Date: December 20, 1999 Section: Location: Cranbury Title: The Story Behind the Shooting Star Author: By Chris Dupin Deck: Officials at Ariel finally speak out about their business and its wild ride on Wall Street. Story:
On the Saturday after Thanksgiving, even though he was getting married later in the day, John Loprete was at his office. As vice president of finance for Ariel, he was finishing paperwork on thousands of stock options that had been exercised by company employees the prior day. Ariel is a small business with 90 employees, 75 of whom work at its headquarters in Cranbury. Loprete is the person who has to process employee options. ãHe was here the morning of his wedding doing this. I had to call him and kick him out of the building to go get married,à recalls Dennis Schneider, senior vice president at Ariel. At the end of 1998, Ariel had about 2.7 million stock options outstanding, and while senior management did not change their holdings, many other workers did. ãLots of employees became happier as a result of their ownership in the company,à says Schneider. On Tuesday, November 22, the companyås stock closed at $3.56. On Wednesday, the company put out a press release about how a new modem card it has developed for Internet service providers (ISPs) had received certifications from various regulatory bodies. The card, which Ariel hopes to begin delivering in the first quarter of next year, represents a new direction for the company. Schneider says certification is an important milestone for a small company that wants to convince potential buyers that its product is not just hype or ãvaporware.à The news was featured in reports on CNBC, Ariel shares caught the fancy of investors and skyrocketed to a high of $13.31, closing at $10.75. But that was just the start of the buffeting Arielås stock was to take. The market was closed Thanksgiving, but Friday the stock shot to a high of $57 before closing at $37. On Friday, the company issued a statement saying it had ãno pending announcements that explain this level of activity.à Schneider said the statement went out without prompting from Nasdaq, where its stock is listed, though he says it is ãsafe to assumeà his company subsequently talked to the exchange. ãWe wanted people to know there was not some announcement about to hit the street that would justify all of that--if anything could justify all of that.à The following week Arielås stock fell back into the low teens where it has traded since, sometimes falling into single digits. It closed last Friday at $9. To market and chat-room watchers like Floyd Schneider, publisher of the The Truthseeker Report in Newton, the run-up had the look of a classic ãpump and dumpà where investors bid up a stock and then short it. He claims several news organizations incorrectly reported Arielås product was ãrelated to wireless communications, which appeared to stimulate momentum buying.à And a mention in the release that Arielås product could run on the Linux operating system as well as Windows NT may have fueled the mania. ãPreholiday/preweekend trading sessions are notorious for market manipulations,à he says, citing a company called Books-a-Million, whose shares soared from $4 to $48 around Thanksgiving 1998. Charles Robins, a managing director at Pennsylvania Merchants Group in Philadelphia, which helped arrange secondary financing for Ariel several years ago, notes there are ãa lot Internet day traders out there who listen to, for example, CNBC, or listen to chat boards. There is almost an instant magnification effect going on as people pick up on various snapshot, soundbite news points and then react and each one feeds on the other, and I think that is what happened to Ariel,à he explains. CNBC commentators, he adds, have been ãelevated to the same kind of microscrutiny that Alan Greenspan has.à As for Ariel, he says its value is probably somewhere between those extremes of $57 and $3. Ariel was co-founded 17 years ago by chairman Anthony Angello as an audio company, but has evolved over the years. Early on, for example, it made a gizmo that delayed the arrival of sound to speakers, so that listeners in the rear of a large rock concert would hear music from the stage and speakers simultaneously. From audio the company moved into digital signal processing and making tools engineers use for products with the DSP microchips that are at the hearts of devices like modems and cell phones.
Arielås expertise in this area has allowed it to capture high-profile contracts such as developing the digital microphone in Steve Jobså Next computer and making products for the military. ãWe donåt know exactly the application, but every time Electric Boat launches a nuclear submarine, they buy four boards from us,à says Schneider. In the first nine months of the year, Ariel had sales of about $8.7 million, about 90% of which was the result of technical products it has supplied as an original equipment manufacturer. That compares with $13.6 million the prior year when it had a large contract from Compaq to supply modem boards for ãenterpriseà applications, where companies maintain computer networks that can be dialed up directly. As many companies now use the Internet for such communications, that business dried up. Important contracts today include sales of modem boards used by Motorola in Nextel base stations, and supplying boards for an Internet service AT&T Wireless is creating for 2,200 airplanes on which it provides wireless telephone service. In January 1999, a new management team led by CEO Jay H. Atlas, a former Digital Equipment executive and investment banker, came on board. The directors felt the company needed new talent after they began focusing on a new business, selling remote access concentrators to Internet service providers (ISPs) for use at their so-called points of presence. These facilities allow users to dial into the Internet with a local phone call. Ariel makes expansion cards that allow computers to support up to 96 telephone calls, which are then routed over trunk lines to and from the Internet service providerås main facility or network operations center. According to Schneider, roughly a third of an ISPås operating expense comes from shuttling data over these trunk lines. Instead of buying custom-built concentrators, Ariel says ISPs can save money using its modem cards and software in plain vanilla personal computers that run a standard operating system like Windows NT or Linux. Schneider believes personal computers will replace custom made concentrators just as they have eradicated custom-built word processors. Ariel says it can provide an ISP with a port into the Internet for about half of what competitors such as Lucent Technologies and Cisco charge for custom built equipment. Because it uses a computer instead of a dumb box, ISPs can reduce the amount of traffic moving over their trunk lines and save money. Ariel is targeting smaller ISPs as customers. After the way Arielås stock bounced, Schneider says ãI now know how a beach ball at a rock concert feels. As a little company we do not have the resources to respond to all the inquiries that we are getting. There is no way that a company that had less than 10 million shares available to trade--far less--should have, could expect, or plan for a week in which 150 million shares were traded. The entire ownership of the company changed hands 15 times.à
Chris Dupin Associate Editor Business News New Jersey 104 Church Street New Brunswick, NJ 08901 Phone: 732-246-5726 Fax: 732-249-8886 email:cdupin@njbiz.com |