5/19/98 Jubak's Journal. My "best bet" telecom portfolio [includes ASND]
investor.msn.com
I use five industry trends as a foundation for standout telecom picks . . . like WorldCom, Cisco, Texas Instruments, Qualcomm and Vitesse. By Jim Jubak
Consider this Step 2.
A while back, in my column "Goodbye to PC Stocks," I argued that investors who now wanted to reap returns like those that investors earned from the PC revolution of the 1980s should invest in telecommunications stocks. I said that with unit growth in PC sales running in the 15% to 20% range, stocks like Intel (INTC), Microsoft (MSFT) and Compaq (CPQ) certainly aren't going to be bad investments going forward. But since Internet traffic was growing at 1,000% a year, returns from investing in companies that were building the new communications network and selling the new products and services that such a network made possible were likely to be quite substantially higher.
In that column I suggested some stocks for a telecommunications portfolio -- I had previously added two, Advanced Fiber Communications (AFCI) and Tellabs (TLAB), to Jubak's Picks -- and promised to come back with a full telecommunications portfolio. Well, here's my stab at that portfolio.
I've tried to break down the telecommunications revolution into a few important trends and sectors and then to find a stock -- what I call a Best Bet -- that should profit from that trend. I've also tried to suggest a few alternatives to my Best Bet in each area, for investors who either want to load up in a sector or who want to do further research on their own. I expect disagreement. In fact I look forward to it. My study of telecommunications stocks is still in its early stages. I'm sharing my conclusions with you in the hope that, over the months to come, we can refine and improve this portfolio together.
I've come up with five major investment themes:
Data, not voice End to end The age of DSP Wireless everywhere Piece by piece
Data, not voice. The argument is pretty simple. The voice-dominated telecommunications network that we now have is changing into a data-dominated network. The assets and skills of the companies that built and control the voice-dominated network are becoming less valuable; the assets and skills of the companies specializing in data are increasing in value.
Details
Company Facts
1-yr Chart
* Earnings Estimates
Company Facts
1-yr Chart
* Earnings Estimates
A few numbers, please. Last year, it looked like traffic on the Internet, which I'll use as my proxy for data traffic, was set to continue doubling every 3.6 months -- that's about 1,000% a year. Turns out this almost-unbelievable growth rate may actually be accelerating. The most recent numbers from a study done by the Commerce Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives showed 1,200% annual growth.
In contrast, voice traffic is growing by about 10% a year. So by 2000, data on the Internet will account for about half of the world's telecom bandwidth. By 2005, it will make up more than 90% of the total if the current growth rates continue.
So forget about the regional Bell companies -- even if they succeed in becoming super-regionals -- as well as any other phone company with a business currently dominated by voice. They've just got too many dollars sunk into the old voice network infrastructure. That investment will earn lower returns going forward and these companies will spend too much time defending their shares of the voice market in order to stretch out the useful lives of these assets.
Instead, look for companies that own networks optimized for data. Best bet: WorldCom (WCOM). No matter what happens in the Justice Department's review of the MCI deal, thanks to its UUNet division, WorldCom is already the dominant Internet backbone company. The exact terms that the Justice Department imposes on the WorldCom/MCI merger will determine whether being No. 2 is simply daunting or outright impossible. WorldCom Internet revenue grew by 100% year-to-year in the first quarter of 1998.
Alternative choice here: Qwest (QWST). The company combines a state-of-the-art fiber system with -- as a result of the LCI International merger -- an aggressive sales force. But Qwest is just now making the transition from a company that owns pipelines to a company that sells to customers.
Details
Company Facts
1-yr Chart
* Earnings Estimates
End to end. No company yet has a lock on building the new data-dominated network. Internet-based companies such as Cisco Systems (CSCO) don't have much experience in building highly reliable, easily managed, service-oriented networks. Phone-system suppliers such as Lucent Technologies (LU) are still struggling to buy or develop all the data-network technologies that they need. But it's clear from the torrid pace of acquisitions that a rapidly consolidating industry is going to produce a handful of end-to-end suppliers that will dominate the future build-out.
Best bet: Neither Cisco nor Lucent owns all the pieces it needs, and both already offer enough of an end-to-end solution to squeeze smaller competitors. But I prefer Cisco, a Jubak's Pick on Sept. 12, 1997 ("Catching the Cisco Express"). The company's aggressive culture is ingrained, not a recent implant, and it is attacking the big telecom market where Lucent already owns a substantial share.
Details
Company Facts
1-yr Chart
* Earnings Estimates
The age of DSP. Consider this analogy. The digital signal processor chip occupies the same central role in the telecommunications revolution as the Intel microprocessor did in the PC revolution. The new network is all about turning analog signals into digital ones -- turning voice into digital data and then back into voice, for example. You'll find digital signal processors in wireless phones, VCRs, camcorders, and modems -- anywhere, in fact, that the analog world of sound and light and touch has to be converted to digital form. Now, no company has the kind of 85% market dominance that Intel has achieved in microprocessors and I don't think it's likely that any one company will. The DSP business isn't about turning out volumes of basically identical chips, but instead about adapting a best-of-its-class chip to a specific product and use. But this market is growing at about 40% a year -- at least twice as fast as the PC chip business.
Best bet: Texas Instruments (TXN), a Jubak's Pick on August 22 ("Itching at the Trigger"). The company owns about 45% of the DSP market and combines manufacturing skills (and volume) with the engineering depth to adapt its chips to new products.
Alternative choice: Analog Devices (ADI), the third-largest maker of DSPs behind Texas Instruments and Lucent.
Details
Company Facts
1-yr Chart
* Earnings Estimates
Wireless everywhere. Worldwide wireless subscribers are projected to number 425 million in 2000, up from 275 million projected for 1998. Within that time period, we're likely to see the price of wireless service hit parity with the price of wired service. When that happens, ownership of a wireless phone moves from being mostly the province of the stressed-out and wealthy to being a reasonable choice in the general consumer market. That trend is already visible in both the developing world -- where getting a land line is essentially impossible -- and in parts of the developed world such as Europe.
Best bet: Qualcomm (QCOM), a Jubak's Pick on January 26, 1998 ("When Opportunity Knocks Again"). I prefer Qualcomm for its relatively small size -- just over $2 billion in annual sales -- and because it gives me a play across the spectrum of wireless opportunities, including a stake in the Globalstar GSTRF satellite system being launched by a group headed by Loral. The small sales base means Qualcomm has lots of room to grow and that margins should increase as the company is able to spread fixed costs across larger sales.
Alternative choices: Ericsson (ERICY) and Nokia (NOK/A). Sweden's Ericsson is a global power in wireless with solid management, and it does a far bigger business than Qualcomm in selling the equipment needed by wireless operators to set up their networks. Meanwhile, the ability of Finland's Nokia to figure out and exploit the hot trends in features and fashion has helped it grab 50% of the tough European market.
Details
Company Facts
1-yr Chart
* Earnings Estimates
Company Facts
1-yr Chart
* Earnings Estimates
Company Facts
1-yr Chart
* Earnings Estimates
Piece by piece. Just as the PC industry depends on scores of companies that build components, so too the telecommunications network will be built of dozens of specialized products from companies that sell to the Ciscos, Lucents, Ericssons, and Qualcomms.
I have several Best Bets here -- first among companies that will put speed in the network. Vitesse (VTSS), a Jubak's pick on June 17, 1997 ("Chip Investors, Roll Up Your Sleeves"), adds speed by making chips that run faster than those based on silicon; Uniphase (UNPH) does it by building components that cut down the number of times light-based signals have to be converted to electronics; and PMC-Sierra (PMCS) designs chips that speed up the operation of the next generation of broadband networks.
Other companies will profit from making smarter switches that add intelligence to the network. Here, my Best Bets are Ascend Systems (ASND), a Jubak's Pick on September 2. 1997, ("Bargains or Blunders?") and Fore Systems (FORE).
A final group builds products that sit at the point where the very efficient long-distance fiber-optic networks connect with the complicated local loops that take service to individual homes and offices. My Best Bets here, both Jubak's Picks on March 17, 1998, ("Picking Up on Telecom Mergers") are the aforementioned Tellabs and Advanced Fiber Communications.
Do these stocks exhaust the pool of potential winners from the telecommunications revolution? Of course not. I haven't mentioned companies such as Metromedia Fiber Networks (MFNX) that are building fiber networks in urban areas to connect businesses to the national network, or international wireless companies, or satellite systems, or . . . Well, you get the idea.
This revolution has a long way to go before it runs its course. I'll be writing about other companies before it's done. You can count on it.
Best bets Company Current Price 52-Week High 52-Week Low WorldCom (WCOM) 44 1/16 45 3/8 25 1/4 Cisco Systems (CSCO) 77 3/4 76 3/4 40 1/8 Texas Instruments (TXN) 59 3/16 71 1/4 39 5/8 Qualcomm (QCOM) 56 1/16 71 7/8 43 1/4 Vitesse (VTSS) 50 7/8 59 1/4 31 5/8 Uniphase (UNPH) 55 1/16 60 3/8 22 5/8 PMC-Sierra (PMCS) 43 1/4 51 1/4 19 1/2 Ascend Systems (ASND) 44 1/4 60 22 Fore Systems (FORE) 23 1/4 24 7/8 13 1/4 Tellabs (TLAB) 70 9/16 73 3/8 42 3/4 Advanced Fiber Comm. (AFCI) 38 11/16 44 3/4 21 1/2
Runners up/alternative choices Company Current Price 52-Week High 52-Week Low Qwest (QWST) 39 3/8 41 1/16 13 1/8 Lucent (LU) 71 9/16 79 30 3/8 Ericsson (ERICY) 52 3/8 56 5/8 33 7/8 Nokia (NOK/A) 63 7/8 70 31 5/8 Analog Devices (ADI) 33 13/16 39.620 23 3/4 |