atandt posts
FeedPosted May 6th 2008 2:20PM by Melly Alazraki (RSS feed)
Filed under: Deals, Microsoft (MSFT), Yahoo! (YHOO), Apple Inc (AAPL), AT and T (T), Sprint Nextel Corp (S), Verizon Communications (VZ)

So
The Wall Street Journal reports today -- according to its favorite "people familiar with the situation" sentence -- that wireless provider
Sprint Nextel Corp. (NYSE:
S) is considering spinning off or selling its Nextel unit. This is when I hear the screeching sound of a needle scraping a record. Say what? Should we play that again?
I guess I shouldn't really be that surprised since the $35 billion acquisition of Nextel Communications Inc. in 2005 has always seemed, to say it mildly, challenging. This would be, as the Journal puts it, "a dramatic acknowledgment" that the merger has actually been a failure.
Well, only Monday we heard that Deutsche Telekom AG (NYSE: DT) may be interested in Sprint. Could it be that either Deutsche Telekom demanded such an action, or that Sprint management decided such an action could entice DT to indeed go forward with an offer (despite the probable problems such a merger could face, as Jonathan Berr outlined in his post Monday)? Without Nextel, Sprint would rid itself of much debt. It is also considered to have better handsets and fewer dropped calls, making it a more attractive target.
Continue reading Sprint considering selling or spinning off Nextel
Posted May 5th 2008 10:35AM by Jonathan Berr (RSS feed)
Filed under: Deals, Rumors, Products and Services, AT and T (T), Sprint Nextel Corp (S), Verizon Communications (VZ)

Shares of
Sprint Nextel Corp. (NYSE:
S) are rising on a
Wall Street Journal (subscription required) report that
Deutsche Telekom AG (NYSE:
DT) is poised to make a bid for the wireless telecommunication company. If the report is accurate, Sprint's long suffering shareholders should do as the
Steve Miller Band song suggests "take the money and run" because the deal may not happen.
For Sprint, though, this may be its only hope. Sprint shares have slumped almost 40% this year as the Overland Park Kansas-based company tried in vain to gain marketshare against larger rivals including Verizon and
AT&T Inc. (NYSE:
T). The commercials starring the company's affable CEO Daniel Hesse haven't helped much either. Remember when Hesse was named CEO last December, board member Irvine O. Hockaday Jr.
remarked that Hesse "has the board's full support to take decisive actions necessary to improve our performance."
Does that mean a sale to the former German telecom monopoly? The deal makes sense in theory because combining Sprint and Deutsche Telekom would create the top wireless company with more than 82 million customers. Verizon, which is
a joint venture between Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE:
VZ) and
Vodafone Group Plc. (NYSE:
VOD) has 67.2 million customers while AT&T
has about 71 million wireless subscribers.
But as
Bloomberg News points out, analysts argue that integrating the Deutsche Telekom and Sprint Nextel networks wouldn't be easy. Moreover, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security may not look kindly on a foreign company taking over a U.S. telecom provider for national security reasons, the news service notes.
Even so, the arguments for the merger are so compelling that it might be worth the risk.
Posted Apr 22nd 2008 11:11AM by Jonathan Berr (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings Reports, Products and Services, Marketing and Advertising, AT and T (T)
AT&T Inc. (NYSE:
T) today posted strong first quarter results thanks to the continuing popularity of the iPhone and its ability to squeeze more savings from the BellSouth merger.
Net income rose to $3.46 billion, or 57 cents a share, from $2.85 billion, or 45 cents. Sales climbed 6% to $30.7 billion. On an adjusted basis, profit was 74 cents. The results matched the estimates of analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial, which in this market is good news. Shares of the telecommunications company were trading up in early morning market action.
"Revenue growth continues to ramp, we have good momentum across key growth areas, major cost initiatives are on track, and our operational results reinforce the confidence we have in our outlook," said Chief Executive Randall Stephenson
in the earnings release.
Among the highlights:
- Total wireless revenue increased 18.3% year-over-year to $11.8 billion. Wireless service revenue, which excludes handset and accessory sales, grew 17.1% to $10.6 billion. Growth was driven by strong subscriber gains and continued improvement in ARPU (average monthly revenues per subscriber).
- Wireless data revenues grew 57.3% to $2.3 billion, reflecting surging demand for Internet access, e-mail, messaging, data access and media bundles.
- The first quarter net gain in wireless subscribers totaled 1.3 million. AT&T ended the quarter with 71.4 million subscribers.
- AT&T's broadband revenue grew 13.2% in the first quarter to $1.4 billion.
- Total video connections, which include AT&T U-verse service and bundled satellite television service, increased by 264,000 to 2.6 million.
The mean price target of Wall Street analysts is $44.39, well above where it currently trades. Perhaps investors are expecting the next earnings report to show signs of a slowdown.
Posted Feb 28th 2008 12:24PM by Melly Alazraki (RSS feed)
Filed under: Major Movement, Earnings Reports, Bad News, AT and T (T), Sprint Nextel Corp (S), Verizon Communications (VZ)
Sprint Nextel Corp. (NYSE:
S) -- with a name that sounds somewhat ironic today --
posted a mammoth $29.5 billion loss today as it wrote down $29.7 billion of the $36 billion 2005 purchase of Nextel Communications Inc. and other companies. In essence, acknowledging it paid (way) too much for that acquisition.
If that was the only ugly number in this fourth-quarter report, then perhaps investors wouldn't have reacted the way they did. Sprint's stock is down some 8% today, following the report, after the company had already lost over 57% of its value in the past 52 weeks; 37% in 2008 alone.
The news is unpleasant. Sprint reported a fourth-quarter net loss of $10.36 a share. While excluding the writedown Sprint earned 21 cents per share,
beating the 18 cents per share expected by analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial, its sales fell 5.7% to $9.85 billion, missing analysts' estimates. The third-biggest U.S. wireless carrier also had to borrow $2.5 billion under a credit line to get access to cash, although it claimed it made the move due to current credit market conditions.
And that's not all. Sprint is losing customers, specifically 683,000 valuable customers (contract, or "post-paid") during the quarter. While it saw an increase in customers through its Boost prepaid brand, recently appointed CEO Dan Hesse said the company would lose 1.2 million customers during the first quarter and would see additional losses in the second quarter. Also, subscribers on long-term contracts spent $58 a month on their bills, down from $60 a month last year. Somehow, the churn rate remained unchanged at 2.3% (most likely offset by Boost).
Sprint has announced it would stop paying dividends for the foreseeable future.
Continue reading Sprint's staggering loss is not the only ugly number in Q4 report
Posted Feb 21st 2008 11:15AM by Steven Halpern (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newsletters, AT and T (T), Stocks to Buy
"Given the uncertainties, our strategy now is to focus on stocks with minimal downside risk in a weak economy, says Harry Domash who has added AT&T (NYSE: T) to the portfolio of his Winning Investing.
"Telecom giant AT&T is in a recession resistant businesses and pays a high dividend, which are the characteristics we need for this market. The stock provides and estimated dividend yield of 4.2%
"SBC Communications adopted the AT&T name when it bought long distance carrier AT&T in 2005. AT&T purchased BellSouth in 2006 and now provides landline Internet and telephone services in 22 U.S. states.
"With BellSouth, AT&T gained full control of Cingular, the largest wireless carrier in the U.S., and changed its name to AT&T Mobility. Wireless services account for most of AT&T's growth. Last year AT&T became the exclusive service provider for Apple's new iPhone.
"In 2006, AT&T launched a fiber-based network, called 'U-verse,' which offers video and higher speed Internet services.
"AT&T reported December quarter (continuing) earnings of $0.71 per share, up 16% vs. year-ago. Thanks to its BellSouth purchase, revenues rose 91% to $30.3 billion. The stock is an addition to the 'Masstress Stuffers' portion of our model portfolio."
Each day, Steven Halpern's TheStockAdvisors.com offers the latest market commentary and favorite investment ideas from the nation's leading financial newsletter advisors.
Posted Feb 21st 2008 10:17AM by Brian White (RSS feed)
Filed under: Products and Services, Consumer Experience, Competitive Strategy, Marketing and Advertising, AT and T (T), Sprint Nextel Corp (S), Verizon Communications (VZ)

Tom Taulli wrote Tuesday about
Verizon (NYSE:
VZ)'s
unlimited wireless calling plan, and competitors
AT&T, Inc. (NYSE:
T) and T-Mobile (part of Germany's Deutsche Telekom)
followed suit with unlimited wireless calling plans for U.S. customers. This is a first in the wireless industry for the major carriers, but it's a welcome one for many consumers. Both AT&T and T-Mobile will offer unlimited calling starting by the end of this week -- T-Mobile starting today and AT&T starting tomorrow.
Where is
Sprint Nextel Corp. (NYSE:
S), you may ask? The carrier also announced unlimited calling plans two weeks ago, but just in a few select markets -- and starting at $119.99 per month. Although the unlimited calling plans vary from carrier to carrier, generally, there is a $99.99 per month price of admission with all of them. T-Mobile offers the best value, with all call minutes and unlimited text messages included. Why did all the carriers -- except Sprint -- unveil unlimited calling within just a few days of each other?
Something has to keep growth churning along in the wireless industry. With 85% of Americans now owning a cellphone, wireless is heading for commodity status (it may already be there), where price wars will begin erupting and "me too" marketing campaigns following shortly thereafter. The PC industry knows all about this. But price wars only help the consumer -- not the wireless carrier. Yes, many of us heavy wireless users may soon have lower bills, but the carriers may have lower bottom lines as well. What wireless company stocks do you have in your portfolio? Will this cause more customers to abandon landline telephones and switch to unlimited-minutes wireless only, pumping in growth into the wireless sector for the time being? Food for thought.
Posted Jan 14th 2008 10:22AM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst Reports, Deals, Industry, Consumer Experience, Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), AT and T (T)
Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) is getting a lot of traffic to its mobile search applications from the Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL)'s iPhone. That does not quite add up since the iPhone "accounts for just 2 percent of smartphones worldwide, according to IDC, a market research firm," writes The New York Times.
The data would seem to show that iPhone users will access internet search features 10 to 20 times more than customers with other smartphones. Based on the industry's perception of how good the handset's interface is for going online, that is possible.
The news raises two important issues. The first is that the iPhone is only available on the AT&T (NYSE: T) 2.5G network now. Later this year, it is likely to work on the faster 3G network, which could increase access to online services even more.
Beyond that, fees from using an interent browser and downloading data can be fairly significant. In other words, Apple and AT&T could be bringing in more revenue than most analysts think.
Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.
Posted Jan 8th 2008 4:16PM by Jonathan Berr (RSS feed)
Filed under: Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Apple Inc (AAPL), AT and T (T), Smartphones

Shares of
AT&T Inc. (NYSE:
T) had their biggest decline in more than 5 years after the largest phone company warned of
"softness" in its consumer business and that more of its customers have had their service disconnected for failing to pay their bills.
In late afternoon trading, the exclusive seller of the iPhone, was down $3.51, or 8.6%, to $37.52. The company's mobile phone and corporate business has not been hurt by the slowdown, Bloomberg News quotes Chief Executive Randall Stephenson as saying.
Shares of AT&T have jumped 12% over the past year. This year, though, the picture is different. The Nasdaq Composite Index has plunged about 8% in the early days of 2008 amid declines by stalwarts such as
Google Inc. (NASDAQ:
GOOG),
Apple, Inc. (NASDAQ:
AAPL) and
Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:
MSFT). AT&T has dropped almost 9%. The tech index hasn't had a positive day yet this year.
What's going on here? I don't think it can all be profit taking. Investors seem to be concerned that the slowdown in consumer spending will hit corporations as well. That won't be clear for another few months. It certainly kills some of the buzz from the Consumer Electronics Show.
Posted Dec 11th 2007 12:30PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Good news, Apple Inc (AAPL), AT and T (T), iPhone

Few deny that the current market contains considerable uncertainty: a subprime mortgage and related asset default issue which seeks a solution, declining corporate earnings, high energy prices and a wary consumer have put investors and citizens on guard.
Sound business decisions in these choppy waters require research, careful planning and verve, and on Tuesday,
AT&T (NYSE:
T) may have accomplished just that.
AT&T announced that it would buy back $15.2 billion of its stock, and also said it would increase its quarterly dividend by 12.6% to 40 cents from 35.5 cents. AT&T's shares surged $2.02 to $39.92 Tuesday at mid-day on the news.
The company also set a long-term target of 30 million subscribers by 2010 for its TV service, which is delivered over phone lines.
Continue reading AT&T buyback shows value in its shares
Posted Dec 11th 2007 8:16AM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst Reports, Forecasts, Industry, Consumer Experience, Competitive Strategy, AT and T (T), Comcast Cl'A' (CMCSA), Verizon Communications (VZ), Qwest Communications Intl (Q)
Cell phones and VoIP are killing the regular old home phone business. Reviewing a new study from a Citigroup analyst, Barron's said, "The telcos continue to lose residential phone subscribers to both cable VoIP and wireless subscriptions at a steady 7%-8% a year."
The number of consumers who use only a wireless phone at home is expected to hit 27% in 2010. And the penetration of cable VoIP is expected to be 25% by then.
It might seem bad news for AT&T (NYSE: T) and Verizon (NYSE: VZ), but both do have large wireless businesses that should help offset attrition among home phone users. They are also selling new fiber-to-the-home broadband, which will also supplement revenue.
Continue reading The death of the home phone
Posted Dec 4th 2007 10:22AM by Brian White (RSS feed)
Filed under: Products and Services, Law, Apple Inc (AAPL), eBay (EBAY), AT and T (T), Comcast Cl'A' (CMCSA), iPhone

One of the hottest names in tech,
Apple, Inc. (NASDAQ:
AAPL), and its wireless partner
AT&T, Inc. (NYSE:
T), have been
sued by Klausner Technologies Inc. for patent violation. Although patent litigation is far and away the joke of the law business these days, this one involves the "Visual Voicemail" feature found on the iPhone, which lets customers visually see their voicemails and go directly to any of them (instead of the standard chronological order most wireless carriers offer).
Kluasner Technologies claims that two of its patents are being violated by Apple and AT&T, and that it is entitled to $360 million in total damages, including future royalties from both companies based on continued usage of the visual voicemail feature by iPhone customers.
From the actions by Klausner Technologies this week, it seems that the company is a patent litigation hound more than anything. The company also filed suits against
eBay Inc. (NASDAQ:
EBAY)'s Skype unit,
Comcast Corp. (NYSE:
CMCSA) and more for violation of Klausner's VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) patents. It wants an additional $300 million in those lawsuits. Klausner settled with more companies last year over its VoIP patents and this year it looks to be continuing the trend.
Posted Dec 3rd 2007 11:00AM by Brian White (RSS feed)
Filed under: Products and Services, Apple Inc (AAPL), AT and T (T), iPhone, Technology

As Doug
noted a few days ago,
Apple, Inc. (NASDAQ:
AAPL) will be releasing an updated iPhone some time in early 2008 that will work on
AT&T, Inc. (NYSE:
T)'s 3G wireless data network. After
AT&T's CEO Randall Stephenson said this last week, it's been confirmed by Apple on several occasions. But, as an aspiring iPhone customer who may have been thinking about buying one this holiday season, will you be more apt to plunk down that $400 knowing that a new version will be out in just a few months (most likely)?
This story is a recurring one for different electronics and gadgets every six months. There is always an upgrade, a better product or a next new thing -- it's what keeps customer buying more and more stuff and it's also what keeps consumer electronics manufacturers plan for a steady income stream. Smacking Apple's holiday sales by sitting on a public stage (of sorts) and stating that, yes, AT&T will have a new iPhone in early 2008, might have just been a backhand against Apple's head.
The relationship between
Apple and AT&T has been an odd one form the very start, no matter how professional it looked in January of this year when both companies announced the iPhone, and their exclusive partnership in the U.S. While Apple gets a cut of every iPhone user's bill, AT&T gets all these new customers and books all that revenue. Sounds like a win-win situation. That is, except for the customer. Then again, much business is not longer about the customers, it's about the company's bottom line.
Posted Nov 30th 2007 9:52AM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: Deals, Launches, Consumer Experience, Competitive Strategy, Google (GOOG), AT and T (T)
It is old news, really. Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) will be bidding on some of the wireless spectrum to be offered by the FCC in January. Speculation is that it will buy a piece of the regulated airwaves and allow consumers to connect to a large number of devices for little or no charge. The airwaves would be "open." Google would make money from selling advertising on the handsets that access the service. The deal would also drive incumbents like Verizon Wireless and AT&T (NYSE: T) crazy by offering a new model for mobile consumers.
Or, it goes something like that. The media has never been able to exactly pin it down. According to The Wall Street Journal, Google "has said it wants to make mobile networks more open, so that consumers can use any Internet service and application and move their handsets between carriers without onerous restrictions."
It is not clear how Google will make back the billions of dollars it would have to pay for the spectrum. It is also fuzzy how Google would deliver the system. Would it make an investment in expensive wireless infrastructure like cell towers? Would it lease those from a third party? The project is much more expensive than just buying the spectrum.
Continue reading Google to bid on wireless spectrum
Posted Nov 29th 2007 9:33AM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: Industry, Consumer Experience, Competitive Strategy, Apple Inc (AAPL), AT and T (T), iPhone, Smartphones
The head of AT&T (NYSE: T) is saying that Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) will launch a 3G iPhone next year and the big phone company is anxious to start selling it. Barron's quotes AT&T's CEO as saying, "The 3G iPhone, when? You will have it next year."
Although the iPhone has sold extraordinarily well in the U.S., one of its only drawbacks is that it runs on AT&T's 2.5G network. The phone does not have the capacity to run on the company's faster 3G network, but the handset is obviously being adapted.
An iPhone on a faster network is likely to encourage people to use the phone more for web surfing and data downloads. AT&T makes money off of usage fees, so this should increase its revenue from iPhone customers. It is widely assumed that Apple gets a piece of these usage fees, so its income-per-phone could go up as well.
Customers waiting for a 3G version of the phone will probably flood AT&T stores when the new version hits the market. It could look like the original launch all over again.
Douglas A. McIntyre is a partner at 247wallst.com.
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