Content management firm F5 Networks is pushing the envelope of technology in order to speed the Net in step with the demands of global e-commerce. This former high-flier has been tattered and tousled since its high of $160 last fall. But with an innovative alliance and exciting new products in the pipe, one analyst says this stock is very undervalued.
Miami, FL, June 5 /SHfn/ -- For investors seeking an undervalued play in an extremely high growth sector, F5 Networks [FFIV] could be just that. Chase H&Q Networking and Communications analyst Erik Suppiger believes F5 is very undervalued and he holds a 'buy' rating on the stock. FFIV hit a high of $160 « last November when jaw-dropping earnings planted the company firmly into profitability and shocked analysts who were expecting a loss. Since that time, F5 has slid steadily lower, and may have found its bottom in the $30 range. Suppiger remains extremely bullish, commending the company's strategic positioning against some competitors for whom he sees storm clouds ahead.
As the dot coms sidestep traffic jams, struggle with security, wrestle packet loss, and hoard data close to the end user, the need for speed in web content management has never been more pronounced. The notion that web traffic is accelerating is well-received to be sure. Companies are scrambling for the tools to fortify their infrastructure to support critical Web applications and boost Net performance. Many have turned to content management firms for caching, routing and load balancing solutions to manage their networks.
F5 Networks has built its reputation by providing Internet Traffic and Content Management (iTCM) products to service providers, e-commerce firms and other high traffic web site operators. F5 is a specialist in load balancing, a subset of the larger content management category. The Seattle-based company has built a big name on Big-IP, its flagship appliance solution. As well, the company develops software products that manage traffic and content at the local server farms or across the network. Big-IP is an intelligent, load balancing product capable of directing traffic to the most appropriate servers and applications. Big/IP will sniff out the fires, and will direct traffic away from any malfunctioning servers or applications thus maximizing uptime and improving ROI for F5's clients.
F5 clients can buckle up for take off in coming months as the Jet Assisted Take Off (JATO) project is ready to fly. JATO is a card, integrated into the back of the Big-IP controller that will accelerate the performance of the box quite considerably, according to Chase H&Q analyst, Eric Suppiger. This is significant, he attested, because it allows F5, which has traditionally been slower than its hardware-based rivals, to accelerate its performance, while offering a rich features set that its switch-based rivals do not offer. Alteon Websystems [ATON], ArrowPoint, and Top Layer Networks provide intelligent switches and contend in the hardware-based solutions space.
"The load balancing market has been growing at an extremely rapid pace over the last year," stated Suppiger. Load balancing can be achieved with a hardware-based approach, in the switch itself, or by software with an appliance-based approach, as F5 does. He believes the switch-based market will become extremely competitive as the established vendors take considerable market share in that market. Cisco's ravenous acquisition of switch-based content management firm, ArrowPoint Communications [ARPT] for $ 6 billion confirms the voracious appetite for the world of content management. The integration of load balancing solutions into their switches will shake up the hardware-based load balancing specialists such as Alteon Websystems. In contrast, F5 and the other appliance-based load balancing vendors could develop additional content and traffic management capabilities that can't be replicated in a switch. Based on his firm's analysis of the company, Suppiger said, "We think that F5 is the best positioned of the appliance-based load balancing vendors."
F5 has forged relationships to OEM its software and network processor technology to switch vendors 3Com [COMS], Extreme Networks [EXTR] and Cabletron Systems [CS] and to server vendors Hewlett Packard [HWP] and Dell [DELL]. And in recent announcements, F5 entered strategic relationships with content delivery firm Akamai [AKAM], and with caching specialist CacheFlow. F5 will work jointly with each company to develop products to optimize intelligent load balancing and content delivery, particularly for e-Business networks. In Suppiger's opinion, these alliances exhibit interoperability that is totally unique to F5.
Interest from other vendors was evident at the Networld + Interop conference in Las Vegas, earlier in May, where F5 was policing heavy traffic of another kind. Brett Helsel, F5's Senior VP of Product Development told StockHouse, "People who are looking at worldwide traffic today are principally looking at 3DNS." 3DNS was the second product, launched after Big-IP, and has now gained worldwide acceptance, Helsel explained. This product allows corporations to tailor their traffic management to their actual business objectives because 3DNS will accept certain routing criteria based on time of day or server farm, network, or policy based metrics. For example, a New York city bank can command 3DNS to route traffic globally and keep it away from its NYC data center between 7-9 am.
The application of such conditional routing policies becomes increasingly valuable in Asia and Europe where demographics, language requirements and Internet cost structures are very different. In Asia, traffic faces various cost and tax structures as it crosses multiple territories and governments. 3DNS can help businesses be profitable in many cases by setting their traffic distribution based on policies. A Hong Kong business, for example, could avoid the high costs of moving traffic to Japan or the United States by allowing that traffic to remain in Hong Kong. This requires the integration of F5 technologies such that content can be maintained and served from the edge of the network rather than travelling superfluously across great distances.
Of all the products displayed at the Networld + Interop show, the yet-to-be officially announced product stole the thunder. Although shipping is not expected for a couple months, F5 displayed EdgeWorks, its newest offering, aimed at integrating the capabilities of F5's entire product suite. EdgeWorks will be targeted toward network providers and companies with servers and caches worldwide. The new product will bring the end user to the nearest copy of the requested content on the edge servers (located close to the end user) while diverting trouble spots on the network.
"We're seeing a lot of edge service in the year 2000," reported Brett Helsel. Edge server solutions are ideal for streaming media applications, he illustrated with another example, as a music provider in the US that receives content requests from Japan could serve up content out of Japan on a local server rather than just blast it back and forth between the two nations. Not only would distance costs be reduced, but the speed and quality of the content delivery would also be superior due to the proximity. For ease and speed of transfer, data is broken down into packets before travelling over the network and are then reassembled at the receiving end. For voice and sound files, dropped or delayed packets will mutate sound quality. Edge service is desirable because it reduces the distance the packets travel and consequently reduces potential for errors and bottlenecks.
Also at the show, F5 officially announced the expansion of the Big-IP product family with the addition of four new appliances for server management, caching management and security software for firewalls. The new products are targeted at small businesses and are each priced under $10,000.
The company aspires to rock the investment community as it did on October 27th of last year when it announced fourth-quarter profits of $0.11 a share - the Street was expecting a 2-cent loss. Shares vaulted 43 % that day and reached an all time high of $160 « a few days after the spectacular announcement. Since November, the shares have dropped like Mercury in mid-winter, although the company has maintained profitability and posted healthy revenue growth at home and abroad. In the most recent quarter, ended March 31st, the company reported net revenue of $23.6 million, up 527% from the $3.8 million in the year ago period. In the earnings release, CEO Jeff Hussey guided for growth rates in the low to mid teens range, and continued profits and positive cash flow in the second half of fiscal 2000.
The complete F5 product line saw strong sales last quarter, to both new and existing customers alike. As of March this year, the company counted over 1,500 customers including some of the largest names in e-commerce, financial service, Internet services, ISPs, government, portals, healthcare and other enterprises. A substantial leap in international sales and service revenue is expected. |