PARIS โ€” Globalstar Inc. managers said March 28 it will take another couple of months before the company can evaluate the extent of the degradation of its 40-satellite constellation following a technical review by outside experts. But they said two-way telephone service from the constellation has improved since a December realignment of the satellites in orbit.

In a March 28 conference call, officials from Milpitas, Calif.-based Globalstar declined to disclose whether the service-quality drop in December, and a February announcement that the constellation was degrading faster than expected, has had any effect on revenues or subscriber loyalty.

Globalstar Chief Executive Jay Monroe said the companyโ€™s fourth-quarter financial performance, which showed reduced โ€œchurnโ€ or subscriber defections compared to earlier periods, โ€œdemonstrates the utility of the product. For now, weโ€™re very comfortable that our customer base is sticking with us.โ€ For all of 2006, monthly churn averaged 1.1 percent.

Globalstar competitors, including Iridium Satellite and Inmarsat, have said Globalstarโ€™s February announcement of a faster-than-expected decline in the satellitesโ€™ power amplifiers โ€” which permit Globalstarโ€™s S-band antennas to provide two-way communications โ€” would take several months to show up in Globalstarโ€™s subscriber numbers.

Globalstar Chief Financial Officer Ahmad Fuad said during the conference call that Globalstar reconfigured its current low-orbiting constellation of satellites in December to prepare for the addition of eight new satellites, to be launched next May and June.

That reshuffling resulted in โ€œsomewhat degraded servicesโ€ during the period, he said. But Monroe said the maneuver has permitted the company to improve overall service quality and led to โ€œa marked improvement in two-way voice service.โ€

Globalstar President Anthony J. Navarra said an ongoing review by outside experts of the Globalstar satellite fleet should be concluded by mid year. The review will give a clearer assessment of the state of health of the constellation.

Monroe conceded that Globalstarโ€™s February announcement on the satellitesโ€™ degrading performance, which caused the companyโ€™s stock to drop more than 20 percent on the U.S. Nasdaq exchange, โ€œdidnโ€™t make for the most pleasant weeks thereafter. The competition is doing all they can to make hay out of it.โ€

Matthew J. Desch, chief executive of Iridium Satellite LLC, like Globalstar an operator of a global fleet of satellites for two-way communications, said Globalstarโ€™s service outages were known to Iridium well before Globalstarโ€™s February disclosure to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

โ€œWhen they came clean it wasnโ€™t a surprise,โ€ Desch said March 20 at the Mobile Satellite 2007 conference in London. โ€œI want to thank them for that great 8K [the SEC disclosure]. It was a boon to our business. We are seeing customers move. Our first-quarter business is stronger than what we were expecting. But they [Globalstar] have a lot of prepaid, bundled plans so you wonโ€™t see the results until after the second quarter.โ€

Monroe repeated his earlier assertion that the eight new satellites to be added this year, plus Globalstar techniciansโ€™ ability to minimize the effect of the S-band antennasโ€™ degradation, would permit the company to provide uninterrupted service until the second-generation Globalstar satellites are launched beginning in late 2009.

Monroe said Globalstar recently signed a contract valued at $12 million โ€“ about 9 million euros โ€” with Alcatel Alenia Space of France and Italy to upgrade Globalstarโ€™s satellite operating centers in preparation for the second-generation constellation, now under construction at Alcatel Alenia Space.

Globalstarโ€™s contract with Alcatel Alenia Space to design and build 48 new-generation Globalstar satellites is valued at 661 million euros, or $871 million.

Globalstar has said it expects to be able to launch and insure these 48 satellites for a total cost of about $329 million. The company has issued a request for bids to prospective launch-service suppliers at a time of generally rising launch costs. A launch contract with one or more suppliers is expected before the end of the year.

Globalstar reported March 28 that as of Dec. 31 it had 263,000 subscribers worldwide, a 34 percent increase over the same period a year earlier. Annual revenue increased 7 percent to $136.7 million. The companyโ€™s net profit for the year increased 26 percent to $23.6 million.