Archive for April 22nd, 2008

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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,” stated 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 World wide web 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.

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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’ve good momentum across key growth areas, major cost initiatives are on track, and our operational results reinforce the confidence we’ve 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 World wide web 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 TV 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 anticipating the next earnings report to show signs of a slowdown.

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The New York Times reports that Marcus Brauchli, managing editor of News Corp’.s (NYSE: NWS) Wall Street Journal is leaving his post. It does not appear to know whether he resigned or was fired. But a quick look at this morning’s Journal tells me that Murdoch is determined to take business news out of the Journal and cover politics.

This morning’s Journal doesn’t have a single business story on the front page of its first section. The one business-like story, about Saudi Arabian oil supplies, is a thinly veiled defense of record high oil prices.

Increasingly since Murdoch took over, the Journal has featured stories on domestic and international politics on its first section. And it seems to have cut back on the kind of in-depth analysis of business stories or identification of new business trends that made the Journal a must-read for me.

Murdoch is now trying to take market share from the Times, which reports that Brauchli had been frustrated with some changes and seemed not to have the control over the newspaper that he was promised. It looks to me like Murdoch is trying to turn the Journal into the print version of Fox News. So when renewal time comes up next year, there’s a good chance I’ll be among those who cancel my subscription.

And if the Times is smart, it will hire the ideal of the disaffected Journal editors and reporters to take up the slack in business coverage that Murdoch is leaving — perhaps starting with Brauchli.

Peter Cohan is President of Peter S. Cohan & Associates. He also instructs management at Babson College and edits The Cohan Letter. He has no financial interest in the securities mentioned.

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