Ken, All,
An Article from X-Change Magazine that addresses the new breed of Data CLECs, defining their roles, and the perceptions they may be eliciting from the investment community.
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Enjoy, Frank C. ======== Defining the CLEC - Simple Descriptions May Elude Potential Investors
By Gary Kim
The emergence of a new breed of "data-centric" competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs) such as Covad Communications Co. and NorthPoint Communications Inc. is but the latest example of how the U.S. CLEC industry is reshaping the telecommunications landscape. Both firms also are examples of investments from non-traditional CLEC sources in the carrier side of the business and further illustrate continued evolution of CLEC business strategies.
At the simplest level, both firms have picked a niche--high-speed Internet access for smaller businesses--and plan to dominate their segment of the services market. The carrot? "Roughly 40 [million] to 50 million users now connected to the Internet, growing at a rate of 60 percent a year," notes Susan Passoni, Cowen & Co. telecom analyst.
About 25 million of those users were connected to online services in June 1997, the balance--15 million to 25 million--to Internet service providers (ISPs), according to Stamford, Conn.-based research firm Cowles/Simba.
That translates into robust growth for ISPs, and, so the thinking goes, for providers of high-speed connections. According to Cowles/Simba, online service providers earned $3.4 billion in 1996 and will earn $14.9 billion in 2002. New York-based researcher Jupiter Communications predicts a separate ISP market of $8 billion by 2002.
Both firms use digital subscriber line (DSL) technology, running over leased copper local loops, to provide high-speed connectivity on a wholesale basis to ISPs. So the new firms are in several niches. They are wholesalers. They use the DSL platform. They eschew voice and specialize in data connections.
Covad Chairman Charles McMinn calls his company a "packet CLEC."
"We're a PC (personal computer) data networking company, not a telecommunications company," he says.
The niche concept isn't new. Indeed, the entire development of the CLEC industry is a search for defensible niches. The original competitive access providers (CAPs) sold private-line connections linking large businesses with their long distance company customers. With the passage of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, CAPs transformed themselves, entering the much-larger market for switched services (dial tone), and becoming CLECs. With the continuing explosion in data services, carriers began to adopt an "integrated communications provider" (ICP) model, bundling local, long distance and data services. Using the leased access provisions of the Telecom Act, as well as gobs of new local fiber laid by the first generation of CAPs and CLECs, carriers began to move to a "smart build" strategy, in which owned switches run over leased fiber. Then the "wireless CLECs" also entered the fray, using microwave technology to circumvent local loop bandwidth limitations.
And despite the trend toward bundling packages of services, some providers focus on local-only or wholesale-only operations. At least one CLEC is a systems integration and premises networking specialist that, "Oh, by the way," also can handle public networking needs.
Some firms tilt toward rural markets. Many emphasize smaller markets or a regional concentration. Most focus on the smaller and medium-sized business segment. But a few are taking on the high end of the consumer market as well, especially the small office/home office segment.
The clear drivers are market size and relative inattention by other carriers.
"This is a market that has been traditionally ignored by the regional Bell operating companies (RBOCs) and long distance companies," says Passoni.
The small and medium business services market was worth $76 billion in 1996 and will grow to $116 billion by 2000, Cowen projects.
The New World
So if there is no "grand" CLEC strategy, what are we to make of industry diversity? In what way can we capture the logic of competitive carrier development, positioning and strategy? Why does it make sense for investment bankers to pour billions into firms with such a plethora of strategies and niches?
For the answer, we must look to the larger transformation occurring within the entire telecommunications industry. For it is not simply technology or the regulatory environment which is mutating. Indeed, the entire business structure of the industry is in flux.
Think back to the world as it was. Industries were tightly regulated by type of customer, by geographic franchise and by service. Cable TV companies, as well as local, long distance, cellular, paging and private networks, could sell only certain services, to certain customers, in certain areas.
It was a "vertical" world in which boundaries between industries were clear and service functions were integrated. An RBOC might be limited to local service, an AT&T Corp. to long distance, a Tele-Communications Inc. to video--but each type of carrier internally handled its own provisioning, sales, distribution, transport and service-grooming functions. Think of grain silos and you've got the picture.
The new, competitive world is fundamentally "horizontal." Think of a layer cake or Rubik's cube and you'll get the picture. In the new environment, the barriers between silos become semi-permeable. More important, business organizations themselves are structured in new ways.
A single carrier that wants to offer bundled services finds itself cutting across old lines. For a non-facilities-based carrier, that means acquiring sales and distribution assets across silos.
"We are your one-stop shop" is the desired sales platform. There's no need to own all the component parts of the business, which are outsourced. What is required is access to the full range of services that constitute the "bundle" offered to customers.
For a facilities-based carrier, more money and muscle are needed, since local network assets must be married to long distance infrastructure and packet networks. "Ma Bell" has to be put back together, and stitched to the world of packet networks as well.
This wide-open atmosphere means providers have extreme latitude to innovate--not simply by customer, service and geography, but by organizational structure. A carrier can excel in a switching, routing, sales, distribution or transport layer, for example, without "owning" all the component pieces of a full delivery system.
"We do long haul," "We do Internet," or "We do Internet protocol (IP)," are some variants. "We do local," or "We do DSL," are some examples of niche business platforms. "We do Iowa," or "We are a nationwide local services provider," are others.
The inevitable business platform includes both retail and wholesale functions. "Don't build your own network, use ours," is the position occupied by this kind of carrier. This is especially true for facilities-based long haul carriers, backbone ISPs or incumbent LECs (ILECs). So data-centric CLECs represent the latest differentiation of new-breed carriers. "We are nationwide DSL wholesalers," is the niche.
The DSL Niche
We should expect that most investment bankers will continue to shower their attention and money on "voice-centric" CLECs, however. For despite the Internet's explosive growth, most of the $220 billion carrier business is voice-driven.
Today, a CLEC's financial worth and gross revenue opportunities are driven by switched voice services. And money talks.
There's also some disagreement about the near-term ability of all-packet networks to provide the full range of voice-related services, however advantageous they are for data networking. As a result, most of the big-money investment banks have left the pioneering to venture capitalists, since DSL-centric firms are still seen as a niche without the upside offered by switched voice--a $220 billion business (including wireless services) in 1998, according to Richard Klugman, Goldman Sachs analyst. Voice may be slower growing, but it still represents the big, established market with proven customer demand, well-defined pricing models and customer expectations. DSL still must prove itself.
Tomorrow, data will play a bigger role. But data is still a smaller market, and opportunities for huge mega-mergers continue to revolve on voice-related revenues and customers. But that's not the point.
Data-centric CLECs aren't waiting for tomorrow because they smell a niche today. Using DSL technology, this new breed of CLEC avoids the switched voice market. Instead, these new data-centric carriers are essentially partners with ISPs who want to provide their customers affordable and fast Internet connections.
Omaha-based Level 3 Communications Company Inc. is pursuing a slightly different strategy, seeking to deliver all services over an IP network, but including all the traditional voice functions and features. ICG Communications Inc., Intermedia Communications Inc. and Convergent Communications Inc. offer other variants on the "data-centric" strategy.
All three CLECs offer a "triple-threat" long distance, local and Internet access bundle. Intermedia arguably emphasizes its nationwide frame relay network. ICG, by virtue of its acquisition of Netcom, a major ISP, may have a stronger play in that area. Convergent emphasizes premises network integration, because one way to grab a niche is to look outside the silo. In Convergent's case, it's the $104.1 billion computer services market.
Price is key to the data-centric CLEC strategy. Santa Clara, Calif.-based Covad sells its "TeleSpeed" symmetrical 1.1 megabits-per-second (mbps) service for $195 a month, far below the cost of a T1 (1.5mbps dedicated) circuit, which can range from $800 to $1,000 a month.
If 5 million U.S. PCs are connected to DSL circuits, each paying $150 a month, the market is worth $9 billion a year. If 10 million PCs are connected, the market may be worth $18 billion. Of course, that assumes prices won't decline as DSL becomes a mass-market phenomena. At $50 a month, 25 million DSL circuits yield carrier revenue of about $15 billion.
But some of the RBOCs, including US WEST Communications Inc. and BellSouth Corp., are starting to deploy mass-market DSL services of their own, so Covad and the other data-centric CLECs have to move fast. Meanwhile, high-speed cable modem services are starting to appear, as well.
But none of that seems to bother CLEC executives. Covad will get "single-digit into double-digit penetration over the next five years," says McMinn.
Noting the penetration for direct satellite broadcast provider DirecTV, which garnered a 2 percent penetration in two years, making it the "most successful consumer electronics innovation ever," McMinn says Covad "absolutely" can maintain a business at single-digit take rates.
There's going to be an adoption curve for DSL, and if Covad does its job right, Says McMinn, the curve will look like the adoption curve of other generations of modems--of 9.6 kilobits per second (kbps), of 14.4kbps and of 28.8kbps, and now DSL. At some point Covad will be shipping 25 million DSL modems a year, just like the modem manufacturers are shipping 25 million analog modems this year, he says.
Covad has inked partnerships with about 20 San Francisco Bay Area ISPs and plans to be operating in the San Francisco, Seattle, Los Angeles, Boston, New York and Washington markets by about March 1999. E.M. Warburg Pincus, Crosspoint Ventures and Intel Corp. were early investors. And Covad recently raised $152 million in a private placement of debt and equity.
NorthPoint, backed by Accel Partners, Benchmark Capital and Greylock Management, likewise offer ISPs business-class data services on a wholesale basis. The company offers connections at 160kbps, 416kbps, 784kbps or 1.04mbps. An end-user connection of 160kbps costs $99 wholesale from NorthPoint; a 416kbps service costs $135; a 784kbps service costs $165; and 1.04mbps service costs $199.
The vast middle market of small- to medium-sized businesses and branch offices is the target customer segment. And the market is growing fast. The Stamford, Conn.-based Gartner Group estimates that more than a million U.S. small businesses invest in Internet connectivity every year. And most will be receptive to high-speed connections. Verona, N.J.-based researcher TeleChoice Inc. predicts that data service revenues will grow from $20 billion in 1995 to more than $40 billion by the year 2000 as a result.
Level 3's DSL access unit, formerly XCOM Technologies Inc., uses a similar model, but dips into the retail segment of the business as well. XCOM gets 65 percent of its revenue from ISPs and 35 percent from corporate customers. First-round financing came from Battery Ventures and Matrix Partners.
What's notable here is that initial funding has come not from the more-traditional Wall Street investment banking concerns, but from the ranks of venture capitalists. And their attention still is riveted on voice opportunities. Because that's where the money is.
Voice Still Rules
For all of today's leading CLEC companies, voice revenues have the most significant impact on the ability to raise investment capital. Indeed, most of the industry's revenue growth since 1995 has been based on voice services, anchored by local revenues and local access line growth.
That's not to deny that data access already has assumed vast tactical significance. Indeed, the whole idea behind integrated access devices is the ability to put additional revenue-generating services over a T1 connection initially installed to support key system or private branch exchange (PBX) voice traffic.
"CLECs with facilities are shifting to data services to leverage those assets," W. Todd Scott, Furman Selz analyst, points out.
Seen in that light, data services already are a crucial driver of incremental revenue, especially when a partially filled voice pipe can carry Internet access or private data network traffic as well. But the long-term carrot is the sheer opportunity for web-based traffic.
Bell Atlantic Corp. executives, for example, believe the data and Internet services market in its region could reach $85 billion by the year 2003, notes James Henry, Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc. telecom analyst. Sprint Communication Co.'s Integrated On-demand Network (ION) project, and a recent $100 million investment by Japanese carrier NTT in Denver-based ISP Verio Inc. are other examples of the growing importance of data services as a growth driver.
As a practical matter, though, data services will not drive U.S. CLEC share values or ability to raise additional capital in 1998. Indeed, the catalysts for the balance of 1998 are strictly related to access-line and revenue growth. And the simple fact is that those metrics hinge on voice-related services, not data.
"We believe that the primary driver of the CLECs over the long term will continue to be their strong fundamental performance on all levels," says Henry. "Revenue growth is the initial benchmark on which investors should focus as they look at the CLECs."
And that means local dial tone sales will be the primary growth driver. At the moment, long distance, enhanced data, and Internet services are secondary--though important--factors. And just as surely, earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) is the revenue-related item of primary importance to investors today, says Henry.
The emergence of data-centric CLECs is but the latest development in both CLEC strategy and industry reshaping. In chasing a distinctly new niche, such carriers also are attracting investment from non-traditional venture capitalist sources. And that speaks volumes about the continued restructuring of a once-stodgy industry.
Gary Kim is strategic research director at Convergent Communications and editor-at-large of X-CHANGE. He can be reached at (303) 749-3061.
Copyright c 1998 by Virgo Publishing, Inc. |