Journalism
Review
Earnings: Eye of the Beholder?
Verizon coverage
shows corpoate earnings are still a trap for business reporters. The
winner: IBD
By
Elinore
Longobardi
Tue 27 Nov 2007
11:01 AM
After the tech crash earlier this decade, the business press took some
well-justified lumps for accepting corporate spin instead of thoroughly
scrubbing earnings numbers.
Tech
companies wanted reporters and stock analysts to emphasize certain numbers
and ignore others—to look at revenue if there was no net income; Web site
visits or something else if there was no revenue; and so on. Corporate
spin won, and we saw what happened. Who remembers
Webvan?
Today, a sobered and more sophisticated business press looks harder at
quarterly earnings, the bricks and mortar of all business reporting.
But,
the job is still thankless, tedious, and, unfortunately, easy to get
exactly wrong.
Take
Verizon’s latest quarter.
How,
you might ask, are Verizon’s cell phone and broadband businesses doing? A
reasonable question. Let’s try to answer it.
The
New York Times
published a piece October 30, under the headline “Cellphone Growth Strong
at Verizon.” It starts out:
Verizon Communications reported better-than-expected third-quarter
profit yesterday, driven by strong wireless subscriber growth….
The
Wall Street Journal
agrees:
Verizon Wireless added 1.6 million net new subscribers for the quarter,
on pace with the first two quarters of the year.
Okay, so Verizon Wireless is doing well. The AP and The Financial Times
basically agree.
But
Investor’s Business Daily says the opposite. An October 30 piece
that aired on CNNMoney.com says:
Verizon Communications’ third-quarter earnings beat estimates by a
penny, as FIOS TV gained, but broadband and wireless subscriber
growth slowed. [The Audit’s emphasis]
Wait
a minute. Is wireless subscriber growth “strong” or has it “slowed?” Who’s
right? It’s Investor’s Business Daily.
Here’s why:
The
Times piece (and the others that frame the wireless numbers in
Verizon’s favor) simply looks at the number of new subscribers added in
the third quarter: 1.6 million, bringing the total to 63.7 million.
But
the IBD examines the numbers from two additional angles and sees
big problems:
The carrier added 1.65 million new customers in the quarter, which is
14% fewer than it added in third-quarter 2006.
IDB
here is looking not only at the raw number of new subscribers, but at the
rate at which new subscribers are signing up—in a year-over-year
comparison. This is important information.
In
the third quarter of 2006, Verizon added 1.9 million new subscribers. It
was growing faster then. That’s why IBD uses the “14% fewer”
figure.
And,
looking at the second quarter of this year, Verizon added only 1.3
million, as opposed to 1.8 million in the 2006 second quarter.
In
the fourth quarter of 2006, the company added 2.3 million. That is the
benchmark for the current quarter. We’ll see how the company does this
Christmas.
So
the Journal erred in looking at quarter-to-quarter subscription
rates. In fact, Verizon’s wireless growth rate has been down all year if
one is looking at the number of new subscribers compared to the
corresponding quarter a year earlier, which is how the company lists the
figures.
A
general rule: it’s better to look year-over-year, to eliminate seasonal
fluctuations, rather than quarter-to-quarter, unless there’s a compelling
reason to do so. Also, looking at acceleration and deceleration of growth
can be revealing and useful to readers.
In
search of some earnings clarity, we put in a call to Jonathan Weil. He was
The Wall Street Journal’s accounting reporter from late 2000 until
early 2006 and is now a columnist for Bloomberg News. Weil is reluctant to
offer any hard-and-fast rules, noting that the choice on what numbers to
use “really is a judgment call.” But he offers some observations and
guidelines.
A
reporter looking to track a company’s performance will generally compare
present earnings to those of a year earlier, Weil says. On the other hand,
if a business is fast growing, “sequential growth might be more
important.” The same is true of a business that experiences a decline
after a long period of growth.
And
here’s a good rule: “You should never rely on the tone of the company’s
press release to set the tone of the story,” Weil says. Unless, that is, a
reporter thinks the company is trying to mislead the public with
“egregious” spin, in which case, says Weil, that slant is a story in
itself.
So a
good earnings article requires an informed, skeptical reporter to make
that “judgment call.” And these days, there is good news on the
earnings-reporting front. Some reporters still accept a company line, says
Weil, but now the press isn’t “falling for it institutionally.”
Weil
says reporters learned from the 2000-2001 tech bubble-burst, and points to
recent coverage of General Motors Corp.’s quarterly earnings, in which
Bloomberg, the Journal, the Times, and others got an
important story right. Weil says that while GM encouraged reporters to
disregard a loss, calling it a “special non-cash charge,” the news outlets
properly emphasized the charge’s dire implications for the company’s
financial condition.
But
still, reader beware.
Weil
pointed to coverage of News Corp.’s most recent quarterly earnings, which
produced dueling headlines: “News Corporation Profits Rise,” according to
Reuters via The New York Times ; “News Corp. Posts Lower Profit,”
according to the Journal.
Who’s right?
The
Journal, Weil says, by looking at net income, rather than at other
metrics emphasized by News Corp.