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To: djane who wrote (4472)5/5/1999 12:12:00 PM
From: David Wiggins  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29987
 
Will Delta III debacle destroy da Globalstar launch schedule? Globalstar getting hammered. I sure wish they would not have cancelled Soyuz. Why mess with success? A bird in hand... Anyone with info on the above issue please post.

Thanks, Dave



To: djane who wrote (4472)5/6/1999 12:54:00 AM
From: 2brasil  Respond to of 29987
 
Loral posts wider loss, satellite revenues rise

NEW YORK, May 5 (Reuters) - Loral Space & Communications Ltd. (LOR - news) on
Wednesday said its first quarter loss nearly doubled, but the satellite company still beat Wall
Street expectations as satellite service revenues jumped 34 percent.

Loral, which builds satellites and provides a range of satellite-based telecommunications
services, said its loss climbed to $50 million, or 17 cents per share, from a loss of $27
million, or 11 cents per share, last year.

Analysts polled by the research firm First Call Corp. had expected a loss of 26 cents per share.

''We're off to a very good start this year, with significant growth in revenue and income, particularly in our fixed satellite
services unit,'' Loral Chief Executive Officer Bernard Schwartz said in a statement.

Total revenues rose to $415 million in the first quarter, up 15 percent from a year ago. The fixed satellite services group
generated $72 million in revenues, up from the $54 million in the first quarter of 1998.

Loral attributed the wider loss largely to costs associated with developing the Globalstar Telecommunications Ltd. (GSTRF -
news) satellite communications network. Loral is the largest investor in Globalstar, which is building a $2.6 billion network of
low-earth-orbit satellites to provide global communications services.

Globalstar's network development has been beset by delays and mishaps, including the loss of a dozen satellites in a rocket
crash in September 1998. But Loral said the network is approaching completion.

''There have been five successful launches thus far,'' Schwartz said. ''With another three launches -- of the eight remaining on
our schedule -- we'll have 32 satellites in orbit and will begin the roll-out of service in September in major regions of the world.''

The first quarter loss also included a doubling of depreciation and amortization costs from the $479 million acquisition of Orion
Network Systems in March 1998, Loral said.

Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA, and before development costs jumped 38 percent
to $68 million from $49 million a year ago. Including development costs, EBITDA was $37 million versus $18 million.

At the end of the first quarter, Loral had $614 million in cash on hand including $49 million that is restricted to pay interest
payments on Orion's debt. Loral's total debt stands at $2.0 billion including Orion's share.

Loral shares were down $1 to $18.125 in afternoon trading Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange. well off a
52-week high of $32.44 but up from a year low of $10.75.

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Globalstar Telecommunications Ltd (Nasdaq:GSTRF - news)
Loral Space & Communications Ltd (NYSE:LOR - news)
Related News Categories: aerospace/defense, computers, telecom, US Market News

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To: djane who wrote (4472)5/6/1999 2:53:00 AM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29987
 
Boeing Failure Another Blow To U.S. Space Industry

Thursday May 6 12:48 AM ET

By Steven Young

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - When the Boeing Co.'s new Delta 3 rocket left an expensive
satellite in lopsided orbit soon after takeoff, the U.S. space industry added another multimillion-dollar
mishap to its growing list.

The 12-story rocket vaulted off its launch pad in a brilliant eruption of flame and smoke at 9 p.m. EDT Tuesday (0100 GMT
Wednesday).

But about 22 minutes later, its second stage engine failed to relight and left its costly cargo stranded thousands of miles (km) too
low.

''Everything had looked so good,'' mission director Rich Murphy said. ''I really have no idea what happened.''

The failure of the $230 million satellite delivery mission was only the latest in a series of U.S. satellite setbacks.

The botched mission meant that four of six U.S. satellite launches -- worth a total of some $2 billion -- have failed within a
month.

The U.S. military's Titan 4 rocket failed twice and a satellite was lost on a commercial Athena rocket in April.

''The last time I remember as many failures as the industry has had was around the Challenger time,'' Murphy said, referring to
the Jan. 28, 1986 explosion of the U.S. space shuttle. Between August 1985 and the end of May 1986, there were six launch
failures, including the Challenger disaster.

Boeing said it had made contact with the satellite, and that it had named a team to investigate.

Boeing was hoping its new rocket would help it win a larger piece of the lucrative space launch market, currently dominated by
the French-led Ariane project.

''We must and we will fly Delta 2 successfully,'' said Gale Schluter, a Boeing vice president. ''At the same time, if we can
determine the cause of the failure is unique to Delta 3, we will clear Delta 2 for flight.''

There are 11 Delta 2 and two Delta 3 flights on the Boeing manifest for this year, the company said.

The Delta 3, an upgrade of the Delta 2, was carrying Loral Space and Communications Ltd.'s Orion 3 satellite, made by
Hughes Space & Communications . The satellite was to be stationed over Asia to provide communications links from India to
Hawaii and beam television to homes across South Korea.

The satellite and launch were fully insured.

Boeing and Hughes were looking to see if there was any way the satellite's mission could be salvaged using its onboard rocket
fuel, but hopes were not high that it could reach its intended orbit of 22,300 miles (35,700 kms) above Earth.

''At this point, we're kind of putting the satellite into a holding pattern,'' said Emery Wilson, spokesman for Hughes Space &
Communications. ''We've got to see how well our orbital maneuvers work. ... We're in the process of doing them now.''

Boeing had postponed the launch of the Delta 3 by two days because the rocket's second stage used a similar engine to that of
a Titan rocket that failed last Friday. The company had cleared the Delta for launch saying it was confident its rocket would not
suffer the same problem.

On April 30, the $433.1 million Titan rocket failed to place a Milstar communications satellite valued at about $800 million into
the proper orbit. Both were built by Lockheed Martin Corp.

On April 27, a Lockheed Martin Athena II rocket failed to place a commercial satellite built by Lockheed Martin for
Denver-based Space Imaging into polar orbit. The rocket cost about $25 million. The satellite's cost was not disclosed.

And on April 9, a $250 million missile warning satellite was stranded in the wrong orbit after it was launched by a Lockheed
Martin Titan 4B rocket. Boeing built the upper stage booster that failed in that mission.

''If you look at the collective failures, it's extraordinary given the fact that many of these did not involve new technologies,'' said
Jon Kutler, president of the aerospace investment firm Quarterdeck Investment Partners.

Before April's failures, two rockets exploded in August, a Titan 4A and a Delta 3 on its maiden flight.

Copyright © 1999 Reuters Limited.