approaching millennium, infamous WSJ "Heard on Street" article of 1994 panning Q, thought you might be interested in revisiting:
Heard on the Street Qualcomm 's Digital Technology Wins Praise,But Marketing Delays Are Raising Questions By Susan Pulliam 10/11/1994 The Wall Street Journal Page C2 (Copyright (c) 1994, Dow Jones & Co., Inc.) Remember the 1980s battle of the videotapes? Betamax was thought to have awesome technology, but VHS scrambled to market first -- and won.
Now some investors envision a similar plight for Qualcomm , a San Diego developer of a better way to cram a lot of mobile-phone calls onto a small slice of the airwaves. It's a good idea. But in technology, ideas alone won't cut it. Speed in rolling out a product is vital. Qualcomm 's whiz-bang digital technology is losing ground, some experts believe, to older digital methods already adopted by the likes of giant McCaw Cellular Communications.
"It's too late for Qualcomm , at least in this round of technological change," asserts Marc Cabi, a Cowen & Co. analyst who rates the stock "neutral." "The momentum has moved away from them."
Qualcom disagrees. "{Our} technology is superior to {competing} technologies in every respect," says Richard Grannis, Qualcomm 's treasurer. "The main challenge we have is making the equipment available as quickly as possible. We are addressing that, and will have the equipment ready next year." Qualcomm closed at 28 yesterday on Nasdaq, off 1/4.
Bears are circling. Qualcomm has been "promising for four years," says Fred Wadler of Gilford Securities in Chicago. Gilford has sold Qualcomm short, betting on a price drop; he values it at $10, including $5 for the wireless business.
Some big investors bailed out earlier this year when Bell Atlantic said it would use existing technology (rather than Qualcomm 's) in four big markets. That was a blow, although Qualcomm still has some big players in its camp, including AirTouch, Sprint, U S West, Ameritech, GTE and Nynex. There's speculation Nynex may also back away; Nynex says only that "it will be a market-driven decision." Bell Atlantic says it won't take sides but "we'll provide the best available digital technology to our customers."
"My feeling is that { Qualcomm 's technology} won't be widely adopted," says Bruce Lusignan, a professor at Stanford University . "Its advantages as a big technological breakthrough have been greatly overblown." Qualcomm counters: "It appears Mr. Lusignan does not believe what's already been proven by us and others."
Skeptics envision Qualcomm winning perhaps one-third of the total cellular market. But bears say the stock reflects higher hopes. (Mr. Grannis says only that Qualcomm expects a "major" market share.)
A year ago Qualcomm 's digital technology, called Code Division Multiple Access, was widely deemed a big gain over existing digital technology, called Time Division Multiple Access. And many carriers were expected to adopt CDMA as the new way to carry wireless phone calls. Cellular calls today rely on analog technology, in which electrical pulses represent the caller's voice. The problem is that cellular carriers are running out of capacity and analog technology is susceptible to static. Enter digital technology. It changes the pulses into ones and zeros, or digits, allowing room for more calls.
McCaw has supported the older digital TDMA, though Qualcomm 's fans say CDMA is better because it allows even more signals to travel at once. While there were lags in developing TDMA, last spring it became clear the CDMA effort was suffering from delays. Qualcomm too hit delays. Qualcomm blames the industry standard-setting process and "the time required for manufacturers to have equipment ready;" it says its technology should be commercially available by mid-1995.
Others are dubious. "If CDMA has half the delays that TDMA had, the first commercial application is still at least one year away," says Mr. Cabi.
Moreover, delays in CDMA may hurt Qualcom's ability to lure cellular carriers that will bid for radio spectrum for Personal Communications Services in a December government auction. Bidders "won't want to wait for a technology that's not ready," says Mr. Cabi. "They'll go with a technology from Europe that's already proven in the marketplace." Qualcomm says a group including US West, Time Warner, Sprint and Bell Atlantic supports CDMA for the so-called PCS market but adds: "There is no guarantee {they} will adopt it." He says The Street often overlooks the company's potential abroad, such as in Hong Kong, the Philippines, South Korea and Argentina.
Mr. Cabi's fiscal 1995 earnings estimate is way below the 61-cent-a-share Street consensus. He looks for 50 cents to 55 cents; Qualcomm won't comment. "There has been a lot of positive press generated by the company," he says. And Qualcomm still has plenty of believers. "Even if they don't get much of the U.S. market, there will still be enough volume to make sense," says Joan Lappin, portfolio manager and president of Gramercy Capital Management.
-- idler. |