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AT&T Trips Up in Phone, Pay-TV Services as It Chases Media Dream

AT&T Sales Miss Estimates as It Sheds More Pay-TV Customers

(Bloomberg) -- AT&T Inc., in the middle of a high-stakes effort to turn itself into a media and entertainment juggernaut, finds itself playing catch-up in its bread-and-butter businesses of wireless and pay-TV services.

Two key measures, U.S. wireless and pay-TV subscribers, came in well below Wall Street predictions in the fourth quarter. That led to a shortfall in overall sales relative to analysts’ estimates. The stock fell as much as 5.5 percent Wednesday, the biggest intraday drop in three months.

AT&T added a net 13,000 U.S. monthly wireless subscribers in the period, way under projections of about 252,000. A loss of 410,000 users of nonphone devices like smartwatches and tablets drove the disappointment.

AT&T fell victim in part to the same phenomenon that’s bedeviling Apple Inc. and other phone makers: People are hanging onto their smartphones longer. The Dallas-based company’s phone sales fell $500 million in the recent quarter due to sluggish upgrades, Chief Financial Officer John Stephens said on an earnings conference call.

AT&T Trips Up in Phone, Pay-TV Services as It Chases Media Dream

AT&T also lost 658,000 U.S. pay-TV subscribers, compared with the loss of about 191,000 anticipated by analysts.

The figures look even worse in contrast with AT&T’s biggest rivals in mobile services. Although Verizon Communications Inc. reported downbeat fourth-quarter sales on Tuesday, that company and T-Mobile US Inc. each gained 1.2 million new wireless subscribers in the quarter. AT&T’s monthly defection rate, or churn, rose to 1.2 percent from 1.1 percent a year ago.

AT&T shares were down 5.4 percent to $29.02 at 9:58 a.m. in New York trading. The stock lost 27 percent last year, lagging behind the 6 percent gain of Verizon.

AT&T’s “top priority” is reducing its debt, Chief Executive Officer Randall Stephenson said in a statement, and its record free cash flow in 2018 will help that effort. The company had net debt of $171.3 billion at the end of the year, having taken on a heavy load to finance its Time Warner acquisition.

What Bloomberg Intelligence Says

“With so many moving parts, including the integration of Time Warner, the FirstNet build-out, the launch of 5G and weaning DirecTV Now subscribers off promotions, AT&T’s management still has its hands full in tightening up the organization and the narrative. We remain focused on trends in wireless, digital ads and DirecTV Now.”


--John Butler, North American telecommunication analyst
Click here to view the research

With that $85 billion purchase last year, AT&T is gambling that entertainment programming, delivered to home TV sets and to mobile phones, can spark its sluggish revenue growth. The completed merger is facing a court challenge by the Justice Department, though AT&T appeared to fare well in a December hearing.

The pay-TV division, led by DirecTV, is continuing to lose customers to fast-growing online businesses, like Netflix Inc. Using content from Time Warner, AT&T is developing online businesses of its own, such as WatchTV, but those will take time to catch on.

Sales rose to $47.99 billion, short of the $48.5 billion average of analysts’ estimates.

To contact the reporter on this story: Scott Moritz in New York at smoritz6@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Nick Turner at nturner7@bloomberg.net, John J. Edwards III, Cecile Daurat

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