Service Provider IT (SPIT) News, Analysis, Events, and Research
Sign up for our Free Telecom Weekly Newsletter
Connect with us
  • SPIT Explained

    Service Provider Information Technology, or SPIT, is Light Reading's term for the evolving set of non-traditional telecom (and data networking) technologies that allow for a greater degree of flexibility in the creation, management, delivery, and monetization of new-generation communications services.Learn More
  • SPIT Infographic

    What exactly is Service Provider IT and how does it relate to the communications ecosystem? Here's a graphic that'll give you a snapshot of what we're talking about and appeal to your inherent aesthetic sensibilities
  • SPIT Manifesto

    What is SPIT, why is it 'hot stuff' and how does it relate to the major challenges facing communications service providers today? The updated SPIT Manifesto answers these questions and achieves the near impossible task of giving a slime green splat a happy home.Learn More
  • SPIT Video

    For operators looking to develop, deliver and monetize new services, run their companies more efficiently and provide an overall better experience for their customers, Service Provider IT, or SPIT, is just as important as the network.Learn More

Telecom News Analysis  

BSS Blues for Comverse

Service Provider Information Technology (SPIT) vendor Comverse Inc. (Nasdaq: CNSI) has just published its first quarterly earnings since it was spun off as an independent telecom software supplier from its former parent, Comverse Technology, at the end of October, and they make for a sobering read. (See Independence Day for Comverse and Comverse Plans for Independence.)

For its fiscal quarter ending Oct. 31, the company generated revenues of $185.2 million and posted a net loss of $10.6 million. And although it's a newly independent company, it is able to provide comparative numbers for the same period a year ago, which show how it has suffered a 24 percent dip in sales and slipped from a profit to a loss.

You can see the full financials by clicking here.

Of particular concern is the performance of the BSS software unit, which saw its revenues dip by 44 percent year-on-year to $65.9 million and its gross margin slip to 29.4 percent from 44.9 percent.

CEO Philippe Tartavull, who was appointed earlier this year, has been hiring new blood to help retain Comverse's status as one of the more influential firms in the BSS market, which is in something of a state of flux at the moment. (See Comverse Gets a New CEO, Comverse Appoints Senior Execs, Redknee to Pay $52M for NSN's BSS Unit and What Will Redknee Get From NSN's BSS Biz?)

Tartavull will need a few more quarters under his belt before his impact can be judged, but by the second half of 2013 we should be able to see whether Comverse has the chops to survive and thrive in its new guise.

For more on the BSS sector:

— Ray Le Maistre, International Managing Editor, Light Reading

Newest Comments First       Display in Chronological Order
Be the first to post a comment regarding this story.
The blogs and comments are the opinions only of the writers and do not reflect the views of Light Reading. They are no substitute for your own research and should not be relied upon for trading or any other purpose.

Software-Defined Networking: An Extreme View

SPONSORED BY