WSJ article on bandwidth:
TORONTO -- Greg Maffei was in for a shock as he prepared to address a conference here last month. He hoped to convince the 250 investors and analysts that the company he heads, fiber-optic communications carrier 360networks Inc., was as hot as the company's then-strong stock price.
But a survey at the conference offered a surprising insight: Some 49% of the assembled investors expected a glut of fiber-optic capacity within three years.
Consoling himself that 51% didn't predict a glut, Mr. Maffei remarked to a banker, "I guess we've got a slight majority with us."
Many Internet and telecom gurus scoff at the notion of an actual glut of available fiber-optic bandwidth. But the investors' response underscores a pressing dilemma for companies such as Mr. Maffei's: Bandwidth -- the capacity of communications lines to carry data and phone calls -- is quickly becoming a commodity for long-distance networks. Companies such as 360networks that have incurred billions of dollars in debt to build tidal waves of new bandwidth must now race to sell it to corporations, phone carriers, Internet providers and others as its price plunges.
Meanwhile, the technology keeps improving, allowing the same fiber cables to move ever-growing amounts of information. The cost of creating bandwidth has plunged 99% over the past 10 years, and fast-improving technology means "the same thing is going to happen over the next five years," says Greg Mumford, president of optical networks for Nortel Networks Corp. The Brampton, Ontario, networking giant is a key company making breakthroughs in fiber-optic technology and a supplier to 360networks.
360networks, based in Vancouver, British Columbia, is spending some $5.7 billion -- and has taken on more than $2 billion of debt -- to develop its fiber network. Those are hefty figures for a newly public company that had just $234 million of revenue in the first half of this year and is expected to produce negative cash flow and losses for at least another year. Competitors such as Global Crossing Ltd. of Bermuda and Level 3 Communications Inc. of Broomfield, Colo., are also investing furiously. The growing availability of bandwidth has resulted in several markets where bandwidth capacity can be bought and sold, much like corn or oil.
There are now 14 big-capacity national networks operating or under construction in the U.S. and the companies are "all burning cash at a pretty sharp rate," says Paul Sagawa, a Sanford C. Bernstein analyst who recently became bearish on the sector. The companies' rate of revenue growth is falling behind their rate of spending, which he calls "an untenable long-term circumstance" that is likely to lead to "a messy period of consolidation," including asset sales or slowed spending.
Already, shares of Global Crossing and Level 3 are trading at less than half the levels of early this year. 360networks stock fell 75 cents to $14 Wednesday in Nasdaq Stock Market trading, down sharply from more than $24 early last month, returning the shares to their initial public offering price of $14 in April.
Competition is growing fierce. Take Cogent Communications Inc., a Washington, D.C., start-up that plans to offer 100 megabits per second of Internet access to more than 500 corporate customers in several U.S. cities for $1,000 a month starting in November. That's more than 60 times the capacity of a standard high-speed office hookup -- at a lower cost.
Big "backbone" carriers such as 360networks, which usually provide wholesale transport service for carriers that actually serve businesses and consumers, face other obstacles. One is the "last mile" problem, the fact that the phone lines that connect consumers and small businesses to the Internet usually are too slow to take advantage of the high speeds. Moreover, there aren't enough applications, such as video-on-demand services, to soak up all the bandwidth.
The rapid growth of backbone networks "will result in a capacity glut, a situation that is likely to persist until well after 2005," telecommunications consulting firm Adventis Corp. said recently.
All this means headaches for Mr. Maffei, who resigned as chief financial officer of Microsoft Corp. last year and became president and chief executive officer of 360networks in January. Since then he has seen 360networks through a blitz of deals, helping the company build one of the world's largest high-capacity networks. By mid-2002, the 81,530-mile maze is expected to link more than 100 major cities around the world.
Now Mr. Maffei and his team must fill 360networks' fat pipes by selling bandwidth and related services as quickly as possible.
On a recent whirlwind trip, Mr. Maffei and other 360networks officials met with customers and prospective customers in Spain one day, then flew a leased jet to Paris for breakfast the following morning, to Rome for lunch, and to Britain for dinner. There is no time these days for golf or other leisure time with customers, says Jim Brennan, the company's marketing chief, who logs some 40,000 miles a month on commercial airlines.
Knowing that it won't always offer the cheapest deal, the company stresses its technology and global reach. But pressure from competitors cutting prices won't go away. Mr. Brennan says he is in contact with Mr. Maffei and Vice Chairman Larry Olsen at least four times a day, trying to decide what contract terms the company can accept. The hardest part comes when the executives must pass on a potential sale because a competitor is offering rates that 360networks believes are unprofitable, Mr. Brennan says.
The price of bandwidth in a competitive area of the U.S. is about a tenth of the price four years ago and less than 1% of the price in the mid-1980s, though prices for bandwidth connecting various regions of the world aren't falling as fast. To avoid pure price competition, 360networks often sells its capacity in conjunction with data-center services and other add-ons.
Mr. Maffei says he also is mining long-time associates for potential sales leads as well as strategic guidance. John Malone, chairman of AT&T Corp.'s Liberty Media unit, is a 360networks director, as is Kevin Compton, a partner in Silicon Valley venture-capital heavyweight Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. Mr. Maffei says he also has held preliminary talks with Dell Computer Corp. CEO Michael Dell, a 360networks shareholder and adviser, about potential business with the computing giant. He called on Rupert Murdoch, another adviser, to help with a network joint venture with Singapore Telecommunications.
"I'm very optimistic about the long-term demand" for bandwidth, Mr. Maffei says. Just as lower mobile phone charges have greatly multiplied the number of customers, lower bandwidth prices will lead to many more bandwidth-hungry applications, he predicts. And 360networks says only a few networks can match its relatively low building costs and global scale.
In a few years, "we'll all be buying our music and our videos online, and those are unbelievable file sizes," says Mr. Olsen, the vice chairman. Moreover, 360networks is in talks with a company seeking to broadcast sports over the Internet, says marketing chief Mr. Brennan. The service will allow viewers to customize their viewing and watch, say, just one star's play at a golf tournament, he says. "That application hogs bandwidth," he adds. |