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Altice USA stock sinks after tough third quarter earnings

Key Points
  • Altice USA's shares temporarily stopped trading on Thursday after a volatile morning that saw the stock sink more than 20%.
  • The drop comes after Altice USA reported weaker than expected earnings on Wednesday after the bell.
  • The cable provider reported lower profit and revenue as the company lost broadband subscribers and continued to spend significantly on its fiber rollout.

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Igor Golovniov | Lightrocket | Getty Images

Altice USA's shares fell 29% Thursday, after the company posted a weak earnings report.

The company, which provides broadband, cable-TV, wireless and phone services, saw its shares sink following Wednesday's earnings report that net income and revenue fell as Altice lost subscribers and continued to spend significantly on the rollout of its fiber network.

Altice's net income for the third quarter fell to $85 million from about $267 million compared to the same period last year. Earnings per share on a diluted basis fell to 19 cents from 58 cents last year.

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The company's revenue fell 7% to $2.39 billion, due to the decline in residential and business services customers. Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization fell 18% to $954.4 million compared with the prior year.

An Altice representative said the company doesn't comment on stock moves. The company's shares are down more than 72% this year, closing Thursday at $4.44.

Cable providers saw big gains in broadband subscribers during the early days of the pandemic, when lockdowns forced many to work and take classes from home. But in recent quarters, subscriber additions have significantly fallen off for the industry as competition from other providers has risen and there's been a low rate of moving activity.

Altice said it lost 43,000 broadband customers during the quarter, as well as 82,000 cable-TV subscribers.

On top of this, Altice has been spending heftily to deploy a fiber network for its broadband customers. The company said Wednesday it would spend between $1.7 billion and $1.8 billion in capital expenses in the 2022 fiscal year.

"While we are operating in a very competitive environment and are starting to see some macroeconomic pressures across our business, we are confident that we have the right strategy to return to sustainable growth," outgoing CEO Dexter Goei said in the earnings release Wednesday.