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Wireless Delivers Industry-Leading Fundamentals; FiOS Growth Accelerates; Sales of Strategic Services to Large Businesses Continue to Increase
1Q 2008 HIGHLIGHTS
Consolidated Results
Wireless
Wireline
Note: Comparisons are year over year unless otherwise noted. See the accompanying schedules and www.verizon.com/investor for reconciliations to generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) for non-GAAP financial measures cited in this news release. Discontinued operations relate to the disposition of Telecomunicaciones de Puerto Rico, Inc. that was completed on March 30, 2007.
Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE:VZ) today reported another quarter of strong sales and operational results. In the first quarter 2008, Verizon Wireless continued to lead the industry in key metrics, and Verizon's Wireline business reported continued strong growth in sales of domestic FiOS services and global strategic business services.
Verizon reported first-quarter 2008 earnings of 57 cents in diluted earnings per share (EPS). This compares with first-quarter 2007 earnings of 51 cents per share, both before and after an extraordinary item and income from discontinued operations that have been divested.
On an adjusted basis (non-GAAP), first-quarter 2008 earnings were 61 cents per share. This is a 13.0 percent increase, compared with 54 cents per share before discontinued operations in the first quarter 2007 -- Verizon's fifth consecutive quarter of a double-digit percentage increase in adjusted EPS.
Adjusted earnings in the first quarter 2008 excluded 4 cents per share in special items: 3 cents per share for costs related to the spinoff of wireline access lines in three states, completed March 31, 2008; and 1 cent per share in merger integration costs. Adjusted earnings in the first quarter 2007 excluded an extraordinary loss of 5 cents in EPS from the nationalization and sale of Verizon's interest in Compañía Anónima Nacional Teléfonos de Venezuela.
Strong Results in Face of Economy
"Verizon has weathered the current economic uncertainty with strong first-quarter results," said Verizon Chairman and CEO Ivan Seidenberg. "I am also confident of our position over the long term because we have further opportunities to drive revenue growth and further opportunities to eliminate costs.
"With our strong cash flows, we continue to invest in growth, evolve our business and return value to shareholders," he said. "In a larger sense, Verizon is leading an industry transformation. In wireless, we are changing the game with our open development initiative, our plans for next-generation technology deployment, and our strategic investment in spectrum for nationwide broadband services. In wireline, we have spun off nonstrategic access lines, and we continue to introduce innovative FiOS and enterprise services."
Consolidated Growth and Share Repurchases
Verizon's total operating revenues grew 5.5 percent to $23.8 billion, compared with the first quarter 2007. Total operating expenses increased 3.8 percent to $19.5 billion over the same period.
Verizon's operating income grew 14.1 percent to $4.3 billion, compared with the first quarter 2007. On an adjusted basis (non-GAAP), operating income grew 14.2 percent to $4.5 billion. Operating income margin rose to 18.2 percent, compared with 16.8 percent in the first quarter 2007. On an adjusted basis, Verizon's operating income margin rose to 18.7 percent, compared with 17.3 percent in the first quarter 2007.
Cash flows from continuing operations totaled $5.4 billion through the first three months of 2008, up 6.9 percent over the same period last year. During the first quarter 2008, Verizon took advantage of market conditions to repurchase $1 billion of its common stock.
Total debt was $35.8 billion, compared with $31.2 billion at year-end 2007, and Verizon ended the quarter with $5.5 billion in cash and equivalents. Most of this cash, along with $4 billion in capital raised through long-term borrowings in April, has been used to pay for the wireless licenses won in the Federal Communications Commission's 700 MHz spectrum auction.
Verizon Wireless Leads Industry in Key Metrics
Verizon Wireless continued to lead the industry with the most retail customers, the lowest churn and the highest profitability. In the first quarter:
Another Quarter of Strong Growth in FiOS, Strategic Services
Verizon's Wireline business, which consists of Verizon Telecom and Verizon Business, reported continued strong growth in FiOS customers and in sales of enterprise strategic services. Results through the first quarter 2008 include operations in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont that were spun off to Verizon shareholders and merged into FairPoint Communications Inc. on the final day of the quarter. In the first quarter:
Additional Highlights
NOTE: This news release contains statements about expected future events and financial results that are forward-looking and subject to risks and uncertainties. For those statements, we claim the protection of the safe harbor for forward-looking statements contained in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The following important factors could affect future results and could cause those results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements: materially adverse changes in economic and industry conditions and labor matters, including workforce levels and labor negotiations, and any resulting financial and/or operational impact, in the markets served by us or by companies in which we have substantial investments; material changes in available technology, including disruption of our suppliers' provisioning of critical products or services; the impact of natural or man-made disasters or litigation and any resulting financial impact not covered by insurance; technology substitution; an adverse change in the ratings afforded our debt securities by nationally accredited ratings organizations; the final results of federal and state regulatory proceedings concerning our provision of retail and wholesale services and judicial review of those results; the effects of competition in our markets; the timing, scope and financial impacts of our deployment of fiber-to-the-premises broadband technology; the ability of Verizon Wireless to continue to obtain sufficient spectrum resources; changes in our accounting assumptions that regulatory agencies, including the SEC, may require or that result from changes in the accounting rules or their application, which could result in an impact on earnings; and the ability to complete acquisitions and dispositions.