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AT&T Reports Mixed Q4; Stock Down; CWA Slams Job Cuts

AT&T reported mixed results Wednesday for Q4, with growth in wireless and declines elsewhere. There were 229,000 postpaid phone net adds. Entertainment reported 945,000 premium TV-subscriber cancellations, an improvement over a nearly 1.2 million loss the same quarter last year.…

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Communications Workers of America slammed AT&T for cutting almost 38,000 jobs since 2018. “AT&T continues to cut jobs and reduce capital expenditures even as the company announced record operating and free cash flow for 2019 and more than $5 billion in stock buybacks in the past four months,” the union said. The telco didn’t comment. Executives stressed overall economics, on a call with analysts, saying the company cut net debt by $20.3 billion throughout 2019. “We'll continue to invest aggressively and at top-tier levels into our core businesses,” CEO Randall Stephenson said: “We expect to invest $20 billion in 2020. Leading in 5G is critical for AT&T, and we're not slowing down. We're more than 75 percent complete on our FirstNet build.” The company has plenty of spectrum to deploy 5G, said President John Stankey. “Our strong spectrum position gives us a leg up and allows us to execute a different 5G deployment strategy than our competitors,” he said: “We have the low and mid-band spectrum to deploy 5G nationwide. We cover 50 million people today and expect to be nationwide" in Q2. Revenue was $46.8 billion, down from $48 billion a year ago. Adjusted EBITDA declined to $14.4 billion, from $15 billion. The quarter ended Dec. 31. “Wireless subscriber growth improved, though not as a result of improved churn as we expected,” NewStreet’s Jonathan Chaplin told investors: “Pay-TV trends were quite a bit worse than we expected, and the path to stabilization in 2020 appears more tenuous. Everything else was a little worse than we expected too.” MoffettNathanson’s Craig Moffett said as AT&T sheds costs, it’s up against two clocks. “One clock is counting down to the next recession,” Moffett told investors: “We don’t know when a recession will come, of course, but when it does, AT&T will have to have reduced its leverage to a sustainable level.” The second “is counting down to the obsolescence of at least two of AT&T’s most important businesses,” WarnerMedia and DirecTV, he said. The stock closed down 4 percent Wednesday at $37.05.