AT and T posts
FeedPosted Nov 4th 2009 3:00PM by Steven Mallas (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, General Electric (GE), AT and T (T), Comcast Cl'A' (CMCSA), Verizon Communications (VZ), Media World

Cable giant
Comcast (NASDAQ:
CMCSA) posted
Q3 numbers earlier today. It seems like the company is doing well with earnings growth and cash flow, even if revenues moved up a meager 3%.
Adjusted earnings per share grew over 20% to 28 cents per share. According to our earnings preview, the market was looking for 25 cents per share. Operating cash flow increased a little under 3%, but free cash flow went up almost 20%, aided by a smaller amount of capital expenditures compared to the previous year's similar quarter. I'm sure shareholders are more than satisfied with the growth rate of the green stuff over the past three months. Comcast saw excellent expansion of free cash over the last nine months, too.
Continue reading Comcast grows free cash in Q3, but when will it do a deal?
Posted Nov 3rd 2009 2:40PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Forecasts, Comcast Cl'A' (CMCSA)
Philadelphia-based Comcast Corp. (NASDAQ: CMCSA), which is said to be buying a controlling stake in NBC Universal, is scheduled to discuss its third quarter 2009 financial results in a conference call Wednesday at 8:30 AM ET. You can catch the live webcast of the call on the company's website.
During the three months that ended in September, Comcast launched an internet portal for kids, a collaboration with the NFL, and a trial of On Demand Online. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters expect this leading entertainment, information, and communication provider to report earnings of $0.25 per share, just a penny per share lower than in both the previous quarter and a year ago. Comcast earnings have beat the Street view in the past four quarters, by as much as seven cents per share. Revenue for the third quarter is expected to be 3.5% higher to $8.9 billion.
Continue reading Comcast earnings preview: NBC deal may overshadow Q3 results
Posted Oct 27th 2009 5:00PM by Steven Mallas (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), AT and T (T), Verizon Communications (VZ)
Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZ) issued Q3 data on Monday. According to the press release, the telecommunications entity made, on an adjusted basis, 60 cents per share. Disappointing, since that's six pennies less than last year's comparable number. However, it was a penny ahead of analyst expectations, according to Reuters.
Of course, when discussing Verizon, what tends to receive focus is cash flow. As we all know, the company is a famous dividend play. Many investors consider this angle to be not only valuable, but an added safety element as well.
Continue reading Verizon tops Q3 profit estimate, but it's all about the dividend
Posted Oct 24th 2009 9:20AM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Microsoft (MSFT), Yahoo! (YHOO), Apple Inc (AAPL), eBay (EBAY), Pfizer (PFE), Coca-Cola (KO), AT and T (T), Altria Group (MO), BB and T (BBT), Boeing Co (BA), duPont(E.I.)deNemours (DD), Hasbro Inc (HAS), AMR Corp (AMR), UAL Corp (UAUA), Wells Fargo (WFC)
Continue reading Earnings highlights: Boeing, Coca-Cola, eBay, Microsoft, Pfizer, UAL, Yahoo! ...
Posted Oct 20th 2009 11:40AM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst reports, Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Amazon.com (AMZN), Ford Motor (F), Bank of America (BAC), Boeing Co (BA), Analyst initiations
Analyst upgrades:
- RBC Capital upgraded Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) to Outperform from Sector Perform and said the company has attractive franchise value and earnings power, and is nearing the start of a credit driven earnings recovery. The firm raised its target to $22 from $19.
- Oppenheimer assumed coverage of Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN) and upgraded shares to Outperform from Perform. The firm expects Amazon's revenue growth to re-accelerate over the next several quarters, making consensus estimates too conservative. Opco set a $130 price target on the stock.
- Barclays upgraded Ford (NYSE: F) to Equal Weight from Underweight and believes the company will report Q3 results above the Street. The firm raised its Q3 EPS estimate to 7 cents from 16 cents, vs. consensus of 21 cents, and its price target to $8 from $7.
- Charles River Labs (NYSE: CRL) was upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Goldman.
- Briggs & Stratton (NYSE: BGG) was upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Baird.
- Sealed Air (NYSE: SEE) was upgraded to Equal Weight from Underweight at Barclays.
Continue reading Analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations: AMZN, BA, BAC, F, LUV, LYG T, WEN ...
Posted Aug 21st 2009 9:30AM by Mark Fightmaster (RSS feed)
Filed under: Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), AT and T (T)

According to
USA Today, Apple (NASDAQ:
AAPL) and AT&T (NYSE:
T) are expected to saunter up to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and explain why they will not allow Google's (NASDAQ:
GOOG) free Google Voice application on the iPhone.
The problem is that Google is throwing stones while it lives in a glass house. Let me explain here -- Google has done the same thing to Skype when it blocked it from use with Google Android. This is truly the pot calling the kettle black, as Google is getting a taste of its own medicine. The question is, why can't these kids get together and play nice?
Continue reading Telecom companies to have their day in front of the FCC
Posted Feb 11th 2009 6:30PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: AT and T (T), Stocks to Buy

Today's economic (and credit market) conditions call for taking a page out of that great analysts' defensive play book: if we liked it at $27, we like it even more at $24.
The 'it' being
AT&T's (NYSE:
T) shares. AT&T shares walked in tandem with the market's great slide in 2008, but just as significant, the shares have been essentially unchanged since October 2008. In other words, shares were essentially unmoved by the greatest financial market and stock market turmoil since the 1930s.
Continue reading AT&T (T) still rings true
Posted Sep 18th 2008 12:30PM by Brian White (RSS feed)
Filed under: Products and services, Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), AT and T (T), Sprint Nextel Corp (S), Smartphones

When
Google, Inc. (NASDAQ:
GOOG) and Taiwanese smartphone maker HTC announced that T-Mobile USA would be the first wireless company to carry a wireless smartphone running Google's hyped Android operating system, those who have refused the iPhone and were fervent Google supporters finally had a reason to cheer. There have been several unknowns, with the most important one being a launch price.
This may have just been cleared up.
CrunchGear is reporting that the HTC/Google "Dream" Android-based smartphone will sell for $200 when released on T-Mobile USA sometime in October, or more precisely for $199 as the
WSJ reports today. This is identical to the pricing of the iPhone 3G on
AT&T, Inc. (NYSE:
T), so if there are any doubts Google and T-Mobile are squaring up to compete head-to-head with
Apple, Inc. (NASDAQ:
AAPL) and AT&T, those have been nicely squashed.
Sprint Nextel Corp.'s (NYSE:
S) first attempt to compete with a unit very much like the iPhone was the Samsung Instinct. That particular phone, which was released in June, has quickly become
Sprint's best cellphone seller in over two years. Can the HTC Dream Android-powered phone give T-Mobile USA a lift like this? Both Google and T-Mobile USA hope so, although Apple iPhone 3G sales certainly are not slowing down. But there are folks who will never want to be involved with AT&T at all (even with the iPhone 3G exclusivity), so having choices outside the Apple/AT&T world could spell immediate success continuation for Sprint Nextel and soon for T-Mobile USA.
Posted Aug 28th 2008 12:24PM by Brian White (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst reports, Deals, AT and T (T), Sprint Nextel Corp (S)
Sprint Nextel Corp. (NYSE:
S) seems to be on the mend from a perception standpoint. CEO Dan Hesse is still running television advertisements with his direct email address and a personal message to potential Sprint subscribers. The cellular carrier has a refined, electric image and has a decent competitor to
Apple, Inc.'s (NASDAQ:
AAPL) iPhone. Is it still in bad financial shape? That answer would be yes, as it continues to lose customers every single quarter.
While a
Sprint/T-Mobile partnership was rumored this summer, the technology used
between the two companies is incompatible. From a layman's perspective, it's precisely the problem that doomed the Sprint acquisition of Nextel. To this day, the brands still operate independently in many ways. That's been a death knell for the company, while larger competitor
AT&T, Inc. (NYSE:
T) perfectly merged its network with the now-gone Cingular over a few years. Still, would T-Mobile really want to team up with Sprint? Only if Sprint jettisons the Nextel brand and network sometime in 2008.
Analyst Christopher Larsen with Credit Suisse makes a
decent argument for Sprint and Nextel parting ways as soon as possible, citing the recent $3 billion fund raiser Sprint announced. Could an impending corporate divorce be in the works? Sprint has already
written off tens of billions in the bungled Nextel merger, but it could raise over $7.5 billion by selling Nextel.
Still, with the third- and fourth-largest wireless players (Sprint and T-Mobile, respectively) ripe for consolidation, combining two very different networks better work if there's even a hint of a future combination between the two. But right now, that may be the only choice: Verizon Wireless and AT&T are kicking butt in the wireless market in the U.S.
Posted Aug 19th 2008 1:55PM by Elizabeth Harrow (RSS feed)
Filed under: Products and services, Apple Inc (AAPL), AT and T (T), Research in Motion (RIMM), iPhone, Stocks to Buy, Technology
In an exciting bit of news for early adopters north of the border, the new BlackBerry Bold smartphone from Research In Motion Limited (NASDAQ: RIMM) is slated to hit Canadian shelves this Thursday, August 21. Because RIMM has signed service pacts with various wireless carriers in different regions, the Bold is being rolled out gradually around the globe. The snappy new device has already launched in Germany, but U.S. carrier AT&T (NYSE: T) is so far keeping mum about its plans for the Bold's Stateside debut.
The latest addition to the CrackBerry family is aimed toward business users; as proof, even Rupert Murdoch is getting in on the act. The Wall Street Journal Digital Network announced today that it's launched a new mobile application to provide immediate access to headlines in the WSJ family of financial publications (including Barron's, MarketWatch, and All Things Digital). The application is available for free on most BlackBerry smartphones.
Naturally, the Bold has already garnered comparisons to Apple's (NASDAQ: AAPL) iPhone -- but there are a few notable differences. While Jobs & Co. are slowly trying to make headway into the corporate world, their core audience is still top-heavy with tech-gadget completists and trust-fund hipsters. Meanwhile, BlackBerry's already in business with business, and the new WSJ app is just an extra boost of its Street cred.
Continue reading RIMM's BlackBerry Bold -- lack of hype is the hype
Posted Jul 30th 2008 3:03PM by Jonathan Berr (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Press releases, Competitive strategy, AT and T (T), Comcast Cl'A' (CMCSA), Verizon Communications (VZ)

Until recently, I believed that shares of
Comcast Corp. (NASDAQ:
CMCSA) had been
unfairly punished by investors who were too skeptical about the company's prospects. Now, I am changing my tune because I have come to realize that the future of the company will be filled with endless pricing battles, which will force the Philadelphia-based cable giant to sacrifice the needs of shareholder to retain customers.
To be fair, Comcast
reported a decent quarter Wednesday and was able to hold the line on capital expenditures. Net income was $632 million, or 21 cents a share, versus $588 million, or 19 cents, a year earlier. Sales jumped 11% to $8.55 billion. Results were short of the 23-cent forecast of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg but beat the $8.57 billion sales forecast.
Now, ordinarily missing the profit forecast would cause the shares to tank. Instead, they are trading up slightly because investors found much about the earnings report to like. For one thing, Comcast's free cash flow was $1.17 billion, more than triple from a year earlier. This beat the forecast of veteran cable industry watchers such as Craig Moffett of Sanford C. Bernstein. It also reaffirmed its earnings guidance for the year, countering worries that it would be hurt by cash-strapped customers falling behind in their bills.
Continue reading Why I have changed my tune about Comcast
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