Another Messy Quarter For Motorola
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Motorola continues to struggle as they posted a first-quarter continuing operations loss of $194 million, or 9 cents a share, compared with a year-ago loss of $218 million. Excluding costs tied to recent job cuts, Motorola lost 5 cents a share, 2 cents better than the Wall Street analyst estimate.
But if the company’s bottom-line performance was slightly better than expected, the rest of its report wasn’t terribly upbeat. Motorola posted sales of $7.45 billion, down 21% from a year ago. Sales in the hard-hit handset unit slumped 39% from a year ago, as Motorola sold 27 million handsets for the quarter.
The drastic decline at that operation prompted Motorola to agree earlier this year to split off its handset and broadband businesses in a new company, as well as to give some board seats to dissident investor Carl Icahn, who has been criticizing Motorola for more than a year and who has called repeatedly for a splitup.
Motorola is also bleeding cash, posting an operating cash outflow of $343 million in the first quarter. The company said it expects to lose 2 to 4 cents a share for the second quarter, excluding costs related to job cuts.
Analysts were looking for a penny-a-share loss. Shares of Motorola, which have lost more than half their value over the past year during the handset unit’s implosion, dropped 35 cents in early trading Thursday to $9.20.
