Today's NFS (No fecking Sheet) trade: "XM Satellite Radio May Need More Money; Shares Plunge
Aug. 7 (Bloomberg) -- XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc., the biggest U.S. satellite-radio service, said it may need to raise money to pay for a fourth satellite. Shares of the company, which has never turned a profit, dropped as much as 24 percent. XM also said its second-quarter net loss widened to $161.9 million from $117.2 million. On a per-share basis, the loss was unchanged at $1.38 after XM increased the number of shares outstanding. The Washington-based company wrote down the value of its satellites in the quarter. XM has two satellites in orbit and has said it needs a third to deliver service through 2008. A fourth satellite, which would serve as a spare, might require XM to raise capital, the company said. ``We think that announcement has put some fear in investors, considering it creates the possibility of a funding gap,'' said Steve Mather, an analyst at Sanders Morris Harris, who rates the shares ``hold'' and doesn't own them. XM's shares, which had risen more than fourfold since January, fell $3.12 to $10.15 at 2:51 p.m. on the Nasdaq Stock Market. XM's biggest competitor, Sirius Satellite Radio Inc., fell 10 percent. Sirius, based in New York, reported subscriber gains yesterday that were less than some analysts expected.
Insurance Losses
XM is trying to get insurance reimbursements on its two functioning satellites because of problems that have developed with their solar power systems. If it fails to get those reimbursements, XM said it won't be able to pay for the construction of a fourth satellite without raising new capital. Spokesman Chance Patterson said the company is confident it will recover its insurance losses. XM's satellites are capable of delivering 101 channels of talk and music as part of a nationwide service. XM's second-quarter loss was wider than the average $1.25-a- share loss that was forecast by six analysts polled by Thomson Financial. The per-share loss figures reflect the payment of preferred dividends. About 209,000 subscribers signed up for XM's $9.99-a-month service in the quarter, bringing the total to 692,253. Sales more than quadrupled to $18.3 million. The company's long-term debt increased to $731.5 million, from $412.7 million a year earlier. XM sold both stock and bonds in the quarter and had $345.9 million in cash at the end of June. Bloomberg News provides programming to both XM and Sirius.
--Michael White in Los Angeles (1)(323) 782-4237, or mwhite8@bloomberg.net, and Chitra Somayaji in Princeton (1)(609) 750-4668, or csomayaji@bloomberg.net, through the New York newsroom, (1) (212) 318-2300. Editors: West, Hertzberg
Story illustration: For a summary of XM Satellite Radio's balance sheet, see {XMSR US <Equity> CH3 Q <GO>}. For a series of Bloomberg functions related to XM Satellite Radio, see {CNP01717730202 <GO>}. |