DMIC was up over 20% today after investors noticed this article featuring the company on the "New America" page in today's issue of the Investor's Business Daily.
Rob
PS) I've heard rumor that Kevin Landis, manager of FirstHand Funds (which owned over 2.5 million shares of DMIC as of 29 February 2000) will be on CNBC monday morning (10 April). He will likely mention DMIC (since its one of his top holdings) and this could bode well for further share price increases next week.
==================================================== Friday 7 April 2000 (IBD: Page A9)
Cutting The Cord
Digital Microwave Seeks An Edge By Offering Wireless Broadband.
by Chris Woodard, Investor's Business Daily
While digital subscriber and cable modem companies fight it out on the ground, Digital Microwave Corp. is going airborne in hopes of dominating wireless broadband markets.
The San Jose, Calif., company manufactures digital microwave radios used in public and private wireless communication systems. Its broadband, medium-capacity and long-haul radios are geared to move data, voice and video over a variety of microwave frequencies.
"The vast majority of buildings in the U.S. are not served directly by fiber, and the bandwidth requirements are just skyrocketing," said Charles Kissner, company chairman and chief executive. "Our whole mission is to take extremely high-capacity backbone fiber and distribute that closer to the customer."
High Demand, Little Access
What's driving growth for Digital is demand for a fast, cost-effective way of bridging a bandwidth bottleneck that keeps 95% of businesses in the U.S. from accessing high-speed fiber-optics.
The company's new broadband Altium radoi and its XP4, Dart and Spectrum II medium-capacity radios are designed to bypass snail-paced copper telephone wires to tie into fiber hubs.
Altium, Digital Microwave's top-of-the-line radio, can move data at 155 million bits per second compared with less than 1 million bits for regular copper lines.
At the end of 1998, there were 142 million Internet subscribers, but the number is expected to triple to more than 500 million by 2003, a 30% annual growth rate.
While telecom players have spent billions of dollars on fiber-optic networks, users are largely cut off from them by copper telephone lines over the so-called last mile.
Bridging The Gap
Digital Microwave's technology gives telecommunication providers a way to bridge the gap in a way that is rapidly deployable, scalable and cost effective, says Scott W. Searle, analyst at Dean Rauscher Wessels.
"We're in the early stages of a $2 billion-plus market opportunity over the next several years," he said. "Wireless solutions can act as an extension of and, in the case of emerging markets, an alternative to fiber."
Digital Microwave has about 250 active customers around the world, including wireless operators such as Winstar Communications Inc. in the U.S., Vodafone AirTouch in Europe, and China Unicom. The company also sells through a number of third parties, including suppliers such as Nortel Networks Corp.
Customers outside North America accounted for 87% of sales in fiscal 1999. The company is up against some stiff competition, though, from the likes of LM Ericsson, Alcatel Alsthom ADR, Siemens AG, P-Com Inc. and Harris Corp.
Sally Anderson, senior portfolio manager for Kopp Investment Advisors - Digital Microwave's largest institutional holder - says the breadth of Digital's product offerings gives the company an edge over competitors.
More Breadth
In addition to its radios, Digital Microwave also makes a Unix-based remote networkwide monitoring and control system called ProVision, and the company recently released a new telecom chip dubbed Velocity.
"The breadth of their product line is definitely a clear advantage," said Anderson, whose company holds 17% of Digital Microwave's stock.
Founded in 1984, Digital carved a niche by selling microwave radio systems for cellular phone systems. The company had high management turnover until Kissner and his team joined the firm in 1995.
As cellular operators began building up their networks, Digital Microwave gained position throughout the globe, with annual sales reaching $350 million.
The Asian financial crisis, though, caused orders to drop 42% in the first quarter of 1999. Kissner sliced operating and manufacturing costs 20% and moved to reposition the company as a supplier of broadband wireless gear.
Swimming Upstream
The company accomplished that through acquisitions and stepped-up research and development. By the third quarter in 1999, Digital Microwave managed to add the Altium, XP4 and Dart radios to its product lineup - this at a time when the company was having one of its most disastrous years.
"We learned that when times are rough it's a valuable opportunity to improve one's position," Kissner said. "We emerged from (the Asian crisis) as having the broadest product line in the industry. And we also emerged as the independent market share leader of the world."
Digital Microwave reported sales of $77.4 million for the third quarter ended Dec. 31, a 33% increase over sales of $58.3 million for the third quarter of the prior year. Net income for the quarter was 5 cents a share compared with an 11-cent loss for the prior year.
Searle expects Altium to post $17 million to $18 million in sales in the March quarter, but the product should account for $100 million in sales by the September quarter. First Call projects earnings of 15 cents a share for 2000 and 49 cents for 2001. The company trades as DMIC around 32.
"Additional excitement surrounding the product line will likely come with direct sales to traditional fiber service providers durng the next several quarters," Searle wrote in a research report.
Kissner says he's comfortable with the projection.
"We're running a little bit ahead of the power curve on this thing," he said. "Demand is just really skyrocketing."
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Two charts are associated with the above article under the heading "Grabbing The Air: Estimates project growth in Digital Microwave's markets."
The first chart, entitled "Global Wireless Subscribers", is a bar chart rising steadily from 300 million in 1998 to 1500 million in 2003.
the second chart, entitled "Data-Enabled Handset Sales", is a line chart rising almost exponentially from near-zero in 1999 to 400 million units in 2003 to 800 million units in 2005.
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