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To: Stoctrash who wrote (1148)9/14/1999 11:07:00 AM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1394
 
Investors See More Risks in Satellite Networks: Rates of Return Investors See More Risks in Satellite Networks: Rates of Return

New York, April 14 (Bloomberg) -- Investors who poured $4
billion into bonds of satellite-based telephone companies, such
as Iridium LLC, worry those companies' growth will be thwarted by
competition from land-based phone systems which charge less.
Iridium, and its competitors Globalstar Telecommunications
Ltd. and ICO Global Communications Ltd., grabbed headlines with
their vision of phones that work anywhere in the world. Using
fleets of new satellites, they promised to eliminate the dead
zones that plague cellular phone systems.
Problems with rocket launches and slower sales than expected
have cast doubts on the future of satellite networks, causing
their bonds to fall as investors grew more fearful of default.
Iridium's 14 percent bonds due in 2005 are down 41 percent since
their sale two years ago and now bid at about $560 each to yield
30 percent. Globalstar's 11 1/2 bonds due 2005 tumbled about $300
per $1,000 since they sold 11 months ago, and are bid at 69 3/4
to yield more than 20 percent.
``Satellite is an interesting story but for every day that
goes by and they're not up and running, they risk other cellular
technology [insert the word cable here] beating them to it,'<b/> said Dean Kartsonas, who help
manage $5 billion of bonds at Federated Investors.
Washington D.C.-based Iridium, 19.5 percent owned by
Motorola Inc., started operations for some customers late last
year, though the company says its growth was stymied by shortages
of telephones and sales staff. New York-based Globalstar expects
its system will be running by September and ICO, of London, is
scheduled to begin operating in August 2000.
Satellite-related accidents the past year added to
investors' skittishness. Globalstar, which is backed by Loral
Space & Communications Ltd., lost 12 satellites when a rocket
carrying them crashed in Kazakhstan last September, causing its
bonds to drop almost 20 percent in a single day. Earlier last
year Iridium's satellite deployment was delayed by two separate
launching mishaps.

Lots of Competition

Apart from competing with each other, the satellite
companies must cope with lower prices at cell phone systems
linked by GSM, the global system for mobile telecommunications
standard. GSM, which uses satellites in higher orbits than those
of the newer networks, is in 118 countries and used by more than
150 cellular phone companies. Coverage gaps among those companies
are shrinking as they expand.
Iridium's phone costs almost $3,000, with charges of $1 to
$8 per minute. Even if its prices fall to Globalstar's $800 to
$1,100 for handsets and 65 cents to $1.50 a minute for calls, it
will be more expensive than existing cellular networks. Omnipoint
Corp., for example, charges $199 for a handset that works on
cellular networks around the world.
If the satellite systems falter before they meet their
growth objectives and earn a profit, it wouldn't be the first
time a part of the fast-growing telecommunications business was
laid low by competing technology.

Paging Companies

Paging companies, led by Paging Network Inc. and Metrocall
Inc., boomed earlier in the 1990s as a cheaper, lightweight and
easy-to-use alternative to cell phones. Paging revenue at many
companies stopped growing the past year, and leaders in that
business were tarnished by plunging prices and explosive growth
of cell phones.
Shares in Paging Network, the world's No. 1 paging business,
tumbled almost 70 percent the past year to 4 3/8. Its 10 1/8
percent bonds due 2007 dropped 20 percent to be bid about 85
cents on the dollar in the same period, traders said.
``There's a danger in any of these businesses that depend on
technology, that the technology will become obsolete,' said Bob
Kricheff, a managing director in high yield at Credit Suisse
First Boston. ``Paging definitely suffered from technological
obsolescence.'
Four years after satellite telephones piqued investor
interest and began selling bonds, ``it's still very
speculative,' said Charles Ullerich, who helps manage $1.1
billion of high-yield bonds at Pilgrim America Group in Phoenix.
He said he's holding onto his satellite bonds and ``just watching
this race' between the operators, unlike many investors who
bailed out as bad news mounted.

Waiting for Proof

Michael Snyder, a money manger at DLJ Asset Management in
New York, won't touch the bonds until the companies have some
performance history to go by.
``I'd want to see some indication of success before getting
involved,' said Snyder, who manages $650 million of high-yield
bonds. ``If things don't work out, there isn't going to be a lot
of asset value in the satellites.'
As the first of the satellite companies to begin operating,
Iridium is the first to test demand for the new phone service. So
far, its experience is disappointing enough for its stock to fall
68 percent the past year. At yesterday's close of 19 its stock is
slightly below the 20 price set at its initial public stock sale
in mid-1997.
The company said last week it won't meet its year-end goal
of break-even cash flow, for which it needs 500,000 subscribers
or 167 times the 3,000 it had at the end of 1998. The company
says its primary customers will be businesses with workers in
remote areas, such as shippers or oil and gas explorers.

Iridium's Bank Lines

Last month, Iridium's chief financial officer Roy Grant
quit, and the company's banks gave it 60 days to meet sales
targets or risk defaulting on its $800 million credit line. The
company said in filings with the Securities and Exchange
Commission it needs about $1.65 billion of cash this year.
With bond yields of 20 percent and higher, investors are
judging satellite phone companies to be far more risky than when
they sold the bonds a few years ago. Still, the bonds' yields are
not so high as they would be if investors thought default was
imminent.
``It's been a roller-coaster ride for the bonds and
investors are discouraged,' said Jane Haugh, telecommunications
analyst at KDP Investment Advisors in Montpelier, Vermont. ``But
I have to think most of the bad news is behind us.'