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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Globalstar Telecommunications Limited GSAT -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rocket Scientist who wrote (7059)8/31/1999 2:25:00 PM
From: djane  Read Replies (6) | Respond to of 29987
 
Will Globalstar be the next satellite casualty?
(via G* yahoo thread)
[Note: The article contains some inaccurate comments, including that Soros sold 75% of his stake. djane]

iionline.com

By Garrett Bekker (8/31/99)



After spending several months in a downward spiral,
Iridium (NASDAQ: IRIQE - Quotes, News, Boards),
a satellite communications vendor, declared bankruptcy
on August 13th. After the close of trading on Friday, ICO
Global (NASDAQ: ICOGF - Quotes, News, Boards)
followed suit, seeking protection from its creditors. That
helps explain why shares of competitor Globalstar fell
$2.19 on Monday to $26.69.

But GlobalStar has a number of important advantages
vis-…-vis Iridium that improve its chance of succeeding.
Most important of which is price. Globalstar users will be
asked to shell out half the price to make calls, when
compared to Iridium?s pricing structure.

Still, the road ahead is filled with speed bumps. We think
the time has not yet arrived for these services, and
Globalstar faces an uphill battle (Editor?s note: Not all of
our writers necessarily hold the same investment opinion
on a given stock. Individual Investor Online columnist
Tom Byrne wrote a bullish piece about Globalstar in May.
Since then the stock has gained about 50%).

As documented in a series of recent columns, Iridium was
essentially engaged in a race against the finance clock.
Due to the high cost of launching the constellation of 66
satellites required to initiate service, Iridium groaned under
an enormous debt load of nearly $3 billion. To service this
debt, Iridium needed to rapidly sign up customers.
However, due to a host of operational and managerial
miscues, subscriber growth was abysmal; despite initial
interest from over one million potential customers,
subscribers totaled less than 20,000, a far cry from the
600,000 required to break even.

Globalstar is facing a race against the clock of its own.
With no current subscribers and a huge debt load of its
own ($3.9 billion), the burn rate is equally frightening.
Although Globalstar secured a $500 million bank line of
credit, Marc Nabi of Morgan Stanley states that
Globalstar is only fully funded through October. This begs
the question: what are the chances of returning to the well
once it runs dry?

The adverse publicity surrounding Iridium has all but dried
up capital flows for other satellite telcos, which
undoubtedly was a contributing factor in ICO?s decision
to file for Chapter 11. CIBC analyst Jeff Wlodarczak
points out that ICO twice failed to raise $500-$600
million, and still needed another $1 billion (for a total of
$4.8 billion) to initiate service. Complicating matters is that
Y2K fears are also expected to have a dampening effect
on capital markets going forward.

No Laughing Matter

What this means is that, like Iridium, subscriber growth
is crucial for Globalstar. Once it launches service in
October, the company hopes to have 10,000 subscribers
by the end of 1999. From there Globalstar is forecasted
to have 1.3 million paying subscribers by the end of next
year. Morgan Stanley is forecasting 975,000 subscribers
by 2000 and 2.6 million by 2002.

Forecasted is the operative word here. Industry veteran
Inmarsat, for example, has only 140,000 users after 20
years in the business.

And even though Globalstar?s phones ($1,100) and
services ($1.50 to $3.00 per minute) are cheaper than
Iridium?s offerings, retail prices will still be higher than
comparable wireless services. For example, Gilat
Satellite (NASDAQ: GILTF - Quotes, News,
Boards) offers a $0.15 per minute rate for fixed wireless
customers in remote areas. Furthermore, should AT&T?s
(NYSE: T - Quotes, News, Boards) new cellular
pricing plan provoke a price war, satellite service will
appear even less appealing on a relative basis. To its
credit, Globalstar could reduce wholesale prices as low as
14 cents a minute and still break-even according to ING
Barings, a huge advantage when compared with $1.37 for
Iridium.

What this means is that for the foreseeable future, satellite
telephony will likely remain a marginal business,
complementing, rather than competing with, cellular. As
was the case with Iridium, Globalstar will be relegated to
serving customers in remote areas where it would be too
expensive to build out a cellular or wireline
communications network. John Coates of Salomon Smith
Barney sees satellite penetration of the overall
telecommunications market totaling only 2% to 3% in the
next 10 years. Investors who dreamed of a day when
satellite phones would rule the roost may have a long wait.

The wild card in this whole analysis concerns the demand
for such services. Coates points out that if we consider
that Iridium had 20,000 customers at $3 per minute to $7
per minute, and that cellular services have 300 million
users at roughly $0.20 cents per minute, then we can
conceptualize a demand curve for the satellite telephony
market. Globalstar currently falls somewhere in the
middle. Obviously, as you move further down the demand
curve, the size of the potential market for Globalstar
should grow. However, there?s really no way to forecast
the shape and slope of this curve. In other words, it?s
anybody?s guess as to how quickly customers will
respond, nor how low prices will have to fall to meet
those customer targets.

Despite the Monday morning sell-off, shares of Globalstar
have more than tripled from their 52-week low of $8.31.
But more selling pressure could come on the heels of
word that George Soros recently sold nearly three-fourths
of his previous 10% stake in the company, and if Soros is
sellin?, we?re not buyin?.

Bottom Line:

Although Globalstar has undoubtedly learned something
from Iridium?s mistakes, it still faces the same hurdles.
Globalstar is also racing against the clock, and unless
everything falls exactly into place, it will suffer the same
fate. We think the stock is highly risky and would avoid it
for now.

Tell us what you think in GSTRF's Board
Copyright ¸ 1997-1999 Individual Investor Group. All Rights Reserved.



To: Rocket Scientist who wrote (7059)8/31/1999 4:47:00 PM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29987
 
RS, we are really only haggling over the details. We agree that Globalstar calls are bursty and that some are very high value, worth $1m a minute. But we can't segregate those calls - well, we can with Maurice's "CURRENT PRICE IS ...." handset price auction system for minutes to ensure no busy signals ever, even with totally full system all day every day.

So, dumping all minutes in a pool, which is what we are going to do, reducing their value to the lowest common denominator, which seems a silly way of marketing, but that's the idea for now and we're stuck with it, those minutes will have a value to the callers. To get those minutes sold, we sell them not at the average at which people would value those minutes, but at the lowest price to attract the last caller to make their call and that price sets the price for all.

Sure, there will be a bit of messing around with bulk minute plans and stuff like that to separate out the business callers a bit and stuff like that, but it won't change things much.

My argument is that Globalstar phone calls won't be as bursty as the time spent buying a new house, car, travelling on a plane or filling the tank with gas to use your example. They will be much more close to regular working hours value. I've made thousands of cellphone calls on business and for private matters and they were not particularly bursty, though the odd ones were.

Mostly those calls are more valuable than other activities, but not hugely so. Sometimes it was quicker, cheaper and generally better to just drive to the place I wanted to contact than take the trouble to make a call first [if they were only 15 minutes away and I was sure they'd want to see me anyway].

I too have no idea what the 'right' price for Globalstar minutes is. Neither does anyone. It is an infinitely variable fractalized value system out there for communications and we will only know the real value of the system which is built and can't be significantly changed when millions of people measure it up compared with what they think of their own needs, wants, or luxuries.

All I know, is that starting high and working down is likely to be a big mistake. Especially given the Iridium and ICO messes. I know that's how new notebook computers, cellphones, cars and other consumer electronics and most other new technologies are handled. They all have high marginal costs of production and limited production capacity.

Globalstar has done it the other way round. Vast, huge and perishable minutes in space are built all in one go! No production! So they have got to be sold. The Globalstar handsets are the item which might start high and come down in price and that is the way it should be. Some people think the handsets should be cheap and subsidized by minute prices. That is totally the wrong idea.

The handsets should be expensive and the minutes really cheap. That will get the incentives right, to Qualcomm, to the service providers, to the handset buyers [who will have a need for lots of minutes and will buy heaps if they are cheap enough].

The handsets should be sold off the end of the production lines direct to the highest bidder, arriving at their address next day [in the USA] ready to turn on! There is no need to take them to shops and put them in glass cases. This is a wide and thin market. It needs the Web to get the customers. The people who buy Globalstar phones will be Web users. Other than the village chiefs who will buy [or more likely lease to buy] fixed phones to rent service out to the tribe.

So, while I guess the right price is around $1 a minute for the first couple of years, to get there, we should start at 50c per minute, not $2 per minute.

It's obvious from Bernie Schwartz's comments posted a few posts ago and other things we see that Globalstar and Service Providers are starting to think along those lines.

We need a clamouring demand for Globalstar service.

Everyone forget about the Iridium idea that rich stupid people, whether business with bursty high value calls or private with $100 a glass champagne calls, will pay really high prices! They didn't and won't - not in sufficient numbers. We want 6m subscribers at least. We want 15m of them in 4 years. We want 30m of them in 7 years.

Build, build, build. Launch, launch, launch.

Get those ASICs fast, powerful and small. Get those data rates up. Shrink that handset. Shrivel that aerial.

Rah! Rah! Rah!

Maurice

PS: I agree with you on the negotiated discounts for big volume customers, but that all takes time as Iridium found. There is a limit to the value of negotiation. Businesses don't want to negotiate over toothpicks and while Globalstar handsets are going to be a lot more expensive than the toothpick bill, we need fast uptake so fairly fixed price plans and big demand will be the way to get it to happen pretty quickly. Since Airtouch has heaps of terrestrial customers, of course they have to sell individually to those businesses.

Gee they could have a lot of fun with this. Sales competitions in Airtouch USA should be fun when they get this going. They are going to know within two days whether they have got it right or not.

I think Globalstar has got it wrong keeping the sales figures secret. Part of the way to sell is to show how fast it's selling. Keeping minutes and handsets sold secret until March next year is like saying it's bound to be a failure. Shout the sales figures from the rooftops. That's all there is to talk about. Nothing else! If there's nothing to shout about, we want to know that anyway so we can start shouting.