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BUSINESS WEEK ONLINE June 18, 1998
STREET WISE by Sam Jaffe
TIME TO CATCH WAVE SYSTEMS' E-COMMERCE CHIP?
Imagine that you could "test drive" software for a nominal fee before deciding to buy it. Or that you could use a specialized spreadsheet program for one hour, and pay for only that hour's worth of use. Well, Wave Systems (WAVX), a San Jose (Calif.) technology company, has developed an intriguing chip aimed at metering the usage of electronic content, and it may be on the verge of getting at least some computer makers to adopt it.
The heart of Wave's technology is a chip that's designed to be embedded into the PCI/O chipset on the motherboard of a personal computer. The PCI/O (which stands for personal computer input/output) is the main communications center between the computer and the outside world. It controlsdevices used to input or send out information, such as the keyboard, a hard drive, or an output jack. Once installed, Wave's chip serves as a metering and billing device for electronic content.
Take Joe Sixpack, for example. He wants to download "Guzzle," the hot new drinking game from the Web site of a software maker. But Joe has never played Guzzle before and is hesitant to plunk down $60 for it without first getting a taste of it. Thanks to the Wave chip on his computer's motherboard, he can download the game and pay only a small fee to try it out for a few hours. The Wave chip will keep track of how long he plays and can shut off his access when the trial period is over, or it could allow him to buy new time increments for using the game."It's like a taxi meter inside your computer that takes credit cards," says Wave's Chief Operating Officer Steven Sprague. In exchange for providing the meter, Wave wants a percentage of every dollar that flows through its chip.
The beauty of the Wave chip -- at least, according to Wave -- is that it offers something for everyone. The software industry can shift to a much more profitable rent-to-own model of distribution rather than rely on an off-the-shelf sales model. Indeed, on June 16, Wave Systems announced that Interactive Magic, a game maker, will start selling its software via the Wave chip. In addition, Wave Systems is nearing a similar agreement with an entertainment and educational software manufacturer, according to sources close to the company.
The consumer also gets something from the Wave-enabled computer: A low-cost way to try a product -- with an option to keep trying it on a per-use basis or to buy it outright. In addition, the chip can store credit-card information in a piece of hardware on the computer that should be far more secure than software encryption.
The Wave chip also allows PC makers, as well as Wave, to share in the revenue stream that would flow through the chip, giving them a reason to build it into their boxes. "The technology is so terrific," says Jim Melcher, who manages money for Balestra Capital Management and has been buying Wave Systems shares for the past year. "It gives you the ability at the press of the button to send cash and download software with total security. There's a huge need for it."
Wave Systems faces one big hurdle, though, before its chip becomes a moneymaker. It has to persuade PC manufacturers to spend the $5 it takes to install a Wave chip on a motherboard. No major PC manufacturer has yet ordered motherboards with the chip built into them. But the company recently signed a contract with Standard Microsystems (SMSC), which controls 35% of the PCI/O market, that will allow SMSC to fulfill orders from PC manufacturers that want the Wave chip built into their PCI/Os. National Semiconductor, which owns an additional 50% of the PCI/O market, has yet to sign such a contract. But the fact that Wave Systems' CEO Peter Sprague is a former chairman of National Semiconductor might help in gaining access to executives there.
Perhaps more significant than the SMSC contract, in May Wave Systems and IBM signed a deal that spelled out how the PC maker would split with Wave any royalties earned from use of the chip, a ratio that they aren't publicly revealing. Sprague says Wave has been in contact with other PC makers, and that new agreements could come between now and the end of the year.
If you're willing to bet that this technology has the potential to become widely used, now may be the time to buy shares in Wave Systems, which was founded in 1988 and went public in 1994. Its stock, which reached $5.50 in May, has settled back to $3.75. The company lost $2 million in the first quarter of 1998 and doesn't expect to make money this year. And if its technology doesn't gain acceptance, its prospects would become decidedly less promising.
But if computer makers start to install its chips into their PCs, the stock could soar. "There's no reason for this company to not be given a market value of $1 billion if a couple of other PC makers join in with IBM," says Melcher."And if everybody uses it, there is no end to its revenue potential. It will be making money off of every electronic-commerce transaction. People will be writing articles reminiscing about when you could buy Wave Systems for $3."
Before Wave is crowned the next Microsoft, though, investors should watch carefully between now and the first quarter of 1999. That's when initial reports will start filtering in about how many orders PC makers are placing for Wave chips. That'll make it clear whether Wave Systems is the next hot stock -- or just another example of Internet hype.
Sam Jaffe writes about the markets for Business Week Online
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