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Old 16-04-2008, 04:41 PM
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This member is the original thread starter. iPhone gets cheaper by £100 !!

O2 slashes its prices by £100... looks like the new iPhone with 3G's coming out soon.

O2 slashes price of Apple's iPhone by a third

The £100 cut came amid industry speculation that a 3G version of the device may be released as early as June
Lilly Peel, Jonathan Richards and Christine Buckley

O2, the mobile operator, has announced it is cutting the price of Apple’s 8GB iPhone by more than a third to £169.

The £100 reduction is part of a limited offer until June 1 and comes after T-Mobile’s decision to reduce the price of the handset from £315 to £78 in Germany.

The price cuts and reports that iPhone stock is running low and not being replenished in the United States, France and Britain and have boosted industry speculation that the 3G version of the device could be released later this quarter.

Today Piper Jaffray, the analyst, lent its weight to reports that the release of a new iPhone is imminent, saying it expected Apple to release a 3G version - with an updated exterior - in June.
Related Links

* Apple gears up for June launch of 3G iPhone

* Apple makes iPhone more like BlackBerry

* Google takes swipe at Apple's iPhone

Piper Jaffray said that the price cuts by O2 and T-Mobile indicated that demand for the iPhone in Europe was "light" and that carriers were "draining the channel" ahead of the release of an updated device.

The next generation iPhone would likely have an entry-level price of between $349 and $399, Piper Jaffray said.

In the US, the iPhone initially appeared in two versions - 4GB and 8GB. In February, the company announced a 16GB version of the device for both the US and Europe, and the 4GB model - which was never sold in Europe - was discontinued in September.

O2's announcement came as Carphone Warehouse reported that the TalkTalk operator had had fewer-than-expected broadband connections, and also revealed a substantial spending programme.

Stock in Europe’s biggest independent mobile retailer tumbled to 228p, its lowest point since December 2005, before closing at 231p, an overall drop of 13.3 per cent or 35½p.

Charles Dunstone admitted that the company was experiencing “a slower consumer environment”. However, he added that the business was more robust than other areas of retail. “We are reaffirming guidance for the year just ended and the year ahead, which not too many retailers are able to do in the current environment,” he said.

In the broadband sector, Carphone added 109,000 customers in the last quarter, falling below analyst expectations of 128,000, to give a total of 2.7 million.

This year Carphone Warehouse expects to add another 400,000 broadband customers, with the aim of having 3.5 million by March 2010.

Mobile connection sales rose 12 per cent – to a total of 2.7 million – compared with a 19 per cent increase the same time a year ago.

Higher-value contract connections rose only 9 per cent to 1.1 million, falling 2 per cent below analysts’ predictions and fuelling fears that consumers are becoming less likely to splash out on expensive mobile phone plans. Mr Dunstone said that voice subscription growth was flat but that demand “for BlackBerrys and smart phones like the iPhone is good but not so much for flash voice phones”.

This year Carphone Warehouse plans 120 net new store openings and 200 resites and big refits. The store expansion and refit plan will contribute £45 million towards a substantial capital expenditure programme. Carphone Warehouse will also spend £85 million on its telecoms network infrastructure, £70 million on IT development and £20 million on other projects.

Overall, Carphone Warehouse said that profits remained on course for between £215 million and £220 million for the year ending March, falling slightly short of analysts’ expectations of between £220 million and £225 million.

Mr Dunstone hopes that his offers of free or subsidised laptops will beat the consumer slowdown and hopes to bring prices down to compete with high-end mobile phones. He said: “I think we have enough good things going on within our market place that can still drive connections.”
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