Too bad this article makes no mention of DMIC...
Its a bit irksome that NTRO gets so much press; and they could have mentioned Ensemble Communications Inc as well.
Lets not forget that DMIC has 655 Mbps fixed wireless products under development that they will roll out in the not-too-distant-future. Not only will these provide the highest-capacity most-spectrum-efficient solutions for the mobile backhaul market (which isn't served by products from NTRO and others), but it will also come in a point-to-multipoint variant which is ideally suited for the fixed wireless access market. Competing products will be far less attractive because they won't offer the capacity or spectrum-efficiency of DMIC's products.
Rob ========================================================= Tuesday June 20, 10:32 am Eastern Time
TheStreet.com - Silicon Valley What's Shakin With Zakin? The Man Who Spotted Palm Has a New Start-Up
Western Multiplex lacks the sex appeal of Palm or Handspring, but has a solid team for a wireless rollup.
By Adam Lashinsky Silicon Valley Columnist
Venture capitalists always say that the biggest factor they consider when funding a company is the quality of the management team. Well, public investors all fancy themselves venture capitalists now, and solid talent at the top is often trotted out as the reason the public should consider a hot start-up that's going public before it's fully cooked. The stellar duo of Palm (Nasdaq: PALM - news) handheld-device creators Jeff Hawkins and Donna Dubinsky , for example, is one of the best attributes of the upcoming initial public offering of Handspring, a company that has sold its consumer-focused product device during only one holiday season.
Well, it turns out there's another, less risky way to bet on the management team that made Palm a success. Jonathan Zakin, the fellow who rescued Palm when it was a private company in search of cash by purchasing it for U.S. Robotics (later purchased by 3Com (Nasdaq: COMS - news) is piloting something of a start-up himself these days.
It goes by the decidedly unsexy name Western Multiplex . (Memo to J.Z.: Lose the name.) But the Sunnyvale, Calif.- based start-up is in the potentially red-hot field of broadband wireless access, equipment that allows cellular carriers and big businesses to set up high-speed networks without digging holes and planting poles. And wouldn't you know, Western Multiplex is attempting an IPO of its own, one with markedly less fanfare than Handspring's (and Palm's before it), but with similar potential.
For a lesson in IPO sex appeal, consider the following: Handspring, backed by Benchmark Capital and banked by Credit Suisse First Boston , aims to offer itself to the public at a valuation of about $2.3 billion. Its most recent quarterly revenue, which more than doubled sequentially, was $34 million and generated gross margins of 32%. It isn't yet profitable. Western Multiplex, bankrolled by Zakin and an obscure group of merchant bankers, is valued at about $525 million, is profitable and recorded first-quarter revenue of $17 million (up 9% sequentially) and gross margins of 55%.
Fixed wireless systems have been around for a while, but haven't really taken off. Their main disadvantages are that the equipment must have a clear line of sight between components (sometimes requiring installers to use third-party roofs or poles) and that bad weather can foul things up.
Still, like everything else having to do with the Internet, fixed wireless offers a badly needed solution to moving data quickly from end users to the network. According to Western Multiplex's securities filings, its systems are cheaper to install than other services, require less time and can take advantage of unlicensed radio spectrum. International Data Corp. guesses that the U.S. market for services delivered by broadband wireless will skyrocket from $767 million in 1999 to $7.4 billion by 2003.
If that's the case, Western Multiplex would benefit because its customers -- which include established players like AT&T Wireless (NYSE: AWE - news) and Nextlink Communications (Nasdaq: NXLK - news) and upstarts like VoiceStream Wireless (Nasdaq: VSTR - news) and Western Wireless (Nasdaq: WWCA - news) -- would benefit. The company also plans, through the recent acquisition of a seven-person (six-engineer) firm in Petaluma, Calf., to offer equipment that will help businesses establish wireless networks within co! rporate campuses.
Western Multiplex is in registration with the Securities and Exchange Commission , so it can't publicly discuss its plans. But in a February interview, Zakin made it clear that he intended to make Western Multiplex something of a roll-up for the fixed wireless industry. A big reason for going public now is to create a currency for acquisitions. (Of the nearly $79 million the company hopes to raise, $22 million will go to pay back bank loans.) The competition is fierce but fragmented as fixed wireless is a small part of the business of giants Alcatel (NYSE: ALA - news) , Cisco (Nasdaq: CSCO - news) , Ericcson (ERICY:Nasd! aq ADR), Lucent (NYSE: LU - news) and Nortel (NYSE: NT - news) as well as a focus of smaller companies, including Adaptive Broadband (Nasdaq: ADAP - news; formerly California Microwave), P-Com (Nasdaq: PCMS - news) , Proxim (Nasdaq: PROX - news) , Netro (Nasdaq: NTRO - news) and Wi-LAN .
What's more, plenty can go wrong with this business. It suffers from declining prices and periodic component shortages. And Western Multiplex's so-called point-to- multipoint product to create a hub-and-spoke wireless network is still in development.
So the bet here is on fixed wireless being big and, of course, on Zakin. Together with partners at Ripplewood Holdings in New York (best known for taking control of the Long-Term Credit Bank of Japan ), Zakin controls 94% of Western Multiplex, formerly an orphan unit of wireless services company Glenayre Technologies (Nasdaq: GEMS - news) .
Zakin has kept much of the previous management but packed the board with a combination of cronies and financial big shots, including former U.S. Robotics executive Michael Seedman, former Bush administration economics adviser Michael Boskin, investment banker Stanley Shuman of Allen & Co. and Peter Crisp, formerly a venture capitalist with Venrock , the pet venture-capital firm of the Rockefeller family.
Because of its relatively slow growth to date, Western Multiplex isn't being positioned as a go-go IPO. But for investors who want proven management and promising technology, give this under-the-radar-screen company a look. |