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To: Maurice Winn who wrote (152005)4/22/2008 9:16:40 AM
From: elmatador   of 152330
 
Economy to curb growth at phone companies. weaker economy is forcing consumers to find ways to lower their telephone bills, likely limiting profit growth for phone companies

Economy to curb growth at phone companies.
Fri Apr 18, 2008
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A weaker economy is forcing consumers to find ways to lower their telephone bills, likely limiting profit growth for phone companies like AT&T Inc (T.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Verizon Communications Inc (VZ.N: Quote, Profile, Research).

While wireless growth should continue to boost earnings, U.S. carriers are suffering from people disconnecting home phones and from new mobile users opting to pay for calls in advance, usually meaning less revenue for the companies, analysts said.

All eyes will also be on struggling No. 3 U.S. mobile service Sprint Nextel Corp (S.N: Quote, Profile, Research) for signs that it could spark a price war by becoming more aggressive on call prices.

"What you'll see is people trying to economize on their monthly plans," said Donna Jaegers, analyst at Janco Partners, noting higher gasoline and food prices, and unemployment.

Top mobile phone maker Nokia (NOK1V.HE: Quote, Profile, Research) sent shivers through the market on Thursday when it partly blamed the U.S. economy for an estimated decline in the global mobile phone market in euro terms in 2008.

Setting a somber tone ahead of its first-quarter results next Tuesday, AT&T said on Friday it would cut its work force by 1.5 percent, or around 4,600 jobs, resulting in a charge of $374 million pretax.

Analysts are projecting AT&T to report a 23 percent rise in quarterly profit to $3.5 billion, or 58 cents per share, according to Reuters Estimates.

Verizon is expected to report a profit rise of 19 percent to $1.8 billion, or 61 cents per share, on April 28 and Sprint Nextel is seen posting a loss of $464 million, or 14 cents a share, on May 12, according to Reuters Estimates.

Verizon and AT&T are seen adding 1.4 million and 1.34 million wireless customers respectively in the first quarter, according to five analysts. Many of those customers likely came from Sprint, which warned of a loss of 1.2 million users.

"We need to be looking at whether or not Sprint would recover," said Bear Stearns analyst Michael McCormack. "In which case those very strong subscriber numbers at AT&T and Verizon in the first half could become more challenging in the second half of the year."

JPMorgan's Chaplin said a poor performance from Sprint could force the No. 3 wireless provider to cut prices, triggering a potentially industry-crippling price war.

"The easiest lever they have to pull is pricing," he said.

LESS REVENUE PER USER

Wall Street expects an increasing portion of wireless subscriber growth in the first quarter to come from people who pay for calls in advance, who tend to be more fickle than post-paid subscribers, who are locked into monthly bills.

Some prepaid users also have poor credit, which can disqualify them from monthly plans. But with 85 percent of U.S. consumers already owning cell phones -- many of them on one- or two-year contracts -- prepaid is where the growth lies.

"It was noticeable last quarter and it's going to be more noticeable this quarter," said JPMorgan analyst Jonathan Chaplin, referring to the prepaid trend.

A weaker economy may also make it hard for wireless providers to make up some of the growth shortfall with second subscriptions, like data cards for laptops. And even monthly subscribers may try to lower their bills, for example moving to $59 monthly plans from $79 plans.

"I don't expect customers to give up their wireless phone because of the economy but perhaps not spend as much on a monthly basis as they once did," said Stanford Group analyst Michael Nelson.

The outlook is worse in the wireline segment, as more consumers are expected to switch to cable service providers' "bundled" packages of video, Internet and phone.

Housing foreclosures and job cuts may accelerate the trend of people disconnecting their home phones.

Consumer wireline accounts for around a quarter of revenue at AT&T and Verizon. With each wireline cancellation, these companies also lose an opportunity to sell higher-margin services like high-speed Internet and video.

Bear Stearns' McCormack forecast a 5.2 percent fall in residential primary line losses at AT&T, and an 8.3 percent fall at Verizon. Sanford Bernstein analyst Craig Moffett said he thought the situation was worse for Verizon than for AT&T, but wireline losses are likely to hurt both in the long run.

Janco's Jaegers said Denver-based Qwest Communications International Inc (Q.N: Quote, Profile, Research) may be particularly vulnerable since it operates in areas with high foreclosure rates. She sees Qwest's residential line losses increasing to around 10 percent.

Increasing bankruptcies and slower economic activity could hit corporate customers too, analysts said.

"There's going to be a lot of focus on the enterprise telecom business. A lot of people are waiting for that piece to be impacted by the economy," said Bear Stearns' McCormack.

(Editing by Gerald E. McCormick)

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From: oxymormon4/22/2008 9:30:14 AM
   of 152330
 
att earnings report this am suggests that the article was wrong. graet to be monday morning qb.

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To: oxymormon who wrote (152101)4/22/2008 10:54:17 AM
From: bronx   of 152330
 
Right you are. People will reduce phone bills whenever they can, but if it's a choice between paying for a call or putting gas in the car to drive there ... phone usage should go up, not down, in this economy.

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To: elmatador who wrote (152100)4/22/2008 12:36:39 PM
From: Maurice Winn1 Recommendation   of 152330
 
ElM, that's great news. I have waited decades for a price war using the efficiency of CDMA. Cheap is good: <JPMorgan's Chaplin said a poor performance from Sprint could force the No. 3 wireless provider to cut prices, triggering a potentially industry-crippling price war. >

I will make more money with a price war because people will buy more phones and megabytes.

Mqurice

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From: blimfark4/22/2008 2:16:09 PM
   of 152330
 
Buying the dip here.

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To: blimfark who wrote (152104)4/23/2008 2:52:10 PM
From: goingbroke   of 152330
 
Good luck with that! ALthough I really want this stock to hit 47 so I can unload my shares that have done nothing over the last 2 years, I feel we are at the high end of the trading range and see this level no as a dip, but as a peak.

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From: mindykoeppel4/23/2008 5:12:24 PM
   of 152330
 
Qualcomm offers a sunny outlook
By Scott Moritz, writer

techland.blogs.fortune.cnn.com 

Qualcomm (QCOM) isn’t seeing a slowdown in wireless apparently. The San Diego tech giant posted solid fiscal second quarter results and guided up for the current quarter.

The wireless standard bearer posted an adjusted profit of 54 cents a share, up from 50 cents a year ago, and 2 cents better than analysts predicted. Sales in the quarter rose 17% to $2.6 billion from $2.2 billion in the year-ago quarter. Analysts anticipated a $2.5 billion revenue performance.

“The fundamental drivers of our business remain strong, and based on the current business outlook, we are raising fiscal 2008 revenue and earnings per share guidance,” CEO Paul Jacobs said in a press release.

Looking ahead, Qualcomm expects a fiscal third quarter profit of 51 cents, directly in line with analysts expectations. Sales for the quarter are expected to remain flat at about $2.6 billion, well above analysts estimates calling for sales of $2.3 billion.

And as a sign that demand for more expensive smart phones is rising, Qualcomm forecast the average selling price of phones to jump to $223 in the fiscal third quarter from $215 last year.

For the full year, Qualcomm now expects sales to be around $10.2 billion that is up from previous guidance calling for $9.8 billion in revenue. That compares with $8.8 billion last year. Analysts were looking for $9.9 billion in total sale for the year ending in September.

Qualcomm shares dipped 53 cents to $41.36 in after-hours trading Wednesday

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From: mindykoeppel4/23/2008 5:14:20 PM
   of 152330
 
Reuters
Qualcomm quarterly profit up, raises '08 view
Wednesday April 23, 5:05 pm ET
By Sinead Carew

biz.yahoo.com 

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wireless chip and technology supplier Qualcomm Inc (NasdaqGS:QCOM - News) posted a higher profit for its fiscal second quarter on Wednesday, and raised its full-year earnings and revenue targets.

Analysts said the company appeared to be benefiting from market share gains by major customers such as LG Electronics (066570.KS) and Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), which compete with cell phone leader Nokia Oyj (Helsinki:NOK1V.HE - News).

"Qualcomm delivered a very strong quarter," said Global Crown Capital analyst Pablo Perez-Fernandez, adding that its forecasts also bode well for Qualcomm customers. "The market is growing faster than people believe and Qualcomm customers LG and Samsung are gaining market share."

Qualcomm's quarterly net profit rose to $766 million, or 47 cents a share, for the quarter ended March 30, from $726 million, or 43 cents a share, in the year-ago quarter. Revenue grew to $2.6 billion from $2.22 billion.

Excluding its investment arm and other items, it earned 54 cents per share, compared with analysts' average estimate of 52 cents a share, according to Reuters Estimates.

Qualcomm forecast full-year earnings per share, excluding items, of $2.04 to $2.09, up from its earlier target of $2.01 to $2.07. This compared with the average analyst forecast of $2.09 per share.

It said 2008 revenue would be $10 billion to $10.4 billion, up from its earlier estimate of $9.6 billion to $10 billion. On average analysts were expecting revenue of $9.96 billion.

Qualcomm shares were unchanged from their Nasdaq close of $41.89 in late trade, after rising briefly to $42.60.

Perez-Fernandez noted that Qualcomm had a reputation for setting conservative financial targets, potentially muting the reaction to its increased range.

It had said in March it still backed its second-quarter targets after rival Texas Instruments Inc (NYSE:TXN - News) warned of weak demand for chips used in advanced phones.

Qualcomm has been embroiled in legal battles with chip rival Broadcom Corp (NasdaqGS:BRCM - News) and No. 1 phone maker Nokia Oyj (Helsinki:NOK1V.HE - News).

(Reporting by Sinead Carew, editing by Richard Chang)

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From: Uncle Frank4/29/2008 12:48:27 PM
3 Recommendations   of 152330
 
"This subject is now moderated to minimize jibberish with no educational purpose to the discussion at hand."

Nice. Moderation worked. No jibberish... but no thread.

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To: Uncle Frank who wrote (152108)4/29/2008 6:40:19 PM
From: hedgefund   of 152330
 
On a cost benefit basis, moderation has failed; it produced silence; too bad because this was a venerable board. HF

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