Goodbye Moto - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
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Goodbye Moto

Posted Nov 20 2007, 02:32 PM by Robert Walberg
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Like the song says, "some say love is a Razr that leaves your soul to bleed." Well, my soul has bled waiting for Motorola's stock to turn around.  I can't wait any longer -- I'm not Job, after all.

Motorola has been screwing up for so long, it even gets it wrong when it gets it right. Last quarter the company delivered another lousy set of sales and earnings numbers, yet it guided fiscal fourth-quarter earnings to a range of 13 to 14 cents a share -- a few pennies above The Street's consensus.  Normally, guiding estimates higher would be perceived as a good thing, and it was at first as the stock edged higher on the news.  However, in offering up hope for the fourth quarter and the upcoming year, CEO Ed Zander might have won himself a new contract. And that's bad news.  

You see one of the reasons I bought Motorola's stock down at its lows was in anticipation of a new management team.  Typically when a struggling company finally ousts its old CEO in favor of someone new and full of promise, the underlying stock tends to rally. Until recently, Zander's ouster was all but certain. But in light of the company's modest progress off a terrible set of numbers, Zander might just hang around.  Let's face it, he did take all the credit for the Razr so there might be a board member or two who thinks he's on the verge of another one-hit wonder. [readmore]

I don't know if the new CEO would be Motorola's own Greg Brown (current President and COO) or an outsider like former Qwest CEO Dick Notebaert and frankly I don't much care -- it's just at the point where anyone but Zander will do.  Isn't there a young Galvin kid somewhere looking to reestablish the family name? 

Without a change at the top, Motorola's stock will be stuck at the bottom.  It was the one big catalyst we needed for the stock to make a run back into the low $20s.  The Razr2 sure as heck isn't the answer to our turnaround prayers. Granted sales have been a little better than expected, but the price is still too high, the functionality is hit -or-miss and the design has lost its cool factor.  And don't even get me started on the Q.  Motorola's answer to the smart phone craze was put to shame by Apple's iPhone and Research-in-Motion's BlackBerry Pearl.  Motorola can't give the phone away -- though it has tried hard, which helps to explain the company's declining margins.

So after waiting and waiting, I wait no more.  Goodbye Moto.

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Comments

 

ONCE ALL OF OUR MANUFACTURING GOS OVERSEAS WE ALL CAN FLIP BURGER'S  FOR  BIG MACK

OUR WONDERFUL GOVT.  ALLOWS IT AND WE KEEP VOTING THE SAME ONES IN THAT SEND OUR JOBS OVER SEAS

No surprise here, Motorola's once excellent customer service has, in my opinion, gone down to the bottom.  When an owner of a Motorola phone calls for technical assistance and is told abruptly "You are not our customer, _________ (my to-remain-unnamed cellular provider) is our customer." someone needs training.  I would accept the explanation, without the attitude.  Or if I had called with an attitude myself, and kept the CS rep on the phone with a long-winded inquiry, I could understand...  

Oh, well, Moto.  You had a good, long run.  Time to step aside, though.

I think its time for Moto to go-go. They have less than subpar phones that are glitchy and have slow menu interfaces. There are A LOT of other phones out there that can do what Moto does and better.

How can Motorola have such lousy stock when they have just about 100% of the public safety 800 mhz systems in the country and a lock on most other public safety systems as well. Their new canopy system for wireless rocks. Maybe they just have great techs but lousy accountants.

I'm sure there are a lot of capable people who could turn Motoral around, but I can assure you that Richard Notebaert is not one of them.  I spent 33 years in the telecom business and any insider in the business would tell you that Notebaert is a fraud.  He nearly ran Ameritech into the ground and didn't do any better at Quest.

Motorola and WiMAX ... look it up

Funny, I've been considering dumping my Mot stock for a couple of months now. It's gone absolutely nowhere in the past few years.

Motorola should have quit wheen they stopped making vacuum tube radios for cars. They ruined their semiconductor business, and trying to get the latest consumer product hit is just as certain as sell hit songs. How many consumer things did Apple fail with before Iphone. Three versions and more subversions of Windows failed before any money was made, and Word was given away in Office to beat out WordPerfect.

It is funny how all the analyst only see Motorola as a phone company. They do have two other sectors that they are near the top of the market in. Why hasn't one analyst reviewed the whole company and not just 1/3 of it

Mot began its' down hill slide with Chris Galvin at the helm.  He did not have a clue as to what was going on and allowed VP after VP get promoted.  Now the Fish stinks from the head down, so what this once great company needs is an entire new and knowledgeable  management team, one that knows the business, believes in customer satisfaction and a six sigma approach to product design.

Truly Mot comes out with new products, but realize they always seem to be a day late and a dollar too high in price, and the quality leaves a little bit to desire.  Look at Nok, they seem to get it right and their stock reflects the customer satisfaction.

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