AT&T reports Q1 earnings; iPhone activations up by 1 million in spite of Verizon iPhone launch

General

AT&T on Wednesday reported its earnings for the first quarter of 2011. The report is highlighted by impressive iPhone activations that were up by almost 1 million units year-over-year to 3.6 million. Many analysts believed Verizon Wireless’ launch of the iPhone 4 in early February would have a tremendous impact on AT&T’s iPhone business, but the effects were far less significant than expected. First-quarter revenue came in at $31.2 billion, up 2.3% over the same quarter last year, but operating income dropped from $6 billion in the first quarter of 2010 to $5.8 billion in the first quarter this year. The carrier added 2 million wireless subscribers in the first quarter of 2011 for a total of 97.5 million as of the end of March. Thanks in large part to the iPhone 4, AT&T also sold a record 5.5 million smartphones in the quarter. Smartphone users now combine to comprise 46.2% of AT&T’s postpaid subscriber base, which played a large role in pushing wireless revenue up 10.2% over the first quarter in 2010 to $15.3 billion. Wireless data revenue was up by $1 billion in the quarter, and branded computing subscribers — a category that includes tablet, aircard and other data-only product users — were up about 100% over the same quarter last year to 3.4 million. AT&T only sold 322,000 tablets in the quarter, roughly 258,000 of which were booked as prepaid, further supporting the notion that first-quarter iPad sales were far less impressive than analysts had expected. Hit the jump for the full release.

10.2 Percent Wireless Revenue Growth, Record Net Adds and Smartphone Sales Highlight AT&T’s First-Quarter Results

  • $0.57 diluted EPS, compared to $0.41 diluted EPS, and $0.58 per diluted share when excluding significant items, in first quarter of 2010
  • Consolidated revenues of $31.2 billion in the first quarter, up more than $700 million, or 2.3 percent, versus the year-earlier period
  • 10.2 percent growth in wireless revenues, with an 8.6 percent increase in wireless service revenues
  • Best-ever first-quarter increase in total wireless subscribers, up 2.0 million to reach 97.5 million subscribers in service, with gains in every category
  • Best-ever first-quarter smartphone sales of more than 5.5 million
  • iPhone activations increased nearly 1 million year over year to 3.6 million, with 23 percent of subscribers new to AT&T; iPhone subscriber churn unchanged year over year
  • Best-ever first-quarter connected device net adds of 1.3 million
  • Branded computing subscribers (includes tablets, aircards and other data-only devices) up 421,000, doubling since the first quarter of 2010 to reach 3.4 million
  • 23.9 percent growth in wireless data revenues, up almost $1 billion versus the year-earlier quarter
  • Postpaid subscriber ARPU (average monthly revenues per subscriber) up 2.4 percent to $63.39, the ninth consecutive quarter with a year-over-year increase
  • Postpaid churn stable excluding the impacts of the Alltel and Centennial integration
  • Third consecutive quarter of year-over-year growth in wireline consumer revenues, driven by AT&T U-verse® services
  • 218,000 net gain in AT&T U-verse TV subscribers to reach 3.2 million in service, with continued high broadband and voice attach rates
  • 26.1 percent growth in wireline consumer IP data revenues, driven by AT&T U-verse expansion
  • 175,000 net gain in wireline broadband connections
  • Strategic business services revenues continue to increase, up 18.8 percent year over year, the best performance in more than two years

Note: AT&T’s first-quarter earnings conference call will be broadcast live via the Internet at 10 a.m. ET on Wednesday, April 20, 2011, at www.att.com/investor.relations.

DALLAS, April 20, 2011 — AT&T Inc. (NYSE:T) today reported first-quarter results, highlighted by continued robust mobile broadband growth with record first-quarter smartphone sales and a two-fold year-over-year increase in branded computing subscribers.

“We delivered another robust mobile broadband growth quarter for a very solid start to the year,” said Randall Stephenson, AT&T chairman and chief executive officer. “We posted double-digit wireless revenue growth, and we set new first-quarter records in total net adds, connected device net adds and smartphone sales. Growth in tablets and other branded computing subscribers also continues to be strong.

“Mobile broadband networks are driving unprecedented growth and innovation, and AT&T is playing a leading role in bringing these benefits to customers,” Stephenson said. “That’s why our agreement to acquire T-Mobile USA, which we announced in March, is so important. Combined, the two companies’ spectrum and network assets will allow us to simultaneously address spectrum issues created by this increased demand and improve customers’ network experience as volumes continue to grow.”

First-Quarter Financial Results

For the quarter ended March 31, 2011, AT&T’s consolidated revenues totaled $31.2 billion, up more than $700 million, or 2.3 percent, versus the year-earlier quarter, marking the company’s fifth consecutive quarter with a year-over-year revenue increase.

Compared with results for the first quarter of 2010, operating expenses were $25.4 billion versus $24.6 billion; operating income was $5.8 billion, down from $6.0 billion; and AT&T’s operating income margin was 18.6 percent, compared to 19.6 percent.

First-quarter 2011 net income attributable to AT&T totaled $3.4 billion, or $0.57 per diluted share. These results compare with reported net income attributable to AT&T of $2.5 billion, or $0.41 per diluted share, in the first quarter of 2010. Excluding 2010 significant items, earnings per share for the first quarter of 2011 was stable with earnings per share of $0.58 per diluted share in the year-ago first quarter.

First-quarter 2011 cash from operating activities totaled $7.7 billion, and capital expenditures totaled $4.2 billion. Free cash flow — cash from operating activities minus capital expenditures — totaled $3.6 billion.

Wireless Operational Highlights

Led by strong performance in mobile broadband in the first quarter, AT&T delivered continued solid growth in its wireless business, including record first-quarter subscriber growth and stable churn. Highlights included:

Mobile Broadband Drives Solid Subscriber Gains. AT&T posted a net gain in total wireless subscribers of 2.0 million, to reach 97.5 million in service. This included gains in every customer category. First-quarter net adds reflect adoption of smartphones, increases in prepaid subscribers, strength in the reseller channel and a record first quarter for connected devices such as eReaders, security systems, fleet management systems and a host of other products. Retail net adds for the quarter include postpaid net adds of 62,000. Excluding the impacts of the Alltel and Centennial integration migrations, postpaid net adds were approximately 165,000. Prepaid net adds were 85,000. Connected device net adds were 1.3 million, and reseller net adds were 561,000.

Tablet Sales Drive Branded Computing Subscribers. AT&T had a strong quarter with branded computing subscribers, a new growth area for the company that includes tablets, aircards, MiFi devices, tethering plans and other data-only devices. AT&T added 421,000 of these devices to reach 3.4 million, twice as many as a year ago. Most of those new subscribers were tablets with 322,000 added in the quarter. More than 80 percent of those tablets were booked to the prepaid category.

Sequential Churn Stable. Churn levels were relatively stable sequentially. Total churn was 1.36 percent versus 1.30 percent in the first quarter of 2010 and 1.32 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010. Postpaid churn was 1.18 percent, compared to 1.07 percent in the year-ago first quarter and 1.15 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010. Excluding the impacts of the Alltel and Centennial migrations, postpaid churn was 1.12 percent for the quarter, compared with 1.05 percent in the year-ago quarter and 1.10 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010.

Smartphone Sales Remain Strong. AT&T had another strong quarter of smartphone sales. (Smartphones are voice and data devices with an advanced operating system to better manage data and Internet access.) More than 5.5 million smartphones were sold in the first quarter, the third-highest quarter ever and an increase of more than 60 percent year over year. During the quarter, 3.6 million iPhones were activated. Approximately 65 percent of postpaid sales were smartphones.

At the end of the quarter, 46.2 percent of AT&T’s 68.1 million postpaid subscribers had smartphones, up from 34.7 percent a year earlier. The average ARPU for smartphones on AT&T’s network is 1.8 times that of the company’s other devices. More than 80 percent of smartphone subscribers are on FamilyTalk and/or business discount plans. Churn levels for these subscribers are significantly lower than for other postpaid subscribers.

Double-Digit Wireless Revenue Growth. Total wireless revenues, which include equipment sales, were up 10.2 percent year over year to $15.3 billion. Wireless service revenues increased 8.6 percent, to $14.0 billion, in the first quarter.

Wireless Data Revenues Lead Growth. Wireless data revenues — driven by messaging, Internet access, access to applications and related services — increased nearly $1 billion, or 23.9 percent, from the year-earlier quarter to $5.1 billion. AT&T postpaid wireless subscribers on monthly data plans increased by 18.7 percent over the past year. Versus the year-earlier quarter, total text messages carried on the AT&T network increased by more than 25 percent to 179.8 billion, and multimedia messages increased by 54.2 percent to 3.7 billion.

Postpaid ARPU Expansion. Driven by strong data growth, postpaid subscriber ARPU increased 2.4 percent versus the year-earlier quarter to $63.39. This marked the ninth consecutive quarter AT&T has posted a year-over-year increase in postpaid ARPU. Excluding the impact of the Alltel merger, postpaid ARPU growth would have been about 3 percent year over year. Postpaid data ARPU reached $23.35, up 16.0 percent versus the year-earlier quarter.

Wireless Margins Reflect Strong Smartphone Sales. First-quarter wireless margins reflected increased operating costs associated with strong smartphone sales, high customer upgrade levels and the Alltel and Centennial merger costs, offset in part by improved operating efficiencies and further revenue growth from the company’s base of high-quality smartphone subscribers. AT&T’s first-quarter wireless operating income margin was 25.8 percent versus 30.0 percent in the year-earlier quarter, and AT&T’s wireless EBITDA service margin was 39.0 percent, compared with 44.5 percent in the first quarter of 2010. Without customer migration costs from the Alltel and Centennial mergers, service margin would have been 40.5 percent.  (EBITDA service margin is earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, divided by total service revenues.) First-quarter wireless operating expenses totaled $11.4 billion, up 16.8 percent versus the year-earlier quarter, and wireless operating income was $3.9 billion, down 5.3 percent year over year.

Wireline Operational Highlights

AT&T’s first-quarter wireline results were highlighted by continued growth in consumer revenues, sustained growth in revenues from strategic business services and solid cost management. Highlights included:

Growth in Wireline Consumer Revenues Continues. Driven by strength in IP data services, revenue from residential customers totaled $5.3 billion in the first quarter, up 0.5 percent year over year, the third consecutive quarter of year-over-year growth.

U-verse Drives Consumer Growth. AT&T U-verse TV added 218,000 subscribers to reach 3.2 million in service. In the first quarter, the AT&T U-verse High Speed Internet attach rate continued to run above 90 percent and nearly 60 percent of subscribers took AT&T U-verse Voice. More than three-fourths of AT&T U-verse TV subscribers have a triple- or quad-play option from AT&T. ARPU for U-verse triple-play customers was $168, up 14.3 percent year over year.

AT&T’s U-verse deployment now reaches 28 million living units. Companywide penetration of eligible living units is 15.3 percent, and across areas marketed to for 30 months or more, overall penetration is 23.8 percent. AT&T’s total video subscribers, which combine the company’s U-verse and bundled satellite customers, reached 5.1 million at the end of the quarter, representing 20.6 percent of households served.

Wireline Broadband Growth Remains Strong. Driven by strength in AT&T U-verse High Speed Internet service and standalone broadband, AT&T posted a 175,000 net gain in wireline broadband connections. About two-thirds of consumers have a broadband plan of 3 Mbps or higher.

IP Data Growth Transforms Consumer. Increased AT&T U-verse penetration and a significant number of subscribers on triple- or quad-play options drove 26.1 percent year-over-year growth in IP revenues from residential customers (broadband, U-verse TV and U-verse Voice). IP revenues now represent 46.9 percent of total wireline consumer revenue, up from 37.4 percent in the first quarter of 2010.

Growth in Revenues Per Household. Wireline revenues per household served increased 6.5 percent versus the year-earlier first quarter and were up 1.4 percent sequentially (average revenue per household is total consumer wireline revenue divided by the average monthly households in service), driven by AT&T U-verse services. This marked AT&T’s 13th consecutive quarter with year-over-year growth in wireline consumer revenues per household.

Consumer Connection Trends. In the first quarter, AT&T posted a decline in total consumer revenue connections due primarily to expected declines in traditional voice access lines, consistent with broader industry trends and somewhat offset by increases in U-verse TV, broadband and VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) connections. AT&T U-verse Voice connections increased by 181,000 in the quarter and 716,000 over the past four quarters. Total consumer revenue connections at the end of the first quarter were 43.1 million, compared with 45.0 million at the end of the first quarter of 2010 and 43.4 million at the end of the fourth quarter of 2010.

Strongest Growth in Strategic Business Services in More than Two Years. Revenues from new-generation capabilities that lead AT&T’s most advanced business solutions — including Ethernet, VPNs, hosting, IP conferencing and application services — grew 18.8 percent versus the year-earlier quarter, their strongest growth in more than two years, continuing AT&T’s strong trends in this category. Total business revenues were $9.3 billion, a decline of 4.5 percent versus the year-earlier quarter and down 2.0 percent sequentially, reflecting economic weakness in voice and legacy data products and the third-quarter 2010 sale of the company’s Japan assets. When normalized for the Japan sale, total business revenues declined 3.6 percent, about the same rate as normalized results for the fourth quarter of 2010 and improved from the year-ago quarter. Business service revenues, which exclude CPE, declined 4.4 percent year over year and were down slightly sequentially.

Growth in Business IP Revenues. Total business IP data revenues grew 8.5 percent versus the year-earlier first quarter, led by growth in VPN revenues. More than 70 percent of AT&T’s frame customers have made the transition to IP-based solutions, which allow them to easily add managed services such as network security, cloud services and IP conferencing on top of their infrastructures. Total business data revenue growth was 0.3 percent when compared to a year earlier.

Wireline Operating Expenses Down 2.7 Percent Year Over Year. AT&T’s first-quarter wireline operating income margin was 11.5 percent, down slightly compared to 12.0 percent in the year-earlier quarter and 13.0 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010. Improved consumer revenue trends and execution of cost initiatives helped to partially offset declines in voice revenues and storm-related costs in the West. First-quarter total wireline revenues were $15.0 billion, down 3.2 percent versus the year-earlier quarter. First-quarter wireline operating expenses were $13.2 billion, down 2.7 percent versus the first quarter of 2010 and up 0.4 percent sequentially. Wireline operating income totaled $1.7 billion, compared to $1.9 billion in the first quarter of 2010 and $2.0 billion in the fourth quarter of 2010.

37 Comments
  • Bob Sakamano

    First!

  • Anonymous

    Verizon is set to report very similar numbers as far as the iPhone is concerned in their quarterly report.

  • Anonymous

    as for the iPad… The carrier connection is weak for tablets. IF (and that’s a big deal) I want a 3G, and don’t want to buy a MiFi or tether off their mobile device , I can buy online and/or from an apple retailer and activate it month to month when I need it.

    I expect Apple to hit their numbers for iPad sales.

  • http://www.colinzerk.com Colin L. Zerk

    Couldn’t be because they sold the 3GS for $49 could it? Could it?

    • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_BHMB52ZFMATI5KS7D4JT6UU7NA Eric W

      could be partly that, and the fact that AT&T does data and voice at the same time…and the fact that AT&T is GSM, and because they aren’t as bad as these blogs make them sound.

      The silent majority of AT&T customers like AT&T’s service and coverage and a minority of haters made a big fuss about them all over the blogs.

      • http://www.colinzerk.com Colin L. Zerk

        Points well taken. I really have no problem with AT&T as a carrier. Decent enough 3G where I live and if I chose a GSM carrier it would be them. It just seems like it’s half the story.

      • SideshowDave

        Where are you getting your data that says a majority of att customers like their service? It doesn’t match my experience. I travel and I rarely meet people who claim to like att. Most have att for other reasons. For, example I’m an att iPhone customer. I hate att service. Their coverage is weaker than Vzw’s for my needs. I only keep it because I’m grandfathered into a cheap rate…

      • Anonymous

        All you have to do is look at subscriber numbers. I too travel for work with by Blackberry – and I can’t remember the last time I dropped a call or lost a data connection. And I use the berry instead of an aircard to tether. If their service was truly that bad, they would loose customers left and right. The iPhone is not the only thing keeping AT&T in business.

  • Anonymous

    i dont think the tablet thing a big deal i haven’t walked into an att store yet and even seen them with stock on an ipad 2 let alone know anyway who received theirs from att. i wonder how the justice department will look at these numbers in relation to the merger

  • Byron

    One thing worth mentioning if you look at the financials, AT&T only had 62,000, yes 62,000, postpaid net adds! That’s the worst ever in their history!

    • Anonymous

      hmm. . . . I wonder why nobody is pointing this out. Oh wait, it is an embarrassment! How do you only add 62,000 subs?

      • Bullet Tooth Tony

        It’s being pointed out on Wall Street… but their profits are up 39%… so it’s a mixed bag.

    • serpentor

      This is the real reason why Apple paid a sh!t load of paper to en exclusivity 1 year early. At this point they’re just selling new iPhones to the same users – unlike RIM who is adding 40% NEW SUBSCRIBERS to their numbers.

    • Sethsevere

      If you read it says retail net adds that excludes anyone from purchasing at third party which was 561,000 also doesn’t include activation done online or through telesales. If they only added 62,000 total not everything would be sunshine and rainbows on wall street. I’m surprised their churn wasn’t higher judging by how much mud at&t gets dragged into for their network.

    • Anonymous

      Exactly! That’s the story. Last year three carriers (VZ, Sprint, T-Mobile) were sending their customers to at&t to get iPhones. Now, nobody is gonna leave VZ for an iPhone and the other two’s customers can take a left turn to Verizon rather than going to At&t. So its about future growth!!!

      As far as losing customers, they aren’t all going to leave all at once for Verizon, they have contracts… But the creep has begun… churn is up.

      It would be really sad if, by the time the FCC rubber stamps the T-Mobile acquisition, that they had lost as many subscribers as they will gain by the purchase.

  • 2BadSoSad

    Projected iPhone sales for Verizon failed because the phone is basically the same piece of non-Flash supporting shit that they’ve been putting out for the last 3 years and just kept ‘reskinning it’ and calling it a ‘new’ phone. That, and because Verizon customers arent dipshit sheep like their ATT counterparts…Thunderbolt anyone? No thanks…I would like to keep my shitty iPhone with its inferior 5mp rear camera, as well as its front facing camera that only supports skype and Facetime over a WiFi Connection, non Flash supportive player, non removable memory and battery, 32gb of memory for $300(vs 40gb of memory in the Thunderbolt), its inability to talk and browse the web at the same time on VZW’s shitty old 3G network(T-Bolt is 4G and can do both), inability to play non DRM supported files and the fact that ‘Apple Care’ basically sucks my balls. May as well be a sheisty ass ‘Black Tie Protection’ plan, it covers…well….basically nothing.

    Yea, suffice to say, there are still gobs of self-centered wannabe elitist f&@ktards out there that still look at Apple products as status symbols into the societal world of the ‘cool’. Too bad its a one way ticket into the world of the ‘douchebag’.

    I will keep my Thunderbolt ty very much. With its 18mb Down and 50mb Up speeds. Eat me iPhags. Enjoy paying out the nose for not nearly the same shit I have on my phone. You always have and you always will.

    • Joel

      Lol people like you make me embarrassed to be a android user. Just cause your specs are above a year old phone you beat your chest like your the greatest?

      FYI your android device will be outdated and lacking in specs in 2 months. Secondly, the iPhones 5MP camera takes better shots than the TBolt because of the sensor apple uses.

      Stop embarassing fellow android users you tool!

      • http://www.droiddoes.com/ Norm

        He is proud like myself and BILLIONS of other droid users like myself who chose a DROID over iCrap.

      • Anonymous

        I would choose iphone over droid crap.

    • Bullet Tooth Tony

      As a Thunderbolt user… and I must say I love this phone… all I can say is wow.

      First, try that speedtest again now that they corrected it, and that 50mb up will disappear.
      Second, as a DSLR photographer – a CMOS user which isn’t as good as a full-frame one even – the camera on the Thunderbolt isn’t so hot… and megapixels mean nothing. It’s good enough to be a point-and-shoot replacement… but it isn’t anything to brag about.
      Third, Thunderbolt does voice and data at the same time on 3G, as will virtually all new 3G phones on Verizon. It has nothing to do with 4G, and everything to do with e-hrpd enhancements as part of their migration plan to LTE.
      Fourth, Skype doesn’t do video chats either, unless you’ve downloaded the *leaked* version.

      Your post, to borrow your words… is one of a self-centered wannabe elitist… and it’s a one-way ticket into the world of ‘douchebag.’

      • BlindAppleSheep

        You are a fucking moron. No 3G Verizon phone does Web and Voice simultaneously. Only the 4G gives you that capability on their network. Call and ask them.

        Secondly, my Thunderbolt STILL pulls those speeds. I live 30 minutes south of Minneapolis and I can do 5 speedtests straight and pull those consistently. You want a screenshot know-it-all? I’d be glad to send it to you.

        Lastly, I love how you own a Thunderbolt yet are all over the nuts of a phone thats been out for 3+ years and had nothing more then a faster processor, front facing camera, and a bit better of a camera and had a design change…oh, once in that span. Way to go smart guy. Steve appreciates your blind commitment to his shit products that he charges you an arm and a leg for.

        I am well aware that the Thunderbolt will be irrelevant in a few months…yet you make no mention of the iPhone? Hmm…same shit for 3 years yet you are quiet as a church mouse about that. Funny how that works. Apple must have their entire fist up your ass running you like a corporate puppet. Enjoy that

      • AppleSheep

        The Thunderbolt having 4G capability and a sim is what allows it to multi-function (voice and web) on 3G. Just to clarify, because i know youll try to bring that back up again.

      • Bullet Tooth Tony

        You’re a retard.

        First – 3G and 4G… they’re incompatible networks – period. The SIM card has nothing to do with it being able to do simultaneous voice and data over 3G. The Blackberry Storm has a SIM card, the Blackberry Curve World Phone does too. So does the Droid 2 Global. Can those do simultaneous voice and data? No, tbey can’t. Why? Because you’re a dipshit talking out of your ass. It has everything to do with HTC taking advantage of SVDO enhancements made to 3G, as I said, as part of Verizon’s e-hrpd migration plan. It works in 3G *only* areas. Not just 4G areas. When not on 4G, that radio is sitting there with its thumb up its ass looking for a signal. Much like what you were doing when they handed out brains, sitting around with your thumb up your ass.

        Second – Your upload is wrong. Tether the fucker to a computer and do a speedtest and try again. You are not – repeat, are not – getting 50 Mbps upload. 5 maybe, 50, never. Try updating your app in the Market too. Works wonders to check for updates once in a blue moon.

        Third – When did I ever give props to the iPhone? I think it’s a rather lame phone. But your comments are based in ignorance and need to be addressed. The iPhone camera, which you try to shit on for being “only” 5 megapixels, is a better camera than the Thunderbolt’s 8. Megapixels mean dick. Know what else takes better pictures than the Thunderbolt **AND** the iPhone? The LG Dare. It’s all about the Lens and the Sensor. Quite simply, the LG Dare still has the best camera lens and sensor ever put on a cell phone. And it’s “only” 3.2 mp.

      • Bullet Tooth Tony

        Oh, and since I’m sure you’ll come right back with your 4G + SIM card theory… here’s a little story from 2009 to read, if a dipshit like you can figure out how to piece together a link that I will break apart:

        http://www.qualcomm dot com/stories/2009/07/01/
        growing-your-business-while-preserving-your-investments

        Here’s the text, since I’m sure you can’t figure that out:

        “The voice-centric CDMA2000 1X is evolving to 1X Advanced, which quadruples the capacity of today’s 1X networks. This unprecedented capacity increase afforded by 1X Advanced can also be used to free up spectrum for high revenue-earning EV-DO data services or to achieve up to 70 percent increase in coverage. 1X Advanced is expected to be commercial in the latter part of 2010.

        Simultaneous 1X Voice and EV-DO Data (SVDO) is a complementary device enhancement that will significantly improve the user experience without impacting standards or infrastructure. SVDO allows devices to access EV-DO data services while in an active 1X voice call.”

        so now, tell me… where in this does it mention that it needs LTE or a SIM card to access this? Nowhere? That’s right, because it doesn’t need it. Again, in case you’re wondering… you’re a moron, and you should refrain from ever commenting on technology for the rest of your life. Even if you’re discussing a light switch, stay away. Because sometimes, flipping it upwards turns a light off instead of on… but you’d have to argue it doesn’t work that way.

      • Sux2BeU

        Hate to break your 3 foot ass off of your soapbox you ignorant fuck. But please oh wise one that can copy and paste from weblinks…tell me WHAT VERIZON 3G phone does Web and Talk simultaneously!? Thats right you big winded douchebag dipshit…you cant. Because they dont. Go troll another site and look day and night to find that phone of which you speak of…cuz i am really really fucking curious to see what you can find. Good luck fucktard. Enjoy stewing over the online comments of some unanimous individual that got your goat you pety low life troglodite inbred faggot.

      • Bullet Tooth Tony

        Hate to break it to ya… The Thunderbolt does 3G Voice and Data simultaneously. Turn off the 4G radio off with Phone Info @Taiwan, pull the SIM card out, it works. It has nothing to do with 4G; yet everything to do with a phone taking advantage of a service just commercialized in late 2010.

        I’m really curious to see why you’re so fucking stupid that you are unable to comprehend the fact that Verizon upgraded its service to 1x Advanced and HTC included SVDO. Good luck figuring that one out dipshit. Now do us all a favor and shut your cock holster. And stewing? Not stewing… I rather enjoy putting you in your place, it’s like a game to shut up fanboys of any make and model. And to highlight your intelligence, thank you for this gem of a post… you really are “unanimous”ly stupid… the fact you continue to highlight your ignorance is testament to how being ANONYMOUS on the internet helps you from being publically outcast… which you probably already are, judging by your attitude and unwillingness to accept being wrong.

    • Anonymous

      I only had to read the first sentence to realize 2BadSoSad is a smart man.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_2BNOIBHBFICJEAPJLGHKK3WHPE DADDY WARBUCKS

    im one of those new customers as of feb 2011

    im also one of the new customers who has an old iphone 2g and now has unlimited data!!!

    only reason i went with att over verizon was due to att NOW offering M2M minutes free to any cellular provider.
    verizon only offers package minutes and free M2M to verizon customers only.

    • Anonymous

      Verizon offers the same. Unlimited calling to any 5 or 10 cell phone or landline numbers that u can decide or change anytime

  • http://www.facebook.com/tylahholden Tyler Holden

    A lot of it has to do with Alltel customers getting a smartphone.

  • Sin City

    Hopefully iPhone 5 is available for T-Mobile and Sprint, when it’s available at launch. More options, the better.

  • Steel

    It’s good news for AT&T and not for Apple. ATT milked the iPhone while it was hot for the first few years but then Android came along and gave Verizon customers a better experience. Now they’re not so concerned about the fact that the iPhone is available to them on Verizon. Now that ATT can sale a decent Android phone as well, one wonders how the iPhone will continue to perform there.

  • Anonymous

    It’s not surprising that smartphone sales are up. Selling an older inferior iPhone 3GS for 49.99 to customers who otherwise couldn’t afford it, and who aren’t knowledgeable in the technology field. ATT did a good job locking customers under contract before the buzz of Verizon’s 4G LTE network caught storm.
    Churn going up and overall profitability going down are huge indicators. Fact is many customers are leaving AT&T , just waiting for ETF’s to go down. As one line becomes out of contract, the other family share lines and business share lines will quickly follow.
    I’m a Droid man, but for those iPhone fans why would anyone buy a mobile broadband card and pay more for a slower network, or buy the iPhone 5 with AT&T when a much faster Verizon one will be available that can actually make calls???

    AT&T has fallen behind in the race of technology, call quality and customer satisfaction, and misrepresentation of their non existent 4G service. How do u think this story ends??

  • Anonymous

    i don’t think anyone can argue, the iPhone did more for Verizon’s customer loyalty preventing churn then it did for customer growth. Customers are flying to Big Red but majority are waiting for contracts to be out. All lines dont have to be out, just one or. two will cause an entire family to move, and there friends and family. It’s a domino effect! It’s no secret AT&T borrowed Verizon’s customers with the iPhone launch. What they didn’t know was it was merely a loan, now its time to pay the piper, with interest. Customers were not loyal to AT&T, they’ve been loyal to Apple. I don’t hear many people say I love at&t, they say I love Apple or love “Droid.”

  • Anonymous

    And you’re telling me they need T-Mobile to build out their spectrum faster? Phuck outta here. Use that same damn money to do it on your own.

  • Janedidit

    Interesting, an entire quarter of ATT’s net gains are attributed to resellers, of which tracfone is by far the major contributor. I mention this as I’m very curios to see what ATT’s approach is going to be regarding the MVNO’s it sells air to. With them having the monopoly on GSM, it does give them all the leverage they need to enforce higher prices. Having said that, if tracfone are responsible for floating ATT’s numbers, then that too alows a little leverage on tracfone’s behalf.

  • http://twitter.com/Rafagon Rafael D. González

    All right, ATT!

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