Trend scout rides the light with 'son of Uniphase' Money manager Phil Lamoreaux hit it big in the modern charge of the light brigade by betting early on JDS Uniphase. Now, he sees a sparkling future for optical-component maker New Focus.
By Jon D. Markman
Phil Lamoreaux prides himself on getting into big trends early. He first bought a stake in fiber-optic components maker JDS Uniphase (JDSU, news, msgs) for his hedge fund seven years ago. He paid the split-adjusted equivalent of 25 cents a share, then held on as the stock rose steadily to the point where JDSU is now the 53rd largest company in the world measured by market capitalization.
Based in the picturesque marina town of Sausalito, Calif., Lamoreaux largely passed on Internet content stocks over the past few years because he couldn’t understand their business plans. But he hasn’t had any trouble putting his money to work. Almost all has gone into a few obscure optical-networking equipment firms that he believes have the management, product mix, funding and production capacity to become his next 500-bagger. “You have to have some money in front of a megatrend,” he says.
In my first column on how pioneering money managers make momentum trends happen (“Trend scouts: Finding the next stocks to sizzle“), I noted that taking advantage of growth tsunamis requires both patience and conviction. Lamoreaux has shown both with his latest top pick in the space -- an optical components maker called New Focus (NUFO, news, msgs). But before getting specific, let’s zoom out for his big view.
Bigger than PCs or wireless Lamoreaux believes that neither the public nor the major institutional investors have yet fully grasped how immensely, insanely, unbelievably huge the optical-networking business is going to become. In his view, we’re only about five years into an industry that will ultimately be much bigger than PCs or wireless; an industry where it’s still the investment equivalent of 1986, when people already knew a few big names like Intel (INTC, news, msgs) and Microsoft (MSFT, news, msgs), but had not yet heard of tiny Dell Computer (DELL, news, msgs) or Cisco Systems (CSCO, news, msgs). “Great wealth was made in those businesses -- but in time, the fortunes in optical networking will swallow them whole,” he says.
Crazy talk? Not to Robert M. MacLellan, director of business analysis at telecom consultancy RHK Technology in Toronto. He believes the sudden emergence of optical-networking companies has caught investors by surprise because, five years ago, few expected that the average person would get access to the Internet and make it a mass medium in record time. As a result, major telephone carriers have been forced to amp up their capital expenditures for high-end networking gear at light speed --yanking money away from voice-networking budgets and spending every spare billion on fiber and optical circuitry that carries data faster, more reliably and at a lower cost than competitors.
“Just do the math,” says MacLellan. In 1999, he notes, Internet traffic amounted to 350,000 terabytes (trillion bytes) a month. By the end of 2003, with more people worldwide coming online and everyone finding vastly more compelling, interactive content at vastly faster speeds, he expects traffic to grow by 500 to 1,000 times, to at least 16 million terabytes per month. “If that sounds too high, just consider that the one thing we’ve consistently underforecast is bandwidth demand,” he says.
MacLellan says that new carriers like Global Crossing (GBLX, news, msgs) and Qwest (Q, news, msgs) have spent the last couple of years digging holes in the ground and buying fiber. Now they’re taking the same funds that were once aimed at paying for backhoes – called “poles and holes” in the biz -- and are instead purchasing terminal equipment from new systems vendors like Corvis (CORV, news, msgs), Avici Systems (AVCI, news, msgs) and privately held Tellium. Likewise, incumbent carriers like WorldCom (WCOM, news, msgs) and AT&T (T, news, msgs) are reapportioning the capital expenditures that they formerly aimed at electronic voice-switching equipment toward buying optical data-switching equipment. This explains why optical sales can rise even as overall spending for capital equipment flattens or slows. Today, optics account for 10% of telecom capital expenditures, but are expected to climb to 50% in four to five years, according to a recent Merrill Lynch analysis.
Focus on New Focus Enter companies like New Focus, which Lamoreaux calls “son of Uniphase.” Its valuation traces the recent history of risk capital in Silicon Valley. In 1998, you could have bought a 10% stake in the firm for $4.5 million. A year later, much smaller stakes were sold for $20 million and $30 million. The firm went public at $20 a share on May 18 this year, giving it a $1.1 billion market cap, then shot to $165 in the euphoria of June. Now it's settled back to around $85 – a price Lamoreaux (lead investor in that first round, at $1 a share) still considers a bargain. “I don’t see why it shouldn’t go up 10 times from here over the next half a decade,” he says.
The reason: management and breadth of innovative products. He calls the firms’ executives “superb,” and who’s going to argue? The founder and chairman is Milton Chang, a physicist who was a seed investor in Uniphase and built another optical firm, Newport (NEWP, news, msgs), which has seen its stock rise 2,950% in the past year. “Milton knows all the deans of all the top engineering and physics schools and gets the pick of the litter of the new PhDs,” Lamoreaux says..
Based in Santa Clara, Calif., the company started by inventing advanced “active” components, such as tunable lasers, and has since moved into “passive” components as well. One of its top products in that category is something called a polarization beam combiner, which solves a key problem for customers like Corvis by quadrupling the capacity of laser beams to travel long distances on less power.
Sales in the most recent quarter were $14.5 million, and chief executive Ken Westrick said that he has so far not seen any slowdown in the company's growth this quarter. He affirmed he's comfortable with analyst forecasts for growth north of 100% for at least the next two years. “Our current customers are increasing orders of current products, and we are seeing them in the process of qualifying additional new products; we anticipate extremely strong growth for the foreseeable future,” he said. “You can’t underestimate the explosive demand for bandwidth -- it’s like an addiction. As you give people more, they want more. I think we are years away from saturation.”
Feeding that addiction with a broadening mix of components and subsystems that make beams of photons bear more data and travel farther, he said the firm expects to use a low-cost, high-volume strategy to be profitable in the first half of 2002. Until then, it has $440 million from a secondary offering in August with which to rapidly expand production capacity both in California and China.
Investment risks are about execution, component constraints, the capital markets’ fickle affections and the extreme difficulty of hiring qualified personnel to build the stuff properly at high speed. MacLellan, the telecom analyst, noted that the manufacturing of components “is hard -- it’s manually intensive, it’s more of a craft business today than anything else, and at some vendors the actual manufacturing personnel are Ph.D.s.”
Those factors, plus a high valuation in traditional terms, make New Focus a risky bet today. But after the current equity conflagration runs its course -- and after the firm gets a chance to show its execution capabilities over the next couple of quarters -- it seems that these shares might well come to deserve a core position in growth investors’ portfolios. Conrad Leifur, technology analyst at U.S. Bancorp Piper Jaffray, said he believes the company could be clocking $1 billion in revenue annually by 2004, with pretax net margins similar to JDS Uniphase and in the 30% range. His 12-month target for the stock is $160.
Fine print To learn more about New Focus and its wave-division multiplexing products, visit its Web site. Budding entrepreneurs should check the Founder’s Corner page, where Chang has posted a 12-part article on starting and managing your own company....A new investment-banking firm, Epoch Partners, has been publishing excellent research reports online for the public at its Web site. Read the one on New Focus (requires free registration)....To learn more about the fastest-growing sectors of telecommunications, check out reports from MacLellan’s firm at the RHK Web site....Another place to keep up on developments in the industry is Network World Fusion, a news and community site for carriers and suppliers....And don’t forget the best of all: Lightreading.com.http://moneycentral.msn.com/articles/invest/models/5768.asp |