QVC reports continued US sales decline


Tom Paine



 Subscribe in a reader






QVC (Liberty Interactive, NASDAQ: QVCA) reported 3rd quarter earnings yesterday. US revenue was down 6% to $1.3 billion. QVC's consolidated group revenue decreased 3% in the third quarter to $1.9 billion.

This follows a 2nd quarter report that noted:

"Beginning in early June QVC’s US sales began to experience significant headwinds, which have continued. The sales declines, as compared to prior periods, have averaged in the mid to high single digit percentages."

That pattern largely persisted throughout the third quarter.

QVC's US average selling price per unit ("ASP") decreased 7% to $54.75. eCommerce revenue increased 1% to $684 million and grew 342 basis points to 51% of total US revenue. Operating income decreased 18% to $175 million.

QVC had taken cost reduction steps to offset the sales slowdown, including cutting 100 jobs at Studio Park near West Chester in September.

QVC CEO Mike George addressed the TV retailer's challenging environment in Liberty Interactive's (QVCA) earnings conference call:

"Since our last call, there has certainly been a great deal of speculation about whether the sudden decline we experienced in June reflected a structural change on the long-term outlook of our business or more short-term and addressable challenges."

"We are confident it is the latter and while we're certainly not happy with the speed of the turnaround, we are nonetheless encouraged by some positive trends we're beginning to see. We do believe this slowdown reflects a kind of perfect storm of unrelated challenges across a number of categories, coupled with difficult macro pressures."

QVCA (representing a tracking stock within media giant Liberty Media) has been slimmed down to the point where it is essentially a pure play for QVC, plus zulily which it acquired last year. zulily revenue grew 14% to $359 million in the quarter.

QVCA closed up 7.3% yesterday.


Links 11/9: United Internet (1&1) sells web hosting stake; delays IPO; How 2016 Wharton MBA grads flocked to Uber, Twitter, etc.



 Subscribe in a reader
Subscribe to Philadelphia Tech News by Email




Dish’s Sling TV braces for onslaught from internet’s goliaths (Denver Post)

Netflix arrives on Comcast TV boxes, won’t be exempt from data cap (Ars Technica)

Cable
Altice purchase of Cable One not happening anytime soon, analyst says
(FierceCable)

United Internet sells web hosting stake; delays IPO (Reuters)
This includes United's 1&1 Internet US unit, based in Chesterbrook.

Epic Systems VP defends company’s interoperability record (MedCity News)

How 2016 Wharton MBA grads flocked to Uber, Twitter and start-up firms (Philly.com)

​Oracle closes NetSuite deal: Can it expand into midmarket, small enterprise? (ZDNet)

How LinkedIn Drove a Wedge Between Microsoft and Salesforce (New York Times)


Charter CEO scoffs at rival AT&T over DirecTV Now (Dallas Morning News)


Two Penn alumni to choose from for President? (Republished from PTN from 2011)



Tom Paine



 Subscribe in a reader



Members of the University of Pennsylvania community may have not just one, but possibly two alumni to choose from in the upcoming Presidential election cycle.

One is the famous (or infamous, depending on one's point of view) Donald Trump (Wharton '68), who may run as a Republican or Independent.

The other is Jon Huntsman Jr., who received a  bachelor's degree in International Politics from Penn in 1987. Huntsman is considered likely by many to enter the GOP race. Among other things, Hunstman has served as Governor of Utah and President Obama's Ambassador to China (until the end of this month when his resignation takes effect). His candidacy would face challenges, since he is not really well known among the general public and he faces criticism from Republicans for his association with Obama and a recently leaked letter in which Huntsman glowingly praised Obama.

His father, Jon Huntsman Sr., founder of chemical giant Huntsman Corporation and a major benefactor of Penn, received his degree from Wharton. It is he for whom Huntsman Hall, a building in which many of you have attended events, is named.

Which leads to the question: has a Penn graduate ever been President? Well no, actually, although one did attend Penn as a medical student: native Virginian William Henry Harrison, who enrolled there around 1790. Unfortunately, his father died, leaving him short on funds, and he is said to have not cared for medical studies much anyway, so he opted for the military life.

Harrison, however, lacked a certain amount of common sense and thus didn't fare too well as President. He gave a ridiculously long inauguration address on a bitter cold Washington day and died a few weeks later from pneumonia. Maybe he should have gotten that medical degree.






Links 11/2: Justice Department sues AT&T-DirecTV, over 'collusion' in blocking Dodgers channel; Vanguard Group plans innovation center in Philadelphia



 Subscribe in a reader
Subscribe to Philadelphia Tech News by Email




Justice Department sues AT&T-DirecTV, alleges collusion in blocking Dodgers channel (LA Times)
Wonder if this suit, though aimed at DirecTV's conduct before AT&T acquired it, will have bearing on Time Warner deal review.

Here’s why you’re seeing the Amazon Web Services logo during the World Series (GeekWire)


Alibaba Sales Beats Estimates on Cloud, E-Commerce Growth (Bloomberg)

Level 3 celebrates $34bn CenturyLink gobble by blacking out Eastern US (The Register)

Vanguard Group opening innovation center in Philadelphia (Philadelphia Business Journal)



Pet health service firm raises $2M in seed funding round led by Comcast Ventures
(Philadelphia Business Journal)

SAP ramps up S/4HANA public cloud division – exclusive with new chief Darren Roos (Diginomica)


Evolve IP buys Xtium (Philly.com: Philly Deals)



Trump wants to make the Navy Yard a Navy Yard again?


Tom Paine



 Subscribe in a reader







Speaking in King of Prussia just now, Donald Trump just said he wants to make the Philadelphia Navy Yard, well, a Navy Yard again.

I have no idea if this makes any sense.

More as it develops.


MEMO: TRUMP ANNOUNCES NATIONWIDE SHIP-BUILDING PLAN TO CREATE 350 SHIP NAVY

Probably just another pre-election goodie without much substance.


"In the tradition of Ronald Reagan’s doctrine of “peace through strength” and a Reagan focus on naval power, Donald Trump has proposed a significant increase in the size of our Navy. The 350-ship goal conforms to that blueprint outlined by the bipartisan National Defense Panel.

Facilities like the Philadelphia Navy Yard can help lead the way – and the defense of America. This yard was shut down in the 1990s but still retains a variety of Navy Department facilities. It has substantial latent capacity to grow in support of the expanding Fleet, it is home to a Naval Inactive Ship Maintenance Facility and retains several specialized engineering activities.

A Trump administration would fully utilize those parts of the Philadelphia Yard that remain in Navy hands and rapidly expand its activities to meet the Fleet's growing science and technology needs – creating thousands of new jobs in the process. Leveraging the under-utilized capacity of the Philadelphia yard will alleviate pressure on other over-stretched facilities and provide an ideal location for tasks the Navy desperately needs accomplished."


Links 11/1: Comcast shunning Apple TV single sign-on, expands Gigabit markets



 Subscribe in a reader
Subscribe to Philadelphia Tech News by Email




Salesforce.com: You Should Be Buying It Now, Says Morgan Stanley (Barron's Tech Trader Daily)

Donio Leaves Concur & Eberhard Becomes President (Business Travel News)

Tableau stock tumbles 13% on mixed earnings results in latest blow to data visualization company (GeekWire)


A Few Followup Thoughts on the CenturyLink/Level3 Deal (Rob Powell / Telecom Ramblings)

Alibaba’s Cloud Arm Set for Center Stage as E-Commerce Plateaus (Bloomberg)

Gannett Is Giving Up Its Bid for Newspaper Publisher Tronc (Fortune)
The Morning Call is safe, in one sense, for a while.

GE wants to sell its global water business, based in Trevose (Philly.com)

Bethlehem venture capital company receives $5M for tech jobs (Allentown Morning Call)

Comcast shunning Apple TV single sign-on, working with CTAM on open solution (FierceCable)

Hulu will have ABC, Disney, ESPN, and Fox on its live TV service (The Verge)
But no word on NBC (which owns about 30%) yet.

Comcast Gigabit Markets to Expand, West Coast Markets in Focus (Telecompetitor)





CenturyLink buys Level3; Implications for Comcast


Tom Paine



 Subscribe in a reader



Level3 campus



CenturyLiink's proposed $34 billion (including assumption of debt) acquisition of internet backbone provider Level3 Communications has implications for Comcast, from both sides.

In July, Comcast was widely rumored to be considering buying Level3, but those turned out to be just rumors. Not that it might not have been on Comcast's radar.


Broomfield, Colorado-based Level3 is a Tier 1 provider of core transport, IP, voice, video, and content delivery. Its a major carrier of traffic to and from Comcast's network.

Level3 also could have also strengthened Comcast's business communications services capabilities for large enterprises, and added to its fiber network for wireless backhaul.

Monroe, La-based CenturyLink, which also has an extensive fiber network, had its roots in the local telco business. CenturyLink also has a pay TV service called Prism, with only 311,000 subscribers, which competes with Comcast in some areas. CenturyLink has also been conducting a pilot for a skinny bundle over-the-top service called Prism Stream.

Comcast and Level3 had a long-running dispute over peerage costs, and Level3's complaints that Comcast was discriminating against traffic from Netflix, a major Level3 customer. But things have been relatively peaceful since the two firms reached a long-term agreement last year.

The combination would increase CenturyLink's fiber network in the United States to 450,000 miles from about 250,000.



Links 10/31: Study: AWS has 45% share of public cloud infrastructure market — more than Microsoft, Google, IBM combined; Marketo has enlisted former SAP exec as new CEO



 Subscribe in a reader
Subscribe to Philadelphia Tech News by Email




CenturyLink to Buy Level 3 for $34 Billion in Cash, Stock (Bloomberg)

Apple Encouraged To Bid For Time Warner As TV Strategy Falters (Investor's Business Daily)

Networking Gear Maker Brocade Is In Advanced Acquisition Talks (Fortune)

iPhone 8 with OLED display may have just been confirmed by an unlikely source (BGR)

ESPN Is Both Right and Wrong About its Terrible Subscriber Numbers (Fortune)

Verizon fell short on 22,422 homes with FIOS, city says (Philly.com)

Study: AWS has 45% share of public cloud infrastructure market — more than Microsoft, Google, IBM combined (GeekWire)

Baltimore is making a $5 billion bet that entrepreneurs can revive the city (CNBC)

Marketo Has Enlisted This Former SAP Exec as Its New CEO (Fortune)









Sunday Highlights: CRM views; Why AmerisourceBergen shares were hammered on Friday



 Subscribe in a reader
Subscribe to Philadelphia Tech News by Email




Why the Lehigh Valley is full of fulfillment centers (Philly.com)

SAP’s CEO on Being the American Head of a German Multinational (Harvard Business Review)

CRM Startups Staff Up As Larger Rivals Fight
(Mattermark)

Should Salesforce Buy NetSuite? (Denis Pombriant / CRMBuyer)

Customer Relationship Automation Is the New CRM (Harvard Business
Review)

Drug wholesalers are getting slammed after McKesson warned that cost scrutiny is hurting its business (Business Insider)
Why AmerisourceBergen shares were hammered on Friday.

Wolff: Business theory behind AT&T-Time Warner deal is twisted (USA Today)