8/30/99 CNN Moneyline transcript. Is Globalstar a Rising Star in Satellite Phone Industry?
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Aired August 30, 1999 - 6:55 p.m. ET
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STUART VARNEY, CNN ANCHOR: A look now at an industry that may be in some trouble: the satellite phone business. This month, two companies filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy. With services that are technical marvels and marketing disasters, the question now: Is this an industry-wide crisis or just two companies that are not succeeding?
Joining us from Washington, we have with us Bernard Schwartz. He is the chief executive of Globalstar, the lead competitor of Iridium and ICO.
Mr. Schwartz, welcome to MONEYLINE.
BERNARD SCHWARTZ, CEO, GLOBALSTAR: It's nice to be here, Stuart.
VARNEY: I want to wade right into the negatives, if I may. You're spending billions on a satellite phone system that's going to be used in remote areas where cell phones simply don't reach. I put it to you that it's not a big enough market to recoup the billions you've already spent.
SCHWARTZ: Stuart, it's a market that has 3 billion people in it. There are 3 billion people in the world who've never had a telephone opportunity. And one of the distinguishing features about the telephone as an instrument is there never has been a time in the 120 years that we've been using telephones where there have been too many telephones. There's always been too few phones to serve to the man.
People need to communicate, They want to communicate, and the only way those people in the world beyond those areas that are now served will ever joined the 21st century is through satellite telephony.
VARNEY: But can those 3 billion people afford the kind of prices you want to charge? As I understand it, when your service kicks off on October the 1st you're looking at $1.25 to $1.50 per minute. Accurate?
SCHWARTZ: Of course. But the interesting thing is that our capacity is only for 7 1/2 million people. And we don't have to sell phones to 3 billion people. If we did that, I wouldn't have to be here. I'd be sitting in the Riviera somewhere.
VARNEY: But, sir, may I interrupt? Because as I understand it only 20,000 to 40,000 phones have been ordered for October the 1st when you go online, on service with the U.S., France, China, Italy, Brazil, Korea, South Africa and Ontario. That's not many phones.
SCHWARTZ: No, that's not true, though. There are 340,000 phones that have been ordered by France Telecom, Vodafone, Airtouch, China Telephone, and thereafter they'll be producing them at least 40,000, 50,000 a month. So our immediate order is for 340,000 instruments, and we hope to be able to have at least 130,000 out by December. And by the middle of next year in the many hundreds of thousands.
VARNEY: I stand corrected. Will you tell us then, sir, what you are going to do with Globalstar that they did wrong with Iridium and ICO?
SCHWARTZ: Well, just about everything. We're different kinds of services. First of all, our technology is different. It's much less expensive than particularly Iridium. The one that they put in was a very complex, different kind of system, limited capacity. All of those things work in our favor rather than theirs.
In addition, our market is different. They were looking for the VIP roamer who could afford to pay or was less sensitive to pricing than our customer will be. We're looking for those within regions that have established requirements.
And most of all, our distributor, our customer, is the telco customers around the world. They are already in the service of serving cellular. Those are our partners. Our cellular telcos are our partners. They're also our customers.
VARNEY: Mr. Schwartz, I'm awfully sorry to interrupt you there, but we're out of time. But we thank you for joining us here from Globalstar.
Bernard Schwartz, thank you, sir.
SCHWARTZ: Thank you.
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