("AT&T 1Q Net Falls 9% On Pension Charges, Landline
Weakness," published at 7:51 a.m. EDT, didn't make it clear that
people familiar with the situation, and not the company itself,
said AT&T was bidding for Verizon Wireless assets. The
corrected version follows.)
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
AT&T Inc.'s (T) first-quarter net income fell 9% on pension
charges and continued to be weighed down by ongoing weakness in the
landline business.
Telecommunications companies have been facing heightened
competition from the new wave of mobile-application stores as
concerns arise that they may lose out on revenue, but the telecoms
say they're working on application outlets of their own.
They also face pressure from discount wireless carriers like
MetroPCS Communications Inc. (PCS) and Leap Wireless International
Inc. (LEAP), which have projected big subscriber gains and offer
plans for as low as $30 that don't require contracts.
AT&T's shares were recently up 4% at $26.30 in premarket
trading as the earnings beat expectations. The stock has lost a
third of its value in the last year.
Chief Executive Randall Stephenson said last month the current
economic downturn isn't any worse than what the industry faced
after the technology bubble burst at the start of the decade.
The company posted net income of $3.2 billion, or 53 cents a
share, down from $3.52 billion, or 57 cents a share, a year
earlier. The latest results included 5 cents in pension and retiree
benefit expenses.
Revenue slipped 0.6% to $30.57 billion.
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters expected earnings of 48
cents on revenue of $31.09 billion.
Profit at AT&T's wireless business rose 13% amid an 8.8%
gain in revenue. Total subscribership grew 1.2 million during the
quarter to 78.2 million. There were 1.6 million activations of
Apple Inc.'s (AAPL) iPhone, with about 40% of them from new
AT&T wireless customers.
Meanwhile, for the more-attractive postpaid contracts, net new
subscribers were 875,000, up 24% from a year earlier, while churn,
the rate of customer cancellations, was stable at 1.2%.
AT&T's wireless data-services revenue - what customers pay
for Internet browsing on cellphones as well as sending wireless
emails - jumped 39%. Revenue from the wireline segment fell 5.4% on
a 27% drop in profits.
Investors have been worried that the wireless business, which
has been AT&T's growth engine with years of rapid expansion,
may be nearing saturation.
AT&T has launched a bid for the roughly $3 billion in
wireless assets that chief rival Verizon Wireless has to sell as
part of its purchase of Alltel Corp. (AT), people familiar with the
situation told The Wall Street Journal in February. Its spending
spree and substantial losses in the value of its pension plans have
raised debt-level concerns at Standard & Poor's Ratings
Services.
-By Kerry E. Grace, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5089;
kerry.grace@dowjones.com