Showing posts with label Telecom New Zealand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Telecom New Zealand. Show all posts

Saturday, May 1, 2010

I was Wrong... sort of

With the New Zealand Yellow Pages Group in apparent financial trouble (who would have thought that would happen after the purchasers borrowed most of the money to buy it !) I must revisit a statement I made about the sale by Telecom New Zealand [TEL.NZ] back in 2007.

I criticised the company for selling a profitable part of their business at a time when the company's other units were mature with falling revenue and future falling profits.

It looks like I was wrong, (and this is where the sort of comes in) Telecom owning Yellow Pages was profitable because of the long established nature of the unit within the company and low base cost but when sold the new owners had far too much debt to make the whole thing work.

People are using the internet more for searching numbers (I use Yellow and White pages online and it is free) and the books seem redundant.

The price Telecom got was superb compared to its worth now, probably less than half its sale price to the current owners and worth less than its debt mountain.

Telecom made a smart move and I praise them for that (now), credit where it is due and all that and that credit goes to Theresa Gattung. The best and only good thing she did for the company she used to head - sorry I couldn't help myself there.


Telecom NZ @ Share Investor

Telecom NZ: TV3 60 Minutes Segment more like Corporate PR
Telecom Share Price Limbos but has it jumped the Shark?
Telecom NZ: Saint Gattung gets her Ya Ya's out
Telecom NZ: Bye Bye Paul Reynolds
Long Term View: Telecom NZ Ltd
Stock of the Week: Telecom Ltd
Revisiting Telecom

Getting cute and fluffy with Teresa Gattung
Telecom NZ Hangs up
Business Gobbledygook puts up barriers to communication
A Rare Breed
Telecom NZ facing a watershed period
Biology a major key in "glass ceiling" for women
Telecom rewards Gattung for mediocrity

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From Fishpond.co.nz

Bird on a Wire: The Inside Story from a Straight Talking CEO

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Thursday, March 18, 2010

Telecom NZ: TV3 60 Minutes Segment more like Corporate PR

3 News Video On Demand


As an exercise in spin, the piece on 60 Minutes last night about Telecom NZ [TEL.NZ] XT Mobile Network failure was barely able to fool the foolish let alone those intelligent enough to leave the network over their recent failures.

Telecom corporate video was used to show the viewer that yes Telecom and its employees were human too and that we all make mistakes. We were supposed to feel sympathy for the hapless tel-co but most watching, especially XT customers, would have instead been close to physically sick.

Blame was apportioned to Acaltel, little to the man ultimately responsible, CEO Paul Reynolds, and it was suggested throughout that it was time for disgruntled Telecom customers to "move on".

Once again PR cannot take the place of actual service and making the product a good one, especially when it fails to live up to company promised expectations.

Arrogant, empty and inward looking, just like the culture at head office, a culture that will ultimately kill the company.

Telecom shareholders would have cringed just as much as they would have over the falling share price.

Image

Telecom NZ @ Share Investor

Telecom Share Price Limbos but has it jumped the Shark?
Telecom NZ: Saint Gattung gets her Ya Ya's out
Telecom NZ: Bye Bye Paul Reynolds
Long Term View: Telecom NZ Ltd
Stock of the Week: Telecom Ltd
Revisiting Telecom

Getting cute and fluffy with Teresa Gattung
Telecom NZ Hangs up
Business Gobbledygook puts up barriers to communication
A Rare Breed
Telecom NZ facing a watershed period
Biology a major key in "glass ceiling" for women
Telecom rewards Gattung for mediocrity

Download every available TEL Annual Report Free


Discuss this stock at Share Investor Forum - Register free

Recommended Amazon Reading

The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing. A   Book of Practical Counsel (Revised Edition)
The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing. A Book of Practical Counsel (Revised Edition) by Benjamin Graham
Buy new: $14.95 / Used from: $7.50
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Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Telecom Share Price Limbos but has it jumped the Shark?

How low Telecom NZ [TEL.NZ] shares could go has been the subject of talk not only in the business media today but in the mainstream non biz as well.

At close of market today TEL shares reached a new all time low of NZ$2.15 on very high volume after touching $2.13 earlier post regulation from Government raising its ugly head again yesterday and the continued woes of the XT Mobile Network failure.

The question for investors remains. Should you be getting in or getting out and if you want to buy in should you buy now?

It is no secret to my readers that I have been bagging this company as a long-term investment for over 10 years but in the short term you stand to make some easy money.

Having said that if you had participated in the 1992 TEL IPO then you would have had an annual return of around 25% net for the last 18 years if you include dividends and are eligible for the full tax credits - 35% better than the average of all NZX indicies.

Those days are over though as the dividends will be under pressure in the medium to long-term and the prospects for profit growth look bleak.

Bad news is good news though!

As least for the short term.



The previous share price floor seemed to be around the $2.25 mark (see 6 month chart above) where buyers came in, volume was up and the share price stabilised and then rose from that point.

The chart does look like one hell of an ugly sister (it keeps going down) but there could be good opportunities here for those patient investors.

More bad news could lead to a serious drop to below the 2 buck mark and at that point all is on for young and old because the bargain hunters will be out at some stage - as they were today.

I wouldn't touch it yet though. I would be a patient wallflower, wait for the drunken suitor to throw up in the garden and then pounce to wipe his chin off.

Somewhere near two bucks would be a good time to enter the party.

When to leave is another story entirely.

If you get a hangover please don't blame me.


Image

Telecom NZ @ Share Investor

Telecom NZ: Saint Gattung gets her Ya Ya's out
Telecom NZ: Bye Bye Paul Reynolds
Long Term View: Telecom NZ Ltd
Stock of the Week: Telecom Ltd
Revisiting Telecom

Getting cute and fluffy with Teresa Gattung
Telecom NZ Hangs up
Business Gobbledygook puts up barriers to communication
A Rare Breed
Telecom NZ facing a watershed period
Biology a major key in "glass ceiling" for women
Telecom rewards Gattung for mediocrity

Download every available TEL Annual Report Free


Discuss this stock at Share Investor Forum - Register free

Recommended Amazon Reading

The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing. A  Book of Practical Counsel (Revised Edition)
The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing. A Book of Practical Counsel (Revised Edition) by Benjamin Graham
Buy new: $14.95 / Used from: $7.50
Usually ships in 24 hours

Buy Bird on a Wire & more @ Fishpond.co.nz

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c Share Investor 2010

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Share Investor Rant: Vodafone VS 2 Degrees

"Push 0 to speak to an operator please...push 1 to confirm that you want to speak to an operator.

This is just one message one gets when one calls Vodafone New Zealand. That is, after waiting through minutes of press this button if you want to talk to Abdul from accounts or stand on a chair with your arms in the air to speak to Zagrib from the "help desk".

If you are lucky one might get an operator whose first language is English, if you get connected to the right person or don't get cut off first. If you get your problem sorted out you would be as lucky and happy as some sort of pig in high quality mud but rarely does this ever happen.

"Someone will call you back" is a typical answer to your problem but rarely do they call you back and if they do you usually end up speaking to the knuckle dragger you first spoke to 30 minutes before, when you were still a human being and not some crazed homicidal maniac pushed to despair by Ranjeet in a smelly call center in outer Delhi somewhere.

I don't know why I have been with Vodafone so long, they have treated me like a smelly turd since joining them (they were OK when I first went with them 5 long years ago) after I ditched the hapless Telecom NZ [TEL.NZ] Mobile.

A long list of crimes (some of them absolute clangers) against the customer over the years finally led me to the novel notion that I really should think about giving Vodafone the big middle finger (like they have to me) and look for another mobile provider.

The clincher was a few days ago when I wondered to my good self why I wasn't getting a paper account.

Apparently they decided that customers didn't need them and they were binned 4 months ago.

That is sort of OK but when I called them to ask for paper copies to check their billing they told me they would charge $5 a statement (funny I didn't get a discount of $5 per month for NOT getting a paper account) and I said (with eyebrows arched for emphasis) that wasn't acceptable to me.

At the same time I wanted to provide them with a new credit card number so I could pay my account regularly, after asking two weeks ago for the correct (paper) form so I could do so, only to be told by the knuckle dragger a few days ago that we don't provide paper versions, only electronic ones. Didn't get either one even though they said they sent them.

Last time I had to change my credit card number it took a year (I kid you not - and yes I stayed with them, so more fool me) to sort it out.

Going back to a few days ago I asked to speak to a "supervisor" and she was worse than the first line of attack and then I asked to speak to her boss.

"This is the end of the line for you Mr Rickard, I cant let you do that, my bosses do not accept calls from customers."

A little voice in my head repeated "This is the end of the line Mr Rickard..."

It was, I have signed up with 2 Degrees Mobile, it was easy, quick, funny (in a good way) and it is cheaper to boot.

"Please press 0 to speak to a real person...this call maybe recorded so we can make the next one even better..."

That message is from 2 Degrees and you don't even have to wait!

Customer service in this country is bad with a capital S for Shite and the worst part of it is that people like me don't do anything about it. We sit back like sheep and take it well and truly up the bottom.

I recommend if you are getting poor service to bloody do something about it.

You might feel much better, like I do.

You might think that Vodafone would learn from their own history. As the mobile minnow back in the 1990s to Telecom's service, everyone thought they didn't have a chance. With superior service (yes the dreaded "s" word) Vodafone managed to claw the number one place in mobile in New Zealand. Now their feeble attempts at service will have the opposite effect in time and good companies like 2 Degrees are going to be there to take up the slack.

Footnote: On Saturday I received a credit card form in the mail. Nice touch but I called Vodafone Saturday morning to officially say good-buy.

Footnote 2 : I have received an account every month from Vodafone since April and I am no longer a customer - I apparently owe them $14.59 but they wont discuss what it is for so I wont pay it!! I have spent less than $40 with 2 Degrees since switching vs $300 it would have with Vodafone. 20/7/2010


Related @ Shareinvestor

2 Degrees Mobile
Vodafone NZ on Twitter






c Share Investor 2010




Friday, March 5, 2010

Telecom NZ: Saint Gattung gets her Ya Ya's out



I nearly choked on my Vegemite on toast this morning when I read what former CEO of Telecom New Zealand Ltd [TEL.NZ] Teressa Gattung said of current executive pay at the company.

"Now that I'm long gone I, with the rest of the country, wonder about the propriety of a company making half the annual profits it did a few years ago but paying its executives considerably higher salaries."

Come on, lets have some facts here instead of the marketing spin that we are getting from Ms Gattung, so she can sell more copies of her book Bird on a Wire. This woman has an overinflated sense of her own competence. As she did as Telecom CEO she is blaming everyone else for problems she helped cause; its politicians, its competitors, its circumstance, its "being a woman" - yes she said that.

"Mr Reynolds, as a male, has faced less scrutiny than she, despite the furore surrounding his $7m salary and incentive package..."

Sure, executive pay is too high given the profit levels and mess the company is currently in over the failing XT network and other problems related to underinvestment over the last 20 years but given that Ms Gattung was CEO when Telecom bought AAPT, the billion dollar plus loser Australian Telecom business and she was at the genesis of Telecom's current problems, shows not only a lack of class coming out now she is putting a book out but also indicates a lack of self awareness.

As bad as Paul Reynolds and the board at Telecom - some of which were on the board when Ms Gattung was at the helm - are currently performing Ms Gattung was the architect, not only of the current woes but also of that awful, the "customer is the problem culture" that is still alive and well.

In fact Ms Gattung admitted she had been deliberately confusing her customers (audio) to keep revenues up.

Ms Gattung under invested as CEO in Telecom from October 1999 to June 2007 and while shareholders received handsome dividends, very little of that moola made its way back into the business. She made the decision to go with the CDMA technology behind the 027 network when advised that she should have gone with GSM, the technology used by most of the rest of the world. As a direct result of that Telecom customers couldn't roam on their mobiles and Vodafone, at that time multiple times smaller than Telecom, ended up taking the bulk of the mobile market with 5 years or so.

The reactionary way the business was run under Gattung meant that she protected its monopoly status in the face of the treat of regulation from Government and years latter they were struck with separating the business from Government because they wouldn't move sooner to open competition. This stance also meant that New Zealanders were stuck with slow internet services, and the slowest uptake of broadband in the world because it was so expensive. This still lingers today with slow, expensive internet connections.

Teresa's marketing background has come to the fore this week and the spin she is putting on her place in Telecom's downfall should be taken with a healthy dose of salt because it simply is more garbage coming from an individual who doesn't have a sense of her own self and her part in the destruction of a company that could have done much better than it has if it was managed in a competent manner and in the hands of an individual who knew something about running a business with a long-term view, focus on customer service and the ability to be understood without having an interpreter explain her gobbledygook.

Ironically Ms Gattung left Telecom in 2007 with the highest payout ever made in this country of $5.4 million when the share price was seriously dropping and profits were falling.

Image

Telecom NZ @ Share Investor

Telecom NZ: Bye Bye Paul Reynolds
Long Term View: Telecom NZ Ltd
Stock of the Week: Telecom Ltd
Revisiting Telecom

Getting cute and fluffy with Teresa Gattung
Telecom NZ Hangs up
Business Gobbledygook puts up barriers to communication
A Rare Breed
Telecom NZ facing a watershed period
Biology a major key in "glass ceiling" for women
Telecom rewards Gattung for mediocrity

Download every available TEL Annual Report Free


Discuss this stock at Share Investor Forum - Register free

Recommended Amazon Reading

The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing. A Book of Practical Counsel (Revised Edition)
The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing. A Book of Practical Counsel (Revised Edition) by Benjamin Graham
Buy new: $14.95 / Used from: $7.50
Usually ships in 24 hours

Buy Bird on a Wire & more @ Fishpond.co.nz

Fishpond


c Share Investor 2010

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Telecom NZ: Bye Bye Paul Reynolds

That squiggly new Telecom NZ [TEL.NZ] logo is starting to look like the most prophetic image for a company's future, rather than representing "anything the customer wants" in a positive way it currently seems to be telling customers that we don't know what the hell we are doing, we don't really care and the future looks grim - for customers as well as Telecom.

Four XT outages since December have led to the resignations of Telecom's chief transformation officer, Frank Mount, and Alcatel-Lucent's New Zealand head, Steve Lowe and Telecom shareholders have so far seen the thick end of $15 million go south for compensation packages for lost XT coverage.

We have yet to see the losses that are surely mounting from not only existing customers deciding to leave the network but also new customers deciding to go elsewhere instead of with XT.

When launched in August last year with much fanfare and Richard Hammond, Anna Streton and Zoe Bell fronting an expensive marketing campaign, XT was going to be the next big thing in mobile in this country with world-class coverage second to none.

It turned out to be a turkey that was introduced in a slap dash way without sufficient financial backing where it counts - spending enough on building the network.

Vodafone New Zealand spent more than a billion dollars building their network and that was many years ago. Telecom NZ spent around $600 million stitching their apparent equivalent of two cans and a piece of string.

Of course Telecom NZ have a history of cost cutting (except when it comes to executive pay packets and buying AAPT) Teresa Gattung, former CEO, introduced a CDMA mobile network in the 1990s when urged not to by experts. It was a redundant system that only a handful of countries used but it was cheap and it was duly purchased and that is why the XT network needed to be built.

Many of the same executives that were on the Telecom board when CDMA was introduced are still on the board today and it seems the failure for Paul Reynolds to look back on company history means he is repeating the same old mistakes. This has become Telecom NZ company culture - think short-term, ignore the obvious and hopefully it might go away. Clearly that extends to customers as well.

For Telecom shareholders the scenario is starting to look even worse. Long-term, shareholders haven't done particularly well and the XT mobile failure means that future performance looks grim. XT was going to be the new growing revenue stream for the company as their other divisions wallow in negative revenue growth but that has been put on hold temporarily.

If the XT network isn't fixed and fixed properly soon, consumers will have less faith in Telecom's mobile offering than they already do and losses for the company and shareholders are going to be significant - possibly the straw that broke the camels back, which happens to large monopolies as their arrogance blinds them to reality.

Paul Reynolds accepted a total package of around $3 million last year and he received more than half of that in performance incentives (hello!) and Telecom shares. This was in a year that profits and the share price were substantially down

Paul is Telecom NZ CEO, he is ultimately responsible for company performance and he gets paid handsomely for it.

Saying sorry, as he has admitted (see below) is simply not good enough.




He has to do the right thing, he has failed and the company he heads is in turmoil because of it. Paul needs to fall on his sword.

I don't expect this to happen because of that Telecom culture again, many Telecom directors and execs have made blunders costing millions and left years after with millions of shareholder bonuses in their pockets - hi Ms Gattung.

Telecom shareholders need to put pressure on those at the top before the company disconnects, for good.

Telecom NZ shares were down 6c to NZ$2.30 at close of market yesterday on higher than average volume. On the NYSE this morning NZT shares are down nearly 5%.

Expect another rorting today on the NZX.

Image


Telecom NZ @ Share Investor

Long Term View: Telecom NZ Ltd
Stock of the Week: Telecom Ltd
Revisiting Telecom

Getting cute and fluffy with Teresa Gattung
Telecom NZ Hangs up
Business Gobbledygook puts up barriers to communication
A Rare Breed
Telecom NZ facing a watershed period
Biology a major key in "glass ceiling" for women
Telecom rewards Gattung for mediocrity

Download every available TEL Annual Report Free


Discuss this stock at Share Investor Forum - Register free

Recommended Amazon Reading

The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing. A Book of Practical Counsel (Revised Edition)
The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing. A Book of Practical Counsel (Revised Edition) by Benjamin Graham
Buy new: $14.95 / Used from: $7.50
Usually ships in 24 hours

Buy The Intelligent Investor & more @ Fishpond.co.nz

Fishpond


c Share Investor 2010

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Telecom New Zealand: How low can it go?




Telecom NZ [TEL.NZ] has become a bit of an obsession for me from the end of last week because of its spectacular drop in share price. I picked it as Stock of the Week this week because of its poor share price and opportunities that exist to buy as a result.

It is now testing a 52 week low of NZ$2.26 having finished at $2.28 at close of trading yesterday.

With market sentiment in the doldrums and a poor quarterly profit to report this Friday, if we get a combination of negative pressure Telecom's share price will probably test an all time low if it hasn't already. (see chart above)

I cant find the 1991 IPO price for the company but from the chart it looks like the current share price is close to its IPO price.

It is an ugly looking chart I must say, with a peak during the dot com boom and downhill all the way since then.

Just as an aside, I wonder if CEO Paul Reynolds is going to give back his huge incentive bonus for company performance (presumably he received it for positive performance) last year, considering poor company performance over 2008-2009 and the associated share price drop ?

It is rhetorical question of course but Paul should consider giving it back, his shareholders need to put some pressure on him to perform. The chart says he hasn't and so does the bottomline.

Telecom @ Share Investor

Stock of the Week - Reprise: Telecom NZ Ltd
Stock of the Week: Telecom NZ
Revisiting Telecom
Getting cute and fluffy with Teresa Gattung
Telecom NZ Hangs up
Business Gobbledygook puts up barriers to communication
A Rare Breed
Telecom NZ facing a watershed period
Biology a major key in "glass ceiling" for women
Telecom rewards Gattung for mediocrity

Discuss this stock at Share Investor Forum - Register free

From Amazon

Telecom Crash Course, Second Edition
Telecom Crash Course, Second Edition by Steven Shepard
Buy new: $28.35 / Used from: $20.00
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