Posts Tagged ‘at&t’

Introducing the MoPR 500 Mobility Stock Index

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

The MoPR 500 IndexThese last few weeks have certainly been crazy on the stock market. The only stock that seemed to do well the last two weeks was Campbell Soup (NYSE: CPB). It made us wonder how mobility stocks would fare as compared to the rest of the market. So we’re trying an experiment.

We looked at some representative companies across the wide mobility spectrum — from wireless to Wi-Fi, from mobile entertainment to network infrastructure — and we put together a portfolio buying a single shares of as many of these mobility stocks as we could purchase for $500. So yes, the “500″ in the name means dollars, not the number of stocks in our index.

On October 3, 2008 the “MoPR 500 Stock Index” was valued at $500.49. How’s it doing today? See how our mobility stock index is performing by visiting the MoPR 500 Index page here on TheMoPRBlog. You can get detailed information about all the stocks her at our MoPR 500 index pages on Herdstreet and Stockalicious.

Index Stocks and Day 1 Share Prices

Company Name (Symbol)   Purchase Price 
Alcatel Lucent (ALU) $   3.54
AT&T (T) 28.12
Bitstream (BITS) 5.17
Broadcom (BRCM) 16.63
Cisco Systems (CSCO) 21.25
Clearwire (CLWR) 9.92
Deutsche Telekom (DT) 15.63
DirecTv Group (DTV) 24.76
France Telecom (FTE) 27.78
Garmin (GRMN) 28.72
Intel (INTC) 17.31
iPass (IPAS) 1.80
Motorola (MOT) 6.72
Neustar (NSR) 18.83
Nokia (NOK) 17.75
Nortel Networks (NT) 2.08
Powerwave Technologies (PWAV) 3.32
Qualcomm (QCOM) 40.87
Research in Motion (RIMM) 60.96
Sierra Wireless (SWIR) 8.75
Sprint Nextel (S) 5.70
Sybase (SY) 28.76
Syniverse Holdings (SVR) 16.11
Telus Corp (TU) 34.61
UTStarcom (UTSI) 2.88
Verizon Communications (VZ) 31.24
ViaSat (VSAT) 21.28
TOTAL VALUE $500.49

John S

And the winner is…cable modem!

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

Photo courtesy of OrangeCats: http://flickr.com/photos/orangecats/

AT&T and Verizon recently announced their worst quarter ever for DSL subscriber additions, with a combined total loss of 87,000 DSL customers.

So where did they all go?  They went to the cable operators and their high-speed Internet. Former DSL customers think DSL is simply too slow.

DSL is what telecom companies use to offer high-speed Internet access, and though it’s considerably faster than a regular phone connection (remember the good ol’ days of listening to AOL dialup?), it is generally outpaced by cable operator’s DSL killer, the cable modem.  Or so says Comcast’s COO Stephen Burke.

In a recent article appearing in Cable Digital News, Burke said that the results of this past quarter “continue to suggest, as some have said, that DSL may be the new dialup. This quarter, approximately two thirds of our net adds came from DSL customers.”

While many thought the slump was due to the struggling economy, Comcast and Cablevision proved them wrong and showed that cable operators are indeed the cause of AT&T and Verizon’s poor quarter due to their superior Internet service. Comcast and Cablevision have announced remarkable customer numbers (Comcast added over 278,000 broadband Internet customers), thanks in large part to the higher speeds they offer their customers.

Burke added that “I think we have a platform advantage in that we are offering much higher data speeds – and we plan to continue that advantage.”

But some say DSL isn’t entirely dead just yet.  Doug Williams, an analyst with Jupiter Research, sees things a little differently stating:

“Cable has historically offered faster speeds -both uploading and downloading speeds — but I think DSL is going to be around for a long, long time…Telcos are rolling out DSL in unserved communities, and that supports the idea that DSL is not going to be obsolete. It’s going to be one of the few technologies available for some people.”

DSL is the perfect option for low-power users relying on the service for simple tasks like email or basic surfing but not wanting blazingly fast downloads. But, if time is money, then the more than 87,000 DSL customers jumping ship is further proof of this statement.  While DSL may be less expensive than cable modem service, people are still choosing to pay a little bit more for faster broadband, especially if they are downloading movies, involved in serious online gaming or taking advantage of the other bandwidth-intensive applications that cable can easily support.

So what technology is coming next to knock the cable guys off their podium?  We’ll keep an eye out for what’s coming next.

Photo courtesy of PhotoCats: http://flickr.com/photos/orangecat.

Tamara