Last modified: December 20, 2000 2:40 PM PST
AT&T reduces earnings, revenue numbers again
The company said revenue growth in the quarter will be 2.5 percent to 3 percent, down from already lowered guidance of 4 percent to 5 percent. AT&T lowered projections after its third-quarter earnings.
Fourth-quarter earnings will be in the range of 26 cents to 28 cents a share, with cash earnings in the 45 cents to 47 cents a share range. Both of those projections are about 5 cents a share below AT&T's previous targets.
Consensus estimates for AT&T were 31 cents a share excluding its stake in Excite@Home, according to earnings tracking firm First Call.
AT&T said its business services revenue is expected to grow 1 percent, down from its previous projection of 2.5 percent. The company cited "industry-wide pricing pressures" and contract changes. AT&T's consumer long-distance service looks even worse. The company said sales will decline at a "mid-teens" rate. The company projected an 11 percent decline.
This is the second time in two months that AT&T has cut its growth targets. In October, it reported lackluster third-quarter results and slashed its growth outlook for the next 15 months.
AT&T rivals Worldcom and Sprint also recently issued profit warnings.
On a positive note, AT&T said its data and Internet revenue will maintain its third-quarter growth rate of 20 percent. AT&T's broadband unit is expected to show growth of 10.8 percent, with AT&T Wireless delivering growth of 30 percent to 35 percent.
The company said it will deliver its outlook for 2001 when it reports earnings in late January. AT&T, however, indicated that its 2001 outlook will change for its consumer and business long-distance services.
AT&T, which has been reeling from falling long-distance prices, recently set a plan to break itself up to boost shareholder value. The company, which went on a spending spree to build its cable assets, is withering under a heavy debt load.
In a separate statement, AT&T declared a dividend of 3.75 cents a share. The previous quarterly dividend was 22 cents a share. When companies cut dividends, it is usually a sign that they need cash.
The dividend cut was the first in AT&T's history. The cut, which is part of a restructuring move, means that investors will get a much smaller check from Ma Bell.


