A few comments on patents and IP, a subject most investors (myself included) and analysts know almost nothing about. Tack on the usual alphabet soup here, IMO, FWIW, ROFLMAO or whatever....
In my experience, most questions about IP begin and end with "is it patented?" or some question about the level of protection. A short answer by management or analyst usually satisfies and the discussion moves quickly on to more easily understood and familiar topics like cash flow, revenues, expenses and new products etc. In the case of development companies like Mvis, you are not, in any case, going to get much more than a short answer. The reason is simple ---- very little of the company's IP will be in the public domain and for obvious strategic reasons the subject is nearly off limits. In the case of Mvis, something like 80% of the patents and pending patents remain undisclosed at present, so only the tip of the iceberg is visible. In time, of course, disclosure will increase, but so will the size of the iceberg, so an investor is always going to be well behind the curve.
I am not saying don't bother to look. All I am suggesting is that we should all recognize just how little we can actually see and factor this into our judgement. You can talk to management all day long and learn almost nothing more. They are not going to tell us more than the bare beginnings of what we want to know. That's why we are probably better advised to look carefully at the quality of the team creating the IP, particularly the track records of key people. With Lewis, Lippert, Gross and Dunfield we are off to a good start.
As a further observation, I think it is fair to rate the fact Mvis has its own, in house IP counsel (Casey Tegreene) as a significant plus. If nothing else, his presence is a statement of just how serious the company is about building on and protecting the ideas of its key people. Casey is the very busy architect of the IP strategy and with his combined legal and EE background he can talk the language of the rest of the team and pull their thoughts together. He brings focus and considerable talent to the process of building a major IP asset, every day, all day. I happen to think this is very important. Perhaps by analogy I can create some sense of why....
The Mvis team is out there surfing the bow wave on a number of new technologies --- VRD itself, MEMS, light sources, optics, to name the obvious. This is an incredibly exciting place to be. The action is fast and opportunities are enormous, but fleeting. In an all too real sense, the race does go to the swift, those who are quickest to recognize the utility of fast breaking developments and stake claims to the gateways controlling the paths to the future. Make or break; top talent wanted.
Suppose, for example, you are an early explorer, riding the leading wave of a new exploration boom in the services of your king. You land on an island and in the distance you can see the coast of a much larger land mass and in the far distance beyond the outline of mountains. You claim the island for your king right away, of course. Then maybe after a drink or two and feeling a little bolder, what the hell, claim the coast as well, right? You haven't got there yet, but you can see it, so claim it. Then maybe after another drink those mountains might start to look larger, so make the claim bigger, take them too. But before taking a snooze, sober up and claim everything --- the island, the coast, the mountains and the full extent of all that lies beyond the mountains, all the way to the far ocean. If you don't, the explorer coming right behind you will!
Put another way, suppose you came up with the idea for a liquid based shock absorber for a car and decided to file a claim to a shock absorber using a damping liquid. You just claimed the island. You left out air based shock absorbers --- the coast and the mountains. If you rewrote the claim to cover damping fluid based shock absorbers (including air and nitrogen) you would be adding some significant territory. But if you were really smart, you would claim a a shock absorber that also included a damping mechanism with a square law response, claim a motor vehicle instead of only a car and claim a port within a chamber to selectively pass a damping fluid. Now you are adding alot of new territory --- airplane suspension systems, motor cycles, a square law response spring structure, a conveyor belt tensioning system etc, etc. We are off at a full gallop on the far side of the mountains, going god only knows where. And that is precisely the point.
If you are the king, you want your explorer to file the most sweeping, creative, broad based fundamental claim he and his brightest companions can possibly imagine. This is what surfing the bow wave is all about and why the subject is hugely important.
The bow wave provides the first view of new territory and allows for the broadest claims --- claims limited only by what is already out there and the ability of the surfer to conceive of the future applications for the core technology unfolding just ahead. Skill and imagination can really pay here.
In Mvis's case, if a patent application relates to ways of improving picture quality and removing image distortion, then the application describes and claims how the basic invention applies to both image display and image capture and also claims basic components, various systems incorporating the components and methods of creating and capturing images. A single application may thus carry a great many claims. And one piece of IP interlocks with another. Claims relating to image correction, exit pupil expansion or fiber feeding apply regardless of the scanner involved, building a network of moats, fences, mine fields etc, all designed to create barriers to entry. Some of the smaller claims may well turn out in time to be as significant as the core patents. One doesn't know right away, since one can't see beyond the distant mountains all the way to the far ocean or anticipate all future uses.
The process of trying to broaden claims and make them more creative applies everywhere, including pending patent applications held by licensors with whom Mvis is working. Overall the idea is to build as substantial an IP portfolio as possible, covering the company's core technology to and beyond currently targeted markets, the whole of which will be significantly greater than the sum of all the parts.
To say the least, this is quite a challenge. Getting to a key invention first is what the IP battle is all about, but how the claims are actually made and the way they are put together in portfolio is what will determine the likelihood of winning the war. There is a lot of sophisticated strategy involved in this fascinating and extremely critical process.
I have only had a small glimpse of what this subject is all about and how it pertains to Mvis, and in any case, am not capable of more than an intuitive guess, based on the people, about how this will all turn out. I can see the tip of the iceberg the same as the rest of you, but none of us on the outside can know much about the much larger mass below the surface. Clearly it's growing quickly and those responsible for its growth make up a very talented, creative and skilled team. As I've said before, a bet on Mvis is ultimately a bet on its people. I think they are pretty damn smart. I'll leave it at that. GMG |