ainsoph
- 08 Feb 2003 16:42
A little like oom really from my point of view - I believe they are the favoured company within their sector and despite the markets - Oftel and the G3 nonsense they will climb back. They pay a divi and this wioll be seen to be increasingly important in the days to come. They have new management and are looking to enhance shareholder value .....
I hold and swing trade a few and not adverse to intraday trading them.
ains
BT in web-based investor relations drive
London, February 7 2003, (netimperative)
by Chris Lake
BT is launching a web-based scheme which it hopes will improve communications with its retail shareholders and help cut costs.
Dubbed 'ShareholderPlus', the system allows investors to sign up and receive BT communications - such as reports, news releases, mandates and, subject to a change in the law, electronic tax vouchers - by email, rather than by post.
BT said this will help it achieve cost savings - by not having to print and despatch reports - and pointed out that it is also good for the environment.
Furthermore, it has negotiated a number of deals with companies such as Virgin Wines, Apollo Travel, RSA and National Car Rental, to market the service and said it will add new offers in the future if it proves to be a success.
BT claims to be one of the first FTSE100 companies to launch such a programme, though it is likely that more will follow.
www.btplc.com/shareholderplus
ainsoph
- 27 Feb 2003 15:58
- 118 of 303
MPs' broadband revolt gathers pace
27/02/2003
Editor: David Minto
Its not only the probable war in Iraq that British MPs are revolting on
ZDNet has reported that over 100 MPs have now signed a motion put forward by the MP Jim Knight to compel the government to do more in prompting BT to roll out broadband to rural areas. 115MPs have declared their support since December 2002, and the list is still attracting names.
As well as urging BT to disclose more specific information about its plans for broadband roll out, the motion also calls for greater cross-departmental cooperation in the governments approach to the project.
The MPs supporting the motion are concerned that, though BT claims that four-fifths of the UKs homes will be able to access its ADSL network by 2005, its plans are insufficiently detailed and the geographical lines of the digital divide have not been made clear. There is also concern about projects which do not offer higher bandwidth than ADSL.
BT, however, has said that the distribution of ADSL roll out will depend on consumer demand. Broadband operators Telewest and NTL are not currently thought to be in a financial position to expand their networks in the significant way still required.
Brain Smiley
- 27 Feb 2003 16:20
- 119 of 303
AINS
u still holding the BT u bought mid 1.70s ?
151 now..breaking support.looks like u will need to buy more to keep averaging down.its only money !
ainsoph
- 27 Feb 2003 17:59
- 120 of 303
They are just about on support now - charts do not look promising and over the last few weeks they have underperformed both the sector and the market but that's only part of the story and still happy to hold. The pension thingy has proved to be more of a negative than I had anticipated.
ains
Brain Smiley
- 27 Feb 2003 18:25
- 121 of 303
with the most bearish brokers thinking BT is worth around 1.50..any further drops I think will be a good op to go long,really oversold now. still watching.
ainsoph
- 27 Feb 2003 21:04
- 122 of 303
Talking to someone over dinner about the Indian Call Centres - They have just come back from Bombay where they have been training the new call centre staff. They get about 2K a year and tend to be well educated and because of local conditions will stay with the job. This not only makes it cheaper to route the calls there but should be more efficient (The English spoken may well have a London accent :-))
I can see myself adding a few more in the morning .....
ains
ainsoph
- 28 Feb 2003 07:37
- 123 of 303
3.4GHz auction: All systems go
17:45 Thursday 27th February 2003
Graeme Wearden
Details about the new wireless broadband auction have hit the Web ahead of a government announcement on Friday. All the auction needs now is some bidders
The forthcoming 3.4GHz wireless broadband auction has been given a provisional starting date of 26 May.
The government is expected to announce full details on Friday, but the Radiocommunications Agency (RA) published the information memorandum on its Web site on Thursday. A deadline to register interest for the 3.4GHz auction has been set at 14 April -- although this could change. The early date for this deadline is designed to help the government weed out unsuitable candidates.
The RA has revealed that the auction will run for two weeks, and that any licences that are left over after 6 June will still be available for at least another year.
Fifteen 3.4GHz licences are on offer -- seven covering metropolitan areas, seven covering rural areas, and one for Northern Ireland. This distribution has caused some controversy, especially in Wales where politicians and industry figures fought in vain for two Wales-only licences.
The government hopes that companies will use 3.4GHz to offer wireless broadband services in rural areas. However, there are concerns that the auction may flounder because large telcos decline to take part in it. BT, NTL and Telewest are all expected not to take part.
This has left the government hoping that smaller players will take part, and the DTI explained on Thursday that this could include Regional Development Agencies. "A Regional Development Agency would be able to take part in the auction, as long as they did so in partnership with a company," a DTI spokesman told ZDNet, explaining that a public-private partnership between an RDA and a commercial operator would be acceptable.
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ainsoph
- 28 Feb 2003 11:17
- 124 of 303
BT demonstrates web-based ID checker
by Gillian Law
All your details in one handy place
Friday, 28 February 2003
BT yesterday demonstrated concept web services, including an identity checking product that it predicts will be the "ubiquitous verification service for business and government".
The service, called Uru, was jointly developed by BT and software company BG Group. It takes the identification details provided by an individual and compares them to a range of databases, including UK registers of names and addresses, death registers, the national telephone directory services database and the Meter Point Asset Number database maintained by the UK electricity companies.
Uru is currently CD-based but an online version is set for launch too.
The Uru service works by asking customers to provide several forms of identification that, used alone, could easily be forged. Armed with more indepth information it can quickly check whether an individual is who he or she says they are and whether they really live where they claim.
"Existing systems used in the UK are based on credit worthiness, not on identity. All they're interested in is whether you're good for the money. So if a fraudster manages to take or copy your ID, it's like an open cheque book," said BG group chief executive Richard Law.
Uru does not disclose personal information. Instead, it checks that the information provided is correct.
There are over two billion authentication transactions taking place every year in the UK, most of them in the financial, retail and government sectors, according to Law.
The databases currently available to Uru won't solve all identity issues indeed, they only confirm identity in about 50 percent of cases at the moment, Law said. But they are an important first step and BG Group is currently speaking to the UK Passport Office about putting its information in the public domain as well as to the DVLA (Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency) and Inland Revenue.
"I predict that in 10 years time, 90 percent of identity checks will be done this way," said Law.
The UK government has over 100,000 databases, in a very fragmented system, and is looking to make the information more useful, Law said. If, for example, digital certification is to work, identity checking will be essential, he said. While BG Group has "no formal backing from the government," Law is aware of no other company able to provide the information needed.
"So we believe we're poised to grab that market," he added.
Brain Smiley
- 28 Feb 2003 14:21
- 125 of 303
upgraded by Williams DeBroe and CFSB today. could be that BT has hit a floor for a while.
ainsoph
- 28 Feb 2003 14:34
- 126 of 303
in top ten risers ..... bit of a game really - brokers notes
ains :-))
ainsoph
- 28 Feb 2003 16:11
- 127 of 303
LONDON (Reuters) - These are the key upgrades and downgrades for UK stocks on Friday.
CSFB UPS BT ON DIVIDEND HOPES
Investment bank Credit Suisse First Boston has raised its rating on BT Group BT.L to "neutral" from "underperform" based on hopes for higher dividend payouts.
BT has indicated a payout ratio of 50 percent in the medium term but CSFB saw a ratio of 80 percent for financial year 2005 if the company's finances continued to improve.
"As BT nears financial rehabilitation, investors face the possibility of increased distribution," CSFB said in a note.
The investment bank said BT shares were now approaching fair value levels, based on financial year 2004 forecasts for a dividend yield of 4.7 percent.
It gave a price target of 160 pence.
ainsoph
- 28 Feb 2003 16:25
- 128 of 303
volumes and price picking up as we head for the close - wonder what the shorters are doing
ains
ainsoph
- 28 Feb 2003 16:28
- 129 of 303
bloomberg
BT Group Plc (BT/A LN) rose 7p, or 4.6 percent, to 159.5. Morten Singleton, an analyst at Williams de Broe, raised his recommendation on the former phone monopoly to ``buy'' from ``hold.''
``BT's share price has come under considerable pressure over the last few weeks, and is now trading at unfairly low levels both on an absolute basis and relative to its European incumbent peer group,'' Singleton said in a note to investors.
ainsoph
- 28 Feb 2003 16:36
- 130 of 303
nice one ...... great finish @ plus 7.21% - 4th in the ftse100 top risers and way out-performing sector and market with over 48 million traded currently.
Ny tactics paid off and back in profit :-))
ains
biffa18
- 01 Mar 2003 17:22
- 131 of 303
Same old story talked them down then talk then up again i bought a few thou @151 so lets hope we see 197 they are talking about that will be a nice turn around but will sell at first sign of weakness as will most others i think
ainsoph
- 03 Mar 2003 08:12
- 132 of 303
Durlatcher has them as a trading buy this morning after the bounce off the low/support on Friday
ains
ainsoph
- 03 Mar 2003 10:13
- 133 of 303
BT aims to stretch ADSL reach
By Dinah Greek [03-03-2003]
Telco hopes to push ADSL beyond current boundaries to broadband-enable more homes
BT Wholesale is hoping to stretch the reach of Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) to homes currently situated too far from local exchanges to receive broadband.
The telco claimed that it will be possible to provide a viable 512Kbps service without having to upgrade exchanges or copper phone lines.
This tackles head on a problem that affects around six per cent of households in the UK.
Although they are situated near upgraded local exchanges, they are unable to get broadband services because the reach of ADSL has been limited to a maximum level of 'noise' on the line of 55dB. This equates to around 5.5km in distance.
Beyond this the technical limitations of ADSL mean that the service quality has been too poor to offer to customers.
But BT has been examining the standards governing ADSL reach and now believes that noise levels can be pushed to 60dB without too much degradation of the service.
If it is able to increase the distance and establish a viable service, BT estimates that the number of people able to access broadband will rise from 93 to 97 per cent.
Limited trials have already begun using around a dozen households.
According to a BT spokesman, the company plans to start more widespread trials by the end of March and hopes at the same time to interest a range of internet service providers.
"We are looking at the possibility of extending the existing reach but, as it is early days, the numbers on the current trial are very small," he said.
"We are not upgrading these unbundled exchanges as all we are doing is pushing out the standard ADSL acceptable noise levels from 55dB to 60dB.
"It is difficult to say in distance how much further this will extend the reach from certain exchanges as it can vary.
"It will depend on local circumstances and the length of the copper wire involved rather than distance.
"The current trials will be looking at potential service problems caused by more noise on the line, such as if customers keep getting chucked off [the service].
"It is no use trying to offer a service if it is always getting cut off."
These trials should not be confused with those of lower bandwidth broadband of 128Kbps that BT is looking at testing in late March or April.
Trials of this midband range, as BT calls it, will provide a lower bandwidth using different technologies to ADSL.
Meanwhile, as part of BT's ongoing scheme to convert local exchanges, another 20 around the country will be converted during May.
These include Tavistock in Devon, Newton in Mid Glamorgan, Irvine Old Town in Strathclyde and Thirsk in North Yorkshire.
Diogenes
- 03 Mar 2003 11:21
- 134 of 303
Ains: re Andy's message (No. 100 above). If you attempt to use one of those frightful machines to send me a 30-second video of yourself, you will find that future mail will be automatically deleted from the server.
ainsoph
- 03 Mar 2003 11:31
- 135 of 303
As it happens I tend to be camera shy although a keen photographer .....
Shares seem to be drifting a little with the market although volumes are very modest - US futures up a little
ains
ainsoph
- 04 Mar 2003 07:37
- 136 of 303
Frost warms to BT and Lloyds TSB
Published: 07:24 Mon 3 March 2003
By Laurence Fletcher, Funds Correspondent
Email to a friend | Printable Version
Respected Artemis income fund manager Adrian Frost has sold out of stocks such as BAE Systems and Britannic in favour of BT and Lloyds TSB.
Frost, manager of the 125 million Artemis Income, says he currently sees best value among stocks outside the FTSE 100 index and has therefore weighted his portfolio away from large caps.
However, he has spotted value in a select number of large caps and has added to holdings in pharmaceuticals giant GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), telecoms group BT (BT.A), oil majors Shell (SHEL) and BP (BP.) and banking group Lloyds TSB (LLOY).
Lloyds has recently received support from star Jupiter manager Philip Gibbs on valuations grounds, while highly-regarded Invesco Perpetual manager Neil Woodford and Axa manager Stuart Fowler have steered clear of the bank.
Elsewhere, Frost has sold out of troubled defence group BAE Systems (BA.), jewellery retailer Signet (SIG) and fallen life assurance group Britannic (BRT).
He has also taken profits in mid-cap stocks such as chilled convenience food maker Uniq, port services and property group Forth Ports and gaming and property group Wembley.
But he added: 'We continue to believe stocks outside the FTSE 100 offer the best value and the portfolio is weighted towards this area.'
Since Frost took charge of the Artemis Income fund around a year ago, it has fallen 26.3%, beating an average 28.9% drop among funds in the UK Equity Income sector and a 29.6% decline in the FTSE All Share index.
Over three years Frost ranks 18th out of 38 managers in the UK Equity Income sector of Citywire Funds Insider, a fund manager ranking system developed by Citywire.
2003 Citywire
ainsoph
- 04 Mar 2003 08:33
- 137 of 303
durlatcher still has them as a trading buy/hold despite yesterdays standstill .... I added a few more to round off my holding - 2nd biggest holding at this time
ains