NEW YORK – First-quarter earnings at Qwest Communications International Inc. rose 37 percent, as the phone company was helped by cost-cutting and strong results from its business services unit.
Denver-based Qwest said Wednesday its net income was $206 million, or 12 cents per share, for the first three months of the year. That rose from $150 million, or 8 cents per share, a year ago.
Revenue fell 7 percent from a year ago to $3.2 billion, as consumers continued to cancel landline service. Qwest has also stopped selling wireless service under its own brand. Excluding that change, revenue fell 5 percent from a year ago. Qwest is now reselling Verizon Wireless service, which doesn’t add to its revenue in the same way.
Thomson Reuters says analysts had been expecting earnings of 8 cents per share on $3.2 billion in revenue.
Qwest shares rose 26 cents, or 7.3 percent, to $3.83 in premarket trading after the release of the results.
Cost-cutting at the company has mainly been in the form of job cuts: Qwest has slashed 10 percent of its work force since last year, ending the quarter with 32,800 employees.
Qwest’s local-phone service business, which serves Arizona and parts of 13 other states, had revenue of $1.3 billion, a decline of 11 percent from a year ago. It added 42,000 broadband customers but lost 259,000 phone lines.
Business services were the bright spot for the company, despite a challenging market because of the economy. Revenue rose 3 percent to $1 billion.
Qwest’s long-haul business, which carries calls and Internet traffic across the country, saw its revenue decline 11 percent to $752 million, partly due to lower prices.
Qwest said it was sticking to its 2009 projections, still expecting earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization to be $4.2 billion to $4.4 billion this year. It made the same projection three months ago.