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
- 13 Feb 2003 11:46
- 38 of 303
13 Feb 2003 11:03 GMT
BT hit by pension worries
By Braden Reddall, UK telecoms correspondent
LONDON (Reuters) - BT Group has reported better-than-expected third-quarter profits, but concerns about a yawning pension fund gap and slower sales growth have knocked its shares.
BT bonds improved on the strong cash flow and reduced debt, and some equity analysts said the worries on pensions overshadowed a company poised to start paying higher dividends.
"On balance BT feels a bit cheap to us, but we think there are no catalysts to spur the shares on from today."
Schroder Salomon Smith Barney
BT will announce a revised pension funding deficit in May based on new accounting standards, and analysts' forecasts range as high as five billion pounds. Steep declines in stock markets have eroded the pension funds of many large British companies, including Rolls Royce RR.L and British Airways BAY.L .
For guidance, BT said its actuary believed the end-2002 deficit based on old SSAP 24 accounting standards would be in a range of 1.0 billion to 1.5 billion pounds compared with 200 million pounds at the end of March 2000.
Shares in BT BT.L , with a market capitalisation around 15 billion pounds, fell 4.4 percent to 175 pence in morning trade.
When BT last calculated its funding valuation three years ago, it ended up 800 million pounds more than the SSAP 24 value.
Nomura analyst Chris Alliott said BT's current market value priced in a pension deficit of more than Nomura's worst-case five billion pound estimate, and he repeated a "buy" recommendation on the stock.
BT Finance Director Ian Livingston reiterated that the company did not expect its annual pension deficit payment to be much different from its current 200 million pounds.
"Our actuary has told us that there's nothing to cause that figure to change," he told reporters on a conference call.
Underlying pre-tax profit for the quarter to end-December rose 37 percent to 521 million pounds, at the upper end of forecasts. Underlying earnings per share rose to 4.1 pence from 2.4p one year ago, beating expectations. But revenue fell short of forecasts with a one percent gain to 4.7 billion pounds.
REVENUES FLAT, BUT HIGHER QUALITY
Chief Executive Ben Verwaayen said he had turned his attention to how much profit each pound of revenue generates as BT loses some of its less important lower-margin business.
"Other parts of our revenues are truly important, and the good news here is (that) where it's really important, it's growing," he said.
BT, which has placed high-speed Internet access at the heart of its strategy for growth, said it had 650,000 broadband subscribers on its network as of February 7, moving towards its target of one million by the middle of this year. In January, the company signed up more than 25,000 new users per week.
Net debt fell 195 million pounds in the quarter to 12.9 billion, and the company said it would fall even further in the fourth quarter when it banks the 2.6 billion pounds it received from Vivendi EAUG.PA for its stake in France's Cegetel.
Traders said BT's 7.125 percent euro bond due 2011 GB012368488= was yielding 132 basis points more than the benchmark, improving by four basis points on the day, having initially fallen by 10 basis points.
Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) grew by just four million pounds to 1.513 billion.
But BT is driving net profit growth by cutting interest payments and making cost cuts that filter down to the bottom line. It aims to hit an annual earnings per share growth target of 25 percent over the next three years.
"On balance BT feels a bit cheap to us, but we think there are no catalysts to spur the shares on from today," Schroder Salomon Smith Barney said in a research note, rating the stock "in line" with the performance of the market.
Concerns about the former monopoly's large pension fund have weighed on its share price recently. Though the stock has outperformed the FTSE 100 by two percent since the start of 2003, the British telecoms sector as a whole has outperformed the same London benchmark index by 10 percent in that period.
ainsoph
- 13 Feb 2003 11:59
- 39 of 303
starting to recover as analysts start crunching the numbers - US futures marginally +
ains
scotsman
Bright outlook for BT as profits surge 37%
BY SCOTT REID
FORMER telecoms monopoly BT today posted better-than-expected profits for third quarter of the year and said it had dialled up record broadband sales last month.
The telecoms giant, which has undergone major restructuring during the past couple of years as it attempts to slash its debt pile, said underlying pre-tax profit in the three months to the end of December had risen 37 per cent to 521 million, a figure at the upper end of analysts forecasts.
Underlying earnings per share beat expectations by rising to 4.1p from 2.4p a year earlier, but group turnover fell short of forecasts, rising by one per cent to 4.7 billion. Sales at the biggest division, BT Retail, which provides traditional fixed-line telecoms services, rose 4.2 per cent to just over 3.3bn.
BTs chief executive, Ben Verwaayen, described the third quarter figures as "excellent results".
He said revenue growth had been challenging, but claimed to have gained real momentum in the corporate sector, winning a number of major new contracts.
He added: "We are achieving our key goals of improving cash flow, earnings per share and customer satisfaction."
Heavy advertising in the emerging broadband market, which provides customers with a high-speed, permanent connection to the internet, certainly appears to have paid off for BT, as the group said it had generated its highest ever broadband sales, with in excess of 25,000 new connections per week in January.
BT has set a target of five million faster internet access customers by 2006, and will have 650,000 customers as of February 7.
In addition to launching a major market awareness campaign, BT has reduced wholesale and retail connection charges and lowered the exchange upgrade trigger levels, though competition remains fierce from rival broadband providers such as NTL, Freeserve and AOL.
On a sour note, the telecoms heavyweight said it expected to show a pension deficit of up to 1.5bn for the end of 2002. Although the pension funding valuation had not yet been completed, BT said the companys actuary believed the deficit would be in a range of 1bn to 1.5bn, as falling stock markets erode the value of invested pension money.
Concerns about BTs large pension fund have weighed on its share price in recent weeks. The stock has outperformed the FTSE 100 by just two per cent since the start of the new year, despite the fact that the UK telecoms sector has outperformed the same London benchmark index by nine per cent in that period.
BT said net debt fell 195m in the quarter to 12.9bn, and added it would fall even further in the fourth quarter when it banks the 2.6bn it received from Vivendi for its stake in Frances Cegetel.
Ian Livingston, group finance director, said: "BTs financial position continues to strengthen. Underlying operating performance is strong, with earnings per share increasing by 71 per cent over last year and 66 per cent in the nine months."
BT said business call volumes have dropped off, driven by a combination of customers switching out of traditional telephony and pressure from the implementation of carrier pre-selection.
Last month, the company launched a new call package aimed at corporate users, which places a ceiling of 10p on national and local business calls and provides a single BT customer contact.
tpaulbeaumont
- 13 Feb 2003 12:15
- 40 of 303
HA HA, I fanyone was even remotely interested in your thread Ains, I'd tell them to short BT.A, BAY.L and OOM. only you and the C+P's here though! see you soon.
ainsoph
- 13 Feb 2003 13:38
- 41 of 303
Interesting article on sharing a bb connection - in aprils PC pro ..... covers Home and small business use
ains
LONDON (AFX) - BT Group PLC, the UK's dominant telecom company, has sought to allay investor fears about its widening pension deficit.
But many brokers said BT will need to pay more than its current 200 mln stg a year as a pension top-up to cover the shortfall.
And they also highlighted a weaker-than-expected 1 pct rise in third-quarter revenue.
BT's shares traded 7.25 pence or 3.96 pct lower at 175.25 at 1.00 pm.
The company also reported a 37 pct rise in third-quarter underlying profits to 521 mln stg, above stock market forecasts centred on 500 mln.
BT revealed its pension funds face a potential deficit of more than 1.5 bln stg -- nearly 10 times the shortfall it had just three years ago.
The company has been hit by a combination of a huge slump in equity prices and new accounting rules.
At the end of March last year BT had 71 pct of its pension fund assets in equities, then worth 19.2 bln stg.
Analysts estimate their value could have fallen by up to 5 bln stg by the year-end.
But finance director Ian Livingston said he sees no need to increase the current 200 mln stg annual top-up it is paying into the scheme.
"We have said previously we did not expect the 200 mln a year to change significantly and on the basis of the work the actuary has done to date we have got no reason to change that position," said Livingston.
But many analysts think 200 mln stg will not be enough.
Broker Merrill Lynch, in a research note, raised its EPS and dividend forecasts but still felt it necessary to increase its projected pension top-up payments needed by the company by 50 mln stg a year to 350 mln.
Merrill said BT's results "tell a familiar tale", with revenues weaker than it had anticipated, but EPS better.
BT reported profit before taxation, goodwill amortisation and exceptional items of 521 mln stg for the three months to Dec 31 2002, up 37 pct on the same three months a year earlier.
Group turnover of 4.701 bln stg was up just 1 pct over the same period.
According to an AFX News poll of eight brokers' forecasts, an underlying pretax profit of 460-530 was expected, giving a consensus of 500 mln. That compares with a 381 mln stg profit last time.
Revenues of 4.7-4.83 bln stg were expected, up some 2.2 pct on the same quarter a year ago.
The group said net debt was reduced by 195 mln stg to 12.9 bln stg at Dec 31 2002, but it received 2.6 bln stg from the sale of its stake in Cegetel to Vivendi in January.
The company aims to get its net debt below 10 bln stg.
BT also revealed record broadband sales in January, in excess of 25,000 per week, giving it a total customer base of over 650,000 as of Feb 7.
Chief executive Ben Verwaayen said the group is on track to hit its 6 mln DSL subscribers target by mid-2006.
But some analysts view the target as challenging due to fierce competition from cable operators.
tim.farrand@afxnews.com
Brain Smiley
- 13 Feb 2003 15:50
- 42 of 303
172 now...1% revenue growth,badly recieved my market.
real chance this will retest its lows in the 150's now.i'd imagine there will be broker downgrades tomorrow morning.
ainsoph
- 13 Feb 2003 15:51
- 43 of 303
I think you will find the brokers have already made their comments ....
Brain Smiley
- 13 Feb 2003 15:59
- 44 of 303
ainsoph
169 now...their comments musn't be much good.You have been tipping this from 9.Why ?
ainsoph
- 13 Feb 2003 16:10
- 45 of 303
I never tip any share and we started the thread @ 176p
did you read this dreamer - 'I hold and swing trade a few and not adverse to intraday trading them'
How many alises do you have now?
ains
BT seeks to calm fears on pension deficit, reports Q3 profit up 37 pct
LONDON (AFX) - BT Group Plc, the UK's dominant telecom company, sought to allay investor fears about its widening pension deficit.
But many brokers argued BT will need to pay more than its current 200 mln stg a year as a pension top-up to cover the shortfall.
And they also highlighted a weaker than expected 1 pct rise in third quarter revenue.
The company also reported a 37 pct rise in third quarter underlying profits to 521 mln stg, above stock market forecasts centred on 500 mln.
BT revealed its pension funds face a potential deficit of more than 1.5 bln stg - nearly 10 times the shortfall it had just three years ago.
The company has been hit by a combination of a huge slump in equity prices and new accounting rules.
At the end of March last year BT had 71 pct of its pension fund assets in equities, then worth 19.2 bln stg.
Analysts estimate their value could have fallen by up to 5 bln stg by the year-end.
But finance director Ian Livingston said he saw no need to increase the current 200 mln stg annual top-up it is paying into the scheme.
"We have said previously we did not expect the 200 mln a year to change significantly and on the basis of the work the actuary has done to date we have got no reason to change that position," said Livingston.
But many analysts think 200 mln stg will not be enough.
Broker Merrill Lynch, in a research note, raised its EPS and dividend forecasts but still felt it necessary to increase its projected pension top-up payments needed by the company by 50 mln stg a year to 350 mln.
Merrill said BT's results "tell a familiar tale", with revenues weaker than it had anticipated, but EPS better.
BT reported profit before taxation, goodwill amortisation and exceptional items of 521 mln stg for the three months to Dec 31 2002, up 37 pct on the same three months a year earlier.
Group turnover of 4.701 bln stg was up just 1 pct over the same period.
According to an AFX poll of 8 brokers' forecasts, an underlying pretax profit of 460-530 was expected, giving a consensus of 500 mln. That compares with a 381 mln stg profit last time.
Revenues of 4.7 bln to 4.83 bln stg were expected, up some 2.2 pct on the same quarter a year ago.
The group said net debt was reduced by 195 mln stg to 12.9 bln stg at Dec 31 2002, but it received 2.6 bln stg from the sale of its stake in Cegetel to Vivendi in January.
The company aims to get its net debt below 10 bln stg.
BT also revealed record broadband sales in January, in excess of 25,000 per week, giving it a total customer base of over 650,000 as of Feb 7 2003.
Chief executive Ben Verwaayen said the group was on track to hit its 6 mln DSL subscribers target by mid-2006.
But some analysts view the target as challenging due to fierce competition from cable operators. tim.farrand@afxnews.com
Brain Smiley
- 13 Feb 2003 16:26
- 46 of 303
i would say your intraday trading would be good !
ainsoph
- 13 Feb 2003 19:04
- 47 of 303
Stars back BT as it dismisses pensions threat
Published: 16:24 Thr 13 Feb 2003
By Gavin Lumsden, Editor in Chief
(Update) There are no less than eight of our favourite fund managers backing BT right now despite today's fears of its ballooning pension fund deficit - read on to find out who they are.
BT today shrugged off worries about its ballooning pension fund deficit and insisted it was growing in all the right areas.
Ben Verwaayen, BT's chief executive who has been in the hot seat for a year now, said today that in spite of having to re-think his ambitious targets for 6-8% revenue growth in his first three years of office, he was if anything more optimistic than ever about BT's prospects.
'If anything I have to scale up not down expectations,' said Verwaayen, having found a responsive, innovative company that is working smarter and has lots of opportunities in Europe, he said. 'I am very optimistic,' he added.
Trading aside, one major concern for investors has been the company's pension fund deficit. BT (BT.A) is not alone in having a hefty deficit, as GlaxoSmithKline proved yesterday with a 1.3 billion funding gap and Barclays' admission today that its scheme would show up 1.3 billion short on incoming FRS17 accounting standard.
BT's actuary is in the process of carrying out the triennial valuation of the pension scheme, and on a preliminary view based on the current SSAP 24 basis, the deficit looks like being between 1 billion and 1.5 billion, compared to 0.2 billion in March 2000.
The news knocked the shares down nearly 12p, or 6.5%, at 171.25p.
Since 2000, BT has been paying in 200 million a year to the fund, and industry watchers have been expecting this sum to rise to at least 300 million. However group finance director Ian Livingston said he did not expect any 'substantial change' from the current 200 million level, and reminded investors that the 200 million was tax deductible so would cost BT only 70% of the cash paid in.
BT reported revenues for the third quarter to December up just 1% to 4.7 billion, although pre-tax profits were up 37% at 521 million and earnings per share were up 71% at 4.1p. Net debt, which hit a critical 20 billion a couple of years ago, was down a further 195 million to 12.9 billion at December, and decreased further in January with the receipt of the 2.6 billion proceeds from the sale of BT's holding in French operator Cegetel. This was the 26% holding that Vodafone had hoped to pick up, but which was pre-empted by Vivendi.
Verwaayen said today's figures were 'really excellent results,' especially when you look underneath the 1% overall growth to figures such as consumer revenues which are growing for 'the first time in many, many years,' strong corporate business growth and broadband orders hitting some 25,000 a week last month.
The main factors behind the flat revenues were the decline in global carrier turnover due to lost business from AT&T and WorldCom following the winding up of BT's Concert joint venture with the two US giants.
Verwaayen stressed the importance of growing 'profitable revenues', rather than revenue for revenue's sake, and said 'where it is important revenue, we are growing.'
Capital expenditure is expected to be some 2.6 billion for this year, and will be between that figure and 3 billion going forward.
Verwaayen said it was important to invest to deliver future growth. The company has also seen cost cutting slightly ahead of plan, and Verwaayen said it has been improving processes. 'Cost cutting means doing the same for less money,' said Verwaayen, and he said BT was working smarter and improving operations.
He is particularly pleased with the progress of broadband, where the numbers are 'fantastic,' some 650,000 users by last week, and highlighted also large corporate sales, and successes in BT Ignite.
He acknowledged that in the small business and residential markets, BT has faced tough competition from virtual operators and carrier pre-select, which had a 'major impact' on business revenues. However he said BT's response in the business market is BT Business Plan, launched last month, which guarantees a ceiling of 10p on national and local business calls and rewards loyalty.
He also maintains that when competitors quote better prices than BT in the retail market, they are quoting BT's standard charges, where some 10 million BT customers now take packages such as BT Together, which offer 'absolutely competitive' prices.
As to the outlook for the next year or so, Verwaayen said that in such an uncertain market, everyone is looking for certainties. 'We have the capability to keep growing where it matters,' he said.
Livingstone also said the company would maintain its 'progressive dividend policy, while continuing to generate cash and reduce debt. 'We can now do all three,' he said.
Citywire Verdict:
There are many good jokes about actuaries but here is one that investors in big companies like BT might like to consider as the issue of pension scheme funding comes to the fore.
An actuary is someone who'd rather be completely wrong than approximately right.
On the face of it BT's actuarial advice seems reassuring but that does not mean the problem of pension deficit will not return to haunt the company and its shareholders.
Nevertheless, on balance, we are inclined to give BT the benefit of the doubt. In this market there is no share that does not have issues and risks.
With the dividend set to get interesting again and its recovery well in place BT looks highly attractive. It is also encouraging to see that the stock is held by no less than eight star fund managers, all rated a top AAA by Citywire for their excellent risk-adjusted returns over three years. Andrew Green of GAM UK Diversified, Colin Morton of BWD UK Equity Income, Chris Littlejohns' Merrill Lynch UK Income, Edward Bonham Carter in Jupiter Undervalued Assets, Hak Salih of M&G Capital, Stephen Whittaker of New Star UK Growth, Nicholas Purves of St James Equity Income and Neil Woodford in his Invesco Perpetual High Income fund all hold BT as a top 10 holding.
If you need any more incentive Merrill Lynch today said buy with a price target of 230p.
As my colleague Richard Lander - who has tipped in and out of BT successfully recently - said recently there is no such thing a sure bet at the moment. But if you're looking for a longer term investment, BT is a great place to start.
2003 Citywire
yf23
- 14 Feb 2003 01:33
- 48 of 303
"I never tip any share and we started the thread @ 176p
- ainsoph
ha, ha ,ha, ho, ho ,ho, eu huh har har ooooohh, what a wheeze
note: ADVFN threads created by ainsoph
BT will soon be back to 6 11 Aug 01
BT ... down but not out (27 Sep'01)
God, what a loser.
ainsoph
- 14 Feb 2003 09:06
- 49 of 303
Telegraph gives them as a buy this morning ..... BT that is not the y peeps :-))
worries about a widening pension deficit outweighed broadly better-than-forecast third quarter figures. According to an AFX poll of 8 brokers' forecasts, an underlying pretax profit of 460-530 was expected for the three months ending Dec 31 2002, giving a consensus of 500m. The actual figure came in 37% higher at 521m. Revenue of 4.7 bln to 4.83 bln stg was forecast, up some 2.2% on the same quarter a year ago. But, in fact, revenues rose a slim 0.9%.
Broker Merrill Lynch, in a research note, raised its EPS and dividend forecasts but still felt it necessary to increase its projected pension top-up payments needed by the company by 50m per annum to 350m. Merrill said BT's results "tell a familiar tale", with revenues weaker than it had anticipated, but EPS better. The US broker had expected group revenue growth of 2.2% against BT's reported 0.9%. However, it noted the primary weakness was in Ignite, BT's business services unit, and was encouraged that the core voice business remained encouragingly robust. BT's EBITDA was 2.5% ahead of Merrill's forecast, thanks to quicker than expected cost-cutting, leading to the group's underlying EPS of 4.1 pence some 4.9% ahead consensus. This led Merrill to raise its 2003 EPS estimate by 4.1 pct, with its 2004 expectation upped by 3.5%. The broker also upped its dividend expectation for 2003 to 6.1 pence from 5.9. Merrill said its expectation of an increased pension top up payment was more than offset by lower levels of forecast capital expenditure, leading Merrill to increase its free-cashflow forecasts by 21% in 2003, 16% in 2004 and 7% in 2005. "In the near term we continue to believe that the potential for further cost and capex reductions outweighs the longer-term risks inherent in BT's business model," Merrill said in a morning note to clients. It repeated a target price of 230 pence per BT share.
Broker Cheuvreux said it expects further funding contributions of 1.6 bln stg spread over the next 10 years to cover the pension shortfall. "This won't remove pension concerns, but we believe the share price is discounting 3-4 bln stg additional funding, in other words is at the conservative end of expectations," said the broker in a research note. Cheuvreux described BT's results as mediocre. "More reassuringly Ignite was the weak division rather than the traditional businesses," said the broker in a research note.
BillyTheBoil
- 14 Feb 2003 09:25
- 50 of 303
...for a business with BT's utility profile, the dividend is miserly. Its prospective dividend yield of about 3.4 per cent is below the UK market average. It should rise as BT's payout rate shifts from around 43 per cent to 50 per cent, and earnings rise. But for now - with BT facing the prospect of slow long-term growth and ongoing fears over the pension fund deficit - it should not be enough to tempt investors.
goodfella
- 14 Feb 2003 10:39
- 51 of 303
Surely after the past few years you must realise that analysts dont know their arse from their elbows.
This company is a complete basket case and its only its monopoly position has kept it from imploding.
They offloaded debt onto the poor succker shareholders at OOM and are still massively in debt.
The published headline figures are nonsense and take a good luck at the balance sheet.
Growth will soon go negative as competition bites and the pension defecit is horrendous.
As somone put BT is not a telecoms operator it is a badly run hedge fund.
Not only that it is a badly run utility and it is still priced as a tech stock.
Of course analysts are upgrading it as they own a shed load of stock and need mugs to bid it up so they can offload it
ainsoph
- 14 Feb 2003 10:49
- 52 of 303
At this time I am tracking with a view to buying - so not over keen on talking them up :-)) 168p on offer currently
ains
ainsoph
- 14 Feb 2003 11:06
- 53 of 303
News - February 14,2003
BT Criticised Over DSL Campaign Cost
By:mark.j @ 10:08:AM BT has defended itself against allegations that the cost of its broadband subscriber push was too high:
BT said the additional customers could not be measured against the amount spent as the campaign was designed to stimulate take-up over several years.
The TV commercials were meant to create generic awareness of broadband the company added. "Between September and December the advertising was very intensive to kick-start the campaign and we will reap the benefits for a long time to come," a BT spokesman said.
We're not bothered so long as more people are registering for ADSL and thus increasing coverage. More in The Scotsman newspaper.
ainsoph
- 14 Feb 2003 12:47
- 54 of 303
TELECOMS giant BT has confirmed that it is considering establishing call centres in India, where labour costs are lower.
BT described the prospect of lower costs stemming from a transfer of jobs as "compelling".
However, the firm has described as "wide of the mark" union claims that 8400 jobs were being relocated to the sub-continent.
A BT spokesman said: "It is true that we are considering whether to establish contact centres in India but we have not made a final decision and the figures for job losses claimed by the union are completely wide of the mark, even if we were to proceed."
A spokesman for the Communication Workers Union, which represents a high proportion of BT workers, said: "We fear that over 8400 UK-based jobs could be moved to India."
About 40,000 people work in more than 200 call centres in Scotland.
The possibility of BT opening call centres in India emerged as the group unveiled a 1.5billion deficit in its pension funds. The pension shortfall update emerged with third-quarter profit figures yesterday which revealed a 37 per cent hike to 521million in the three months to December 31.
A spokesman for BT said: "We would stress that, whatever decision is reached, we would not destroy BT jobs in the UK, only to recreate them in India... Anyone who wanted to stay with BT would be able to do so."
But the union, as well as campaigning against the move simply to try to save jobs here, has cited security issues associated with such a move.
"In these troubled times what government would allow a company to expose the details of the millions of customers contained in BTs database to any foreign nationals?
"We must make the public aware of these issues to gain their support in persuading BT and the many other companies who use outsourcing as a way to inflate their profits to stop this exploitation of workers in other countries."
ainsoph
- 14 Feb 2003 13:59
- 55 of 303
Scottish Hydro-Electric have announced they are to start trialing broadband delivery over power lines in an effort to assess the commercial potential of offering such a service on a more widespread basis.
The company has stated that it is now fully convinced of its technological ability to deliver 2Mbps broadband over existing power cables, and has ironed out the security issues faced by its rival, Norweb.
ainsoph
- 14 Feb 2003 15:58
- 56 of 303
recovering a little now and up on the day as volumes pick up :-))
BT insists it will hit no-frills broadband target
15:08 Friday 14th February 2003
Graeme Wearden
Rumours that BT Retail is set to miss a key broadband goal are wide of the mark says the company, which believes it can still hit the magic number
BT said on Friday it was confident that it will have sold at least 500,000 subscriptions to its no-frills broadband package by this summer, despite speculation that the target may be too ambitious to be achieved.
A BT spokesman told ZDNet UK News that the rate of take-up of BT Broadband is still growing strongly and is now close to 10,000 new users per week.
With a marketing campaign planned for the second quarter of 2003, Pierre Danon, chief executive of BT Retail, has said he still believes the goal of gaining at least half a million BT Broadband subscribers by this summer is attainable.
In its latest financial results, published on Thursday, BT said weekly sales of BT Broadband are "now exceeding 7,500", and in a press release put out this week announcing a deal with Yahoo! BT disclosed that it now has "over 100,000" BT Broadband customers.
Some in the industry have speculated that these figures indicate that BT Retail will fall short of hitting its 500,000 target, pointing out that at 7,500 new subscribers per week it will take a whole year to add another 400,000 users.
According to BT Retail, though, the picture is actually more rosy.
"Customer growth is now closer to 10,000 per week and the total user base is now significantly more than 100,000. We're still gaining momentum and are confident the 500,000 users target will be hit," explained a BT Retail spokesman.
BT Broadband, unlike most broadband packages, does not include features such as an email account, Web space or any security packages. Instead, customers must get these features from third-parties.
BT is expected to unveil a range of products and applications to be used with BT Broadband this year, including possibly a 'home monitoring' product.
ainsoph
- 15 Feb 2003 10:53
- 57 of 303
Well I added a few yesterday morning and covering my costs and a little extra
ains