puerto Rico
Corporate
Intersegment eliminations

Total

2020

Revenue
Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

1,706.8  $
500.2 
949.0 
624.1 
2.7 
(18.2)
3,764.6  $

1,812.8  $
582.7 
1,073.8 
412.1 
— 
(14.4)
3,867.0  $

1,738.7 
600.9 
1,043.7 
335.6 
— 
(13.2)
3,705.7 

II-139

 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

C&W Caribbean and Networks
C&W Panama
VTR/Cabletica
Liberty Puerto Rico
Corporate

Total

2020

Adjusted OIBDA
Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

713.2  $
177.2 
361.9 
276.9 
(44.5)
1,484.7  $

732.1  $
227.6 
433.6 
203.2 
(55.1)
1,541.4  $

664.3 
251.4 
421.1 
195.8 
(46.1)
1,486.5 

The following table provides a reconciliation of total Adjusted OIBDA to operating income (loss) and to loss before income taxes:

Total Adjusted OIBDA
Share-based compensation expense
Depreciation and amortization
Impairment, restructuring and other operating items, net

Operating income (loss)

Interest expense
Realized and unrealized gains (losses) on derivative instruments, net
Foreign currency transaction gains (losses), net
Losses on debt modification and extinguishment, net
Other income (expense), net

Loss before income taxes

II-140

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

1,484.7  $
(97.5)
(914.6)
(380.9)
91.7 
(533.4)
(352.7)
1.2 
(45.1)
0.1 
(838.2) $

1,541.4  $
(57.5)
(871.0)
(259.1)
353.8 
(499.2)
(17.2)
(112.5)
(19.8)
14.3 
(280.6) $

1,486.5 
(39.8)
(829.8)
(640.5)
(23.6)
(443.7)
94.8 
(180.0)
(32.1)
(0.1)
(584.7)

 
 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Property and Equipment Additions of our Reportable Segments

The  property  and  equipment  additions  of  our  reportable  segments  and  corporate  operations  (including  capital  additions  financed  under  vendor
financing or finance lease arrangements) are presented below and reconciled to the capital expenditure amounts included in our consolidated statements of
cash flows. For additional information concerning capital additions financed under vendor financing, see note 9.

C&W Caribbean and Networks
C&W Panama
VTR/Cabletica
Liberty Puerto Rico
Corporate

Total property and equipment additions

Assets acquired under capital-related vendor financing arrangements
Acquisition of intangible assets (a)
Assets acquired under finance leases
Changes in current liabilities related to capital expenditures

Total capital expenditures

(a)    Represents cash paid for the acquisition of spectrum license intangible assets.

Balance Sheet Data of our Reportable Segments

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

246.8  $
70.4 
196.4 
97.3 
20.2 
631.1 
(99.1)
7.8 
— 
26.0 
565.8  $

305.8  $
89.7 
222.7 
88.0 
15.3 
721.5 
(96.1)
— 
(0.2)
(36.1)
589.1  $

302.0 
76.7 
214.7 
161.9 
16.1 
771.4 
(53.9)
— 
(3.9)
62.8 
776.4 

We do not present the balance sheet data of our reportable segments, as this information is not a primary measure used by our chief operating decision
maker to evaluate segment operating performance, determine the allocation of resources to segments, or assess the effectiveness of our management for
purposes of annual or other incentive compensation plans.

Revenue by Major Category

Our revenue by major category for our reportable segments, set forth in the tables below, includes the following categories:

•

•

•

•

residential  fixed  subscription  and  residential  mobile  services  revenue  include  amounts  received  from  subscribers  for  ongoing  fixed  and  airtime
services, respectively;

residential fixed non-subscription revenue primarily includes interconnect and advertising revenue;

B2B  service  revenue  primarily  includes  broadband  internet,  video,  fixed-line  telephony,  mobile  and  managed  services  (including  equipment
installation  contracts)  offered  to  small  (including  small  or  home  office),  medium  and  large  enterprises  and,  on  a  wholesale  basis,  other
telecommunication operators; and

B2B subsea network revenue includes long-term capacity contracts with customers where the customer either pays a fee over time or prepays for
the capacity upfront and pays a portion related to operating and maintenance of the network over time.

II-141

 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Year ended December 31, 2020

C&W
Caribbean and
Networks

C&W
Panama

VTR/Cabletica

Liberty Puerto
Rico
in millions

Corporate (a)

Intersegment
Eliminations

Total

Residential revenue:

Residential fixed revenue:
Subscription revenue:

Video
Broadband internet
Fixed-line telephony

Total subscription revenue

Non-subscription revenue

Total residential fixed revenue

Residential mobile revenue:
Service revenue
Interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales

and other (b)

Total residential mobile revenue

Total residential revenue

B2B revenue:

Service revenue (c)
Subsea network revenue
Total B2B revenue

Other revenue (d)

Total

$

$

142.4  $
250.0 
74.6 
467.0 
42.2 
509.2 

294.1 

44.4 
338.5 
847.7 

27.8  $
39.0 
18.8 
85.6 
11.8 
97.4 

160.1 

41.0 
201.1 
298.5 

600.4 
258.7 
859.1 
— 
1,706.8  $

201.7 
— 
201.7 
— 
500.2  $

370.6  $
382.7 
77.2 
830.5 
24.3 
854.8 

55.7 

8.2 
63.9 
918.7 

30.3 
— 
30.3 
— 
949.0  $

147.2  $
204.7 
25.5 
377.4 
17.7 
395.1 

82.9 

50.6 
133.5 
528.6 

89.8 
— 
89.8 
5.7 
624.1  $

—  $
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 

2.7 
2.7 
2.7 

— 
— 
— 
— 
2.7  $

—  $
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 

— 
— 
— 

(4.1)
(14.1)
(18.2)
— 
(18.2) $

688.0 
876.4 
196.1 
1,760.5 
96.0 
1,856.5 

592.8 

146.9 
739.7 
2,596.2 

918.1 
244.6 
1,162.7 
5.7 
3,764.6 

(a)

(b)

Amount relates to services we now provide, following the AT&T Acquisition, for mobile handset insurance.

During  2020,  we  changed  our  presentation  of  inbound  roaming  revenue  whereby  we  no  longer  include  it  in  “mobile  services  revenue”  and  now
present it within “mobile interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and other” to better align with how management evaluates the business.
The total amount includes $27 million of inbound roaming revenue. The total amount also includes $68 million of revenue from sales of mobile
handsets and other devices.

(c)

The total amount includes $18 million of revenue from sales of mobiles handsets and other devices to B2B mobile customers.

(d)

Amount relates to revenue received from the FCC related to Liberty Mobile following the closing of the AT&T Acquisition.

II-142

 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Residential revenue:

Residential fixed revenue:
Subscription revenue:

Video
Broadband internet
Fixed-line telephony

Total subscription revenue

Non-subscription revenue

Total residential fixed revenue

Residential mobile revenue:

Service revenue
Interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales

and other (a)

Total residential mobile revenue

Total residential revenue

B2B revenue:

Service revenue (b)
Subsea network revenue

Total B2B revenue

Total

C&W
Caribbean and
Networks

C&W
Panama

VTR/Cabletica

Liberty
Puerto Rico

Intersegment
Eliminations

Total

Year ended December 31, 2019

in millions

$

$

$

150.1 
225.1 
79.5 
454.7 
47.5 
502.2 

339.1 

65.3 
404.4 
906.6 

31.0  $
34.9 
22.4 
88.3 
14.5 
102.8 

183.8 

56.8 
240.6 
343.4 

422.1  $
412.0 
100.7 
934.8 
34.3 
969.1 

62.7 

12.0 
74.7 
1,043.8 

659.3 
246.9 
906.2 
1,812.8 

` $

239.3 
— 
239.3 
582.7  $

30.0 
— 
30.0 
1,073.8  $

140.9  $
175.0 
23.4 
339.3 
21.7 
361.0 

— 

— 
— 
361.0 

51.1 
— 
51.1 
412.1  $

—  $
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 

— 
— 
— 

(4.2)
(10.2)
(14.4)
(14.4) $

744.1 
847.0 
226.0 
1,817.1 
118.0 
1,935.1 

585.6 

134.1 
719.7 
2,654.8 

975.5 
236.7 
1,212.2 
3,867.0 

(a)

During  2020,  we  reclassified  $37  million  of  inbound  roaming  revenue  from  “mobile  services  revenue”  to  “interconnect,  inbound  roaming,
equipment sales and other.” The total amount also includes $43 million of revenue from sales of mobile handsets and other devices.

(b)

The total amount includes $26 million of revenue from sales of mobiles handsets and other devices.

II-143

 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Residential revenue:

Residential fixed revenue:
Subscription revenue:

Video
Broadband internet
Fixed-line telephony

Total subscription revenue

Non-subscription revenue

Total residential fixed revenue

Residential mobile revenue:
Service revenue
Interconnect, inbound roaming, equipment sales and

other (a)

Total residential mobile revenue

Total residential revenue

B2B revenue:

Service revenue (b)
Subsea network revenue
Total B2B revenue

Other revenue (c)
Total

C&W
Caribbean and
Networks

C&W
Panama

VTR/Cabletica

Liberty Puerto
Rico

Intersegment
Eliminations

Total

Year ended December 31, 2018

in millions

$

$

143.0  $
194.3 
76.6 
413.9 
50.0 
463.9 

344.5 

71.8 
416.3 
880.2 

610.5 
248.0 
858.5 
— 
1,738.7  $

29.0  $
31.0 
24.4 
84.4 
18.3 
102.7 

211.3 

56.2 
267.5 
370.2 

230.7 
— 
230.7 
— 
600.9  $

401.4  $
386.5 
123.8 
911.7 
30.2 
941.9 

62.9 

13.2 
76.1 
1,018.0 

25.7 
— 
25.7 
— 
1,043.7  $

118.9  $
132.5 
18.6 
270.0 
17.4 
287.4 

— 

— 
— 
287.4 

37.1 
— 
37.1 
11.1 
335.6  $

—  $
— 
— 
— 
— 
— 

— 

— 
— 
— 

(5.4)
(7.8)
(13.2)
— 
(13.2) $

692.3 
744.3 
243.4 
1,680.0 
115.9 
1,795.9 

618.7 

141.2 
759.9 
2,555.8 

898.6 
240.2 
1,138.8 
11.1 
3,705.7 

(a)

(b)

(c)

During  2020,  we  reclassified  $38  million  of  inbound  roaming  revenue  from  “mobile  services  revenue”  to  “interconnect,  inbound  roaming,
equipment sales and other.” The total amount also includes $47 million of revenue from sales of mobile handsets and other devices.

The total amount includes $23 million of revenue from sales of mobiles handsets and other devices.

Represents funds received by Liberty Puerto Rico from the FCC, which were granted to help restore and improve coverage and service quality from
damages caused by the 2017 Hurricanes.

II-144

 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

Geographic Markets

The revenue from third-party customers for our geographic markets is set forth in the table below.

Panama
Networks & LatAm (a)
Jamaica
The Bahamas
Barbados
Trinidad and Tobago
Curacao
Chile
Costa Rica
Puerto Rico
Other (b)
Total

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

497.8  $
353.6 
375.5 
181.1 
139.2 
160.6 
139.7 
809.0 
139.9 
611.0 
357.2 
3,764.6  $

580.4  $
351.0 
383.3 
207.3 
150.2 
161.3 
120.0 
941.1 
132.7 
410.5 
429.2 
3,867.0  $

597.4 
356.2 
361.6 
229.2 
151.3 
157.4 
22.8 
1,011.1 
32.6 
333.8 
452.3 
3,705.7 

(a)

(b)

The  amounts  represent  managed  services  and  wholesale  revenue  from  various  jurisdictions  across  Latin  America  and  the  Caribbean,  primarily
related to the sale and lease of telecommunications capacity on C&W’s subsea and terrestrial fiber optic cable networks.

The amounts primarily relate to a number of countries in which we have less significant operations, all of which are located in the Caribbean, and to
a lesser extent, in Latin America.

II-145

 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

The long-lived assets of our geographic markets are set forth below:

Panama
Networks & LatAm (a)
Jamaica
The Bahamas
Barbados
Trinidad and Tobago
Curacao
Chile
Costa Rica
Puerto Rico
Other (b)
Total

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

354.8  $
721.7 
360.5 
342.4 
185.2 
214.5 
161.5 
755.0 
67.4 
1,217.9 
530.5 
4,911.4  $

391.6 
751.0 
374.6 
359.4 
193.7 
216.0 
169.6 
710.8 
67.6 
524.2 
542.6 
4,301.1 

$

$

(a)

(b)

Represents long-lived assets related to C&W’s subsea and terrestrial fiber optic cable networks that connect over 40 markets in Latin America and
the Caribbean.

The amounts primarily include long-lived assets of C&W’s other operations, which are primarily located in the Caribbean, and to a lesser extent, in
Latin America.

(22)    Quarterly Financial Information (Unaudited)

Revenue (a)
Operating income (loss)

Net loss attributable to Liberty Latin America shareholders

Basic and diluted net loss per share attributable to Liberty Latin America

shareholders (b)

Revenue (c)
Operating income (loss)

Net earnings (loss) attributable to Liberty Latin America shareholders

Basic and diluted net earnings (loss) per share attributable to Liberty Latin

America shareholders (d)

st
1  quarter

nd
2  quarter

rd
3  quarter

th
4  quarter

2020

in millions, except per share amounts

931.0  $

107.8  $

(180.7) $

848.9  $

(206.0) $

(393.0) $

887.5  $

86.6  $

(84.6) $

(0.98) $

(2.12) $

(0.46) $

1,097.2 

103.3 

(28.9)

(0.12)

st
1  quarter

nd
2  quarter

rd
3  quarter

th
4  quarter

2019

in millions, except per share amounts

942.7  $

113.3  $

(41.7) $

982.9  $

143.5  $

(116.0) $

966.8  $

(69.7) $

35.3  $

(0.23) $

(0.63) $

0.19  $

974.6 

166.7 

42.3 

0.23 

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

(a)

(b)

As discussed in note 4, we completed the AT&T Acquisition in October 2020.

The  basic  net  loss  per  share  attributable  to  Liberty  Latin  America  shareholders  amounts  are  calculated  based  on  a  weighted  average  number  of
Liberty Latin America Shares outstanding of 184,950,252, 185,424,779, 185,380,797 and 232,014,448, respectively.

II-146

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – (Continued)
December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018

(c)

(d)

As discussed in note 4, we completed the UTS Acquisition in March 2019.

The  basic  net  earnings  (loss)  per  share  attributable  to  Liberty  Latin  America  shareholders  amounts  are  calculated  based  on  a  weighted  average
number  of  Liberty  Latin  America  Shares  outstanding  of  183,891,922,  184,366,504,  184,452,387  and  184,755,090,  respectively.  The  dilutive  net
earnings per share attributable to Liberty Latin America shareholders amounts for the third and fourth quarters of 2019 are calculated based on a
weighted average number of Liberty Latin America Shares outstanding of 184,807,225 and 184,820,386, respectively.

II-147

The  following  required  information  is  incorporated  by  reference  to  our  definitive  proxy  statement  for  our  2021  Annual  General  Meeting  of

Shareholders, which we intend to hold during the second quarter of 2021.

PART III

Item 10.

DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

Item 11.

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Item 12.

SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER
MATTERS

Item 13.

CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS, AND DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE

Item 14.

PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES

We intend to file our definitive proxy statement for our 2021 Annual General Meeting of Shareholders with the Securities and Exchange Commission

on or before April 30, 2021.

III-1

Item 15.    EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES

(a) (1)    FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

PART IV

The financial statements required under this Item begin on page II-57 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

(a) (2)    FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES

The financial statement schedule required under this Item is as follows:

Schedule I - Condensed Financial Information of Registrant (Parent Company Information):

Liberty Latin America Ltd. Condensed Balance Sheets as of December 31, 2020 and 2019 (Parent Company Only)
Liberty Latin America Ltd. Condensed Statements of Operations for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018 (Parent

Company Only)

Liberty Latin America Ltd. Condensed Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31, 2020, 2019 and 2018 (Parent

Company Only)

IV-7

IV-8

IV-9

(a) (3)    EXHIBITS

Listed below are the exhibits filed as part of this Annual Report on Form 10-K (according to the number assigned to them in Item 601 of Regulation S-

K):

2.1  Stock Purchase Agreement, dated October 9, 2019, by and among AT&T Corp, AT&T International Holdings, LLC, SBC Telecom,
Inc., Leo Cable LP and, for the limited purpose specified therein, Liberty Latin America (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 to
Liberty Latin America’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed on October 15, 2019 (File No. 001-38335)).***

3.1  Memorandum  of  Association  of  Liberty  Latin  America  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  3.1  to  Liberty  Latin  America’s

Registration Statement on Form S-1 filed on November 16, 2017 (File No. 333-221608) (the S-1 Registration Statement)).

3.2  Memorandum  of  Increase  of  Share  Capital  of  Liberty  Latin  America  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  3.1  to  Liberty  Latin

America’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed on January 5, 2018 (File No. 001-38335) (the January 2018 8-K)).

3.3  Bye-laws of Liberty Latin America (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.2 to the January 2018 8-K).
4.1  Specimen  Certificate  for  shares  of  Class  A  common  shares,  par  value  $.01  per  share,  of  Liberty  Latin  America  (incorporated  by

reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the S-1 Registration Statement).

4.2  Specimen  Certificate  for  shares  of  Class  B  common  shares,  par  value  $.01  per  share,  of  Liberty  Latin  America  (incorporated  by

reference to Exhibit 4.2 to the S-1 Registration Statement).

4.3  Specimen  Certificate  for  shares  of  Class  C  common  shares,  par  value  $.01  per  share,  of  Liberty  Latin  America  (incorporated  by

reference to Exhibit 4.3 to the S-1 Registration Statement).

4.4  Indenture  dated  January  24,  2014,  between  VTR  Finance  B.V.  (VTR  Finance),  The  Bank  of  New  York  Mellon,  London  Branch,  as
Trustee  and  Security  Agent,  and  The  Bank  of  New  York  Mellon  as  Paying  Agent,  Registrar  and  Transfer  Agent,  relating  to  VTR
Finance’s  6.875%  senior  secured  notes  due  2024  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  4.1  to  Liberty  Global’s  Current  Report  on
Form 8-K filed January 24, 2014 (File No. 001-35961)).

4.5  Registration Rights Agreement dated October 17, 2018, by and between Liberty Latin America, SCPV LEO,L.P., SC LEO, L.P., SC
AIV LEO, L.P., Searchlight/SIP Holdco SPV II (TRI), L.P. and Searchlight LEO Co-Invest Partners, LP (incorporated by reference to
Exhibit 4.8 to Liberty Latin America’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2018 filed on February 21, 2019
(File No. 001-38335)).

4.6  Indenture, dated June 28, 2019, between Liberty Latin America and The Bank of New York Mellon relating to Liberty Latin America’s
2.00% Convertible Senior Notes due 2024 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Liberty Latin America’s Quarterly Report on
Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2019 filed on August 6, 2019 (File No. 001-38335) (the August 2019 10-Q)).

IV-1

4.7  Indenture, dated October 25, 2019, between LCPR Senior Secured Financing Designated Activity Company, as issuer, LCPR Loan
Financing LLC, as guarantor, BNY Mellon Corporate Trustee Services Limited, as trustee and The Bank of Nova Scotia, as security
trustee (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.7 to Liberty Latin America’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December
31, 2019 filed on February 19, 2020 (File No. 001-38335) (the 2019 10-K)).***

4.8  Indenture, dated July 1, 2020, by and between VTR Finance N.V. (VTR Finance) and BNY Mellon Corporate Trustee Services

Limited, as Trustee, The Bank of New York Mellon, London Branch, as Security Agent, and The Bank of New York Mellon as Paying
Agent, Registrar and Transfer Agent, relating to VTR Finance’s 6.375% senior notes due 2028 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit
4.1 to Liberty Latin America’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2020 filed on August 5, 2020 (File No.
001-38335) (the August 2020 10-Q)).

4.9  Indenture,  dated  July  1,  2020,  between  VTR  Comunicaciones  SpA  (VTR)  and  The  Bank  of  New  York  Mellon,  London  Branch,  as
Trustee, and The Bank of New York Mellon as Paying Agent, Registrar and Transfer Agent, relating to VTR’s 5.125% senior secured
notes due 2028 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to the August 2020 10-Q).

4.10  Description of the Registrant’s Securities Registered Pursuant to Section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (incorporated by

reference to Exhibit 4.8 to the 2019 10-K).
The Registrant undertakes to furnish to the Securities and Exchange Commission, upon request, a copy of all instruments with respect
to long-term debt not filed herewith.

10.1  Additional  Facility  Joinder  Agreement  dated  July  24,  2017  and  entered  into  between,  among  others,  Sable,  Coral-US  Co-
Borrower LLC and The Bank of Nova Scotia, relating to the Credit Agreement dated May 16, 2016 as amended and restated on May
26, 2017 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Liberty Global’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed July 28, 2017 (File No. 001-
35961)).

10.2  Additional Facility Joinder Agreement dated February 7, 2018 and entered into between, among others, Sable, Coral-US Co-Borrower
LLC and The Bank of Nova Scotia (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to Liberty Latin America’s Current Report on Form 8-K
filed on February 12, 2018 (File. No. 001-38335)).

10.3  Tax Sharing Agreement, dated as of December 29, 2017, between Liberty Global and Liberty Latin America (incorporated by reference

to Exhibit 10.1 to the January 2018 8-K).

10.4  Sublease Agreement, dated as of December 29, 2017, between Liberty Global, Inc. and LiLAC Communications Inc. (incorporated by

reference to Exhibit 10.3 to the January 2018 8-K).

10.5  Facilities  Sharing  Agreement,  dated  as  of  December  29,  2017,  between  Liberty  Global,  Inc.  and  LiLAC  Communications  Inc.

(incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to the January 2018 8-K).

10.6  Employment  Agreement,  dated  as  of  November  1,  2017,  by  and  among  Liberty  Latin  America,  LiLAC  Communications  Inc.  and

Balan Nair (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.8 to the S-1 Registration Statement).

10.7  Form  of  Indemnification  Agreement  by  and  between  Liberty  Latin  America  and  its  executive  officers/directors  (incorporated  by
reference to Exhibit 10.9 to Amendment No. 1 to Liberty Latin America’s Registration Statement on Form S-1 filed on December 8,
2017 (File No. 333-221608)).

10.8  Liberty  Latin  America  2018  Incentive  Plan  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  99.1  to  Liberty  Latin  America’s  Registration

Statement on Form S-8 filed on January 11, 2018 (File No. 333-222515) (the S-8 Registration Statement).

10.9  Liberty Latin America 2018 Nonemployee Director Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.2 to the S-8 Registration

Statement).

10.10  Liberty  Latin  America  Transitional  Share  Conversion  Plan  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  99.3  to  the  S-8  Registration

Statement).

10.11  Form  of  Share  Appreciation  Rights  Agreement  under  the  Liberty  Latin  America  2018  Incentive  Plan  (incorporated  by  reference  to

Exhibit 10.3 to the May 2018 10-Q).

10.12  Deferred Compensation Plan effective May 1, 2018 (adopted effective March 23, 2018) (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to

the May 2018 10-Q).

10.13  Form of Share Appreciation Rights Agreement between Liberty Latin America and its Chief Executive Officer under the Liberty Latin

America 2018 Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5 to the May 2018 10-Q).

10.14  Personal  Usage  of  Aircraft  Policy,  adopted  April  1,  2018  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  10.1  to  Liberty  Latin  America’s
Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2018 filed on August 8, 2018 (File No. 001-38335) (the August 2018
10-Q)).

IV-2

10.15  Form of Aircraft Time Sharing Agreement (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the August 2018 10-Q ).
10.16  Form of Restricted Share Units Agreement under the Nonemployee Director Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3

to the August 2018 10-Q).

10.17  Form of Performance Share Units Agreement between Liberty Latin America and its Chief Executive Officer under the Liberty Latin
America 2018 Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Liberty Latin America’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for
the quarter ended September 30, 2018 filed on November 7, 2018 (File No. 001-38335) (the November 2018 10-Q)).

10.18  Form  of  Performance  Share  Units  Agreement  under  the  Liberty  Latin  America  2018  Incentive  Plan  (incorporated  by  reference  to

Exhibit 10.2 to the November 2018 10-Q).

10.19  Form of Restricted Share Units Agreement under the Liberty Latin America 2018 Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit

10.1 to the August 2019 10-Q).

10.20  Form of Employment Agreement, approved as of July 17, 2019, by and among Liberty Latin America, LiLAC Communications Inc.
and certain executive officers (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to Liberty Latin America’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for
the quarter ended September 30, 2019 filed on November 5, 2019 (File No. 001-38335)).

10.21  Credit Agreement, dated October 25, 2019, between LCPR Loan Financing LLC, as borrower, LCPR Senior Secured Financing

Designated Activity Company, as guarantor, The Bank of Nova Scotia, as administrative agent, The Bank of Nova Scotia, as security
agent, and the lenders party thereto (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.21 to the 2019 10-K).***

10.22  Credit Agreement, dated October 25, 2019, between Liberty Cablevision of Puerto Rico LLC, as borrower, Puerto Rico Cable

Acquisition Company, as guarantor, The Bank of Nova Scotia, as administrative agent, The Bank of Nova Scotia, as security agent, and
the lenders party thereto (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.22 of the 2019 10-K).***

10.23  Additional Facility Joinder Agreement dated January 24, 2020 and entered into between, among others, Sable International Finance
Limited,  Coral-US  Co-Borrower  LLC  and  The  Bank  of  Nova  Scotia  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  10.1  to  Liberty  Latin
America’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed on January 30, 2020 (File No. 001-38335) (the January 2020 8-K)).

10.24  Extension Amendment dated January 24, 2020 and entered into between, among others, Sable International Finance Limited, Coral-US

Co-Borrower LLC and The Bank of Nova Scotia (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the January 2020 8-K).***
Liberty Latin America Ltd. Nonemployee Director Deferred Compensation Plan (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to Liberty
Latin America’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2020 filed on May 5, 2020 (File No. 001-38335)).

10.25

21 List of Subsidiaries.*

23.1  Consent of KPMG LLP (U.S.).*
31.1 Certification of President and Chief Executive Officer.*
31.2 Certification of Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (Principal Financial Officer).*

32 Section 1350 Certifications.**

101.INS XBRL  Inline  Instance  Document  -  the  instance  document  does  not  appear  in  the  Interactive  Data  File  because  its  XBRL  tags  are

embedded within the Inline XBRL document.
101.SCH XBRL Inline Taxonomy Extension Schema Document.*
101.CAL XBRL Inline Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document.*
101.DEF XBRL Inline Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase.*
101.LAB XBRL Inline Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document.*
101.PRE XBRL Inline Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document.*

Cover Page Interactive Data File.* (formatted as Inline XBRL and contained in Exhibit 101)

104

*    Filed herewith
**    Furnished herewith
***     Certain schedules and exhibits have been omitted pursuant to Item 601(a)(5) of Regulation S-K. Liberty Latin America hereby undertakes to furnish

supplemental copies of any of the omitted schedules and exhibits upon request by the

IV-3

SEC; provided, however, that the Company may request confidential treatment pursuant to Rule 24b-2 of the Exchange Act for any schedule or
exhibit so furnished.

Item 16.    FORM 10-K SUMMARY

None.

IV-4

SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on

its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

Dated: March 1, 2021

LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

/s/ JOHN M. WINTER
John M. Winter
Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary

Pursuant  to  the  requirements  of  the  Securities  Exchange  Act  of  1934,  this  report  has  been  signed  below  by  the  following  persons  on  behalf  of  the

Registrant and in the capacities and on the date indicated. 

Signature

/s/ MICHAEL T. FRIES
Michael T. Fries

Title

Executive Chairman of the Board

/s/ BALAN NAIR
Balan Nair

President, Chief Executive Officer and Director
(Principal Executive Officer)

/s/ ALFONSO DE ANGOITIA NORIEGA
Alfonso de Angoitia Noriega

/s/ CHARLES H.R. BRACKEN
Charles H.R. Bracken

/s/ MIRANDA CURTIS
Miranda Curtis

/s/ PAUL A. GOULD
Paul A. Gould

/s/ BRENDAN PADDICK
Brendan Paddick

/s/ DANIEL SANCHEZ
Daniel Sanchez

/s/ ERIC L. ZINTERHOFER
Eric L. Zinterhofer

Director

Director

Director

Director

Director

Director

Director

/s/ CHRISTOPHER NOYES
Christopher Noyes

Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)

/s/ BRIAN ZOOK
Brian Zook

Chief Accounting Officer
(Principal Accounting Officer)

IV-5

Date

March 1, 2021

March 1, 2021

March 1, 2021

March 1, 2021

March 1, 2021

March 1, 2021

March 1, 2021

March 1, 2021

March 1, 2021

March 1, 2021

March 1, 2021

 
[THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK]

IV-6

LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

SCHEDULE I
(Parent Company Information – See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements)

CONDENSED BALANCE SHEETS
(Parent Company Only)

ASSETS

Current assets:

Cash and cash equivalents
Other receivables – related-party
Prepaid expenses
Other current assets
Total current assets

Long-term notes receivable – related-party
Investments in consolidated subsidiaries
Other assets, net

Total assets

LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY

Current liabilities:

Related-party loan payable
Related-party liabilities
Accrued liabilities and other
Total current liabilities

Long-term debt and finance lease obligations, net

Total liabilities

Shareholders’ equity:

Class A, $0.01value; 500,000,000 shares authorized; 49,303,401 and 49,009,585 shares issued and outstanding,
respectively, at December 31, 2020 and 48,795,552 shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 2019
Class B, $0.01 par value; 50,000,000 shares authorized; 1,932,386 shares issued and outstanding at December 31,
2020 and 1,934,686 shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 2019
Class C, $0.01par value; 500,000,000 shares authorized; 181,786,924 and 181,113,766 shares issued and
outstanding, respectively, at December 31, 2020 and 131,181,371shares issued and outstanding at December 31,
2019

Treasury shares, at cost; 966,974 and nil shares, respectively

Additional paid-in capital
Accumulated deficit
Accumulated other comprehensive loss, net of taxes

Total shareholders’ equity

Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity

IV-7

December 31,

2020

2019

in millions

193.3  $
122.1 
0.7 
3.4 
319.5 

46.7 
2,757.5 
0.2 
3,123.9  $

524.6 
60.7 
— 
0.8 
586.1 

45.7 
3,072.0 
0.2 
3,704.0 

29.8  $
25.9 
11.5 
67.2 

342.0 
409.2 

0.5 

— 

245.8 
16.0 
5.2 
267.0 

327.2 
594.2 

0.5 

— 

1.8 
(9.5)
4,982.0 
(2,134.5)
(125.6)
2,714.7 
3,123.9  $

1.3 
— 
4,569.9 
(1,447.1)
(14.80)
3,109.80 
3,704.0 

$

$

$

$

 
LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

SCHEDULE I
(Parent Company Information - See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements)

CONDENSED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(Parent Company Only)

Operating costs and expenses:

Other operating costs and expenses
Depreciation and amortization
Impairment, restructuring and other operating items, net
Operating loss

Non-operating income:

Interest expense – third-party
Interest income – third-party
Interest income – related-party
Other income (loss), net

Loss before equity in losses of consolidated subsidiaries and income taxes

Equity in losses of consolidated subsidiaries, net

Net loss

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

$

11.9 
— 
33.1 
(45.0)

(22.0)
— 
3.0 
(1.3)
(20.3)
(65.3)
(621.9)
(687.2)

$

$

11.8 
— 
23.8 
(35.6)

(10.9)
4.6 
1.0 
(0.4)
(5.7)
(41.3)
(38.8)
(80.1)

$

$

8.7 
0.8 
24.5 
(34.0)

— 
— 
0.7 
1.1 
1.8 
(32.2)
(313.0)
(345.2)

IV-8

 
LIBERTY LATIN AMERICA LTD.

SCHEDULE I
(Parent Company Information - See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements)

CONDENSED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(Parent Company Only)

Cash flows from operating activities:

Net loss
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash used by operating activities:
Equity in losses of consolidated subsidiaries, net
Share-based compensation expense
Depreciation and amortization
Amortization of debt financing costs
Changes in operating assets and liabilities
Net cash provided by (used) by operating activities

Cash flows from investing activities:

Capital expenditures
Investments in and advances to consolidated subsidiaries
Net cash used by investing activities

Cash flows from financing activities:

Borrowings of third-party debt
Repayments of related-party debt
Capped calls
Repurchase of Liberty Latin America Shares
Issuance of Liberty Latin America common shares, net
Borrowings of related-party debt
Other financing activities, net

Net cash provided by financing activities

Net increase (decrease) in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash

Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash:

Beginning of year

End of year

2020

Year ended December 31,
2019
in millions

2018

$

(687.2)

$

(80.1)

$

(345.2)

621.9 
2.7 
— 
14.8 
(8.2)
(56.0)

— 
(511.7)
(511.7)

— 
(101.1)
— 
(9.5)
347.0 
— 
— 
236.4 

(331.3)

38.8 
1.3 
— 
7.2 
38.2 
5.4 

(5.1)
(5.1)
(10.2)

402.5 
— 
(45.6)
— 
— 
123.4 
(0.8)
479.5 

474.7 

524.6 
193.3 

$

49.9 
524.6 

$

$

IV-9

313.0 
0.2 
0.8 
— 
25.1 
(6.1)

(4.4)
(45.0)
(49.4)

— 

— 
— 
— 
— 
0.1 
0.1 

(55.4)

105.3 
49.9 

 
Liberty Latin America Subsidiaries
December 31, 2020

Exhibit 21

Name
Cable and Wireless (Anguilla) Limited
Cable & Wireless Antigua & Barbuda Limited
Kelcom International (Antigua & Barbuda) Limited
Columbus Communications Limited
CWC Bahamas Holdings Limited
The Bahamas Telecommunications Company Limited
Antilles Crossing (Barbados) IBC, Inc.
Cable & Wireless (Barbados) Limited
C&W Networks (Greater Antilles) Inc.
Cable Jamaica (Barbados) Limited
CNL-CWC Networks Inc.
Columbus Acquisitions Inc.
Columbus Antilles (Barbados) Limited
Columbus Capital (Barbados) Limited
Columbus Caribbean Acquisitions Inc.
Columbus Curacao (Barbados) Inc.
Columbus Eastern Caribbean (Barbados) Inc.
Columbus Holdings (Barbados) II SRL
Columbus Holdings (Barbados) SRL
Columbus International Capital (Barbados) Inc.
Columbus International Inc.
Columbus Investments Inc.
Columbus Jamaica Holdings (Barbados) Inc.
Columbus Networks (Cayman) Holdco Limited
Columbus Networks Finance Company Limited
Columbus Networks Sales, Limited
Columbus Networks, Limited
Columbus Telecommunications (Barbados) Limited
Columbus Trinidad (Barbados) Inc.
Columbus TTNW Holdings Inc.
CWC CALA Holdings Limited
CWC-Columbus Asset Holdings Inc.
CWI Caribbean Limited
Gemini North Cable (Barbados) Inc.
Karib Cable Inc.
Liberty CWC Holdings Limited
S.A.U.C.E. Holdings (Barbados) (I) Limited
Wamco Technology Group Limited
Cable and Wireless Network Services Limited
Liberty Latin America Limited
LiLAC Services Limited

1

Country
Anguilla
Antigua & Barbuda
Antigua & Barbuda
Bahamas
Bahamas
Bahamas
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Barbados
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda

Name
New World Network International, Ltd
Columbus Networks (Bonaire), N.V.
UTS Bonaire N.V.
CNW Leasing Ltd.
CWC Canada Limited
C&W Senior Finance Limited
C&W Senior Secured Parent Limited
Coral Re SPC, Ltd.
Cable & Wireless Jamaica Finance (Cayman) Limited
Cable and Wireless (Cayman Islands) Limited
Columbus New Cayman Limited
CWC Acquisitions Holding Limited
CWC New Cayman Limited
CWC WS Holdings Cayman Ltd.
IT Outsource Ltd
Kelfenora Limited
LCPR Cayman Holding Inc.
Liberty Costa Rica Holdings Ltd.
Leopard Re PIC, Ltd.
LiLAC Ventures Ltd.
Sable International Finance Limited
United Chile Ventures, Inc.
C&W Networks Chile SPA
Sociedad Televisora CBC Limitada
VTR Comunicaciones S.p.A.
VTR Global Carrier S.A.
VTR Ingeniería S.A.
VTR Movíl S.p.A.
VTR Southam Chile S.p.A.
VTR.com SpA
Columbus Networks Zona Franca, Limitada
ColumbusNetworks de Colombia, Limitada
Cabletica S.A
Columbus Networks de Costa Rica S.R.L.
LBT CT Communications S.A
Antelecom N.V.
Cable & Wireless Curacao Holding B.V.
Columbus Communications Curacao N.V.
Columbus Networks Antilles Offshore N.V.
Columbus Networks Curacao, N.V.
Columbus Networks Netherlands Antilles N.V.
E-Commercepark N.V.
Fiberco N.V.
International Data Gateway N.V.
T.V. Distribution Services N.V.

2

Country
Bermuda
Bonaire
Bonaire
Canada
Canada
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Cayman Islands
Chile
Chile
Chile
Chile
Chile
Chile
Chile
Chile
Colombia
Colombia
Costa Rica
Costa Rica
Costa Rica
Curacao
Curacao
Curacao
Curacao
Curacao
Curacao
Curacao
Curacao
Curacao
Curacao

Name
United Telecommunications Services N.V.
Cable & Wireless Dominica Limited
Marpin 2K4 Limited
Columbus Networks Dominicana, S.A.
CWC Cable & Wireless Communications Dominican Republic SA
Columbus Networks de Ecuador S.A.
Columbus Networks El Salvador S.A. de C.V.
SSA Sistemas El Salvador, SA de CV
Columbus Holdings France SAS
New Technologies Group S.A.R.L.
UTS Antilles Francaises S.A.R.L.
UTS Caraibe S.A.R.L.
Cable and Wireless Grenada Limited
Columbus Communications (Grenada) Limited
Columbus Networks de Guatemala, Limitada
Columbus Networks (Haiti) S.A.
Columbus Networks de Honduras S. de R.L.
PT Mitracipta Sarananusa
Lion Insurance PIC Limited
Cable & Wireless Jamaica Limited
Caribbean Landing Company Limited
Chartfield Development Company Limited
Columbus Communications Jamaica Limited
Columbus Networks Jamaica Limited
D. & L. Cable & Satellite Network Limited
Dekal Wireless Jamaica Limited
Digital Media & Entertainment Limited
Jamaica Digiport International Limited
LIME Foundation Limited
Northern Cable & Communication Network Limited
S.A.U.C.E. Communication Network Limited
Columbus Eastern Caribbean Holdings Sàrl
Columbus Networks de Mexico S.R.L.
Cable & Wireless Australia & Pacific Holding B.V.
Dutch United Telecommunication Services B.V.
Lila Chile Holdings BV
VTR Finance NV
Winward Islands Cellular Company N.V.
Columbus Networks Nicaragua y Compania Limitada
SSA Sistemas Nicaragua, Socieded Anonima
Cable & Wireless Panama S.A.
Columbus Networks Centroamérica S. de R.L
Columbus Networks de Panamá SRL
Columbus Networks Marítima de Panamá S. de R.L.
CWC WS (Panama) SA

3

Country
Curacao
Dominica
Dominica
Dominican Republic
Dominican Republic
Ecuador
El Salvador
El Salvador
France
France - French Sint Maarten
France - French Sint Maarten
France - French Sint Maarten
Grenada
Grenada
Guatemala
Haiti
Honduras
Indonesia
Isle of Man
Jamaica
Jamaica
Jamaica
Jamaica
Jamaica
Jamaica
Jamaica
Jamaica
Jamaica
Jamaica
Jamaica
Jamaica
Luxembourg
Mexico
Netherlands
Netherlands
Netherlands
Netherlands
Netherlands - Saba
Nicaragua
Nicaragua
Panama
Panama
Panama
Panama
Panama

Name
CWC WS Holdings Panama SA
Grupo Sonitel, SA
Sonitel, SA
Lazus Peru S.A.C
SSA Sistemas del Peru S.R.L.
Columbus Networks Puerto Rico, Inc.
Liberty Communications of Puerto Rico LLC
Cable & Wireless (Singapore) Pte Limited
Liberty Iberoamerica
Cable & Wireless St. Kitts & Nevis Limited
Antilles Crossing Holding Company (St. Lucia) Limited
Bandserve Inc.
Cable and Wireless (St Lucia) Limited
Caribbean Premier Sports Ltd.
Columbus Communications (St Lucia) Limited
Columbus Eastern Caribbean (St. Lucia) Inc.
Dekal Wireless Holdings Limited
Techvision Inc.
Tele (St. Lucia) Inc.
New Technologies Group N.V.
Radcomm Corporation N.V.
UTS Eastern Caribbean N.V.
UTS Sint Maarten N.V.
Cable & Wireless St Vincent and the Grenadines Limited
Columbus Communications St. Vincent and the Grenadines Limited
Petrel Communications SA
Columbus Communications Trinidad Limited
Columbus Holdings Trinidad Unlimited
Columbus Networks International (Trinidad) Ltd.
Cable and Wireless (TCI) Limited
Cable & Wireless (UK) Group Limited
Cable & Wireless Carrier Limited
Cable & Wireless Central Holding Limited
Cable & Wireless Communications Limited
Cable & Wireless DI Holdings Limited
Cable & Wireless International HQ Limited
Cable & Wireless Limited
Cable & Wireless Services UK Limited
Cable & Wireless Trade Mark Management Limited
Cable and Wireless (CALA Management Services) Limited
Cable and Wireless (Investments) Limited
Cable and Wireless (West Indies) Limited
Cable and Wireless Pension Trustee Limited
CWC Communications Limited

4

Country
Panama
Panama
Panama
Peru
Peru
Puerto Rico
Puerto Rico
Singapore
Spain
St Kitts and Nevis
St Lucia
St Lucia
St Lucia
St Lucia
St Lucia
St Lucia
St Lucia
St Lucia
St Lucia
St Maarten
St Maarten
St Maarten
St Maarten
St Vincent and the Grenadines
St Vincent and the Grenadines
Switzerland
Trinidad and Tobago
Trinidad and Tobago
Trinidad and Tobago
Turks and Caicos Islands
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales

Name
CWC UK Finance Limited
CWIG Limited
CWIGroup Limited
LGE Coral Holdco Ltd
LLA UK Holding Limited
Sable Holding Limited
The Eastern Telegraph Company Limited
The Western Telegraph Company Limited
LGI International Holdings LLC
United Chile, LLC
LLA Operations, LLC
A.SUR NET, Inc.
ARCOS-1 USA, Inc.
Cable & Wireless Delaware 1, Inc.
Columbus Networks Telecommunications Services USA, Inc.
Columbus Networks USA (2015), Inc.
Columbus Networks USA, Inc.
Coral-US Co-Borrower LLC
KBW Spectrum LLC
LCPR Ventures LLC
Leo Cable LLC
Latam Technologies Holdings I, LLC
Leo Cable LP
Liberty Mobile Inc.
Liberty Mobile Puerto Rico Inc.
Liberty Mobile USVI Inc.
LiLAC Communications Inc.
LLA Holdco
Petrel Communications Corporation
SkyOnline Maya-1, LLC
Tarana Wireless, Inc.
Cable & Wireless Communications Inc.
Columbus Networks Venezuela S.A.
Cable and Wireless (BVI) Limited
Cable and Wireless (EWC) Limited

5

Country
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
UK-England & Wales
USA-Colorado
USA-Colorado
USA-Colorado
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Delaware
USA-Virginia
Venezuela
Virgin Islands, British
Virgin Islands, British

Exhibit 23.1

The Board of Directors 
Liberty Latin America Ltd.:

Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

We consent to the incorporation by reference in the registration statements (Nos. 333-222515 and 333-223322) on Form S-8 of Liberty Latin America Ltd.
of our reports dated March 1, 2021, with respect to the consolidated balance sheets of Liberty Latin America Ltd. and subsidiaries as of December 31, 2020
and 2019, the related consolidated statements of operations, comprehensive loss, equity, and cash flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended
December 31, 2020, and the related notes and financial statement schedule I (collectively, the consolidated financial statements), and the effectiveness of
internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020, which reports appear in the December 31, 2020 annual report on Form 10-K of Liberty
Latin America Ltd.

Our  report  dated  March  1,  2021,  on  the  consolidated  financial  statements  as  of  December  31,  2020,  includes  an  explanatory  paragraph  related  to  the
Company’s change in method of accounting for leases as of January 1, 2019 due to the adoption of Accounting Standards Update No. 2016-02, Leases.

Our  report  dated  March  1,  2021,  on  the  effectiveness  of  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  as  of  December  31,  2020,  contains  an  explanatory
paragraph  that  states  the  Company  acquired  AT&T  Mobility  Puerto  Rico  Inc.,  AT&T  Mobility  Virgin  Islands  Inc.  &  Beach  Holding  Corporation  (the
AT&T Acquired Entities) during 2020, and management excluded from its assessment of the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial
reporting as of December 31, 2020, the AT&T Acquired Entities’ internal control over financial reporting associated with total assets of $2,707 million and
total revenues of $174 million included in the consolidated financial statements of the Company as of and for the year ended December 31, 2020. Our audit
of  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  of  the  Company  also  excluded  an  evaluation  of  the  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  of  the  AT&T
Acquired Entities.

Our  report  dated  March  1,  2021,  on  the  effectiveness  of  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  as  of  December  31,  2020,  expresses  our  opinion  that
Liberty Latin America Ltd. and subsidiaries did not maintain effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2020, because of the
effect of material weaknesses on the achievement of the objectives of the control criteria and contains an explanatory paragraph that states the following
material weaknesses have been identified:

• The  Company  did  not  have  a  sufficient  number  of  trained  resources  with  the  appropriate  skills  and  knowledge  with  assigned  responsibilities  and

accountability for the design and operation of internal controls over financial reporting.

• The Company did not have an effective risk assessment process that successfully identified and assessed risks of misstatement to ensure controls were
designed and implemented to respond to those risks. The Company did not adequately communicate the changes necessary in financial reporting and
related internal controls throughout its organization and to affected third parties.

• The  Company  did  not  have  an  effective  monitoring  process  to  assess  the  consistent  operation  of  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  and  to

remediate known control deficiencies.

• The Company did not have an effective information and communication process to identify, capture and process relevant information necessary for

financial accounting and reporting.

• The  Company  did  not  i)  establish  effective  general  information  technology  controls  (GITCs),  specifically  program  change  controls  and  access
controls,  commensurate  with  financial  and  IT  personnel  job  responsibilities  that  support  the  consistent  operation  of  the  Company’s  IT  operating
systems, databases and IT applications, and end user computing over all financial reporting, ii) have policies and procedures through which general
information  technology  controls  are  deployed  across  the  organization.  Automated  process-level  controls  and  manual  controls  dependent  upon  the
accuracy and completeness of information derived from information technology systems were also rendered ineffective because they are affected by
the lack of GITCs.

• The  Company  did  not  effectively  design,  implement  and  operate  process-level  control  activities  related  to  order-to-cash  (including  revenue,  trade
receivables, and deferred revenue), procure-to-pay (including operating expenses, prepaid expenses, accounts payable, and accrued liabilities), hire-
to-pay (including compensation expense and accrued liabilities), long-lived assets, inventory, and other financial reporting processes.

/s/ KPMG LLP

Denver, Colorado
March 1, 2021

CERTIFICATION

Exhibit 31.1

I, Balan Nair, certify that:

1.

I have reviewed this annual report on Form 10-K of Liberty Latin America Ltd.;

2. Based on my knowledge, this annual report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to
make  the  statements  made,  in  light  of  the  circumstances  under  which  such  statements  were  made,  not  misleading  with  respect  to  the  period
covered by this annual report;

3. Based  on  my  knowledge,  the  financial  statements,  and  other  financial  information  included  in  this  annual  report,  fairly  present  in  all  material
respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this annual report;

4. The registrant's other certifying officers and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in
Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-
15(f)) for the registrant and we have:

a) Designed  such  disclosure  controls  and  procedures,  or  caused  such  disclosure  controls  and  procedures  to  be  designed  under  our
supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by
others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this annual report is being prepared;

b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our
supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for
external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

c) Evaluated  the  effectiveness  of  the  registrant's  disclosure  controls  and  procedures  and  presented  in  this  annual  report  our  conclusions
about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures as of the end of the period covered by this annual report based on such
evaluation; and

d) Disclosed in this annual report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant's
most  recent  fiscal  quarter  (the  registrant's  fourth  fiscal  quarter  in  the  case  of  an  annual  report)  that  has  materially  affected,  or  is
reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting; and

5. The registrant's other certifying officers and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to

the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

a) All  significant  deficiencies  and  material  weaknesses  in  the  design  or  operation  of  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  which  are

reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and

b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal

control over financial reporting.

Date: March 1, 2021    

/s/ Balan Nair
Balan Nair
President and Chief Executive Officer

CERTIFICATION

Exhibit 31.2

I, Christopher Noyes, certify that:

1.

I have reviewed this annual report on Form 10-K of Liberty Latin America Ltd.;

2. Based on my knowledge, this annual report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to
make  the  statements  made,  in  light  of  the  circumstances  under  which  such  statements  were  made,  not  misleading  with  respect  to  the  period
covered by this annual report;

3. Based  on  my  knowledge,  the  financial  statements,  and  other  financial  information  included  in  this  annual  report,  fairly  present  in  all  material
respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this annual report;

4. The registrant's other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in
Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-
15(f)) for the registrant and we have:

a) Designed  such  disclosure  controls  and  procedures,  or  caused  such  disclosure  controls  and  procedures  to  be  designed  under  our
supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by
others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this annual report is being prepared;

b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our
supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for
external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

c) Evaluated  the  effectiveness  of  the  registrant's  disclosure  controls  and  procedures  and  presented  in  this  annual  report  our  conclusions
about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures as of the end of the period covered by this annual report based on such
evaluation; and

d) Disclosed in this annual report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant's
most  recent  fiscal  quarter  (the  registrant's  fourth  fiscal  quarter  in  the  case  of  an  annual  report)  that  has  materially  affected,  or  is
reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting; and

5. The registrant's other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the

registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

a) All  significant  deficiencies  and  material  weaknesses  in  the  design  or  operation  of  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  which  are

reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and

b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal

control over financial reporting.

Date: March 1, 2021

/s/ Christopher Noyes
Christopher Noyes

Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Certification
Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
(Subsections (a) and (b) of Section 1350, Chapter 63 of Title 18, United States Code)

Exhibit 32

Pursuant to section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (subsections (a) and (b) of section 1350, chapter 63 of title 18, United States Code), each of

the undersigned officers of Liberty Latin America Ltd. (the "Company"), does hereby certify, to such officer's knowledge, that:

The Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020 (the "Form 10-K") of the Company fully complies with the requirements of
section  13(a)  or  15(d)  of  the  Securities  Exchange  Act  of  1934  and  information  contained  in  the  Form  10-K  fairly  presents,  in  all  material  respects,  the
financial condition and results of operations of the Company as of December 31, 2020 and December 31, 2019, and for the year ended December 31, 2020,
2019 and 2018.

Dated:

March 1, 2021

Dated:

March 1, 2021

/s/ Balan Nair
Balan Nair
President and Chief Executive Officer

/s/ Christopher Noyes
Christopher Noyes
Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)

The foregoing certification is being furnished solely pursuant to section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (subsections (a) and (b) of section

1350, chapter 63 of title 18, United States Code) and is not being filed as part of the Form 10-K or as a separate disclosure document.