Asian Crisis No Sweat for IP Telephony
By Gary Kim
The financial crisis that has rocked East and South Asia since last year may not have widespread and significant negative impact on the U.S. Internet protocol (IP) telephony industry. In fact, at least some carriers may benefit as hard-pressed consumers turn to new IP services as a way to save money.
Software and gateway providers may see slowdowns, but most of the business this year and next will be in North America and Europe, so the impact should be minimal. To the extent that suppliers to the IP telephony industry also have significant sales in the broader computer telephony arena. However, they may suffer from weakness in the call center systems business.
So far, carriers seem to be faring well enough. Indeed, IDT Corp. (www.idt.net), which fired up its Phone2Phone service in South Korea in February 1998, was "very pleasantly surprised by customer reaction," says IDT spokeswoman Sarah Hofstetter. "Actually, we think it works to our advantage."
The reason: hard-pressed consumers are looking for ways to save money, and slashing the cost of international calling is one way to do that. Daewoo, the large Korean business concern that is marketing the IDT service, "says the crisis has killed business everywhere but in telecom," says Hofstetter.
In any event, few IP telephony carriers have overwhelming exposure in Asian markets. RSL Communications Ltd. (www.rslcom.com), which owns 60 percent of IP telephony provider Delta Three Inc. (www.deltathree.com), earned only about 8 percent of its 1997 revenue in Asia, according to Richard Klugman, Goldman Sachs analyst. A whopping 65 percent of revenues were earned in the U.S. market, with Europe contributing 27 percent. By 2002, it is estimated that RSL will earn only about 11 percent of total revenue from Asia, with the U.S. market contributing 41 percent, Europe 42 percent and Latin America 6 percent.
The Asian exposure, should there be any fall, is probably the difference between the $22.1 million RSL earned in that region in 1997 and the projected target of $48.5 million foreseen for 1998. For a company expected to generate gross revenue of about $560 million, the exposure is in the $26.4 million range, should growth completely stall in Asia. That's less than 5 percent of total gross revenue, even assuming the worst-case scenario of zero growth from Asia.
Gateway supplier Vienna Systems Corp. (www.viennasys.com), likewise, has seen "no impact at all," says Kent Elliott, company president and CEO.
"What has been different, though, is that thinly capitalized players who might otherwise have started their own VoIP (voice over IP) services have been weeded out. In markets such as Hong Kong, cell-phone adoption rates are down, as people are looking for other ways of communicating," says Elliott. "This market will not go away."
Suppliers of software could conceivably see some slowdowns, though Asian business isn't large for most IP telephony software providers. For example, Oracle Corp. (www.oracle.com) typically books 15 percent of total revenue from the Asia-Pacific region, and sales from this region were growing at 50 percent annually.
Early in 1998, growth appeared to have completely stalled. But few IP telephony software firms have huge exposure in the Asian markets.
There has been significant weakness in the share prices of computer telephony components since about April, however. In early June, for example, the Dow Jones industrial average had temporarily declined 3 percent from its yearly high. The small, technology-dominated Nasdaq had dropped 7.8 percent. But a market basket of computer telephony firms had backed off just more than 14 percent, according to analysts at Piper Jaffray.
Among the affected companies are Dialogic Corp. (www.dialogic.com), Brooktrout Technology Inc. (www.brooktrout.com), Natural MicroSystems Corp. (www.nmss.com), Aspect Telecommunications Corp. (www.aspect.com), Applied Voice Technology Inc. (www.appliedvoice.com), Comverse Technology Inc. (www.comverse.com), Davox Corp. (www.davox.com) and GeoTel Communications Corp. (www.geotel.com), for example. Several firms, including InterVoice Inc. (www.intervoice.com) and Applied Voice Technology, have strengthened since January.
The weakness appears largely unrelated to the Asian developments, however, and would seem to have much more to do with recent consolidations in the outbound telemarketing business, which have depressed carrier ordering of call center and telemarketing systems that incorporate computer telephony technology.
Dialogic, however, reported in its March 1998 Securities & Exchange 10Q report that first quarter revenue from the Asia/Pacific region was down 16 percent from the same quarter in 1997. Cambridge, Mass.-based computer telephony concern Artisoft also reported weakness in the Japanese markets, but that does not seem to be directly caused by market turmoil, since U.S. sales for the quarter also declined 29 percent. International sales declined 18 percent compared to the same quarter of 1997.
Still, some observers think suppliers of IP telephony software and gateways will avoid damage. VocalTec Communications Ltd. (www.vocaltec.com), for example, is a supplier of both host and client software as well as IP telephony gateways. During the first quarter, about two-thirds of total sales were in the United States, according to Phil Leigh, an analyst at St. Petersburg, Fla.-based investment banking concern Raymond James.
And Leigh doubts there's any negative impact on VocalTec. "There's enough demand in North America and Europe to offset any weakness in Asia," he argues.
Because the market is in its infancy, there's no installed base of usage to decline. Also, anticipated growth in U.S. and European markets is strong enough to drive the business forward, unaided by any significant business from Asia, Leigh believes.
"We're pleased with our first quarter results," says Howard G. Bubb, Dialogic president and CEO. "Despite ongoing difficulties in the Pacific Rim, our overall business has showed continued strength, particularly in Europe. Also, Dialogic's business is diversified. IP telephony is one of several key elements," not the entire business.
Company executives don't see that changing.
"Since the economics are so great compared to the public network, we aren't as sensitive to gyrations," says Jim Macki, Dialogic's director of product marketing. "We haven't seen that it's affecting us."
Natural MicroSystems, the Framingham, Mass.-based company that supplies digital signal processing (DSP) boards and software tools for gateways, saw its revenues from IP telephony components rise from nothing in 1996 to $75 million in 1997. That was enough to make IP telephony the source of 25 percent of the company's income.
"1997 is a watershed year for IP telephony," says Patrick Fetterman, market segment manager for IP Telephony at Natural Microsystems.
Inter-Tel Inc. (www.inter-tel.com) does not appear to have much exposure to Asian markets in the IP telephony area, though 81 percent of total net revenues come from sales of IP telephony network management products. The company's first quarter 1998 report noted the September 1997 commercial release of Inter-Tel Vocal'Net, the company's standalone IP telephony gateway product. At the end of March, however, "revenues from the sale of this product have not been significant," the Securities & Exchange Commission 10-Q report states.
The broader Internet community and Internet companies generally came out unscathed by the Asian financial crisis, says Derek Brown, Volpe Brown Whelan & Co. analyst. That's in large part because such firms have little exposure in Asian markets, being primarily U.S. operations.
Waves for Wireless
Still, large infrastructure projects that might compete with IP telephony will suffer. That may be especially true for new wireless networks that had anticipated new construction. At least one wireless project has been put on hold in Indonesia, for example, because the currency drop has virtually doubled the cost of U.S. equipment.
Likewise, Motorola Inc.'s (www.motorola.com) first quarter 1998 numbers slumped 2 cents a share below the expected rate, and company executives said the Asian crisis was largely to blame. Company officials said they expected lower-than-forecast earnings for the second quarter as well.
In fact, large infrastructure or transportation projects of many types could be delayed. In June, for example, Boeing Corp. (www.boeing.com) predicted that 150 new aircraft orders would be lost over the next five years because of the Asian financial troubles. The Japanese economy sunk into recession and U.S. bankers rushed to prop up a sagging yen, fearful of further instability in a region beset by problems.
Ironically, the Asian financial crisis, which began in 1997, has unevenly scratched the U.S. markets. In fact, the biggest danger may be to domestic financial markets, rather than to software, hardware or services suppliers who sell to East Asian customers. So far, weakness in stock prices, for example, has been isolated. And for IP telephony carriers, the cost savings should prove even more attractive to financially battered Asian consumers.
And battered they are. Gross domestic product (GDP) seems to have fallen about 20 percent or more in South Korea, Malaysia and Indonesia in the first quarter of 1998, and new forecasts suggest these economies will at best see no growth next year.
At least in part, that's because International Monetary Fund (IMF) assistance to Thailand, Indonesia and South Korea calls for adoption of austerity plans that will slam the brakes on growth. South Korea's GDP, for example, is expected to drop six places, from 11th-largest economy to 17th, in the 1998 international economic rankings, according to LG Economic Research Institute of Seoul. The good news is that the institute expects a return to economic stability in 1999.
So why haven't we seen a greater impact?
In part, because U.S. exports to Asia aren't a huge part of the economy. Japan accounts for only about 1 percent of U.S. GDP last year, while total exports to Asia as a whole are less than 2.5 percent of GDP. That may be one reason why the financial carnage has had such little apparent impact. Still, U.S.-made goods priced in dollars will be more expensive in Asian markets. That should slow exports to Asian markets, and should slow U.S. economic growth as a consequence, say experts.
Indeed, the June Commerce Department report on trade showed that the U.S. trade deficit soared to a record $14.5 billion in April as the Asian financial crisis battered American exporters, pushing down sales of everything from commercial aircraft to farm products. The Commerce Department said the April deficit was 9.5 percent higher than the March imbalance of $13.2 billion, the previous record.
Still, that drag on the economy has been offset largely by booming consumer demand, the report suggested. The major danger appears to be a collapse of U.S. confidence, should the Asian crisis spread to other parts of the globe, triggering a crash in the high-flying U.S. stock market. So far, that has yet to occur.
On the other hand, U.S. firms that build products in Asia could benefit.
When local currencies devalue against the dollar, local costs decline. The value of the Korean won against the U.S. dollar dropped 50 percent in 1997, from 844 won to 1,691 won to the dollar. Thai and Indonesian currencies dropped at about the same rate. In dollar terms, the wages that chipmakers pay to Malaysian workers, who package semiconductors in their ceramic casings or put together disk drives and other components, have just declined 50 or 60 percent, for example.
As part of its $57 billion bailout agreement with the IMF, South Korea was forced to lift many of its prohibitions against foreign takeovers of local firms. So U.S. firms may have an opportunity to acquire assets or partners that would have been unthinkable before the crisis. If Asian firms reduce research and development spending, U.S. firms may benefit again.
The Asian crisis may slow sales for some providers of IP software and hardware and prevent some entrepreneurs from getting into the carrier side of the business. But it's hard to imagine any appreciable long-term impact.
Platform suppliers appear confident they can prosper on the strength of transatlantic sales (North America and Europe), while carriers will continue to benefit from price arbitrage opportunities.
According to New York-based Cowen & Co. Managing Director Susan Passoni, the average per-minute price of an international call was $1.16 in 1990, was just under a dollar in 1996 and is about 89 cents in 1998. By 2000 such calls will cost about 83 cents a minute. Minutes of use (MOU), meanwhile, will climb from about 33.3 billion up to the 1998 target of about 90 billion MOU. By 2000, international calls will represent some 105.2 billion MOU. So even with price declines, the market will explode, reaching about $95 billion in revenue.
So aside from suppliers of computer telephony components, who may see sales softness for other reasons, the larger IP telephony community should not suffer from the Asian financial distress.
Gary Kim is a contributor to Sounding Board magazine. |