[1st-mile-nm] Qwest net tumbles by 24%

Richard Lowenberg rl at 1st-mile.com
Fri Aug 8 11:45:32 PDT 2008


Qwest net tumbles by 24%

Phone customers are still leaving, but a bright spot is sales from data, Net and
video services.

www.denverpost.com/headlines/ci_10120526#

By Steve Raabe
The Denver Post
08/07/2008

Qwest on Wednesday reported a decline in phone customers but announced new
promotional prices in an effort to pick up more Internet business.

The fall-off in telephone revenues contributed to a 24 percent decline in
second-quarter net income to $188 million, compared with $246 million a year
ago. Operating revenue for the quarter was $3.4 billion, compared with $3.5
billion a year earlier.

"Under more challenging conditions in some of our markets, operating results
were mixed," said Qwest chief executive Ed Mueller.

Qwest shares fell 14 cents Wednesday to $3.45. The stock has dropped about 50
percent this year.

Qwest said it lost 1.1 million residential and business phone lines over the
past year, an 8.2 percent drop, as competition from cable and wireless
providers took a toll on traditional phone service.

But sales from data, Internet and video services grew 9 percent in the second
quarter compared with last year.

The company announced Wednesday that customers signing up for its standard-
speed Internet service will receive a 12-month promotional rate of $14.99 a
month, compared with the current charge of $29.99 with a two-year commitment.

Promotional discounts also are being offered on Qwest's bundled Internet and
DirecTV service, as well as on higher- speed broadband. The company said its
highest-speed offering is now available to more than 1 million customers in 18
markets.

Helping to counter the disappointing earnings report, the Federal Communications
Commission said Qwest has won partial regulatory relief on rules governing the
commercial Internet market.

The decision lifted pricing restrictions on what Qwest can charge to business
customers and rival carriers for using its high-speed Internet network.

"This relief will enable Qwest to have the flexibility to further deploy its
broadband services and fiber facilities without overly burdensome regulations,"
FCC Chairman Kevin Martin said in a statement.

But the ruling drew criticism from Littleton-based TW Telecom Inc., formerly
Time Warner Telecom.

"There is simply not enough competition for these enterprise broadband services
to keep prices affordable for most businesses," said Kelsi Reeves, vice
president of federal government relations for TW. "This decision is not in the
best interest of America's businesses."


-- 
Richard Lowenberg
1st-Mile Institute
P.O. Box 8001, Santa Fe, NM 87504
505-989-9110;   505-603-5200 cell
rl at 1st-mile.com  www.1st-mile.com

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