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AT&T, T-Mobile Step Up Prepaid Wireless Battle Amid Economy Worries

The one-fifth of U.S. mobile phone users that buy prepaid wireless services stand to get much better data deals as AT&T ( T ),  T-Mobile US ( TMUS ), and Sprint slug it out. “The prepaid market is heating up with surprising deals,” said Roger Entner, chief analyst at consulting firm Recon Analytics. So-called postpaid wireless subscribers historically got the most bang for their money. Postpaid subscribers had two-year service contracts and were billed monthly. Service contracts have been phased out recently along with retail subsidies for Apple ( AAPL ) iPhones and other high-end smartphones. Most postpaid subscribers now buy phones in monthly installment plans. Prepaid customers, who typically bought less pricey phones upfront, generally were provided slower data services. But that’s changing. “Prepaid users are getting more 4G data at cheaper rates than ever,” Entner said. “When you look at the fighter brands (Cricket and MetroPCS, the most aggressive), you see the old days of prepaid being more expensive (per megabyte) than postpaid are gone.” Entner says MetroPCS customers get unlimited voice calls, texting and 3 gigabytes of 4G data for $40. A similar deal at Cricket provides 2.5GB of data. T-Mobile sells prepaid services under the MetroPCS brand, while AT&T has Cricket. AT&T acquired Leap Wireless and its Cricket brand for $1.2 billion in March 2014. Since then, AT&T has stepped up Cricket advertising while opening more retail stores. AT&T has expanded Cricket’s marketing reach through deals with Wal-Mart ( WMT ), Target ( TGT ) and GameStop ( GME ). T-Mobile acquired prepaid specialist MetroPCS in 2013 and has kept the brand alive. Both T-Mobile and AT&T, by coincidence, said they added 469,000 prepaid subscribers in the December quarter, while Verizon Communications ( VZ ) shed 157,000 and Sprint ( S ) lost 491,000. Some of Sprint’s prepaid subscribers upgraded to postpaid plans. On T-Mobile’s Q4  earnings conference call Feb. 10, CEO John Legere said that he expects the prepaid battle to heat up. “We’re killing it in prepaid,” Legere said. T-Mobile also sells prepaid services under the Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile brands. “The majority of our growth is on MetroPCS, as opposed to our other brands,” Legere said. “Cricket has had some success, but AT&T is bleeding postpaid subscribers. We see MetroPCS’ main target not to be Cricket per se but to be Sprint. And I think you’ll see a lot more competition between MetroPCS and Sprint.” AT&T has lost postpaid phone subscribers for five quarters in a row, including 256,000 shed in Q4. Prepaid, Postpaid Wireless Lines Blur Marketing lines have blurred between the prepaid and postpaid customer segments, analysts say. Many prepaid plans renew automatically every month. Phone financing plans still lock in postpaid subscribers, though it’s easier for consumers to exit deals. “We’ve seen a shift in consumers from low-end, pay-as-you-go type (prepaid) plans to higher-quality plans,” Legere said. Prepaid plans start at around  $25.  America Movil ’s ( AMX ) TracFone subsidiary, with 25.6 million U.S. customers, focuses on the lower-spending part of the prepaid market. TracFone’s growth has stalled, though. Analysts say the prepaid market could be more important strategically if the U.S. economy slows down. Most economists do not forecast a recession in 2016. Some of T-Mobile’s postpaid subscriber growth has come from prepaid users converted to postpaid plans, with monthly installment plans for phone upgrades. Sprint in the second half of 2015 began adding postpaid phone subscribers for the first time in five years, including its Nextel brand. Some of Sprint’s prepaid subscribers also have migrated to postpaid plans. One concern among investors, said Oppenheimer analyst Tim Horan in a 2016 outlook research report, “remains that T-Mobile and Sprint are financing low-credit-quality customers and will get hurt in any potential economic weakness.” In Q4, T-Mobile reported “bad debt expense” of $228 million, up 52% from the year-earlier period. But Craig Moffett, an analyst at MoffettNathanson, says that worries could be overblown. “T-Mobile has never been able to fully shake the perception that its subscriber base is of lower credit quality than that of its peers,” said Moffett in a report. “Those customers would be hard hit in a recession. “The counter-argument is equally compelling. (It) holds that in a recession price sensitivity generally rises and that T-Mobile would actually benefit.” T-Mobile has gained share with its Uncarrier-branded marketing and price cutting. In November, T-Mobile launched “Binge On Demand,” which offers free video streaming. In Q4, T-Mobile added 917,000 postpaid phone subscribers. Verizon added 449,000, while Sprint added 366,000. In 2015, T-Mobile added 4.5 million postpaid subscribers, including about 1 million tablet users, and it added 1.3 million prepaid customers. AT&T lost 1.27 million postpaid phone subscribers, while gaining 1.36 million prepaid subscribers in 2015. “We expect AT&T will continue to be active with prepaid Cricket promotions while focusing on profitable, high-value customers in postpaid,” said UBS analyst John Hodulik in a report. Image provided by Shutterstock .

Activision Blizzard Whiffs On Q4 EPS, Sales; Stock Sinks

Video game publisher Activision Blizzard ( ATVI ) late Thursday missed Wall Street’s targets for the fourth quarter and gave conservative guidance for the current quarter and full-year 2016. Investors punished Activision stock on Friday. In morning trading, Activision shares were down about 10% to about 27 on the stock market today . On Dec. 29, Activision stock hit an all-time high of 39.93. At least eight Wall Street analysts cut their price targets on Activision stock after the earnings report. The Santa Monica, Calif.-based company earned 83 cents a share excluding items on sales of $2.12 billion. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected Activision to earn 86 cents a share on sales of $2.20 billion. On a year-over-year basis, Activision’s EPS fell 12%, and its sales slipped 4%. Activision was hurt by smaller-than-expected sales of “Guitar Hero Live” and “Skylanders” during the holiday quarter, as well as negative foreign-exchange trends, Benchmark analyst Mike Hickey said in a research report Friday. For the current quarter, Activision expects to earn 11 cents a share ex items on sales of $800 million. For 2016, Activision is looking to earn $1.75 in adjusted EPS on sales of $6.25 billion. Activision’s figures include its planned acquisition of King Digital Entertainment ( KING ), while current Wall Street estimates do not. Excluding King, Activision’s core adjust EPS guidance for the year would be $1.35, 21 cents below Wall Street consensus, Hickey said. “The company’s weaker-than-anticipated guidance was primarily attributable to the delay of (the sequal to action game) ‘Destiny’ and the general conservative nature of management,” Hickey said. He rates Activision stock buy, but he lowered his price target to 37.63 from 43.07. ‘Call Of Duty’ Helped Activision The underperformance of “Guitar Hero” and “Skylanders” was partially offset by the continued success of “Call of Duty: Black Ops 3,” Piper Jaffray analyst Michael Olson said in a report Friday. He reiterated his overweight rating on Activision stock but cut his price target to 39 from 42. “We still believe a history of conservatism suggests the outlook may prove low,” Olson said. “Activision has exceeded its original full-year revenue and EPS outlook, on average, by 19% and 7% from ’09 to ’15.” Excluding a tax benefit, Activision would have missed its earnings guidance for the first time in 10 years in the fourth quarter, Wedbush analyst Michael Pachter said in a report Friday. He maintained his outperform rating on Activision stock but lowered his 12-month price target to 40 from 47. Pacific Crest Securities analyst Evan Wilson said the holiday season proved “strangely difficult” for the video game industry. Activision, Electronic Arts ( EA ), GameStop ( GME ) and Ubisoft all disappointed with their recent earnings reports, he said. “This is supposed to be the sweet spot right?” Wilson said in a report Thursday. “What has become clear is that the breadth of successful games continues to narrow, and increases in competition can have a huge impact, especially on lower-quality or casual titles. This holiday likely fully transitions the sector from ‘buy the basket’ to ‘buy the slate,’ as releases don’t guarantee success.” Wilson maintained his overweight rating on Activision stock but trimmed his price target to 36 from 41. RELATED: Take-Two Interactive Software’s Games Show Staying Power; Q3 Beats Electronic Arts Falls On Mixed Q3, Weak Guidance .  

GameStop slides on digital download worries

GameStop (GME) stock tumbled on Tuesday after the company’s holiday sales report renewed concerns about the impact of digital downloads on its game software sales. GameStop dipped 5.1% to 27.88 on the stock market today. In intraday trading, GameStop fell as much as 10.4% to 26.31, its lowest price in nearly three years. The Grapevine, Texas-based retailer said its sales for the nine-week holiday period ended Jan. 2 rose 1.8% year over year to