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Strategies & Market Trends : Booms, Busts, and Recoveries -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TobagoJack who wrote (34756)6/5/2003 10:25:34 PM
From: EL KABONG!!!  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 74559
 
Hi Jay,

I see some 20%+ gains in this chart on your site...

achamchen.com

KJC



To: TobagoJack who wrote (34756)6/5/2003 10:33:49 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 74559
 
Hutchison slashes 3G voice tariffs in UK

As I explained in my infamous plan August 2001: <<Operators spent 130 billion Euros to keep competitors from entering their existing telephony-SMS markets. These costs start to look more as a protection for their existing markets rather than a sign of the potential future business in mobile wireless data.>>

Here how it became reality:

<<Boy am I good or not? :-)>>

Hutchison slashes 3G voice tariffs in UK
By Robert Budden and Chris Nuttall
Published: June 5 2003 19:42 | Last Updated: June 5 2003 19:42

Hutchison 3G touched off a damaging price war in the UK mobile market on Thursday, as the Hong Kong-backed group announced major cuts in its voice tariffs.

Analysts said the reductions amounted to a near 70 per cent discount on the current average per-minute price for mobile calls.

The UK operation is 65 per cent-owned by Hutchison Whampoa, led by Li Ka-shing, Hong Kong's richest tycoon. He has made a US$16.7bn bet on the success of next-generation mobile services in Europe and paid £4.4bn (US$7.3bn) in 2000 for his UK 3G licence. The latest price cuts could lengthen considerably the payback time on his investment.

Lex: Hutchison 3G

Hutchison 3G has stepped back in time. Having failed to wow customers with new age video services, the mobile start-up is undercutting rivals on good old-fashioned voice calls. The move is little surprise.
Go there

Shares of rivals Vodafone, Orange and MMO2 fell sharply in London on the news. Analysts at ABN Amro described Thursday's announcement as part of their long-predicted 3G tsunami.

"There is a tidal wave of capacity out there that will affect pricing and will change the UK market forever," said Jamie Mariani, telecoms analyst.

Price cuts had been expected under Bob Fuller, the new chief executive of Hutchison 3G in the UK, who has been conducting a root and branch review of the business to try to revitalise the ailing fortunes of the new entrant.

Sources suggest Hutchison is currently selling only around 600 handsets a day with Carphone Warehouse, the UK's largest retailer, accounting for less than a third of all sales. The low sales make its target of achieving 1m customers by the end of the year look increasingly tough.

But, in his first interview since taking over last month, Mr Fuller, told the Financial Times he was "building the business to be able to support" this target.

Mr Fuller insisted his rivals were wrong to dismiss Hutchison 3G so early on. "We are getting customers and we are getting them on the revenues we expected," he said.

Tim Pennington, finance director, said Hutchison had so far drawn down £1.7bn of its £3.2bn banking facility provided by a consortium of banks and that, combined with a £1bn shareholder loan, he "hoped" this financing would see the company to profitability.



To: TobagoJack who wrote (34756)6/5/2003 10:50:10 PM
From: Canuck Dave  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
Well Jay, you could convert everything to gold.

Or better yet, give it all to charity and get yourself a shopping cart and a squeegie.

After something like PMT yesterday (and PWI to a lesser extent today), I feel like trading it all in for a little "Safeway-mobile Freedom". We're going to need a lot more carts one day, and not because there's more stores.

I saw a few panhandlers today and thought "You never see a Chinese panhandling. They're willing to work".

Is that racist? Or are several generations of Caucasians who've never sweated before going to have to do some new things to eat?

CD



To: TobagoJack who wrote (34756)6/6/2003 1:04:16 AM
From: Raymond Duray  Respond to of 74559
 
Hi Jay,

Your wife may be on to something...

Re: The machines we all are riding on has only one speed, 'full max', and goes only in one direction, 'forward'.

I recall hearing this sort of driven compulsiveness from the likes of a fellow named John Meriwether in the summer of 1998... <gg>

Best of luck!