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Sirius Earnings Improvements Don't Help Customer Retention, Other Problems

By Erik Sherman | Nov 6, 2009

Sirius XM (SIRI) CEO Mel Karmazin has again tried to strike an upbeat tone at the company’s latest earnings announcement. But, again, the business fundamentals have to make you wonder if the company has a viable long-term future.

Good news at Sirius XM (SIRI) was tempered by a hard dose of reality on Nov. 5. Sure, the top satellite-radio provider added subscribers, increased revenue, and narrowed losses in the third quarter. At the same time, Sirius is girding for slower growth than in the past, and analysts remain concerned about the company’s ability to control costs.

Start with customers. It’s hard to have a business without one, and although the number of subscribers between the second and third quarters did go up, the trend (red line) is still down, as the graph below shows.

Certainly there was a jump, but if you consider that it took place during the same time as the cash for clunkers government program to aid auto sales, and that automobiles are a major source of acquiring customers, it’s not unreasonable to assume that much of the improvement might have been artificially pumped up. In fact, as the filed 10-Q notes, the decrease in subscribers in the third quarter between 2008 and 2009 was “principally the result of 671,341 fewer paid promotional trials due to the decline in North American auto sales.” Without cash for clunkers, losing even more would have been likely, and you have to wonder whether there would have been any increase at all.

Churn is up year-over-year as well, with the first nine months of 2009 showing 2.1 percent, versus 1.7 percent in 2009. Furthermore, conversion rates for trials into paid subscriptions are down over the first nine months from 49.1 percent in 2008 to 45.3 percent in 2009. So the company is losing customers at a faster rate and is converting fewer prospects into become paid customers.

If you look at the first nine months, again, year-over-year subscribers have gone down by 488,126. And although average revenue per user (ARPU) is up over the nine months from $10.33 a month to $10.42 a month, that isn’t a reason to rejoice. The increase seems likely due to Sirius XM increasing its rates, not from expanded use of the service. As the subscribers trend down, costs had better as well.

And then there is the ongoing issue over share price and the need to bring it up to keep the stock listed. The threshold is a dollar a share. The current Sirius price as of Friday afternoon is just a hair over 63 cents. This is not good news, no matter how the management team would like to paint it.

Image via Flickr user jack_spellingbacon, CC 2.0.

Erik Sherman is a freelance journalist whose work has appeared in Newsweek, the New York Times Magazine, Technology Review, the Financial Times, Chief Executive, and other publications. Follow him on Twitter.

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  •  
    1

    ppavlock

    11/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Sirius Earnings Improvements Don't Help Customer Retention, Other Problems

    Your posting about SIRI is all wrong. SIRI showed a profit because the company has came along way. To many writers like yourself only want to post negitive comments about SIRI. All of these type postings will stop in the near future and you will have to find another company to write negitive about!

  •  
    2

    THETRUTHBETOLD

    11/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Sirius Earnings Improvements Don't Help Customer Retention, Other Problems

    YES SIRIUS IS CONVERTING LESS CUSTOMERS BUT IT WOULD BE NICE IF YOU TOLD EVERYONE THAT SIRIUS PENETRATION INTO NEW CARS SALES HAS INCREASED FAR GREATER THAN THE LOSS OF CONVERSION ON A PERCENTAGE BASIS. GOING FORWARD AS THE NEW CAR SALES INCREASE, AS EVERYONE FEELS IT WILL SIRIUS/XM WILL BE GETTING A GREATER SHARE OF THERE PRUDUCT IN CARS THEREFORE GETTING GREATER REVENUES FROM NEW CARS SALES THAN IN YEARS PAST.
    LET'S TALK USED CARS. NEVER HAS SIRIUS GONE AFTER USED CARS SALES AS THEY HAVE IN THE LAST FEW MONTHS. NO EXPENSE TO GIVE A CUSTMER A 3 MONTH TRIAL OF THERE SERVICE WITH THE POTENIAL OF THEM CONVERTING TO A PAYING CUSTOMER. THIS MIGHT BE THE BIGGEST REVENUE GROWTH THAT SIRIUS HAS THAT IS COMPLETELY BEING OVERLOOKED.

  •  
    3

    ErikSherman

    11/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Sirius Earnings Improvements Don't Help Customer Retention, Other Problems

    I'm guessing two investors who don't like the idea of having stock under $1 a share.

  •  
    4

    mjp57

    11/09/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Sirius Earnings Improvements Don't Help Customer Retention, Other Problems

    If that's the best reply that you can come up with Erik then that tells me that you can't refute what the other posters had to say. But I nderstand that you own SIRI puts so of course you're hoping the stock price drops. Good luck buddy.

  •  
    5

    ErikSherman

    11/09/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Sirius Earnings Improvements Don't Help Customer Retention, Other Problems

    Oh, please - I don't invest in any company I write about. The numbers and trends on customers are clear - and it's clear that, as often happens on this blog, investors get terribly upset that someone might say something that could somehow affect the stock price. Sorry, but unless the company finds a way to actually grow, then penetration into new cars simply doesn't matter. Why? Because it's clearly not translating into growth over time, and retention is going down.

    And given that I've been a subscriber to XM for years, it's not as if I'm hoping that the company disappears. But I'm also not going to wear blinders, even if you find them comfortable.

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