Posted on 02/10/2005 1:30:50 PM PST by t_skoz
Loss Widens at XM Satellite Radio
XM Satellite Radio Reports Wider Net Loss for Fourth Quarter, Despite Adding Subscribers
Feb 10, 2005 XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc. reported a wider net loss for the fourth quarter of 2004 on Thursday as the company bulked up on new subscribers, adding more than 700,000 in the latest quarter to top 3.2 million users.
XM, which is based in Washington, D.C., reported a net loss attributable to common shareholders of $190.4 million for the last three months of 2004, more than the loss of $170.2 million reported in the comparable period a year ago.
The per-share loss calculations, however, fell to 93 cents in the latest period from $1.12 a year ago because of an increase in the number of shares outstanding. The loss was smaller than the $1.02 per share that analysts polled by Thomson First Call had been expecting.
Revenues more than doubled in the latest quarter to $83.1 million from $33.5 million in the year-ago period. The revenues were also above the $80.5 million that analysts had been expecting.
XM has been spending heavily on programming and marketing to build up its service as it competes with rival Sirius Satellite Radio Inc. Both companies have been signing deals with automakers to install their devices in new cars, and both are also signing multimillion dollar deals for programming, including Major League Baseball for XM and Howard Stern for Sirius.
XM said it cost the company a total of $100 to add each new subscriber in 2004, down from $137 in 2003. The company disclosed in a regulatory filing that it expected to break even on a cash flow basis in 2006, and that it expects to have subscription revenues of $480 million in 2005. The company also said it expects to have 5.5 million subscribers at the end of this year.
Last month Sirius reported that it ended 2004 with more than 1.1 million subscribers and expected to finish 2005 with more than 2.5 million. Sirius is being run by Mel Karmazin, a longtime radio executive who departed last year as the president and chief operating officer of media giant Viacom Inc., the owner of CBS and MTV.
XM's stock was up 28 cents at $31.68 in midday trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market, about in the middle of its 52-week range of $20.35 to $40.89.
A big amen to your post 24. XM has made radio worth listening to again.
This was said about Cable TV, Video on Demand & Cable Internet.....in 1980... I was employed at AT&T & SWBT & SBC.... Who is laughing now?
Each technology is different. I don't compare the service of sat radio in any way to video on demand. Indeed, I really see it as the wave of the future due to unlimited programming.
I have XM and primarily listen to blues and jazz.. I used to listen entirely to cd's also.. but I never found anything new to listen to, and radio is a wasteland.. XM gives me access to new talent..
I think XM is great.. and I chose it over Sirius cause I didn't want any money going to npr...
Gee, you almost have me sold. Good taste in music!
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