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
- 17 Feb 2003 13:34
- 64 of 303
BT gets clearance for consumer wireless expansion
London, February 17 2003, (netimperative)
by Richard Agnew
BT has confirmed it is to aggressively expand its activity in the consumer wireless sector this summer, little over a year after spinning off its in-house mobile arm O2.
The move will see O2 rival T-Mobile replacing it as the supplier of network capacity for BT's consumer offering Mobile Sense, which the telco aims to expand and generate the main part of the 44m in revenue it has targeted for such activities by 2004/05.
Although BT would not give out specific details of the services it would offer, the move is expected to see it bundle fixed and mobile services for consumers on one bill and promoting services such as text messaging from landline phones. A spokesperson for the company confirmed it had received clearance from telecoms regulator Oftel to press ahead with the new expansion.
T-Mobile is believed to have undercut O2 to supply BT with access to its network. It already allows virtual operator Virgin Mobile to piggyback on its network, and UK CEO Harris Jones said the deal would "accelerate our growth further".
BT signalled its intent to take on the UK mobile operators with the low-key launch of its online service Mobile Sense in October.
The move saw BT offering consumers the chance to build their monthly pricing plans and pay their bills online via the bt.com website, but a BT spokesperson said the service was just a "first step" back into the market. He said the company planned to start targeting consumers offline and offering unified services to its massive residential telephony customer base.
BT Retail consumer MD Angus Porter said: "From this summer, we will be able to offer excellent mobile packages to our customers in the consumer market. Our aim at BT is to connect our customers' worlds completely, and obviously a strong mobile offering is a vital link in that chain.
The new service's launch also forms part of a gradual build-up of BT's activity in the mobile market after spinning off its in-house operator O2 at the end of 2001.
Through mobile business services run through O2 and its wireless LAN (local area network) business Openzone, the company is looking to capture 12% to 15% of the corporate wireless market by 2006/7.
BT is contractually obliged to use O2 for its corporate mobile service for the three years after the firm's demerger, but ongoing rumours have linked it to deals with other operators in the consumer sector since the business service was launched.
Brain Smiley
- 17 Feb 2003 13:42
- 65 of 303
more downgrades...u slagged me for saying downgrades would follow the results !!
ainsoph
- 17 Feb 2003 13:50
- 66 of 303
I said the brokers had mostly already updated .... BT have now stabilised and moving up a tad ..... generates a buying opportunity which is good and my guess is the price hasn't moved any since your last post :-))
ains
Brain Smiley
- 17 Feb 2003 14:19
- 67 of 303
you said the brokers had already made their comments. suppose your making lots of dosh longing BT around these prices ? What did u do with the shars you bought in the 1.70's u mentioned ?
ainsoph
- 17 Feb 2003 14:55
- 68 of 303
I haven't sold any in the last day or two ..... tending to swing trade rather than intraday on these and at the moment happy to accumulate a few
ains
Brain Smiley
- 17 Feb 2003 14:59
- 69 of 303
I'd buy mid 1.50's and short around 1.85.just watching developments.
ainsoph
- 17 Feb 2003 15:10
- 70 of 303
We will see ..... market will soon forget and there will be positive notes out soon - US being closed doesn't help any
ains
17 Feb 2003 14:10 GMT
UPDATE 1-BT to make new consumer wireless bid with T-Mobile
(adds detail, background)
LONDON, Feb 17 (Reuters) - BT Group Plc BT.L , Britain's largest fixed-line telecoms provider, stepped further away from its mobile offspring on Monday when it announced a deal with one of mmO2's OOM.L rivals in a renewed bid for mobile consumers.
BT will be able to offer a bundled fixed and wireless phone service by reselling time on Deutsche Telekom AG's DTEGn.DE T-Mobile [TMOG.UL] network, just over a year after the British company sold its mobile arm mmO2 Plc in order to reduce debt.
"From this summer, we will be able to offer excellent mobile packages to our customers in the consumer market," Angus Porter, managing director of BT Retail's consumer division, said. More details would be released closer to the launch, he added.
BT, which resells O2's mobile services to its business customers, had already launched a consumer mobile product with O2 called "Mobile Sense" last October.
Mobile Sense, which BT had primarily targeted at the two million users of its Web site, would carry on until the launch of its new service, a BT Retail spokesman said
"What we're talking about with T-Mobile is a much broader variety of packages," he said.
BT has said before it aims to earn 44 million pounds ($70 million) a year in revenue from consumer mobile and other services by 2005. It jumped back into the corporate wireless market in April last year, hoping to add 500 million pounds in revenue by 2007.
Though BT can enjoy the benefits of mobile earnings without the risk and high cost of network ownership, some analysts wonder how much money can be earned out of reselling agreements.
Virgin Mobile, a British joint venture between entrepreneur Richard Branson's Virgin Group [VA.UL] and T-Mobile, has enjoyed success in its first three years, picking up almost 2.4 million subscribers and turning an underlying profit last year.
biffa18
- 17 Feb 2003 17:12
- 71 of 303
I will buy these @150 ish looks on the cards as pension is going to be a big burden and with no signs of any improvement in the short term ,If you look around the market place it does not forget easily and bt is a ideal shorting share for the moment they are placing a lot of faith in broadband but on the other hand are theatening to limit data downloads which goes against the whole idea of the ordinary person having broad band in the first place especialy as they advertise downloading music/films etc, take that away and there is no reason for the home user to pay 20+ a month
ainsoph
- 17 Feb 2003 23:47
- 72 of 303
BT Group and Swisscom AG were active in opening deals after both issues were downgraded in a UBS Warburg review of the fixed-line telecoms sector, dealers said.
BT was moved to 'reduce' from 'neutral' by the broker, on a target price lowered to 154 pence from 180.
Swisscom was moved to 'neutral' from 'buy', with its target cut to 450 skr from 475. Elsewhere in the UBS research, Deutsche Telekom AG and France Telecom were both kept at 'reduce'.
TeliaSonera AB was upgraded to 'buy' from 'neutral', with its target price raised to 10.3 eur from 8.8. KPN NV Royal, OTE, TDC AS, Telekom Austria, Telenor ASA and Portugal Telecom were reiterated at 'neutral'. Telefonica had its 'reduce' recommendation repeated.
UBS told clients it sees the fixed-line telecoms operators at a crossroads. Sales newsflow has been weak, but cost base reductions have led to upgrades to free cash flow and consequently to share prices, it said. With the sector now valued at a 5% premium to the wider market, UBS mulled whether upgrades would come from further cost-cutting, or whether revenue growth will be the ultimate driver of cash-flow growth. The broker concluded that top-line growth will ultimately be the key driver while further cost-cutting could be hard to achieve. This led it to remain cautious on the sector. Shareholders should not assume they will see 100% of cost-cutting benefits to perpetuity, given high implied post-tax return on invested capital of 20 pct, UBS thought. It was also concerned by the top-line effect of fixed to mobile substitution, wireless termination rate cuts, regulation and overcapacity. The expected squeeze on near-term cashflows led UBS to lower wireline valuations by an average of 7%. Telecom Italia was named as UBS's preferred pick, while TeliaSonera was highlighted as "the cheapest way to play potential restructuring".
Deutsche Telekom and France Telecom were considered more leveraged plays, while BT was downgraded because of its leverage into wireline fundamentals.
ainsoph
- 18 Feb 2003 07:44
- 73 of 303
talk of the Royal Bank of Scotland being close to announcing a renewed contract with BT to manage all of its telecoms systems.
The long-term agreement is still to be signed, but it could be worth around 65 million per annum to BT.
ains
ainsoph
- 18 Feb 2003 10:56
- 74 of 303
Just a reminder that from yesterday anybody subscribing to BTs BT 'No Frills' Broadband ADSL service will gain two months of free digital music downloads via the operators Dotmusic portal.
The offer is valid until 31st March 2003 and lets you download up to 100 free music tracks from a collection of over 120,000. The standard subscription of 4.99 per month will be reinstated for April.
ainsoph
- 18 Feb 2003 11:58
- 75 of 303
Fixed wireless broadband too pricey for ISPs
By Dinah Greek [18-02-2003]
Smaller service providers lack resources to roll out more services, says analyst
Few internet service providers (ISPs) have the enthusiasm or cash to roll out further residential wireless broadband services, according to analyst Ovum.
Even the lure of a low reserve price for the 3.4GHz wavelength, previously used for telephony services, may not be enough to tempt many smaller independent ISPs.
And rather than use the frequency to roll out broadband access to consumers, as the government hopes, larger telecoms operators could take advantage of the removal of many restrictions to snap up the licences while continuing to use the frequency as extra bandwidth for their existing services.
"In the financial climate who has got the hunger left to deploy new networks? This means fixed wireless is still struggling to sell," said Michael Philpott, a broadband market analyst with Ovum.
The most likely outcome could be that licences are sold to major players such as BT, according to Philpott.
"They could buy the spectrum and create more than one source of revenue for themselves by offering both retail and wholesale services."
On paper the 3.4GHz spectrum is perfect for broadband deployment to rural areas where cable and Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) is too expensive to roll out.
It has a similar bandwidth offering to DSL but with a greater reach, and the equipment is cheaper to install than for higher frequency wireless spectrums.
But the main drawback of fixed wireless access is the cost to the ISP and the consumer. Economies of scale mean that ADSL prices are dropping all the time, whereas fixed wireless asset prices are largely standing still.
Dave Thorpe, operations manager for business-to-business ISP Internet Central, based in Norfolk, said: "Investment costs to ISPs for fixed wireless services are enormous.
"There is the investment in hardware that is needed and the bandwidth has to come from somewhere. This usually means linking to a local BT exchange.
"We charge businesses 750 for installation, then 350 per month for a 2Mbps leased line. We couldn't charge this to residential customers so would never get the cost of investment back."
But the Radiocommunications Agency and the Department of Trade and Industry have had a difficult job pitching the licences at the right price, argued Rob Mortimer at wireless DSL equipment vendor Alvarion.
Removing restrictions that would force operators to provide broadband access would not necessarily backfire, he said.
"While companies such as Vodafone and Orange could be interested in the 3.4GHz spectrum for backhaul services, there is a lot of interest from rural ISPs to provide broadband services."
ainsoph
- 18 Feb 2003 12:45
- 76 of 303
By Tim Richardson
Posted: 18/02/2003 at 12:25 GMT
BT may fall short of reaching its target of one million broadband customers by the end of June, according to a report just published.
Enders Analysis reports that the wholesale take-up of BT's DSL service is currently growing at an "exceptional" pace and that this would have to be sustained until the summer for BT to meet its target.
During January, the report says BT Wholesale connected 70,000 ADSL lines, compared to an average of 50,000 a month during Q3 2002.
This is disputed by BT Wholesale, which said that in January more than 80,000 DSL lines were connected. It also claims that connection rates are accelerating with 25,000 connected in the first week of February alone.
As long as these levels of take-up are sustained then BT looks set to hit its target. A spokesman for BT Wholesale said the telco remains "absolutely confident" that it will do so.
But Enders Analysis isn't so sure, which is why it is taking a more cautious approach, suggesting that it would be "touch-and-go" whether BT Wholesale hits its million mark.
Of course, whether BT misses its target by a few weeks is not really of any great consequence. The important thing is that with more than 650,000 DSL connections in the UK, broadband is beginning to make its mark. But at what cost?
According to the report, BT has been forced to rethink its broadband strategy following the "disappointing" take-up of its much-hyped, no-frills, access-only BT Broadband service.
When it was launched last year some analysts predicted that this access-only product could sign the death warrant for traditional service and content-included ISPs.
But with only 100,000-plus customers so far and millions spent on promoting the product, BT is still way-off the tough 500,000 target it set itself for the end of June.
Publicly, BT is still optimistic that it will hit this target, something challenged by Enders Analysis.
Perhaps more interesting, though, is the fact that BT Broadband's failure to catch on as hoped has breathed new life into the telco's ISP, BT Openworld, which was effectively kicked into the long-grass last year.
Now it seems BT is ready to spend cash on it once again in a bid to increase numbers and help it reach the million.
ainsoph
- 18 Feb 2003 12:48
- 77 of 303
Tuesday 18th February 2003
Broadband UK Internet connections reach one in ten
[Computer Buyer] 12:32
The Office of National Statistics has covered the month of December 2002 in its latest monthly report on UK Internet connectivity.
The headline figure is that the total number of subscriptions for access to the Internet actually fell - month on month - by 1.1 per cent. This is attributed to seasonal factors involving the Christmas holiday. On a yearly basis, however, Internet connectivity grew 7.4 per cent compared with December 2001.
Of more interest is the statistic that 10.1 per cent of subscriptions to the Internet now involve fast dedicated access (broadband or fixed lines). The Office of National Statistics reports that the yearly growth for permanent connections was 262.7 per cent, with an increase of 7.3 per cent from November to December 2002.
By contrast, the relative decline of dial-up connections - which include ISDN - has continued. The figure for December 2002 stands at 89.9 per cent, down from the 97 per cent of all subscriptions in December 2001.
Make no mistake, however - this is not to say that one in ten people now enjoy broadband. The official figures relate to the nature of Internet subscriptions. Nevertheless, the stats provide a useful and consistent indication of the take up of broadband.
Alun Williams
ainsoph
- 19 Feb 2003 07:57
- 78 of 303
The share price seems to have'bottomed at around 165/169p ..... time to add a few in the very next intraday dip ..... some useful shareholder offers on new phones - we need a new cordless as some of the current ones we use are nearly three years old and batteries are starting to wear out - like the look of the On Air 2300SMS exec which enables you to send/receive teaxt messages as well as incorporating an ansaphone ..... save around 70 on a base unit + three extra handsets ......
ains
BTo gets tough with Sat bandwidth hogs - again
By Tim Richardson The Reigister
Posted: 17/02/2003 at 13:48 GMT
BT Openworld has threatened around 40 of its broadband satellite customers that it might have to cap their service if they continue to hog bandwidth.
In a letter to customers BT's ISP has warned them that they have been "using an excessive amount of bandwidth on a regular basis".
And unless they curtail their usage, then BT Openworld warned: "We will soon have to start imposing bandwidth limitations on your account at peak hours so that all our customers have a fair share of bandwidth."
Of course, instead of imposing a restriction, BT Openworld wants to work with those heavy users in a bid to help them manage their usage more effectively.
A spokesman for BT Openworld told The Register that it did not want to cap usage or kick anyone off the service for over-use and hoped that those people contacted would co-operate.
Indeed, when BT Openworld warned satellite customers last September about over-use, the matter was resolved without any further action on BT's behalf, he said.
BT may fall short of reaching its target of one million broadband customers by the end of June, according to a report just published.
Enders Analysis reports that the wholesale take-up of BT's DSL service is currently growing at an "exceptional" pace and that this would have to be sustained until the summer for BT to meet its target.
During January, the report says BT Wholesale connected 70,000 ADSL lines, compared to an average of 50,000 a month during Q3 2002.
This is disputed by BT Wholesale, which said that in January more than 80,000 DSL lines were connected. It also claims that connection rates are accelerating with 25,000 connected in the first week of February alone.
As long as these levels of take-up are sustained then BT looks set to hit its target. A spokesman for BT Wholesale said the telco remains "absolutely confident" that it will do so.
But Enders Analysis isn't so sure, which is why it is taking a more cautious approach, suggesting that it would be "touch-and-go" whether BT Wholesale hits its million mark.
Of course, whether BT misses its target by a few weeks is not really of any great consequence. The important thing is that with more than 650,000 DSL connections in the UK, broadband is beginning to make its mark. But at what cost?
According to the report, BT has been forced to rethink its broadband strategy following the "disappointing" take-up of its much-hyped, no-frills, access-only BT Broadband service.
When it was launched last year some analysts predicted that this access-only product could sign the death warrant for traditional service and content-included ISPs.
But with only 100,000-plus customers so far and millions spent on promoting the product, BT is still way-off the tough 500,000 target it set itself for the end of June.
Publicly, BT is still optimistic that it will hit this target, something challenged by Enders Analysis.
Perhaps more interesting, though, is the fact that BT Broadband's failure to catch on as hoped has breathed new life into the telco's ISP, BT Openworld, which was effectively kicked into the long-grass last year.
Now it seems BT is ready to spend cash on it once again in a bid to increase numbers and help it reach the million.
ainsoph
- 19 Feb 2003 14:30
- 79 of 303
Wednesday February 19, 01:52 PM
BT pulls discount offer that breached licence
LONDON (Reuters) - Telecoms regulator Oftel has said that former telecoms monopoly BT Group (LSE: BT.L - news - msgs) has withdrawn a discount offer that put it in breach of its licence.
Oftel issued a provisional order against BT following a complaint by telecoms firm Vanco (LSE: VAN.L - news) about RHM, a BT service reseller which had offered a discount to IBM (NYSE: IBM - news) while Vanco attempted to sign up the U.S. computer giant itself. BT's licence says it must publish any discounts offered to customers.
"I welcome the steps BT has taken to comply with its licence and the commitments it has given to ensure that similar unacceptable behaviour does not occur again," David Edmonds, director general of telecommunications, said in a statement.
ainsoph
- 19 Feb 2003 16:34
- 80 of 303
oops ..... main market down 1.84% - sector down 3.12% - BT down 4.46%
ains
UK games machine operator looks to broadband
London, February 19 2003, (netimperative)
by Richard Agnew
Leisure Link, the games machine giant, has inked a multi-million pound deal for the supply of broadband as part of an expansion plan which will see it roll out 18,000 more digital terminals over the next three years.
The company's digital division, Inspired Broadcast Networks (IBN), is paying BT 17.5m to provide ADSL lines to its pay-to-play touch-screen machines, which provide punters with fixed-odds betting, quiz and arcade games in pubs, amusement arcades, service stations and betting shops across the country.
The agreement will see the 3,000 terminals IBN currently operates upgraded from ISDN by September, and 18,000 new broadband lines installed to facilitate the roll-out of a raft of new betting and gaming machines and services over the next three years.
IBN chairman Russell Hoyle told netimperative that potential new services would include digital music delivery and downloading of content to mobile phones. It currently allows mobile users to pay for ring-tones via its machines.
Hoyle added that the ADSL upgrade would allow it to increase the number and sophistication of the games available, to manage the content better, fix faults remotely and change services overnight.
Slot and games machine operators are increasingly looking to the web for such benefits. Swedish online gambling software company Boss Media recently launched an interactive video terminal allowing fruit machine firms to increase the games on offer on one device and users to continue gambling when they leave the arcade, from their PC or mobile.
Leisure Link is the UK's largest amusement machine provider with 90,000 terminals in 30,000 locations.
ainsoph
- 19 Feb 2003 17:59
- 81 of 303
BT explores slower ADSL in search for long-range broadband
17:46 Wednesday 19th February 2003
Graeme Wearden
Is your house located too far from the local exchange for 512Kbps broadband to work? BT is working on a possible solution
BT is examining the possibility of offering a 256Kbps ADSL product that would extend the reach of broadband across the UK.
Trials are still at an early stage, but it is possible that this product could help to close Britain's broadband divide. A significant proportion of homes are located too far from their local exchange for BT's current consumer broadband product -- which runs at 512Kbps -- to work, because of technical limitations.
A slower ADSL product could be commercially viable if it works well enough over a longer distance, BT hopes.
ainsoph
- 19 Feb 2003 18:00
- 82 of 303
edited
19 Feb 2003 17:04 GMT
BT seeks to calm on India plan after strike threat
LONDON, Feb 19 (Reuters) - BT Group Plc BT.L , Britain's former telecoms monopoly, sought to reassure employees on Wednesday after strike threats from union officials who say BT plans to move 700 call centre jobs to India.
BT, which has been forced to cut costs to boost profits despite stagnant revenue growth, said no call centres would be shut down in Britain if it decided to move some work abroad.
"In line with sensible business practice, we will always review our operations to help us provide our customers with the best standard of service at the most competitive cost," the company said in a statement.
Jeannie Drake, director general of the Communication Workers Union, has written to 3,500 BT workers to say the union would resist "by all means possible" the move of jobs out of the UK.
ainsoph
- 20 Feb 2003 07:53
- 83 of 303
I repeat my earlier comments that I am not over concerned on the pensions front and think the market is wrong to over sell
ains
BT plays down pension concerns
IAIN DEY BUSINESS CORRESPONDENT Scotsman
BTS FINANCE director insisted yesterday that he was not overly concerned by the 1.5 billion deficit in the firms pension fund, despite no imminent prospect of a stock market recovery.
Scot Ian Livingston, in Edinburgh to brief investors on BTs full-year results, claimed the methods of calculating pension fund values has led to a degree of "misinformation" over the true state of the fund.
He also insisted that BT was more than doing its fair share to increase broadband internet access in Scotland.
Livingston told The Scotsman: "While the pension deficit has got worse, it hasnt got dramatically worse. The critical thing is that although the market has fallen, the cash-flow into the fund hasnt changed dramatically. Dividends, rentals from property and that sort of thing havent really changed."
He added: "Between 1996 and 1999, our fund went from a small surplus to a small deficit, despite the fact that the FTSE went from around 4,000 to around 6,900. But many of the companies who were driving up the market were dotcoms, which didnt pay a dividend. Since the market has fallen, many people think Oh well the deficit must be much bigger now. But no."
The BT pension deficit has swelled from 200 million in March 2000 to between 1 billion and 1.5 billion, although some analysts have claimed the company is attempting to understate the extent of the problem. BT is now injecting an extra 200 million a year to cover the deficit.
In Scotland, Livingston said BT was continuing to upgrade exchanges to broadband status, at a cost of up 500,000, wherever there is sufficient demand.
Ten Scottish exchanges - Culloden, Kilsyth, Helensburgh, Newton Mearns, Cambuslang, Ardrossan, Bathgate, Largs plus one exchange in Irvine and another in Aberdeen - will be upgraded in the next few weeks.
Livingston said: "The problem is not supply, its demand. If the demand is there, well build."
He added: "If people want an infrastructure that they could be proud of, we need the government and everyone else to do it with us."