Now this ain't peanuts!:
Qwest wins $1 billion U.S. Treasury Dept. contract
NEW YORK, Feb 3 (Reuters) - Qwest Communications International Inc. (NASDAQ:QWST), the No. 4 U.S. long-distance carrier, said Wednesday it won a $1 billion subcontract to upgrade the U.S. Department of Treasury's communications system. Qwest will support the Treasury Communications System, the network that interconnects the Treasury and all of its agencies throughout the United States, Canada and Mexico. Denver-based Qwest will provide high-speed data and voice transmission services and may eventually help the department shift to an Internet-based network, a spokeswoman said. Qwest said the contract, which will be spread over six or seven years, is its largest commercial contract ever. "Winning a contract of this size will be a seminal contract in helping us win others. This will give us enormous credibility as we go after other huge contracts," Qwest Chief Executive Joseph Nacchio said in a telephone interview. Qwest was awarded the subcontract by the prime contractor TRW Inc. (NYSE:TRW) Nacchio said Qwest, a relative upstart in the telecommunications industry, won the contract over the incumbent service provider, Sprint Corp. (NYSE:FON) and other bidders including AT&T Corp. (NYSE:T) and GTE Corp. (NYSE:GTE) "New companies tend to be hungrier" for new contracts, Nacchio said. He also said the lower costs of its new fiber optic network helped it win over other bidders, which operate costlier and older networks. Qwest is building an 18,500-mile communications network linking 130 cities, which is scheduled to be completed by mid-year. Qwest declined to comment on how the new contract would affect its revenue and earnings growth. Qwest is expected to report fourth-quarter earnings on Wednesday. Wall Street expects the company to post earnings of 2 cents a share, compared with 7 cents in the same period a year ago, according to First Call, which tracks analysts' estimates. Shares of Qwest closed Tuesday at $60.125, down $2.3125 on Nasdaq.
Copyright 1999, Reuters News Service
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