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Earnings: Virgin Mobile Profit Jumps On Popularity Of New Calling Plans

image Virgin Mobile USA (NYSE: VM) posted a first quarter net income of $19.1 million, or 19 cents a share, a surge of 301 percent from its earnings of $4.7 million a year earlier, as the MVNO’s introduction of new calling plans took off with customers. Excluding items, net income was 24 cents a share. Revenue was up 2 percent to $337.3 million, while net service revenue was up 4 percent at $318.1 million.

Last month, Virgin cut the price of its unlimited voice plan to $49.99 to match competitors. It also rolled out two other plans, “Texter’s Delight” and “Pink Slip Protection,” which gives subscribers 3 months free if they lose their job. Virgin Mobile USA CEO Dan Schulman said in statement, “These new offers have significantly increased our number of high-quality gross additions, with initial results showing the percentage of customers signing on for unlimited plans growing more than 5 times.”

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Gross customers additions: Virgin Mobile USA added 630,259, compared to gross customer additions of 795,575 in the first quarter of 2008. The MVNO admitted that rival offerings had hit the number of net additions in Q1, as well as its new strategy for going after “high lifetime value customers.” It also reported that its new plans were doing well, accounting for 55 percent of Virgin Mobile USA’s gross adds. As of March 31, 2009, the MVNO had approximately 5.2 million customers.

Average revenue per user flat: ARPU for Q1 was $20.08, compared to $20.14 in the first quarter of 2008, and a decrease of 5 percent from $21.14 in the fourth quarter of 2008. Virgin blamed the sequential decline on texting replacing voice calls. Messaging traffic grew by 26 percent quarter-on-quarter in Q1. Data now accounts for 22 percent of total net service revenue, compared to 20 percent in the fourth quarter of 2008.

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May 11, 2009 8:29 AM ET
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  • Don Shula

    This is some crappy numbers if I have to say.  Yes, they have positive outlook, but they still have no answer for Boost.  They have $50 unlimited everything and Virgin has $50 unlimited talk.  All the high value high data users are flocking to Boost.  I don't know what their answer is for Boost.  Boost is also adding a full QWERTY keyboard (i465 -Boost Mobile Shuttle) which will compete head on with the X-TC phone and will cause huge disruptions in Virgin's texting business. 

    Virgin Mobile still suffers from lack of distribution, Boost is opening 50 new Boost exclusive stores, while Virgin has now shut down their exclusive mall program with Celluphone.  If they are to improve numbers they will need to add more third party distribution to survive.

  • Scott

    This is all well and good… but the future looks pretty bleak.  The numbers than nobody seems to pay attention to are the following:
    -Net additions… (-133K).  They lost over 100K subs last quarter and the real hammer will fall this quarter when the holiday gross additions will fall off (remember they count subs active for 150 days after their last top-up)
    -Operating cost (down approx 50%) - All projects on hold, no capital expenditures, means future prod/svc are non-existent.

    They reported solid numbers no doubt… but they are still coasting from past success… the fuel for growth for VM is running out.

  • also rolled out two other plans, "Texter's Delight" and "Pink Slip ... Virgin Mobile USA CEO Dan Schulman said in statement,Virgin Mobile USA (NYSE: VM) posted a first quarter net income of $19.1 million, or 19 cents a share

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