| Money Manager Interviews 
 Money Manager sees enormous potential for cash flow generation in the future for Waste Management
 archive.twst.com
 
 and from the wsj online
 
 Waste Management, Houston, should report a 12% rise in third-quarter
 earnings to 37 cents a share from 33 cents a year ago, according to Thomson
 Financial/First Call.
 
 Analysts expressed confidence in Waste Management's earnings because
 their expectations are tied mostly to the company's turnaround initiatives
 rather than volume growth. Those initiatives, cost-cutting and targeted price
 increases are unaffected by the slowing economy.
 
 "We are confident the company is on track with its turnaround initiatives," said
 J.P. Morgan's Tepper in a research note, "and we expect to see evidence of
 this in improved margins over the next several quarters."
 
 Cherie Rice, a spokeswoman at Waste Management, confirmed that "nothing
 in the economy should stop" the company's strategy, which is " moving
 forward."
 
 Devine of Deutsche Banc said she's comfortable with her below-consensus
 estimate of 36 cents a share, on $3 billion in revenue and $862 million in
 earnings, before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA.
 She has an adjusted free cash flow estimate of $178 million.
 
 The analyst is looking for Waste Management's internal growth to decline 1%,
 which assumes a price gain of 2%, volume drop of 2% and a 1% decrease in
 commodities.
 
 Waste Management is scheduled to report earnings Nov. 7.
 |