Showing posts with label Time Warner Cable. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Time Warner Cable. Show all posts

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Thursday’s biggest gaining and declining stocks

Thursday’s biggest gaining and declining stocksOrlando, FL 5/3/12 (StreetBeat) -- Shares of the following companies made notable moves in U.S. trading Thursday:

Gainers

Teradata Corp. (NYSE: TDC +4.95%) shares rose 5.3% Thursday. Earlier, the company reported strong first-quarter earnings that beat analyst estimates, as the firm revised its 2012 outlook modestly higher.

Kensey Nash Corp. (Nasdaq: KNSY +32.20%) shares jumped 32%. Dutch life-sciences company Royal DSM NV agreed to acquire the biomedical company for about $337 million in cash, at a premium of about 33%.

Scripps Networks Interactive Inc. (NYSE: SNI +6.31%) shares were up 6.4% Thursday after the parent of cable channels Food Network and HGTV reported first-quarter results that easily surpassed most forecasts on strong ad sales.

Decliners

Cablevision Systems Corp. (NYSE: CVC -5.24%) shares were down 7.3% Thursday on a first-quarter revenue figure that fell short of most analysts’ estimates. Miller Tabak cut its rating on the cable-television operator to neutral from buy, thouugh the company reported a gain in basic-video customers during the period, in contrast to peers Comcast (Nasdaq: CMCSA +0.08%) and Time Warner Cable (NYSE: TWC -0.64%), the two largest U.S. cable companies.

Prudential Financial Inc. (NYSE: PRU -8.16%) shares dropped 8.1%. Late Wednesday, financial results showed the company swinging to a first-quarter loss on charges relating to currency fluctuations and derivative impacts, mostly related to the Japanese yen’s decline against the U.S. dollar.

Please contact www.thestreetbeat.com for interest in our latest investor relations platform the “CEO Interview Series” with its host Steve Kanaval. The package includes a one-on-one interview with a seasoned industry professional; published segment to our web site with embedded audio/video file; and a compressed file that can be easily e-mailed out to your current and/or potential investors. Please e-mail bflautt@gmail.com or call (662) 392-0740 for pricing and scheduling.

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Monday, April 23, 2012

Otelco shares tank on non-renewal of Time Warner contract

Otelco shares tank on non-renewal of Time Warner contractAtlanta, GA 4/23/12 (StreetBeat) -- Shares of telecom services provider Otelco Inc(Nasdaq:OTT) fell as much as 80 percent after it said Time Warner Cable (NYSE:TWX) will not renew a contract and suspended dividend.

The contract to provide network connections accounted for 11.7 percent of Otelco's 2011 revenue. It expires on December 31.

Otelco said dividends on the common stock of its income deposit securities — which consist of common stock and debt — will be suspended immediately.

Shares of the company touched a low of $6.62 in their biggest intraday fall to become the top percentage loser on the Nasdaq. They were later trading down 38 percent at $7.45.

Please contact www.thestreetbeat.com for interest in our latest investor relations platform the “CEO Interview Series” with its host Steve Kanaval. The package includes a one-on-one interview with a seasoned industry professional; published segment to our web site with embedded audio/video file; and a compressed file that can be easily e-mailed out to your current and/or potential investors. Please e-mail bflautt@gmail.com or call (662) 392-0740 for pricing and scheduling.

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Friday, November 11, 2011

TV: Not Dead Yet

TV: Not Dead YetPalm Beach, FL 11/11/11 (StreetBeat) --A few years ago, many people were predicting the end of television as we know it. The rise of video-on-demand, social games and other Web-based diversions all were supposed to kill TV. Who could possibly want to watch an antiquated, live network or cable show, the theory went, when one could Tweet, surf Facebook or watch something cached on Hulu or streamed on Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX) instead?

Fast-forward to today. The TV business certainly has undergone some seismic shifts due to new technologie. But the bottom line is, people are still watching the tube. Nielsen predicted that the number of U.S. homes with TV access would hit 115.9 million in the 2010-11 season, up 1 million from the year before and representing an all-time high. American teenagers, one of the most tech-savvy segments of the population, have seen their TV viewership actually increase six percent in the last five years, according to a Nielsen report. And major, live TV events continue to draw enormous audiences: 111 million viewers in the U.S. watched the Green Bay Packers beat the Pittsburgh Steelers in the 2011 Super Bowl, while 38.6 million tuned in to see last season’s American Idol winner crowned.

Why has live TV remained so powerful? Part of it, obviously, is community. People still like to be a part of major world events and discuss them while they’re fresh—not a week later, when everyone knows which handsome bachelor “The Bachelorette” picked, or who won the big game. But there’s a new twist to that today: Thanks to the rise of social media and the Internet, people can discuss live TV while it’s happening. It’s even given rise to a new term, “social TV.” A recent study by Ovum, a business/technology research firm in the U.K., found that almost 40% of TV viewers discuss particular TV shows via social media while they’re watching them. This is evidenced by the average one million tweets generated during each of the seven games of this year’s World Series and 4.5 million from this year’s Superbowl viewers. Some shows, like “The Voice”, a live singing contest, even show viewer tweets on air.

More broadly, 51% of consumers surveyed said they used the Internet to access news or information while watching TV—the “second screen” phenomenon. The upshot: Rather than being a replacement for TV, many Internet technologies are proving complimentary; the online environment is the new water cooler where people gossip with each other about TV shows and other topics. Indeed, the new stereotype of a couch potato is fast becoming someone splayed out on his or her couch, snacks in hand, pecking away periodically at a laptop or tablet to trade comments with friends.

Equally important, the nature of TV content has changed profoundly over the last several years to favor live viewing. Today, reality, talk and contest-type programs, a la “American Idol,” “The Biggest Loser” and “Dancing with the Stars,” dominate the airwaves. Old-fashioned comedies and dramas no longer sit at the top. (In the 2010-11 season, the top-rated, prime-time network shows were, in order, two “American Idol” episodes, “Dancing with the Stars”, “Sunday Night NFL Football” and, then, finally, “NCIS.”) And to fully participate in some of these programs, like Idol, one must watch them live. Otherwise, you can’t vote for the winner. And people like to vote—over 100 million votes were cast in this year’s Idol season finale. And even for traditional broadcast shows, social media presents the opportunity for “spoilers” from your network, so you better watch your show live to avoid missing out on the surprise ending in the season finale of your favorite drama.

That said, it doesn’t mean people are going to be watching all their TV on an actual TV set in the coming years. Cable and satellite companies are all working feverishly to catch up to new, Internet content-providers like Hulu, YouTube, Netflix, AppleTV, Roku and, of course, Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN). The traditional players, like Comcast (Nasdaq: CMCSA) and Time Warner Cable (NYSE: TWC), are testing new technologies to allow them to deliver shows and movies via Internet protocol, which means they can be beamed via broadband connections to multiple devices—PCs, smartphones, tablets, whatever. It’s a concept known in the industry as “TV Everywhere”, and it’s the natural evolution of online video. It’s also a natural evolution of IP: The Internet has gradually chewed through countless traditional industries, from data to voice to music, and TV is one of the last analog bastions.

There are some obstacles to the IP-video revolution, including securing rights for specific content and figuring out how to measure viewership when people are watching shows on multiple devices. But the cable and satellite providers have a big incentive to figure it out—namely, keeping their subscribers. Today’s on-the-go consumers, who expect to complete most computing tasks on a mobile phone or an iPad, are also demanding the kind of high-quality video they get on their living room TVs when they’re out of the house. And right now, the video experience on computers, smartphones and other mobile devices—especially for live content—can still be lacking. Current pay TV providers are in the best position to be a one-stop source for high-quality video, anywhere and everywhere. Many start-up companies, including ours, are working to provide them with cutting-edge technologies to make that happen—keeping TV alive (with a little help from Simon Cowell).

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