Friday 1/27: Ex-DreamWorks boss raises almost $600M for investment startup; Walmart Layoffs Hit Ecommerce Division



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Apple strategy in 'smart home' race threatened by Amazon (Reuters)

InsideSales CEO – ‘There is no true AI in the market and data scientists aren’t a thing’ (Diginomica)

Ex-DreamWorks boss raises almost $600M for investment startup (NY Post)

Google CEO Mum on CBS Deal (Multichannel News)

Why Verizon Investors Are Worried by Charter Merger Rumors
(Reuters)


Walmart Layoffs Hit Ecommerce Division (Fortune)
Memo from Marc Lore.

Wal-Mart Tackles Food Safety With Trial of Blockchain (Bloomberg)


Unisys CEO: Our Federal Business Focus, Particularly Around Border Security, Aligns Well With The Trump Administration (CRN)







The last time a phone company bought a cable company from John Malone

Tom Paine



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On December 20, 2001, Comcast reached an agreement to acquire AT&T Broadband, created through AT&T's acquisitions of MediaOne and TCI, for $52 billion. AT&T acquired TCI from John Malone in 1999 for $55 billion. The deal would almost triple the number of Comcast subscribers to 22 million, clearly establishing it as the leading US cable operator. Comcast CEO Brian Roberts cited the potential for products such as "video on demand, interactive services, high-speed data services, cable modems … the most attractive way to get the internet in your home is with a cable modem."




Comcast Earnings beat expectations: Expanding X1, looking to wireless launch

Tom Paine



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On a morning where the big question was the extent to which Verizon and Charter might be engaged in M&A talks, Comcast released its earnings for Q4 2016 and the full year.


Revenue grew 9.2% and adjusted EPS grew 9.9% for the quarter, beating expectations. Continuing the reversal of a long-term trend, video customer net additions were 80,000 for the quarter, and for 2017 Comcast had its best video customer results in 10 Years, with 161,000 net additions.

Programming expense rose just a tick over 10% in 2016, but Comcast expects it to rise 13% in 2017 due to the latest round of rights agreements before moderating the following year.

NBCU revenue grew 13.0% in the quarter, as Theme Parks continued gushing growth and profits.

Business Services, which grew by 16.1% for the year, is now at a $5.5 billion annual run rate.

Comcast is increasing its dividend by 15% per share, splitting its stock two-for-one, and expects to repurchase $5 billion of stock this year.

Comcast said penetration of its X1 interface is expected to increase from 48% at year-end to the low 60s over the next year.


Comcast indicated a mid-year launch for its wireless offering (likely in just a few areas to begin with). Chairman & CEO Brian Roberts said he expects "most popular mobile devices" to be available for the service. Roberts also said that after reaching limited scale, Comcast expected each incremental customer to be NPV (Net Present Value) profitable. CFO Mike Cavanagh said to expect a $200 to $300 million drag on operating cash flow from wireless until Comcast starts breaking it out separately. Beyond that, the company was rather tight-lipped about wireless.

There seems to be a developing consensus that wireless and cable assets, in some combination, are the best way to provide 5G LTE. Cable's backhaul capacity, and its indoors networking capabilities ( where cellular is weak on its own) are valuable assets to the wireless industry.


Round Numbers


Charter: Marketcap - $90bn LTD - $35bn

Comcast: Marketcap - $181bn LTD - $49bn

Verizon: Marketcap - $200bn LTD - $104bn

AT&T: Marketcap -$260bn LTD -$113bn


Source: Yahoo Finance as of close 1/26/2017. AT&T as of 1/27 morning.

Comcast beats on earnings and revenue
(CNBC)

Comcast Backs Bet on X1
Plans to expand X1 penetration beyond 60% in 2017, seek more licensing opportunities
(Multichannel News)

Comcast Chief Pressed on Wireless Rollout Plan, Regulatory Environment Under Trump (Variety)

Cox thanks white-label X1 for best video performance since 2008 (FierceCable)

Verizon, Charter Talks Heating Up? Malone Vision Key (IBD)


Verizon Exploring Potential Charter Merger (Report) (Variety)

Verizon CEO Said to Approach Maffei About Possible Charter Deal (Bloomberg)

Verizon: Reasons Charter Speculation Makes No Sense, Per Wells (Barron's Tech Trader Daily0





Verizon CEO Said to Approach Charter on Combination (Bloomberg / Video)



Thursday highlights: Alibaba’s online payments affiliate eyes U.S.acquisition (done deal); Violin Memory faces the music



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Trump tells Republican lawmakers in Philly: Enough talk. Time to deliver. (Reuters)


Alibaba’s Online Payments Affiliate Is Said to Eye U.S. Acquisition
(Reuters via Fortune)
Done Deal.








Streamlining pharma-HCP communications with a common identity standard (Pharmaceutical Commerce)

Time to face the music, Violin Memory: Upstart's asset auction is over (The Register)
SAP Ventures was an investor pre-IPO.





Oracle to launch Adaptive Intelligent Apps this spring, status of Oracle Data Cloud less certain (ZDNet)

FCC approves $170 million for New York broadband rollout (Engadget)

Google Maps for iOS gets real-time 'Popular Times' in latest update (AppleInsider)




Wednesday highlights: McKinsey measures B2B’s digital gap; Comcast makes use of SAP HANA



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Qlik Sense provides tempting prices and contract terms with group offering (Diginomica)

iPipeline buys Resonant, seeks more deals (Philly.com)

Funny, the two companies above are both owned by Thoma Bravo.

Measuring B2B’s digital gap (McKinsey Quarterly)

SAP Rises: OpCo Likes Everything But the Margin Hit (Barron's Tech Trader Daily)

Exclusive: SAP dips its toes in the healthcare startup world (Med City News)


IBM Reorg Forges Cognitive Systems, Merges Cloud And Analytics (NextPlatform)

Button, the marketplace for app integrations, lands $20 million in Series B funding (TechCrunch)


Verizon’s Foray Into Hollywood Is Already Getting a Reboot (Bloomberg)

Connected doorbell startup Ring raises $109 million from DFJ, Goldman Sachs, Qualcomm, others (VentureBeat)

McKesson Will Acquire CoverMyMeds for $1.1 Billion (HISTalk)



Comcast uses SAP HANA:










HTH did this happen? (clickbait)




here's an explanation.


Chamber Says Salary History Law Hurts Job Growth, Hampers Global Business Recruitment (Press Release) / The Chamber of Commerce for Greater Philadelphia

The Chamber of Commerce for Greater Philadelphia

Chamber Says Salary History Law Hurts Job Growth, Hampers Global Business Recruitment
Posted Tuesday, January 24th, 2017


ADVOCACY, ECONOMY, MEMBER NEWS, PRESS RELEASES, PUBLIC POLICY

With the signing of a salary history bill, the City of Philadelphia continues its record of passing legislation that hurts job growth and business expansion. While this bill is supposedly an attempt to improve wage equity, there is in fact no evidence whatsoever that asking prospective employees about their current compensation contributes in any way to wage inequities. Unfortunately, the City government has rejected a proposal by the business community to discuss and enact a real wage equity ordinance.

“While the Chamber is deeply committed to highly diverse and inclusive workplaces and will not tolerate wage inequity, we believe passage of this measure says Philadelphia is not open for business,” said Chamber President and CEO Rob Wonderling. “Philadelphia has a reputation around the country and world for having a high cost of doing business. With this bill, we have reinforced our unfortunate anti-business reputation of having a City government that tells companies how to run their business.”

As a matter of policy, the Chamber stands against discrimination in any way on the basis of gender in the payment of wages, or to pay any person a salary or wage rate less than the rates paid to employees of a different gender for comparable work, provided that variation in wages are not prohibited due to seniority, and that seniority is not affected by pregnancy-related conditions, protected parental, or family and medical leave; commission-based systems; geography and/or education, training or experience; or travel.

This ordinance does not result in wage equity. Nor does it provide any evidence to suggest that removing this question from the hiring process results in wage equity.
“Tragically, we are finding that when global enterprises are looking to locate their business in America, Philadelphia is quickly falling off the list,” says Wonderling. “The cumulative effect of city ordinances restricting businesses is having a negative impact on job growth in Philadelphia. In addition, existing businesses located in the City will begin to look elsewhere as they plan for job growth.”

In fact, data of annual private sector wage and salary jobs from 2010 to 2015 shows the nation’s 25 largest cities grew by 2.8%, with Philadelphia in last place at 1.1%.

Below are some of the restrictive, anti-job growth measures taken up by Philadelphia City Council over the last few years:
2011: “Ban the box legislation,” which barred an employer from inquiring about criminal background until after the first interview.
2012: “First Source Jobs Policy” which requires recipients of financial assistance from the city to “hire first” for entry-level jobs from a registry of unemployed Philadelphians.
2013: Prerequisites to City Contracts: Requires contractors to disclose, as part of the bidding process: (i) The current percentage of female executive officers in the company and the current percentage of females on the company’s executive and full boards; (ii) The company’s aspirational goals for the inclusion of females in executive positions and on the executive and full boards; and (iii) The intended efforts by the contractor to achieve the aspirational goals.
2013: Legislation to prohibit employers from requesting access to employees’ social media profiles.
2014: Minimum Wage executive order to increase to $12/hour for city contractors and subcontractors.
2015: Mandatory paid sick leave legislation.
2015: Wage theft law that imposes higher penalties than state law and adds private right of action for alleged violations.
2015: Amendments to “Ban the box legislation” barring employer from inquiring about criminal background until after conditional offer of employment. Also limits look back to 7 years.
2016: Ordinance limiting employer ability to obtain credit checks as part of applicant background check process.
2016: Minimum Wage Ordinance Amendment Bill – Amends the 21st Century Ordinance to increase the minimum wage to the higher of 150% of the federal minimum ($10.87) or $12.00 with a CPI multiplier, for new contracts or renewals of existing contracts.

The Chamber of Commerce for Greater Philadelphia stands committed to aggressively advocating on behalf of its members and for the benefit of those working to bring more jobs to Philadelphia, and looks forward to working with the Mayor and City Council on a jobs growth agenda for all citizens.


Origin: http://news.chamberphl.com/2017/01/chamber-says-salary-history-law-hurts-job-growth-hampers-global-business-recruitment/



Scott McAllister joins Comcast as SVP of Digital Transformation

Tom Paine



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Scott McAllister / LinkedIn



Scott McAllister posts on LinkedIn that he's "joined Comcast to help lead the Digital transformation of their consumer touch points across their life cycle as SVP of Digital Transformation."

He will also lead digital analytics.

In his last position, he was SVP, Consumer Digital Marketing at Time Inc.


McAllister has an MBA from UNC-Chapel Hill.



Tuesday highlights: Verizon Misses Subscriber Growth Projections; Qlik announces SMB cloud solution



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SAP nudges up multi-year outlook after posting in-line 2016 result (Reuters via CNBC)

SAP Takes on More Cloud Customers as It Seeks Smaller Deals (Bloomberg)

What's the purpose of 4 year out revenue projections? Is it a Euro reporting requirement or an SAP thing?










Verizon Misses Subscriber Growth Projections Amid Stiff Competition
(Reuters via Fortune)

Verizon Adds 21,000 FiOS Pay TV Subs, Still Assessing Impact of Yahoo Data Breaches (Hollywood Reporter)
Company confirmed Monday that it is laying off 155 employees who work on its go90 streaming service, most cuts coming from Verizon's San Jose, Calif. office.





Alibaba Raises Forecast as Chinese Consumers Continue to Spend (Bloomberg)
Revenue at Alibaba's cloud unit more than doubled.

Why Salesforce Is Snapping Up AI Startups (and Passing on Marketing Ones) (Fortune)

Qlik announces SMB cloud solution
(ZDNet)

More Comcast Buybacks Coming As Stock Trades Near All-Time High? (Investor's Business Daily)

A Philly venture-capital firm finds few deals here (Philly.com)

After years of talk, Camden school headquarters goes to bid (Philly Voice)
Former RCA Victor HQ.