SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : Gorilla and King Portfolio Candidates

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: Uncle Frank who started this subject8/21/2000 6:38:53 PM
From: GGorillaGirl  Read Replies (2) of 54805
 
EMC versus NTAP / Fool article

fool.com

EMC vs. Network Appliance
A future storage battle?

New optical technologies are making the Internet faster, more robust, and more reliable -- which means there will be more and more data that must be stored. Data storage leaders EMC and Network Appliance stand to benefit from this trend. While both companies have their core markets -- EMC on the high end and NetApp on the low end -- the two will increasingly battle one another in the middle market of storage solutions. A better value proposition appears to give NetApp the upper hand.

By Matt Richey (TMF Verve)
August 21, 2000

If you haven't seen it yet, this month's Forbes ASAP is devoted to the all-optical network of the future. Pretty interesting stuff, especially The Race for Fiberspace, comparing the optical efforts of Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO), Nortel Networks (NYSE: NT), and Lucent Technologies (NYSE: LU). What does all this mean? Our current Internet of electrons on copper is slowly but surely being replaced by a new Internet of light on glass. Data traveling on fiber optic cable at light speed will produce bandwidth a-plenty. And, with immense bandwidth will come the need for immense storage.

Over the past few months, I've written a couple of times about EMC Corp. (NYSE: EMC), the big dog in data storage. (Story links at bottom.) EMC has a $213 billion market value, $7.1 billion in trailing revenues, and a blue chip client list. EMC's focus is on the upscale Storage Area Network (SAN) segment of the market.

SANs are distinguished by super-fast speed (typically fiber-based) and superb "five 9s" reliability (that's 99.999% uptime, or 5 minutes of downtime per year). EMC sells these SAN systems to Fortune 500 clients that demand the ultimate in speed and reliability for mission critical storage needs. Of course, such sterling technology comes at a price -- typically more than a million bucks for an average EMC system. There are less-expensive alternatives, however.

Up-and-comer Network Appliance (Nasdaq: NTAP) offers a less-sophisticated, though very capable, storage technology at a much lower price point. It's called NAS or Network Attached Storage.

Compared to SAN, NAS is not quite as fast because it utilizes the office LAN (local area network) rather than a dedicated fiber network. Also, it's not quite as reliable, typically achieving uptime of 99.9% (which translates to 8 hours of downtime per year) or 99.99% at best (1 hour of downtime per year). The upshot is that a NetApp storage solution runs for only about $80,000, a bargain compared to EMC. Thus, for many customers, especially small and medium-size businesses, the NetApp "filer" is the storage solution of choice. As such, NetApp has garnered a market value of $34 billion on $707 million in trailing annual revenue.

Here's a side-by-side comparison of these two companies on our six Rule Maker financial criteria:

(Trailing 12 months) EMC NetApp
Revenue Growth 26.2% 110.9%
Gross Margin 56.6% 60.0%
Net Margin 17.8% 13.1%*
Cash MINUS Debt 2,314M 437M
Foolish Flow Ratio 1.76 1.30
Cash King Margin 13.8% 16.7%**

(* Pro Forma)
(** Estimate)

As you can see, both companies have excellent financials. NetApp is growing revenues faster, but off of a much smaller base. Interestingly, NetApp also has the lead on gross margins, though only by a smidgen. Moving down the list, EMC has a higher net margin and more net cash (cash minus debt), but NetApp controls its cash better, as measured by its lower Flow Ratio and higher Cash King Margin. All in all, two impressive sets of financials, two impressive companies, and maybe two continued success stories. As of yet, EMC and NetApp are not direct competitors.

But, that may change in the next few years. As storage technologies evolve, it appears that NetApp and EMC will eventually address overlapping markets. The question is, which company is better positioned to win?

I've been reading up on both companies, and I think NetApp is ultimately better positioned to gain market share. I mentioned that NetApp's NAS systems run over the office LAN. Right now, that handicaps an NAS system's speed. But, in the next couple of years, office LAN Ethernet technology is expected to make enormous jumps in speed -- as in a 100x increase over current speeds. Matt Tompkins, Soapbox author of Ten Companies That Will Rule the World, explains it as follows:
"Both NAS and SAN have their strengths and weaknesses. SANs, for instance, have a speed advantage over NAS because they operate on a separate and (at present) faster Fibre Channel network, while NAS uses the existing LAN Ethernet technology. This difference will become less of an issue as companies begin deploying separate Ethernet storage networks operating over higher gigabit technology, which is 10x faster than the present system. There is also growing awareness of the coming of 10-gigabit Ethernet, likely two years away and another ten-fold increase in speed. Using an Ethernet-based storage network costs only a fraction of a similar Fibre Channel offering. This will be a significant boost to the NAS value proposition and increases its prominence in enterprise storage architecture."
So, as LAN technology improves, NetApp's storage solutions will increasingly approach the capability of EMC's more-expensive offerings. That should give NetApp the edge as the two companies begin to compete for middle-range storage systems.

Let me be clear that both companies have their core markets -- EMC on the high end and NetApp on the low end -- and both of these segments are experiencing dramatic growth. There's room for more than one victor in the storage space. Even so, NetApp appears to me as the better-positioned company for growing rapidly and creating the most shareholder value from here.

Below are some of the resources that were extremely helpful to me in my study of EMC, Network Appliance, and the data storage industry as a whole:
Motley Fool Stock Research -- EMC Corp.

TMF MadDog's Network Appliance Discussion Board Posts

Matt Tompkins on Network Appliance

Ten Companies that Will Rule the World (Part 2: Hardware Infrastructure)

And make sure you check out Tom Gardner's story in the Rule Breaker Portfolio today. No, Tom's not jumping ship. The Rule Breaker team has taken a close look at high-flying fuel cell company Ballard Power (Nasdaq: BLDP). So has best-selling business author Tom Koppel in a new Soapbox.com research report, and Tom 's adding his two cents to the brewing debate.

Have any thoughts on today's article? Let's talk about it on the Rule Maker Strategy discussion board.

--Matt Richey, TMF Verve on the Boards

Related Links:

Will EMC Be the Next Rule Maker?, 6/7/00

EMC's Operating Leverage, 8/14/00
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext