By Kenneth Li

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Sirius Satellite Radio Inc. (SIRI.O: Quote, Profile,
Research) on Thursday posted stronger second quarter subscriber additions
than larger rival XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc. (XMSR.O: Quote, Profile,
Research), sending Sirius' shares up 4 percent.

Sirius, boosted by an exclusive deal with shock jock radio personality
Howard Stern, said it added about 600,640 net new subscribers in the
quarter, a 64 percent growth from the same period last year. It ended the
quarter with 4.7 million subscribers, still short of XM's nearly 7 million
subscribers.

XM said it added 398,000 net new subscribers, a 38 percent drop in net
subscriber growth compared to last year's period curbed by new product
availability. XM shares were flat in Nasdaq trade after falling as much as 5
percent before the market opened. 

Oppenheimer and Co. analyst Thomas Eagan said Sirius' business continued to
benefit from the "Howard Stern-effect", with fans of the ribald talk show
host flocking to the No. 2 satellite radio service.

On the other hand, XM's growth has been hurt by a delay in shipment of its
new handheld digital music players with built-in satellite receivers.

But Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Craig Moffett offered a more complicated
answer that explained XM's volatile stock price on Thursday morning.

He said the difference in net new subscriber growth was actually an "optical
illusion" due to the difference in the sheer size of the two satellite radio
operators.

With churn, or the rate of losing subscribers at an industry average of
about 2.5 percent, Moffett said XM would naturally lose more customers every
quarter since it has a larger subscriber base.

"By virtue of its smaller size, Sirius loses fewer customers ... each
quarter," he said. "As a result, its share of net additions will always be
higher than its share of gross additions, at least until it 'catches up' to
XM in sheer size."

To make up the difference, "XM has to grow more aggressively," Oppenheimer's
Eagan said.

He said the gap between the number of net new subscribers each company added
was approximately equal to their difference in estimated churn for the
quarter.

The two companies, which are expected to post net losses for the foreseeable
future, are also hamstrung by high marketing and subscriber acquisition
costs, analysts have said. 


Sirius shares rose 13 cents, or 3 percent, to $4.61; XM shares lost 5 cents,
or less than 1 percent, to $14.44 on the Nasdaq in late morning trading.

Gregory S. Williams
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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