
Context: How Bolsa de Valores de Quito works, and what it makes issuers disclose · Ecuador on the LatAm Power Map
Ecuador’s internet backbone runs, to a remarkable degree, through a single family-owned company founded thirty years ago on the Pacific coast — and that company is now laying submarine cable from Guayaquil to Florida.
| Full name | Telconet S.A. |
| Ticker / exchange | TELCONET.EC — Bolsa de Valores de Guayaquil (bonds listed; equity not publicly traded) |
| Headquarters | Guayaquil, Ecuador |
| Sector | Telecommunications & data infrastructure |
| Employees | 6,485 (2024) |
| Market value (equity) | Not disclosed in available sources (private equity; bonds listed) |
| Yearly sales (revenue, FY 2024) | $309.95 million |
| Net profit (FY 2024) | $30.01 million |
| Net margin (FY 2024) | 9.7% (our calculation: $30.01m ÷ $309.95m) |
| Return on equity (FY 2024) | 14.85% |
| Price-to-earnings ratio | Not applicable (equity not listed) |
| Dividend yield | Not disclosed in available sources |
| Website | www.telconet.net |
Now writing the full article:
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Ecuador’s internet backbone runs, to a remarkable degree, through a single family-owned company founded thirty years ago on the Pacific coast — and that company is now laying submarine fibre-optic cable from Guayaquil all the way to Florida.
| Full name | Telconet S.A. |
| Ticker / exchange | TELCONET.EC — Bolsa de Valores de Guayaquil (bonds listed; equity is privately held) |
| Headquarters | Guayaquil, Ecuador |
| Sector | Telecommunications & data infrastructure |
| Employees | 6,485 (2024) |
| Market value (equity) | Not disclosed in available sources — equity is not publicly listed |
| Yearly sales / revenue (FY 2024) | $309.95 million |
| Net profit (FY 2024) | $30.01 million |
| Net margin (FY 2024) | 9.7% (our calculation: $30.01m ÷ $309.95m) |
| Return on equity (FY 2024) | 14.85% |
| Price-to-earnings ratio | Not applicable — equity not listed |
| Dividend yield | Not disclosed in available sources |
| Website | www.telconet.net |
What it is
Telconet provides telecommunications and technology services — connectivity, internet, data-centre hosting, and managed tech services — backed by more than two decades of fibre-optic network-building in Ecuador. Beyond Ecuador, it operates in Colombia, Panama, and Guatemala.
Through its subsidiary Cable Andino, Telconet supplies submarine cable capacity to internet providers like Megadatos (Netlife) and Xtrim, which together hold roughly 40% of Ecuador’s fixed-internet market, according to the regulator Arcotel. In plain terms, Telconet is less a consumer brand than the hidden plumbing that keeps Ecuador’s internet flowing.
Who owns it
The principal shareholder is Tomislav Topic Granados, who holds about 83% of the shares; registered capital stands at $21.63 million. A second family member holds the remainder, giving Telconet an entirely family-owned shareholding structure.
The Topic family has been entangled in Ecuador’s political controversies: Tomislav was investigated for his links to former vice-president Jorge Glas and his uncle, both convicted in the Odebrecht bribery scandal, specifically over Cable Andino’s construction. Regulators filed documents on the matter, though Topic was absolved; the company argues its dominant market position means clients have few practical alternatives.
Who runs it
The senior leadership team includes Tomislav Topic as Chief Executive (Gerente General), Javier Galarza as Chief Financial Officer (Gerente Administrativo Financiero), Hugo Proaño as Chief Technical Officer (Gerente Técnico Nacional), and Francisco Villacreses as Commercial Vice-President for Latin America.
Tomislav Topic has served as general manager for over two decades, making him both the controlling shareholder and the operational chief — a concentration of authority that credit-rating agencies note as a governance consideration.
The money, in plain words
Revenue grew 21.7% between 2022 and 2024, reaching $309.95 million. The 2023-to-2024 step was more modest — 6.1% (our calculation: $292.20m to $309.95m) — as Ecuador’s broader economy slowed and a national energy crisis hit the telecoms sector.
For every dollar of revenue, Telconet kept about 9.7 cents as net profit in 2024 — a net margin of 9.7% (our calculation) — down sharply from the 18.2% it earned in 2023 (our calculation: $53.07m ÷ $292.20m), as the cost of expanding its geographic coverage rose faster than its sales. Equity now finances 32.7% of total assets, down from 38.8% in 2022, meaning the company has taken on meaningful debt to fund its infrastructure push.
For every dollar of equity its owners put in, it earned about 15 cents in 2024 — a return on equity of 14.85%, solid for a capital-intensive infrastructure business, though well below the 30%+ it posted in prior years.
In Guayaquil, Telconet operates Ecuador’s only Tier IV-certified data centre — the highest international standard for reliability — which anchors its position at the premium end of the corporate-connectivity market. The company also holds ISO 27001, ISO 9001, ISO 22301, and ISO 37001 certifications.
What it is doing now
Holding Telconet has announced a $550 million investment plan through 2027, targeting international connectivity infrastructure, data centres, and next-generation digital infrastructure across Ecuador and the region. The centrepiece is the CSN-1 submarine cable: the 4,500 km CSN-1 will link Florida, Panama, Colombia, and Ecuador, with commercial service expected in the second half of 2026.
Telconet and its subsidiary Megadatos have also closed a five-year $50 million syndicated international loan to support the cable project and continued fibre-to-the-home and business-to-business growth in Ecuador. In March 2025, the company announced a second cable, CSN-2, which will connect Veracruz, Mexico, with northern Florida.
What to watch
- Regulatory overhang. In November 2024, Arcotel unilaterally revoked the operating licence of Cable Andino, the company that provides Ecuador’s submarine cable service and is linked to Jan Topic. The dispute directly threatened CSN-1’s Ecuador landing rights, and its resolution will determine whether the cable comes in on schedule.
- Profit recovery. Net profit fell 43% in 2024 and contracted further in the first ten months of 2025 (our calculation from audited data). Investors in Telconet’s listed bonds need to see margins rebuild as the new infrastructure goes live.
- Concentration risk. Megadatos alone represents 33.74% of Telconet’s client revenues — a related party. Any disruption to that relationship would hit results hard.
- Political exposure. One family controls 100% of the equity and the CEO role simultaneously. In a country with Ecuador’s governance volatility, this single point of control is the clearest long-term risk for bondholders.
Sources
- GlobalRatings — Calificación Décima Segunda Emisión de Obligaciones Telconet S.A., December 2025 (audited financials 2022–2024, management structure, key metrics)
- Bolsa de Valores de Guayaquil — Información del Emisor Telconet S.A.
- Bolsa de Valores de Guayaquil — Calificación Décima Tercera Emisión de Obligaciones, March 2026
- SummaRatings — ICR-MV-2024-009, July 2024 (management list, client concentration)
- SummaRatings — ICR-MV-2023-002, January 2023 (ownership structure)
- Bolsa de Valores de Guayaquil / GlobalRatings — Calificación Tercer Programa de Papel Comercial, July 2020 (historical shareholder table)
- Telconet Latam (official company site) — Comunicados Oficiales (CSN-1, CSN-2 announcements; $50m loan)
- Telconet Latam (official company site) — $550m investment plan announcement, April 2026
- Expreso — ¿Qué es Telconet en Ecuador y quién es su dueño?, November 2024
- BNamericas — Telconet plans US$550mn in subsea cable, edge data center investments
- Market data: EODHD (no financials available for this issuer; all financial figures sourced from primary regulatory filings above).
This is news, not investment advice.
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