Another IDC?
Tiny Firm's Wireless Technology Attracts Investors and Skeptics
By AARON ELSTEIN THE WALL STREET JOURNAL INTERACTIVE EDITION
Getting cellular phones to use each other's networks seamlessly world-wide is the holy grail of wireless telephony. Some of the industry's biggest companies, including Motorola, L.M. Ericsson and Nokia, are spending hundreds of millions of dollars trying.
But where these deep-pocketed titans have failed, a tiny Irvine, Calif., company with no revenue says it will succeed. In the process, the company, Advanced Communications Technologies, is stirring as much skepticism among industry watchers as enthusiasm among online investors.
The upstart company, whose shares are listed on the Nasdaq OTC Bulletin Board under the symbol ADVC, has gained a wide following among online investors. Some go so far as to proclaim it "the next Qualcomm," referring to the red-hot wireless-telecom stock.
Investors boosted shares of Advanced Communications as high as 7 3/16 earlier this month from a low of 3/16 in May. The stock traded at 4 1/2 Monday.
Much of the excitement in the stock has been generated by a string of press releases issued by the company, announcing various financing deals, partnerships and other plans. However, the company has been reluctant to provide details of its plans, even refusing to disclose the names of some companies with whom it says it has made deals.
Chief Executive Roger May says the company plans to test its technology, which is being developed in Australia, in less than a year and expects to generate $200 million in revenue in 2001. But Pete Peterson, an analyst at Prudential Volpe Technology Group, says technology for uniting wireless-communications standards is "several years away" from being commercially viable. Brad Williams, an analyst at Legg Mason, notes Advanced Communications is hitting the industry's "hot buttons." But he says it's unclear whether the company has the financing that would be needed.
Currently, there isn't a global standard for the technology behind wireless communications. Cell-phone carriers around the world rely on competing protocols from various tech companies that aren't interchangeable. The different protocols mean cell phones from one carrier won't work on another carrier's network unless the two use the same transmission standard -- or, essentially, speak the same communications language.
The issue has long been a dilemma for the industry and a problem for consumers, who often find they can't use their cell phones in different countries -- or even across town lines. The industry has been unsuccessful in pushing for the adoption of one of the various protocols as a global standard.
Advanced Communications says it doesn't plan to create a new standard. Instead, the company says it's developing technology that will enable networks to process multiple protocols. Current systems handle a single wireless standard. "What we're developing here is fairly revolutionary," Mr. May says. He adds the system would be "future-proof," because it could carry all "current and evolving" standards of wireless communications.
Callie Pottorf, an analyst at International Data Corp., a Framingham, Mass., technology-research firm, estimates Advanced Communications would need tens of millions of dollars for such a project.
What's more, while companies such as Nokia and Ericsson are run by executives with hands-on operating experience in the wireless business, Mr. May has limited experience in the field. Prior to starting up Advanced Communications, he was chief executive of International Reservations Services, a Brookfield, Conn., travel company that filed for protection from creditors in August 1996 under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Act.
But Mr. May has recruited PricewaterhouseCoopers to help finance his new venture. Peter Rayner, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers Securities in Australia, says it has agreed to raise 20 million Australian dollars for Advanced Communications to help the company develop its technology and is in discussions with a number of prospective investors.
Mr. May says Advanced Communications also plans to make an initial public offering in Australia and will sell new stock to U.S. investors in the third quarter. It now has 7.5 million publicly traded shares and over 60 million in private hands.
Because of its failure to file financial statements with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the National Association of Securities Dealers plans to delist the company's stock from the OTC Bulletin Board on Feb. 9. But in a Dec. 14 announcement, Advanced Communications said it had signed a letter of intent to merge with a Nasdaq-listed company. But it didn't identify the company, and Mr. May still refuses to do so. He says he fears doing so would trigger a sharp increase in the target's stock price.
John Heine, a spokesman for the Securities and Exchange Commission, says it's permissible for a publicly traded company to issue a press release about a deal without naming the other party if only a letter of intent to merge has been signed. The company must identify the target, he says, after a definitive merger agreement has been reached.
In its Dec. 14 announcement, Advanced Communications also reported an agreement with a Newport Beach, Calif., merchant bank to raise $40 million, but it didn't name the bank. Mr. May says the bank wanted its name withheld because it "didn't want to be flooded with calls from people seeking financing."
Regardless of their lack of specifics, these announcements have stirred excitement on online message boards. In late December, Advanced Communications shares started to rise as posts about the company began appearing on message boards, including Yahoo! Finance (quote.yahoo.com) and Raging Bull (www.ragingbull.com).
William Peavey, an investor in Tryon, N.C., says he bought shares in Advanced Communications after seeing the company mentioned favorably on Yahoo. He confesses to doing little research before purchasing the stock. "I pretty much went in and bought some stock after I saw the posts," Mr. Peavey says. "I didn't really understand what they were making, but it looked interesting." He says he has since sold the shares for a profit.
In June, Mr. May hired a New York marketing firm called OHN Research Group, whose job is "to get the word out for the company using all means and mechanisms," according to its president, Jordan Ness, who says his firm stands to collect up to $100,000 worth of Advanced Communications stock in return for its services.
And in November, he hired a Hackensack, N.J., online promotion firm called DDInvestor.com. Mr. May says he is paying DDInvestor.com $1,000 and 5,000 restricted shares per month (www.ddinvestor.com) to promote his company. DDInvestor.com has profiled the company on its Web site, and its employees appear frequently on the Raging Bull message board devoted to Advanced Communications to answer questions from online investors. DDInvestor didn't return telephone calls for comment.
Some shareholders have gotten involved in spreading the word about the stock as well. Ben Hutchins, a 19-year-old computer science student at El Paso Community College in El Paso, Texas, created a Web page called "Ben's High Tek Stock Research," (http://members.xoom.com/_XMCM/Ben4616/ADVC.htm) which contains links to Advanced Communications' Web page (www.adcomtech.net).
Mr. Hutchins says he owns 16,050 Advanced Communications shares and says he's received no compensation for his work. His site features interviews with and messages from Mr. May. Mr. Hutchins has posted links to his page dozens of times in the past few months on many Raging Bull messages boards.
Mr. May also has been a frequent participant on Internet stock-discussion boards. In one message, he called the company's detractors "pathetic parasites motivated by questionable motives."
Write to Aaron Elstein at aaron.elstein@wsj.com |