SDUnion. Globalstar predicts shining future in wireless. Qualcomm-backed firm pursues success where 2 rivals failed
By Mike Drummond UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
September 23, 1999
NEW ORLEANS -- If executives at Globalstar are worried, they aren't showing it. At least they aren't showing it here at the Personal Communications Showcase '99 trade show, where 600 wireless companies and 20,000 attendees from around the world have converged to keep atop one of the planet's fastest-changing industries.
Officials with Qualcomm-backed Globalstar might be forgiven a bit of hand-wringing. Theirs is, after all, the only worldwide satellite phone system left standing, after the spectacular financial flameouts earlier this year of two erstwhile competitors -- Iridium and ICO Global Communications.
But Tony Navarra, president of San Jose-based Globalstar, said yesterday that the failure of others has not added pressure on his company to survive, let alone make a profit.
"We don't feel any more or less pressure to deliver low-earth-orbit satellite phone service," Navarra said.
In fact, Navarra said, the company launched four satellites just yesterday morning, bringing the number of Globalstar's orbiting birds to 40.
Using those satellites, Globalstar seeks to deploy its go-anywhere mobile phones in areas where traditional and mobile phone networks don't reach -- the outskirts of Rio de Janerio, for instance, or the vast regions of China and those "dead spots" in the big, square states of America. Company officials say about 95 percent of the planet has no mobile phone networks, representing a lucrative chunk of the risky $65.9 billion satellite communications market. Commercial Globalstar service is expected to begin in nine countries within the next two months.
Globalstar officials say they will succeed where pioneering company Iridium failed because their technology is superior and less expensive, and their targeted market is more realistic -- the farmer, the oil driller, the coastal mariner and others deployed outside the ring of traditional telecommunications.
Iridium, by contrast, initially targeted the mobile business traveler in the hopes that corporate road warriors would buy into the concept of a "world phone."
San Diego-based Qualcomm, Sweden's Ericsson and Italian manufacturer Telital are building Globalstar phones, expected to retail for about $1,500. A minute of talk time is expected to cost about $1.50 in the United States. Bankrupt Iridium originally planned to charge about $3,000 per phone and up to $8 a minute for a call.
Iridium also launched a worldwide marketing blitz reportedly costing $180 million before the system was fully functional, angering would-be customers with dropped calls and fuzzy reception.
David Kestenbaum, analyst with ING Barings, said Motorola-backed Iridium priced itself "way out of sync with the market," limiting total subscribers to about 20,000, when it needed more than 500,000 to meet financial obligations.
"We thought all along Iridium would fail," Kestenbaum said. "Iridium probably likely will vanish."
Gerald Beckwith, president of Qualcomm's wireless systems, readily agreed.
"We could never figure out (Iridium's) business plan," Beckwith said, adding that Iridium's tailspin dragged down ICO when skittish investors proved reluctant to deliver funding.
Iridium sounds as though it has some fight left in it, however. Though it is in bankruptcy, the company continues to offer services for existing customers and recently dropped prices to compete with Globalstar.
"Iridium can make it; it's got great technology that's working today," Raymond J. Leopold, one of the architects of the Iridium system, told The New York Times recently. "There are too many people who put too much money into it to walk away. You can't just go out and pawn a constellation of 66 satellites."
Globalstar officials gleefully noted that their company is sponsoring the Canadian version of the Iditarod dog sled race this year -- a race Iridium sponsored last year. Still, Globalstar officials are not dancing on the graves of their competitors.
Mike Kerr, vice president and general manager of Globalstar USA, a member of the Vodafone AirTouch group, said the company is taking a more cautious approach to marketing, targeting advertising in trade journals and other niche or vertical markets.
Moreover, with the absence of competition, it's hard for analysts to gauge the performance of the market, Beckwith said, adding that a rival "keeps my pencil sharp."
Globalstar will need about 500,000 subscribers to break even. Company officials expect to have 1 million customers by the end of next year.
Kestenbaum, the ING Barings analyst, is betting that Globalstar will fly where two others have faltered.
"We believe Globalstar will succeed," he said.
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