Verizon to hike TV prices
By Scott Moritz, writer
Seeing no signs that the slowing economy is crimping consumer spending, Verizon (VZ) plans to raise prices on its nascent TV service.
The New York phone giant reported first quarter earnings that met Thomson Financial’s analyst estimate but missed the Bloomberg consensus by a penny Monday. On a conference call following the release, the company blamed the loss of a large former MCI business customer for some of the profit weakness.
The most striking news of all, however, was Verizon’s bullish take on consumer behavior. Verizon said it has been watching for warning signs, like increases in so-called uncollectible or deadbeat customers, but so far hasn’t seen anything to worry about. “I’ve seen no changes,” finance chief Doreen Toben told analysts on the call, referring to a spending slowdown.
Verizon is feeling so confident about paying subscribers that it plans a price hike.
“We will move up prices at the end of this quarter or next quarter,” Verizon executives said on the call. “We are very comfortable moving up the pricing at this point.”
The company said it probably won’t tamper with its $99-a-month promotional offer for its package of phone, Internet and TV services. Instead, officials said they’re looking to hike the price of the company’s a la carte TV service, which launched in 2005 and costs $48 a month.
Verizon has been winning business from cable companies like Comcast (CMCSA), Time Warner Cable (TWC) and Cablevision (CVC) as it pushes its Web video and TV strategy. On the flip side, as the cable companies have started selling phone services, telcos like AT&T (T) and Verizon have seen the decline in landline phone subscribers accelerate. In the first quarter, Verizon’s total phone line count dropped 8.2% from the prior year, a slight increase over the 8.1% pace for 2007. And residential lines fell by an eye-popping 10.9% from the same quarter a year ago.
Raising prices in the face of a economic slowdown is a bold move that borrows from the cable industry’s long-held strategy of continual rate hikes. Two things work in Verizon’s favor here, says one analyst: Phone and TV subscribers aren’t known to be the most vigilant consumers. They may not even notice they’re paying more.
Verizon’s about to find out.
The comment posted by brian/ny:April 29,2008 seems to be in line with my experience with (vz); They keep adding data & megabyte charges on my bill. I’ve had to have my account updated 2x due to inflated bill charges with assurances that it won’t happen again; I will have to wait for next month’s bill again to check if they make good on their assurances. They leave services on your plan without advising you about them and then they wait till you complain to remove the services but still hold you responsible for the bill.
This is exactly like the Direct TV commercial where the cable executive said he read a book about business school (but didn’t actually go) and said we should raise the prices. The other guy said that is a great idea. We will go after the people with disposable income and have them use the disposable income to buy cable. In fact, they are too busy to know HD if it sat on their lap. Maybe somebody should tell Verizon the commercial was a joke!
the reason their earnigns are up due to more text messages and customer browsing the internet is that they dont tell their customers, they trick them so all this money is in accounts receiveables. VZ are thieves, the ceo should be hanged for his dirty practices of CHEATING customers.
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I’m gonna be moving soon, and I thought about getting Verizon FIOS vs. Comcast, but now I doubt I’ll be doing that. I heard their much touted service is nothing special, the On Demand offering sucks, and I believe they have less HD Channels. I’m not gonna pay more for the same or inferior product. I even get VOIP through another company, so I don’t need their phone service.