NASDAQ
 
 
Why Comcast Is the Most Hated Company In America
 
By _Motley  Fool_ (http://www.nasdaq.com/author/fool) ,  September 13, 2014,



Read  more: http://www.fool.com
 
 
 
You can upset activists with killer whales in captivity, underpaid retail  
employees, or genetically modified seeds, but nothing seems to tick 
Americans  off more than a poorly maintained cable television and Internet 
empire. 
Comcast took top honors earlier this year in Consumerist's  annual _Worst 
Company in America_ 
(http://consumerist.com/2014/04/08/congratulations-to-comcast-your-2014-worst-company-in-america/)
  tournament, beating out fellow 
Final  Four competitors SeaWorld , Wal-Mart , and  Monsanto . 
This isn't the first time that Comcast comes out on top by being at the  
bottom. It reclaims the throne it won back in 2010's tourney. 
Anyone that's been a Comcast or XFINITY customer can probably relate. The  
outages are brutal, especially for those with bundled packages including 
cable,  Internet, and phone. The ridiculous policy to only credit outages after 
 inconvenienced customers call back twice (once to report the outage and 
then  later once it's back up) is something out of the dark ages. Then you get 
to  Comcast's less than sterling reputation to tackling service calls. 
_I've been there_ 
(http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2010/11/18/i-hate-you-comcast.aspx?source=eptnaslnk0000001)
  . You have probably been there, too. 
More than just a fat cable bill 
All of the venom that  Comcast gets is a shame because it's also an 
entertainment powerhouse at a time  when content is king. Through NBCUniversal 
it 
watches over NBC, Telemundo, and  several other cable network properties. 
Universal Studios includes the motion  pictures and television production 
studios as well as the Universal Studios  chain of international theme parks. 
Financially speaking, Comcast is in pretty decent shape. Revenue has 
climbed  8.5% through the first half of the year. NBC's coverage of the Winter 
Olympics  in Sochi earlier this year helped boost ad revenue, but even if we 
back out the  Olympics it still came through with a 5% uptick on the top line. 
The past down  the income statement gets even kinder with operating income 
and adjusted  earnings per share climbing 13% and 23%, respectively. 
However, the venom directed at Comcast isn't really about the NBC fall 
lineup  or the _initial hiccups_ 
(http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2014/07/10/escape-from-gringotts-is-the-new-banking-crisis.aspx?source=eptnaslnk00000
01)  this summer at Universal Orlando during the  Diagon Alley expansion at 
the Wizarding World of Harry Potter. It's ultimately  all about the 
unflattering experiences suffered by many of Comcast's 26.775  million cable, 
Internet, and/or home phone service customers. 
To XFINITY and beyond 
We're living in an era of cautious  cord cutting, and Comcast has suffered 
as cable television subscribers tire of  overpaying for content that they're 
not watching. Comcast closed out the quarter  ending in June with 22.457 
million video customers, 162,000 fewer than it had a  year earlier and 144,000 
less than it had just three months before. Comcast's  video accounts peaked 
at nearly 25 million seven years ago, and it's been on a  gradual decline 
ever since. 
Comcast suffered a ridiculous streak of 26 consecutive quarters of 
sequential  declines in video customers that came to an end late last year. It 
then 
bounced  back with upticks during last year's fourth quarter and the first 
quarter of  this year, but then we saw it return to its backpedaling ways in 
the second  quarter. 
It's not just cord cutters eating away at Comcast's growth. Cheaper 
satellite  and broadband television providers have gnawed away at the market of 
traditional  cable providers. The number of pay TV customers in this country 
fell by 251,000  in 2013 according to industry tracker SNL Kagan -- the first 
full year of an  aggregate decline -- but Comcast's 305,000 in net 
defections last year means  that it single-handedly brought down the pay TV 
industry. 
This is no dot-com darling 
Comcast isn't just fumbling  on the cable television front. It may be 
growing its Internet and home phone  subscribers as a result of its bundled 
packages, but the trend of customers  eliminating land lines since they're 
already paying wireless carriers plenty for  their smartphones should 
eventually 
take its toll. 
Comcast's XFINITY Internet service is growing in popularity, but it didn't  
win a lot of friends earlier this year when it decided to turn its leased  
residential routers in Houston into Wi-Fi hotspots that could be accessible 
to  nearby XFINITY customers. 
Comcast defended the move, arguing that the hotspots would be separate from 
a  home's network, and that subscribers hosting the routers would be given  
additional bandwidth. Customers also had the ability to opt out of the plan 
 altogether. However, given Comcast's standing as this year's Worst Company 
in  America, perceptions are often more damaging than reality. 
If you loathe Comcast, you're not alone. 
Your cable company is scared, but you can get rich 
You  know cable's going away. But do you know how to profit? There's $2.2  
trillion out there to be had. Currently, cable grabs a big piece of it. That 
 won't last. And when cable falters, three companies are poised to benefit. 
_Click here_ 
(http://www.fool.com/fool/free-report/18/sa-the-22-trillion-war-249309.aspx?aid=5001&source=eptnaslnk0000001)
   for their names. Hint: 
They're not the tech  darlings that you're thinking about. 

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to