I can't understand the high valuation being assigned to NTRO while the DMIC stock price stands still. After sitting in the $40-50 range during Jan & Feb, NTRO rocketed to $118/sh in early Mar before settling into the $80-90 range. At least one early investor has bailed out of NTRO with a huge capital gain: Sunday March 12, 4:43 am Eastern Time Mofet sees pretax $48.3 mln gain from Netro shares JERUSALEM, March 12 (Reuters) - Israeli venture capital fund Mofet sold its entire holding in Netro Corp (NasdaqNM:NTRO - news) and expects a $48.3 million capital gain before taxes, Mofet said in a statement on Sunday.
The gain will be included in Mofet's first quarter results, the statement said. Mofet purchased the shares in Netro in 1995 for $633,000.
Netro makes equipment for high-speed wireless telecommunications access.
Mofet stocks surged 15 percent to 6.50 shekels early on Sunday. ($1 = 3.97)
The fact is, companies like NTRO, PCMS, ADAP, and others are getting big bets from the market based on their PMP technology. But the customers for this technology (e.g., WCII and TGNT) haven't yet decided which supplier has a "good enough" product to allow them to execute their business plan. In short, the trials haven't gone so well and it would seem that the suppliers who got to market early may have been *too* early in that their PMP products aren't as good as their customers had hoped.
DMIC has been criticized for "missing the boat" by not coming out with a PMP product yet... but I don't think it would have made sense for them to come out with inadequate products that leave their customers complaining (as their competitors have). Instead, DMIC has come out with the premier high capacity PTP product (their 155 Mbps Altium radio) and they're developing a still higher speed product (622 Mbps) which will come in both PTP and PMP flavors (now THAT is what I call broadband).
In the interim, DMIC has partnered with privately held Ensemble Communications so DMIC can offer Ensemble's PMP product. It had been thought that Ensemble would be coming late to the party, but it seems that the extra features Ensemble has built-in may turn out to be a real competitive advantage. Even if companies like NTRO and PCMS can come out with their next generation PMP products a lot earlier than expected, it seems to me that Ensemble (and DMIC) can still take a sizable chunk of the market... and its a huge market, expected to grow to more than $5 billion in 2003. ============================================================= Broadband Wireless Gets To The (Multi)Point
By Fred Dawson Contributing Editor, Inter@ctive Week March 13, 2000 7:49 AM ET
Vendor assertions that this is the year when wireless broadband technology will finally take off will soon be put to the test. The lead guinea pig will be Teligent, which has a plan to ramp up wide-scale deployment of point-to-multipoint access systems starting this spring.
"Right now, that's the plan, but we won't know for sure until things get rolling," says Steve White, vice president of sales at the company's operations in Louisiana and Texas. "There's still a lot of testing going on in the vendor selection process."
Teligent, which now has high-speed wireless access operations in place in 40 major U.S. markets, is currently using point-to-multipoint transmitters on a limited basis in many of those areas, including White's territories. But until now, Teligent has relied on the more mature and technologically simpler point-to-point wireless technology, along with some wireline Digital Subscriber Line connections, to serve its small and midsized business customers.
With only 4 percent of roughly 760,000 office buildings nationwide now directly connected to fiber-optic networks, the opportunity for delivering broadband access via wireless networks remains huge, White says. "We see revenue from fixed wireless services going from $0.3 billion [$300 million] in 1999 to more than $5 billion in 2003," he says.
[snip]
Full article (long): zdnet.com
Excerpt pertaining to Ensemble Communications:
The fact that U.S. players across the broadband wireless spectrum, from LMDS to MMDS to the 39-GHz tier, have yet to announce suppliers for commercial rollouts of point-to-multipoint systems has fueled a new wave of technology offerings from established and start-up vendors. "The air links available up until now have not been sufficiently flexible to support the pricing and usage models that you need to compete in the real world," says Carlton O'Neal, vice president of marketing at Ensemble Communications.
Ensemble had originally expected to be playing catch-up with its Adaptix air link protocol, which is slated for release this spring. But the failure of the market in general to take off has greatly improved the company's prospects, O'Neal says. "It's not a great situation for the carriers, but it's great for us," he notes.
Along with providing the mechanisms for dynamically assigning bandwidth at predetermined pricing levels, the Ensemble system can handle bursting large quantities of data on top of the guaranteed service a given customer has signed up for, O'Neal explains. Because such bursts can be accommodated via unused portions of a specified channel stream at any given moment, this means that operators can assure customers they'll have added bandwidth available when they need it, while maximizing the number of customers served by any one channel.
Other Adaptix features include the use of adaptive time division duplexing, which allows variable rates of data to flow in both directions over a single channel; adaptive TDMA, which supports variable packet lengths to maximize bandwidth efficiency; and adaptive modulation, which provides for the delivery of signals over the highest level of modulation that's feasible at a given moment in the fluctuating atmospheric environment of the transmission path.
While O'Neal says Ensemble's system will register at about a 6 on a scale of 1 to 10 in the pricing of wireless broadband systems, he contends that the overall cost of infrastructure based on its technology will be much lower because of the flexibility the company has built into its technology. The system, which includes 64 Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM) as one of the dynamically assignable modulation options, operates over any frequency tier, from 10 GHz to 43 GHz. =============================================================
NTRO has about 45 M shares outstanding so, at $90/sh, its being valued at about $4.0 billion. DMIC has about 72 M shares outstanding so, at $40/sh, its being valued at $2.9 billion. But DMIC has a full product line of profitable products being sold all over the world while NTRO has its one product line that's still being tested by customers. NTRO has only had $12.1 M in sales this last 12 months while DMIC has had $271.6 M in sales.
So why does DMIC's share price continue to lag behind NTRO?
Most analysts have a "strong buy" recommendation on DMIC with a target price around $54/sh to $56/sh. I would think we should be able to get there at least... that would give DMIC a valuation comparable to NTRO. But DMIC is a great company with shrewd management... if they can grab a big chunk of this broadband access market, I'd think we could go a whole lot higher than that.
Rob |