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To: pat mudge who wrote (17)12/2/1999 4:18:00 PM
From: Techplayer  Respond to of 211
 
Pat, interesting article... brian

netstocks.com

iBasis and Deltathree: Post IPO Report
Wednesday, December 01, 1999 6:39 PM
by A. Sahoo

The past few months have seen a dramatic increase in the number of Internet telephony IPOs: NTOP, ITXC, and CLRN, just to name a few. In November, two new IT companies debuted - iBasis (IBAS), a wholesale voice over Internet Protocol provider, and Deltathree (DDDC), a retail VoIP company. So far, both seem well positioned to move upward.

IBAS sells capacity on its worldwide network to telcos and other major carriers. It shares the rapidly growing wholesale IT market - estimated to grow to $2 billion by 2004 by International Data Corp. - with just a handful of other providers: AT many senior execs come from the telco business and other IT firms. Venture backing has come from 3 of the top VC firms, and the underwriting was managed by Hambrecht and Quist. The company posted 1998 revenues of $1.7 million, with a loss of $5.7 million. (ITXC's 1998 numbers were similar - revenues of $1.5 million and loss of $7.2 million). Although IBAS was priced at $16 per share, it opened on November 10 at $35, and except for a brief pullback into the low $30s, has been maintaining the $35 - 40 range for the past 3 weeks. When IBAS' quiet period ends on December 10, and analysts may release coverage recommendations, many expect that its price will continue moving up.

Deltathree also boasts a pedigree, via ownership stakes from Yahoo! (YHOO) and AOL (AOL), and Lehman Brothers as its IPO's lead underwriter. DDDC competes in the larger consumer IT market (estimated to grow to $16 billion by 2004 by IDC), and has successfully established co-marketing relationships for its PC-to-phone and phone-to-phone calling with Xoom.com, Tribal Voice, and other large consumer-oriented websites. Competitors in this market include Net2Phone (NTOP), IPO-ed at $15 in June, and currently trading at $75. DDDC also provides a unified messaging service, called "D3Box" that offers users a unique telephone number and email address at which they may collect voice messages, faxes and email. Sure enough, it's easy to use: I opened my own Deltathree unified messaging account last week, and within minutes I was up, running and collecting messages at my new number. It makes my old Bell Atlantic voicemail account look like a Model T.

Compared with IBAS and ITXC, DDDC's sales look gargantuan: 1998 revenues of $5.6 million, and loss of $7.1 million. (Market leader NTOP, with 59% of all Internet telephony minutes carried, recorded 1998 sales of $12.0 million, with a loss of $3.5 million).

Priced at $15, DDDC opened on November 23 at $33, then dipped into the high $20s. Typical of newly trading IPOs, the market seems to be testing this one, as it fluctuates by 2 - 3 points each day on relatively high initial volumes of 400,000 shares per day.

Both the wholesale and retail IT markets are still in their infancy, so market dominance is still up for grabs. At least in the short term, though, both IBAS and DDDC look like good plays for investors wanting to capitalize on this exploding sector.

(



To: pat mudge who wrote (17)12/6/1999 8:37:00 AM
From: sam  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 211
 
Monday December 6, 8:13 am Eastern Time

Company Press Release

iBasis Launches Internet Telephony Hosting

New Services Complement the Company's Wholesale VoIP Business,
Enable New Market Entrants, Accelerate Growth of Internet Telephony

BURLINGTON, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec. 6, 1999--iBasis, Inc., (NASDAQ:IBAS - news) the leader in
international Internet telephony, today announced the industry's first Internet telephony hosting services. With iBasis Internet
Telephony HostingTM, telephony service providers and international ISPs have access to a turnkey solution that enables them
to quickly begin offering voice, fax, pre-paid calling and other value-added VoIP services, with minimal capital investment.
These new services include hosting of voice-over-Internet protocol (VoIP) equipment in iBasis Internet Central Offices, access
to high quality Internet backbone and Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) termination and the Operational Support
Systems (OSS) necessary for traffic management, reporting and customer billing.

''There is a huge wave of traffic moving to the Internet, and iBasis, with these new Internet telephony hosting services and its
proven global network, is well positioned to do for international telecommunications providers what UUNET has done for
ISPs,'' said Mark Winther, group vice president, Worldwide Telecommunications, IDC. ''iBasis is offering service providers a
new model for obtaining the critical infrastructure and management resources they need to be successful in international Internet
telephony.''

''Sharing Cisco's vision of packet-based communications, iBasis established itself early as a leading provider of VoIP,'' said
Kevin Kennedy, sr. vice president and general manager, Service Provider Line of Business, Cisco Systems. ''Now it is
becoming a catalyst, helping other service providers make a swift transition to the New World of IP telephony.''

''We have built the world's largest international Cisco Powered Network for Internet telephony and are delivering toll quality
service to tier one carriers over that infrastructure using our proprietary Assured Quality Routing technology,'' said Ofer
Gneezy, president and CEO of iBasis. ''Now, with iBasis Internet Telephony Hosting, we are combining that Internet
telephony expertise, global footprint and our operational support services to deliver a modular, turnkey solution that enables
service providers around the world to quickly enter the rapidly growing market for international voice and fax services over the
Internet.''

iBasis Internet Telephony Hosting: A World of Opportunity for Service Providers

iBasis is the proven leader in Internet telephony, employing unparalleled technological expertise to develop and deploy the
world's first global VoIP network that provides toll quality service to tier one carriers. Now, with the addition of Internet
telephony hosting, the company is broadening its offerings to deliver services that appeal not only to large international carriers,
but also to new types of customers, such as emerging service providers and international ISPs that want to leverage the
company's world-class platform to rapidly establish a global footprint.

Telecommunications carriers, both wireline and wireless, whose existing network footprint is local, regional or national in scope,
can use iBasis Internet Telephony Hosting to extend both their services and their brand to the international marketplace with
overseas call origination and termination.

For emerging carriers, iBasis Internet Telephony Hosting offers an ''instant global network,'' without the significant investments
in equipment, time and operational and regulatory groundwork required to build a global telephony network. In the same way
that outsourcing dial up access enables ISPs to focus on recruiting and retaining customers, iBasis Internet Telephony Hosting
lets new service providers leverage their brand and focus their resources on sales, marketing, and customer service rather than
on establishing and maintaining a telephony infrastructure.

For network service providers and systems integrators that build enterprise-wide networks, iBasis Internet Telephony Hosting
provides the additional elements required to voice-enable their solutions. An integrated voice and data solution reduces their
customers' telephony costs, with no reduction in call quality or need for end user training. In addition, iBasis Internet Telephony
Hosting can provide IP call-routing and billing management services, access to iBasis' proprietary Assured Quality Routing
technology, as well as low cost, off-net termination for calls to points beyond a customer's network.

With a proven global network and automated billing services, iBasis Internet Telephony Hosting enables e-businesses to
quickly and economically add the power of voice and real-time fax to their solutions.

Global Network Expansion to Create Platform For Value-added Services

In order to meet the rapidly growing demand for its core voice and fax services as well as to deliver new hosting solutions,
iBasis is significantly expanding its global infrastructure. As of December 1999, the company has Internet Central Offices in
Frankfurt, Hong Kong, London, Los Angeles and New York and can terminate voice and fax traffic in virtually every country
in the world. The company plans to quadruple the number of Internet Central Offices (ICOs) in its network from five to 20 by
the end of 2000, substantially increasing infrastructure capacity. As the market for advanced, IP-based communications
expands, this large-scale, network expansion will ensure that iBasis has the global platform necessary to deliver the
value-added services that will drive the next wave of growth in Internet telephony.

biz.yahoo.com