This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2000/1023bradner.html
'Net
Insider:
A plague of moles?
By
Scott Bradner
Network World, 10/23/00
AT&T
must have help being as dumb as it has been of late.
Once upon a time
AT&T was retirement stock. You bought it to be sure you would have income
when your work-a-day world was behind you. It was safe for widows and orphans.
It ain't quite that safe any more.
On Oct. 12, AT&T's
stock closed below $24, down from a high of $60 in April. AT&T stock is now
making future retirees quite nervous. State and local city funds have lost most
of a billion dollars over the last year by sticking with AT&T and now the
managers of some of the funds want to meet with AT&T management to find out
just what the heck is going on.
One would have thought that AT&T
had lost all its luster, returning to mid-1997 status when the stock got below
$10. Until recently, things looked much better - at least to the market - with
the stock passing $60 in early 1999 and staying in that range until this past
spring when it tanked after AT&T admitted it was not going to meet sales
and profit projections for the rest of 2000. Things have just been getting
worse since then.
AT&T has been making strange business decisions
of late - decisions outside the normal range of Dilbert-like managerial
incompetence.
For instance, last spring the Federal Communications
Commission touted the effects of an FCC-mandated reduction in fees that long-distance
phone companies such as AT&T have to pay local phone carriers to complete
long-distance phone calls. AT&T joined in the hoopla about the lower costs
that were to be seen by phone customers.
Then, within a day, AT&T
announced a new price structure that took away most of the reductions, and in
some cases raised prices. AT&T had to back down after some bad press,
including stories on the front page of The New York Times and on the network
news shows.
Then early this month, AT&T was reported to be
considering getting out of the long-distance phone business. It is hard to
imagine what would be left of the company after it dumped its final
"T."
Finally, on Oct. 9 it leaked out that AT&T may
demand a piece of the action from commercial Web sites that use its broadband
network. Seems to me to be an ideal way to ensure that commercial sites use
other ISPs.
It's hard to imagine that these and a number of other
recent moves could be the product of a competent management group. I don't like
saying that someone is incompetent, so the only other option is that an
AT&T competitor managed to place a mole on the AT&T management team. If
so, the mole is earning his keep.
Disclaimer: I know of no Harvard
moles in AT&T (or WorldCom or Sprint), and the above is my speculation.
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