CSFB JNPR: Providing Infrastructure For The Next Millennium (target:$200) Paul J. Weinstein, CFA Juniper Networks(JNPR) Providing Infrastructure For The Next Millennium Summary We are initiating coverage of Juniper Networks with a Strong Buy rating and 12-24 month price objective of $200. With its addressable market growing at 100% and a pure play on the exponential growth of the Internet, Juniper is a core holding. Being the first to market with new generation of IP infrastructure equipment, Juniper has the potential to be a " category defining" company, as such we believe a premium valuation is warranted. Juniper's purpose built operating system, exponentially higher forwarding rates and best in class software, provide the underpinnings for a new generation of backbone equipment. JNPR's time to market, high barriers to entry, technology leadership & differentiation and enviable customer base are formidable competitive advantages. Price Target Mkt.Value 52-Week 07/20/991 (12mo.) Div. Yield (MM) Price Range USD 138 $200 $0 None $7,010.4 $162-90 Annual Prev. Abs. Rel. EV/ EBITDA/ EPS EPS P/E P/E EBITDA Share 12/00E $(0.02) NA NA 12/99E (0.36) NA NA 12/98A (0.81) NA NA March June Sept. Dec. FY End 2000E $(0.07) $(0.01) $0.01 $0.04 Dec. 1999E (0.15) (0.07) (0.09) (0.06) 1998A (0.11) (0.19) (0.28) (0.23) ROIC (6/99) NA Total Debt (6/99) $0.00 Book Value/Share (6/99) $6.37 WACC (6/99) NA Debt/Total Capital (6/99) 0% Common Shares 50.8 EP Trend2 NA Est. 5-Yr EPS Growth 100% Est. 5-Yr. Div. Growth NM 1On 7/20/99. DJIA closed at 10,996.1 and S&P 500 at 1377.1. 2Economic profit trend. Juniper is a leading provider of Internet infrastructure solutions that enable ISPs and other telecommunications service providers to meet the demands resulting from the rapid growth of the Internet. The Company's M40 routers and JUNOS Internet software are currently used by several of the world's leading service providers such as UUNet, Cable and Wireless, IBM Global Services, Frontier GlobalCenter and Verio. Investment Summary and Conclusion Initiating coverage of a "category defining company" with a Strong Buy rating We are initiating coverage of Juniper Networks, a leading provider of high performance IP-based routing switches, with a Strong Buy, and a 12-month price objective of approximately $200 per share. We believe Juniper defines a new category of IP-infrastructure equipment suppliers that hold one of the keys to unleashing the future power of the Internet. Over the next decade, Internet traffic will grow several thousand fold, in the process transforming the Internet into the converged network that pundits have talked about for years. In order for this to happen we believe two requirements must be met: (1) performance must improve commensurate with the traffic growth (i.e. thousand fold improvements) and (2) the reliability, control, and scalability must match that of the current voice network. Without these fundamental attributes, there will be a mismatch between user expectations and Internet capacity/capability. Juniper is poised to address these requirements, specifically at the core of carriers networks, a highly strategic position where the worlds of copper, or electrical, and fiber, or optical, collide. As the acceptance of IP gains strength at the core of the network, carriers will increasingly look for solutions that were developed specifically for their needs - high performance, scalable for the future and compatible with the existing infrastructure. Juniper boasts the industry's first Internet-focused routing operating system, that not only has the scalability and reliability that service providers demand, but also is compatible with the existing infrastructure (Cisco's IOS routing software) and delivers up to a 10 fold improvement in price/performance over traditional routing platforms. Our primary reasons for recommending Juniper - franchise potential, superior market growth, technology leadership, strategic position in the network, high barriers to entry and broad customer base With the release of Q2 results last night, our revenue and operating earnings/loss projections have already been adjusted upward, see Exhibit 1, relative to our expectations at the time of the IPO. Juniper's revenue growth came it at 75% sequentially vs. our anticipated 22% estimate. Q2 results showed gross margins at 54% vs. our 43%, owing to higher than expected revenues and higher ASP's as the existing customer base requested additional product interfaces . Juniper was able to expand upon its diverse customer base, bringing the total number of customers to 31, up from 22 in Q1 . Juniper has proven its ability to rapidly innovate its existing software- releasing the third version of its software in as many quarters. Our revisions reflect higher revenues associated with a broader range of customers, and higher operating expenses reflecting increases in R&D and sales people. The following factors make Juniper an attractive investment at current levels: Category Defining Company. Juniper is the first company to come to market with a purpose-built, next-generation, hardware /software solution designed for the core of service providers' networks. As previous category-defining companies have done in the past, Juniper has the opportunity to capture a large share of the market opportunity from entrenched competitors thus, Juniper represents a kind of call option on the future of the Internet, and like other category defining companies, deserves a significant valuation premium. Rapidly Growing New Market Opportunity. As applications, transactions and services migrate to the Internet, the core infrastructure need to achieve unprecedented scalability, creating a new opportunity. Enterprise routers, predicated on a 100K user model, are not able to meet the challenge of supporting 100's of millions of users upon which the Internet is predicated. As shown in Exhibit 2 the market for Internet backbone routers was approximately $169 million in 1998 and is expected to increase to approximately $5.5 billion in 2003 , which equates to a 100% compound annual growth rate over the next five years. We have conservatively estimated Juniper's share at approximately 10% and believe there is material upside to that assumption. Real Products - Real Customers. Unlike its start-up brethren, Juniper has a working product in production at the core of several large carriers' networks, including the two largest IP networking UUNET and Cable & Wireless in the world. With the core team hired about 3 years ago, the first release of software was shipped 18 months ago with hardware beta's begun a year ago. In 1H:99 Juniper generated $27.6 mm in revenue and we expect $48.3 mm in 2H:99. While Juniper's time to market created significant distance between itself and competitors, the high quality customer base is a testament to Juniper's technological achievements/superiority. Having shipped product to 22 customers, but only recognized revenue from 8 as of 3/3/99, Juniper's pipeline of business is very robust. For perspective, there are nearly 5,000 service providers in the US, each of which has some potential to deploy a current or future Juniper product. Providing Infrastructure For The Next Millennium Significant Barrier To Entry. The technology involved in high end routing switches draws on expertise from multiple disciplines (computing, silicon design, networking, communications) which is what makes this a difficult market to enter. Beyond that difficulty, the problems to be solved ( scale, speed, control, reliability) are new because the scope of the network is entirely different. Finally, this task is set against the backdrop of unprecedented rates of change and exponential growth. Potential competitors will find the high software content and custom designed silicon the most daunting and time consuming tasks/attributes to replicate. Development time and highly talented/experienced software development team are viewed as the main barriers to entry.
Expanding Addressable Market: Juniper's market opportunity will evolve both in product and customer opportunity, which overtime will result in an expanding addressable market. Today we estimate Juniper is addressing 35-55% of its available market but within five years Juniper should reach 100% coverage. On the product front, we expect higher-end platforms by 1H:00 that will provide hundreds of Gigabits as well as higher-density aggregation and access platforms that act as feeders to the core platform. Today, Juniper's customer base is nearly entirely comprised of large ISP's but in the near term they will target new customer segments: first facilities based CLECs & IXCs, regional ISP, followed by content providers, broadband access providers and finally large corporate and govt. institutions. Technology Leadership & Differentiation. Unlike competitors, Juniper's software, JUNOS, has been field tested for interoperability with existing software infrastructure ( Cisco's IOS), while incorporating the much desired MPLS support. Amazingly, Juniper expects to have a major software release every 3 months - virtually unheard of in this industry . Juniper separates the routing and forwarding functions to achieve enhanced performance and uses common chips and software across all platforms/interfaces. Unique to Juniper is the combination of a distributed shared memory & distributed switch architecture, an extremely high speed routing look-up engine, highly integrated ASICs and modular software with a "clean-sheet" design. Highly Experienced Management Team. The management team has proven track records from internetworking, semiconductor and computing companies including Cisco, Stratacom, Sun, Xerox PARC, and MCI/ANS. Juniper's development team draws on knowledge from three distinct disciplines - telecommunications for traffic management, data networking for IP forwarding techniques and computer systems for silicon design, fault tolerance and clustering - providing a uniquely deep talent pool for a start-up. Valuation Metrics For New Age Companies Valuation today is driven by scarcity value of unique ways to play the New Public Network As shown in Exhibit 4, Juniper is trading at 92/46x our estimated 1999/2000 revenue, vs. our three comparable groups - recent high-growth communications equipment IPOs, Internet infrastructure companies and Internet destination companies - are trading at revenue multiples of 32/18x, 54/31x and 27/17x respectively. Many reasons exist for this premium, however, in this market of rising tides lifting all boats, scarcity value is driving up nearly all companies even tangentially related to building the new public infrastructure. But when the air comes out of this balloon, underlying competitive attributes will dictate winners and losers, and based on this factor, we would rather invest in Juniper than virtually all of the other comparables. Our 12-24 month valuation target of $200-plus is predicated on our belief that investors will view Juniper as a true category defining company, one that represents not only a claim on the construction of the Internet, but also a claim on the market capitalization of the incumbent vendors. In viewing the historical performance of those companies that were recognized as "category defining" companies, relative to the performance of their respective incumbents (market leaders whom they challenged), we hope to gain insights into how to value Juniper's potential franchise. Our assumption is that, today's valuations reflect two dynamic's (1) investors are willing to accept private market risks (venture capitalist risks) in the public domain, by funding companies earlier than they historically have but (2) in return, investors expect they will own a sort of "call option" on particular market segment. Future valuation will be based on Juniper's ability to be a category defining company As dislocations occur across the technology landscape we believe new company's have a claim on the revenue potential of an incumbent's existing market, a market that could be radically transformed by the new company's technology. These discontinuities are quite numerous including circuit to packet migration, siliconization, optical networking, broadband access, device and applications proliferation, etc . In Exhibit 5, we have illustrated the historical performance, measured in terms of market capitalization, for those companies that have significantly outperformed the " franchise names" in their respective markets. The pie charts represent a relative view of valuation - the new comer's market capitalization divided by incumbents' market capitalization, first at the time of the new comer's IPO and second the same quotient at today's prices. At IPO, all of these companies represented a call option on the domain of the incumbent's market opportunity. Those that were truly category defining companies went on to capture a substantial portion of the underlying market away from the entrenched competition. Removing the extreme case of Amazon, our selected group shows , on average, that attaining a roughly 25% share of the incumbents market cap is possible. If we examine Juniper Networks in this light, we see that Juniper started off at IPO with a market cap of less than 1% compared to Cisco. This is not much different than Broadcom, which was less than 1% of Intel's market cap and now commands a 6% share. Currently, Juniper is being valued at roughly 3% of Cisco's market cap. If we assign this historic 25% percent average to Cisco's market cap of $215 billion, the possibility for Juniper's market cap could reach $50 billion over the next several years. However, a 25% claim could seem aggressive - for perspective, our revenue assumptions give Juniper a roughly 10% market share of the router market. If we used 10% as the proxy for Juniper's potential market claim, taking into account growth in the incumbents market cap , over a competitive time frame and an appropriate discount rate, we could establish a theoretical value for the stock. Exhibit 3 illustrates this analysis under the following assumptions - five year horizon, we use only Cisco's market cap (assumed it can grow at 20% annually) and a 35% discount rate. This yields a one year price target of $216 at an expected share claim of 10% . While many of the assumptions can be debated, the critical factor here is that a substantial market opportunity and long term appreciation potential exist. The fact that we have described this analysis in terms of "call option" suggests significant risks exists especially with regard to price volatility. With that caveat also comes a reminder, in nearly all cases of the preceding call option companies - letting valuation get in the way of a sound fundamental story kept many an investor on the sideline too early in the life of these companies. We advice not making the same mistake with Juniper. |