| | |
Sprint Staggering to Regain Financial Footing
Ugh. The tech meltdown turn toward the telecom sector this week, fixing its dark gaze on companies like AT&T, Verizon, and Sprint Nextel, among others.
On Thursday, shares of telecommunications companies fell badly from the ongoing fallout amid credit concerns.
The carnage was grim and deep. U.S. traded shares of Paris-based Alcatel-Lucent fell nearly 5 percent. Ciena Corp. fell ahead of its earnings report, scheduled for Friday.
Novatel Wireless Inc. was an exception, as its shares rose more than 3 percent after the wireless modem maker said it will buy back up to $25 million of its stock through Sept. 5.
A rundown of telecom stocks from Thursday's trading . . .
-- AT&T, down 43 cents to $35.02
-- Sprint Nextel Corp., down 20 cents, or 2.9 percent, to $6.80
-- Verizon Communications Inc., down 67 cents to $35.28
-- Alcatel-Lucent, down 28 cents to $5.41
-- Ciena, down $1.05, or 4 percent, to $24.94
-- Novatel, up 34 cents to $10.77
I'm particularly concerned about Sprint. Last week, week, Sprint's shares plummeted 20 percent following lousy earnings results and a bleak rest-of-2008 forecast from the nation's third-largest wireless carrier.
Today, CNET News is reporting that rumors are swirling today over the future of Sprint. "First off, Seeking Alpha is reporting that Sprint has hired Morgan Stanley for a possible spin-off of its Nextel brand. Sprint's ongoing troubles have been widely reported over the last few months and many analysts have named the 2006 merger between Sprint and Nextel as a key cause of the carrier's ongoing troubles. With that in mind, a spin-off of Nextel may be surprising, but it wouldn't be so shocking."
"But that's not the only Sprint dish going around today. The Kansas City Star said that Merrill Lynch analysts are predicting that Deutsche Telekom, owner of T-Mobile USA, is considering buying Sprint. The joining of a CDMA and a GSM carrier seems a bit unlikely, but after Sprint scooped up Nextel I can believe just about anything. Yet what would seem more probable is a Verizon Wireless acquisition of Sprint. But as the Wall Street Journal points out, Verizon should just concentrate on sucking away Sprint's customers. Verizon already decided in 2004 not to buy Sprint so the Journal can't find a reason why it should try again."
Last week I wrote how Sprint was having some difficulty turning its financial ship of state around. New management, weak sales, increased competition, and a stagnating economy won't help that process along any further. Stay away from this former high flyer.
On Thursday, shares of telecommunications companies fell badly from the ongoing fallout amid credit concerns.
The carnage was grim and deep. U.S. traded shares of Paris-based Alcatel-Lucent fell nearly 5 percent. Ciena Corp. fell ahead of its earnings report, scheduled for Friday.
Novatel Wireless Inc. was an exception, as its shares rose more than 3 percent after the wireless modem maker said it will buy back up to $25 million of its stock through Sept. 5.
A rundown of telecom stocks from Thursday's trading . . .
-- AT&T, down 43 cents to $35.02
-- Sprint Nextel Corp., down 20 cents, or 2.9 percent, to $6.80
-- Verizon Communications Inc., down 67 cents to $35.28
-- Alcatel-Lucent, down 28 cents to $5.41
-- Ciena, down $1.05, or 4 percent, to $24.94
-- Novatel, up 34 cents to $10.77
I'm particularly concerned about Sprint. Last week, week, Sprint's shares plummeted 20 percent following lousy earnings results and a bleak rest-of-2008 forecast from the nation's third-largest wireless carrier.
Today, CNET News is reporting that rumors are swirling today over the future of Sprint. "First off, Seeking Alpha is reporting that Sprint has hired Morgan Stanley for a possible spin-off of its Nextel brand. Sprint's ongoing troubles have been widely reported over the last few months and many analysts have named the 2006 merger between Sprint and Nextel as a key cause of the carrier's ongoing troubles. With that in mind, a spin-off of Nextel may be surprising, but it wouldn't be so shocking."
"But that's not the only Sprint dish going around today. The Kansas City Star said that Merrill Lynch analysts are predicting that Deutsche Telekom, owner of T-Mobile USA, is considering buying Sprint. The joining of a CDMA and a GSM carrier seems a bit unlikely, but after Sprint scooped up Nextel I can believe just about anything. Yet what would seem more probable is a Verizon Wireless acquisition of Sprint. But as the Wall Street Journal points out, Verizon should just concentrate on sucking away Sprint's customers. Verizon already decided in 2004 not to buy Sprint so the Journal can't find a reason why it should try again."
Last week I wrote how Sprint was having some difficulty turning its financial ship of state around. New management, weak sales, increased competition, and a stagnating economy won't help that process along any further. Stay away from this former high flyer.
Similar Threads
- Sprint gasping for Breath in Q1 (Upcoming News Stories)
- How can I regain drive space? (Windows NT / 2000 / XP)
- Have to reboot to regain IE browsing (Web Browsers)
- I loose & regain network connection every 2 hrs. (Networking Hardware Configuration)
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
2008 age amd apple at&t avatar banks biotech bluegene business cellphones chips cisco cloudcomputing computers consumer consumers database development dos earnings economy employment energy enterprise funds gdp google grandtheftauto hardware hdtv housing ibm ibm.news idc intel intelibm internet investing investment investments investors iphone ipod jobs layoffs linux mac macbook madden markets medicine memory merger microprocessors microsoft mp3 news nintendo obama oil online openoffice opensource pc portfolio ps3 recession redhat retail routers russia sap security semiconductors sony spending sprint stevejobs stock stocks sun supercomputer supercomputing tech technology technologystocks telecom trends ubuntu verizon videogame videogames web windows windows7 working x86 yahoo zune




