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  1. #1
    4phun
    Guest
    Sprint shares plummet after job cuts

    from BusinessWeek


    NEW YORK

    Shares of beleaguered Sprint Nextel Corp. took a nosedive Friday after
    the nation's third-largest wireless carrier said it continued to lose
    subscribers at an alarming rate during the fourth quarter and will lay
    off thousands to cut costs.

    A "meltdown," a "miserable performance" and "disaster" were some of
    the words analysts used to describe Sprint's predicament Friday. The
    company said it lost 683,000 postpaid subscribers during the quarter.
    Wall Street had expected a loss of about 250,000 to subscribers,
    according to Goldman Sachs analyst Jason Armstrong.

    Sprint also announced plans to cut 4,000 jobs, close 8 percent of its
    retail locations and reduce its use of contractors and outsourced
    services. While investors have been expecting the company to outline a
    cost-cutting plan since its new CEO took helm, Armstrong said in a
    client note the cuts were already in the works under interim
    management.

    "Hence, we would warn that new CEO Dan Hesse has yet to take his cut
    at the business," he wrote. "He has historically been aggressive on
    cost cuts and conservative on guidance, so look for more reductions
    when he finalizes his plan."

    Hessem, who took over as Sprint's CEO in December, is the former chief
    executive of Sprint spinoff Embarq, where he cut more than 1,200 jobs.
    He replaced Gary Forsee, who was ousted in October following several
    quarters of falling subscriber numbers and other operational troubles
    for the company.

    Sprint did not mention its WiMax service, Xohm, when announcing the
    job cuts, and Cowen and Co. analyst Thomas Watts said the company "may
    continue with a slow launch in select markets as planned, but may
    reevaluate its strategy going forward." Sprint, he added, may scale
    back WiMax spending as it focuses on improving its core wireless
    business. The project has been viewed by some as too expensive and
    years away from turning a profit.

    Most analysts kept "Hold" ratings on Sprint's stock, noting that the
    company is in the midst of a turnaround that may have to get worse
    before it gets better. In the meantime, Sprint's subscriber defections
    should benefit Verizon Wireless and AT&T Inc. -- though the shares of
    both companies fell on Friday.

    Sprint's shares plunged $2.91, or 25.2 percent, to $8.66 in afternoon
    trading. The stock has lost nearly 35 percent of its value since the
    start of the year. Earlier Friday, shares hit $8.15, their lowest
    level since 2002.

    Verizon's shares fell $1.91, or 4.7 percent, to $39. AT&T's shares
    fell $1.29, or 3.5 percent, to $36.01.



    See More: SPRINT = a "meltdown," a "miserable performance" and a "disaster" -shares plunged 25.2 percent



  2. #2
    jgrove24@hotmail.com
    Guest

    Re: SPRINT = a "meltdown," a "miserable performance" and a "disaster"- shares plunged 25.2 percent

    On Jan 18, 6:38 pm, 4phun <vic.hea...@gmail.com> wrote:
    > Sprint shares plummet after job cuts
    >
    > from BusinessWeek
    >
    > NEW YORK
    >
    > Shares of beleaguered Sprint Nextel Corp. took a nosedive Friday after
    > the nation's third-largest wireless carrier said it continued to lose
    > subscribers at an alarming rate during the fourth quarter and will lay
    > off thousands to cut costs.
    >
    > A "meltdown," a "miserable performance" and "disaster" were some of
    > the words analysts used to describe Sprint's predicament Friday. The
    > company said it lost 683,000 postpaid subscribers during the quarter.
    > Wall Street had expected a loss of about 250,000 to subscribers,
    > according to Goldman Sachs analyst Jason Armstrong.
    >
    > Sprint also announced plans to cut 4,000 jobs, close 8 percent of its
    > retail locations and reduce its use of contractors and outsourced
    > services. While investors have been expecting the company to outline a
    > cost-cutting plan since its new CEO took helm, Armstrong said in a
    > client note the cuts were already in the works under interim
    > management.
    >
    > "Hence, we would warn that new CEO Dan Hesse has yet to take his cut
    > at the business," he wrote. "He has historically been aggressive on
    > cost cuts and conservative on guidance, so look for more reductions
    > when he finalizes his plan."
    >
    > Hessem, who took over as Sprint's CEO in December, is the former chief
    > executive of Sprint spinoff Embarq, where he cut more than 1,200 jobs.
    > He replaced Gary Forsee, who was ousted in October following several
    > quarters of falling subscriber numbers and other operational troubles
    > for the company.
    >
    > Sprint did not mention its WiMax service, Xohm, when announcing the
    > job cuts, and Cowen and Co. analyst Thomas Watts said the company "may
    > continue with a slow launch in select markets as planned, but may
    > reevaluate its strategy going forward." Sprint, he added, may scale
    > back WiMax spending as it focuses on improving its core wireless
    > business. The project has been viewed by some as too expensive and
    > years away from turning a profit.
    >
    > Most analysts kept "Hold" ratings on Sprint's stock, noting that the
    > company is in the midst of a turnaround that may have to get worse
    > before it gets better. In the meantime, Sprint's subscriber defections
    > should benefit Verizon Wireless and AT&T Inc. -- though the shares of
    > both companies fell on Friday.
    >
    > Sprint's shares plunged $2.91, or 25.2 percent, to $8.66 in afternoon
    > trading. The stock has lost nearly 35 percent of its value since the
    > start of the year. Earlier Friday, shares hit $8.15, their lowest
    > level since 2002.
    >
    > Verizon's shares fell $1.91, or 4.7 percent, to $39. AT&T's shares
    > fell $1.29, or 3.5 percent, to $36.01.


    HA HA HA, shoulda went with GSM...those Lucifer radio cards should be
    good for some gold and silver scrap value....JG



  3. #3
    John Navas
    Guest

    Re: SPRINT = a "meltdown," a "miserable performance" and a "disaster" - shares plunged 25.2 percent

    On Fri, 18 Jan 2008 16:46:08 -0800 (PST), jgrove24@hotmail.com wrote in
    <6da5f0e5-6cf7-498b-aefc-a73189a886f7@d70g2000hsb.googlegroups.com>:

    >On Jan 18, 6:38 pm, 4phun <vic.hea...@gmail.com> wrote:


    >> Verizon's shares fell $1.91, or 4.7 percent, to $39. AT&T's shares
    >> fell $1.29, or 3.5 percent, to $36.01.


    >HA HA HA, shoulda went with GSM...those Lucifer radio cards should be
    >good for some gold and silver scrap value....JG


    Yep. CDMA has been in serious decline, and this will tend to accelerate
    the process, leaving Verizon increasingly isolated on a shrinking CDMA
    island, probably why Verizon shares dropped much more than AT&T shares.
    The bet by AT&T on GSM and 3G looks has been paying off well, and
    beating out Verizon for the iPhone has made it the strongest player in
    the U.S. market.

    --
    Best regards, FAQ FOR AT&T (CINGULAR) WIRELESS:
    John Navas <http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/AT&T_Wireless_FAQ>



  4. #4
    Dennis Ferguson
    Guest

    Re: SPRINT = a "meltdown," a "miserable performance" and a "disaster" - shares plunged 25.2 percent

    On 2008-01-19, John Navas <spamfilter1@navasgroup.com> wrote:
    > On Fri, 18 Jan 2008 16:46:08 -0800 (PST), jgrove24@hotmail.com wrote in
    ><6da5f0e5-6cf7-498b-aefc-a73189a886f7@d70g2000hsb.googlegroups.com>:
    >
    >>On Jan 18, 6:38 pm, 4phun <vic.hea...@gmail.com> wrote:

    >
    >>> Verizon's shares fell $1.91, or 4.7 percent, to $39. AT&T's shares
    >>> fell $1.29, or 3.5 percent, to $36.01.

    >
    >>HA HA HA, shoulda went with GSM...those Lucifer radio cards should be
    >>good for some gold and silver scrap value....JG

    >
    > Yep. CDMA has been in serious decline, and this will tend to accelerate
    > the process, leaving Verizon increasingly isolated on a shrinking CDMA
    > island, probably why Verizon shares dropped much more than AT&T shares.


    ?? Over the past 52 weeks Verizon shares are up 5%, AT&T up 3% and Sprint
    down 50%. The S&P is down 7%.

    Sprint and Verizon don't look like the ones which are closely correlated
    to me.

    Dennis Ferguson



  5. #5
    4phun
    Guest

    Re: SPRINT = a "meltdown," a "miserable performance" and a "disaster"- shares plunged 25.2 percent

    On Jan 18, 8:00 pm, John Navas <spamfilt...@navasgroup.com> wrote:
    > On Fri, 18 Jan 2008 16:46:08 -0800 (PST), jgrov...@hotmail.com wrote in
    > <6da5f0e5-6cf7-498b-aefc-a73189a88...@d70g2000hsb.googlegroups.com>:
    >
    > >On Jan 18, 6:38 pm, 4phun <vic.hea...@gmail.com> wrote:
    > >> Verizon's shares fell $1.91, or 4.7 percent, to $39. AT&T's shares
    > >> fell $1.29, or 3.5 percent, to $36.01.

    > >HA HA HA, shoulda went with GSM...those Lucifer radio cards should be
    > >good for some gold and silver scrap value....JG

    >
    > Yep. CDMA has been in serious decline, and this will tend to accelerate
    > the process, leaving Verizon increasingly isolated on a shrinking CDMA
    > island, probably why Verizon shares dropped much more than AT&T shares.
    > The bet by AT&T on GSM and 3G looks has been paying off well, and
    > beating out Verizon for the iPhone has made it the strongest player in
    > the U.S. market.
    >
    > --
    > Best regards, FAQ FOR AT&T (CINGULAR) WIRELESS:
    > John Navas <http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/AT&T_Wireless_FAQ>


    John in looking over the financial news related to this Sprint news I
    saw one wit called CDMA the beta max of Wireless and another said
    Sprint should consider switching to GSM. Apparently there is a
    Canadian Telco considering rolling out GSM this year and abandoning
    their CDMA network. The bottom line, the global standard is GSM.

    John, I also saw an interesting news story from CNET VIDEO NEWS today
    that mentioned the current tweaking by Google for the iPhone now had
    the same Google search data on the iPhone which was using GSM EDGE
    loading and displaying just as fast as a PC hooked up to broadband.
    The iPhone is one powerful little instrument that has captured the
    imagination of best minds in the industry!




  6. #6
    tedkaz24@hotmail.com
    Guest

    Re: SPRINT = a "meltdown," a "miserable performance" and a "disaster"- shares plunged 25.2 percent

    On Jan 18, 7:14 pm, Dennis Ferguson <dcfergu...@pacbell.net> wrote:
    > On 2008-01-19, John Navas <spamfilt...@navasgroup.com> wrote:
    >
    > > On Fri, 18 Jan 2008 16:46:08 -0800 (PST), jgrov...@hotmail.com wrote in
    > ><6da5f0e5-6cf7-498b-aefc-a73189a88...@d70g2000hsb.googlegroups.com>:

    >
    > >>On Jan 18, 6:38 pm, 4phun <vic.hea...@gmail.com> wrote:

    >
    > >>> Verizon's shares fell $1.91, or 4.7 percent, to $39. AT&T's shares
    > >>> fell $1.29, or 3.5 percent, to $36.01.

    >
    > >>HA HA HA, shoulda went with GSM...those Lucifer radio cards should be
    > >>good for some gold and silver scrap value....JG

    >
    > > Yep. CDMA has been in serious decline, and this will tend to accelerate
    > > the process, leaving Verizon increasingly isolated on a shrinking CDMA
    > > island, probably why Verizon shares dropped much more than AT&T shares.

    >
    > ?? Over the past 52 weeks Verizon shares are up 5%, AT&T up 3% and Sprint
    > down 50%. The S&P is down 7%.
    >
    > Sprint and Verizon don't look like the ones which are closely correlated
    > to me.
    >
    > Dennis Ferguson


    A down day for all:

    Symbol Time Trade Change % Chg
    S 4:00PM ET 8.70 Down 2.87 Down 24.81%
    T 4:01PM ET 36.11 Down 1.19 Down 3.19%
    VZ 4:00PM ET 39.09 Down 1.82 Down 4.45%



  7. #7
    John Navas
    Guest

    Re: SPRINT = a "meltdown," a "miserable performance" and a "disaster" - shares plunged 25.2 percent

    On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 01:14:10 GMT, Dennis Ferguson
    <dcferguson@pacbell.net> wrote in
    <slrnfp2jn1.4m.dcferguson@akit-ferguson.com>:

    >On 2008-01-19, John Navas <spamfilter1@navasgroup.com> wrote:
    >> On Fri, 18 Jan 2008 16:46:08 -0800 (PST), jgrove24@hotmail.com wrote in
    >><6da5f0e5-6cf7-498b-aefc-a73189a886f7@d70g2000hsb.googlegroups.com>:
    >>
    >>>On Jan 18, 6:38 pm, 4phun <vic.hea...@gmail.com> wrote:

    >>
    >>>> Verizon's shares fell $1.91, or 4.7 percent, to $39. AT&T's shares
    >>>> fell $1.29, or 3.5 percent, to $36.01.

    >>
    >>>HA HA HA, shoulda went with GSM...those Lucifer radio cards should be
    >>>good for some gold and silver scrap value....JG

    >>
    >> Yep. CDMA has been in serious decline, and this will tend to accelerate
    >> the process, leaving Verizon increasingly isolated on a shrinking CDMA
    >> island, probably why Verizon shares dropped much more than AT&T shares.

    >
    >?? Over the past 52 weeks Verizon shares are up 5%, AT&T up 3% and Sprint
    >down 50%. The S&P is down 7%.
    >
    >Sprint and Verizon don't look like the ones which are closely correlated
    >to me.


    I'm talking only about the drops today on the Sprint news. Analysts
    believe the fall in AT&T and Verizon reflect a likely tough year in 2008
    for cellular carriers. The greater fall in Verizon presumably means a
    tougher outlook than for AT&T.

    --
    Best regards, FAQ FOR AT&T (CINGULAR) WIRELESS:
    John Navas <http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/AT&T_Wireless_FAQ>



  8. #8
    Ness-Net
    Guest

    Re: SPRINT = a "meltdown," a "miserable performance" and a "disaster" - shares plunged 25.2 percent

    John, up to your old tricks again I see......

    Let me give you a hint...... then do your homework.

    N E X T E L

    is where most of the problems are - (which isn't "CDMA")......




    "John Navas" <spamfilter1@navasgroup.com> wrote in message
    newsii2p3p5e7eg675nop6o6r5rnk66auvfrr@4ax.com...
    >
    > Yep. CDMA has been in serious decline, and this will tend to accelerate
    > the process, leaving Verizon increasingly isolated on a shrinking CDMA
    > island, probably why Verizon shares dropped much more than AT&T shares.
    > The bet by AT&T on GSM and 3G looks has been paying off well, and
    > beating out Verizon for the iPhone has made it the strongest player in
    > the U.S. market.
    >
    > --
    > Best regards, FAQ FOR AT&T (CINGULAR) WIRELESS:
    > John Navas <http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/AT&T_Wireless_FAQ>





  9. #9
    SMS
    Guest

    Re: SPRINT = a "meltdown," a "miserable performance" and a "disaster"- shares plunged 25.2 percent

    Dennis Ferguson wrote:
    > On 2008-01-19, John Navas <spamfilter1@navasgroup.com> wrote:
    >> On Fri, 18 Jan 2008 16:46:08 -0800 (PST), jgrove24@hotmail.com wrote in
    >> <6da5f0e5-6cf7-498b-aefc-a73189a886f7@d70g2000hsb.googlegroups.com>:
    >>
    >>> On Jan 18, 6:38 pm, 4phun <vic.hea...@gmail.com> wrote:
    >>>> Verizon's shares fell $1.91, or 4.7 percent, to $39. AT&T's shares
    >>>> fell $1.29, or 3.5 percent, to $36.01.
    >>> HA HA HA, shoulda went with GSM...those Lucifer radio cards should be
    >>> good for some gold and silver scrap value....JG

    >> Yep. CDMA has been in serious decline, and this will tend to accelerate
    >> the process, leaving Verizon increasingly isolated on a shrinking CDMA
    >> island, probably why Verizon shares dropped much more than AT&T shares.

    >
    > ?? Over the past 52 weeks Verizon shares are up 5%, AT&T up 3% and Sprint
    > down 50%. The S&P is down 7%.
    >
    > Sprint and Verizon don't look like the ones which are closely correlated
    > to me.


    Even with the Sprint subscriber losses, CDMA remains the dominant system
    in North America, with well over 50% of subscribers. 2007 saw big
    increases in CDMA penetration in the U.S.. CDMA is also gaining ground
    in Asia, because carriers like the fact that you can have the same
    coverage with 40% fewer cell sites, and the fact that CDMA has much
    higher capacity per Mhz than GSM.

    In Australia, a judge granted an emergency order delaying the CDMA shut
    down because "Next G" could not provide the rural coverage of CDMA. Hey,
    maybe someone can do that for AMPS in the U.S.!

    Of course remember than for data, it's all CDMA, whether it's W-CDMA or
    CDMA-2000. The future is indeed bright for CDMA!



  10. #10
    John Navas
    Guest

    Re: SPRINT = a "meltdown," a "miserable performance" and a "disaster" - shares plunged 25.2 percent

    On Fri, 18 Jan 2008 19:05:25 -0800, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com>
    wrote in <47916887$0$84203$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net>:

    >Of course remember than for data, it's all CDMA, whether it's W-CDMA or
    >CDMA-2000. The future is indeed bright for CDMA!


    Nope. CMDA-2000 and W-CDMA are totally different.

    --
    Best regards, FAQ FOR AT&T (CINGULAR) WIRELESS:
    John Navas <http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/AT&T_Wireless_FAQ>



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