OVERLAND PARK, Kan.(AP)
Wireless carrier Sprint Nextel Corp. said Monday it had a larger
first-quarter deficit as revenue fell, it lost more than a million
subscribers and it absorbed charges for severance and other
costs.
Its shares fell almost 4 percent in premarket trading.
Overland Park, Kan.-based Sprint said its loss totaled $505
million, or 18 cents per share, in the three months ended March 31
compared with a loss of $211 million, or 7 per share, during the
first quarter of last year.
Not including a number of one-time charges, including $231
million for severance and asset impairment and $86 million in
deal-related costs, the company said it earned 4 cents per share,
compared to 18 cents per share in the year-ago quarter.
Revenue fell 7.5 percent to $9.3 billion from $10.1 billion a
year earlier.
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial had expected earnings of
2 cents per share on $9.4 billion in sales.
Its shares fell 37 cents, or 3.9 percent, to $9.01 in premarket
trading.
Sprint, which has struggled since buying Nextel Communications
Inc. in 2005, said its total subscriber base fell by 1.09 million
to 52.8 million, including the loss of 1.07 million post-paid
customers who pay a monthly bill.
That was actually smaller than the 1.2 million in post-paid
losses the company had forecast last quarter.
Churn, or the measure of customers dropping service, was 2.45
percent during the quarter, an increase from the first quarter of
2007 and last quarter. Average revenue generated per post-paid user
fell 6 percent from last year to $56.
"As expected, our wireless business delivered weak
financial results," Sprint Chief Executive Officer Dan Hesse
said. "While the business will continue to face challenges in
the short term, we are making progress in methodically attacking
the sources of our performance issues."
During the first quarter, the company introduced a $99.99 plan
that provides unlimited voice and data services, undercutting by
price its chief rivals AT&T Mobility and Verizon Wireless'
similar unlimited plans.
It also has revamped its marketing, which has often been
criticized since the purchase of Nextel as being unfocused.
The company said it expected to continue feeling pressure on
wireless revenue and would have only "marginal"
improvement of post-paid subscriber losses in the second quarter.
However, it said it expected its finances to stabilize towards the
end of the year.
Sprint also said it was exploring the possible sale of non-core
assets and other moves designed to help profitability and ensure
the company maintains compliance with its debt covenants. It also
said it may ask its lenders for waivers to its credit facilities
but said it expected to remain in compliance with those covenants
"over the next few financial quarters while exploring and
pursuing these measures."
Last week, Sprint and Clearwire Corp. announced they had
resurrected their plan to offer high-speed mobile Internet service
with the help of some deep-pocketed supporters.
The two companies said they will combine their wireless
broadband units to create a $14.55 billion communications company,
to be called Clearwire, that will continue developing a mobile
network based on WiMax technology.
WiMax is similar to the WiFi service found in coffee shops,
airports and many homes but able to cover larger areas and
supposedly download at speeds faster than the latest cellular
networks for movies, games and other data services.
A similar partnership fell through last November. This time,
however, the duo is getting help from a group of outside investors,
including Intel Corp., Google Inc., Comcast Corp., Time Warner
Cable Inc. and Bright House Networks, who will kick in $3.2 billion
for the new company.
Other rumors swirling around the company is whether it plans to
spin off or sell its press-to-talk Nextel business and if it is a
possible acquisition target by Deutsche Telekom, the owner of
wireless rival T-Mobile.
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