SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Loral Space & Communications -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Thomas who wrote (4071)7/27/1998 8:49:00 AM
From: Geoff  Respond to of 10852
 
Subject: Re: Miscellaneous
Date: Mon, Jul 20, 1998 20:28 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072100284600.UAA25734@ladder01.news.aol.com>

Any possible interest in Primestar would not have to do with delivering content, but rather deploying certain of P*'s transponders for multimedia/internet delivery systems, whether under the C* or Orion banner. Loral is not entering the content-delivery business.

Given the recent acquisition by AT&T of Telecommunications Corp. (which has an interest in Primestar, and in turn the @home network) and the, what one can consider to be, reasonably informed talk in trade papers about New Skies' capitalization as a soon-to-be publicly traded company (and no longer an Intelsat property) a Loral alliance with Primestar would now appear less likely.

Subject: Re: Miscellaneous
Date: Mon, Jul 20, 1998 23:05 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072103054000.XAA17813@ladder01.news.aol.com>

No, I do not think that Loral will buy New Skies.

I have read through some of the FCC filings and ITU memoranda regarding the privatization of the Intelsat assets. Extraordinarily "legalese", to say the least.

Ex hypothesi it would make sense in this privatization discussion, one could argue, for LOR to buy (1) Comsat International, (2) ownership in Teleglobe's 3 sats (Teleglobe beams off Orion F1 anyway), (3) transponder access to Intelsat's IOR fleet (or at least ownerships of the slots to 62 and 63 degrees East for their [Loral's] own sats), and the rights to the two slots opening up in Intelsat's AOR.

Ownership in Teleglobe would enhance C* [the Teleglobe sats are ATM efficient], ownership of Comsat Int'l would enhance Orion, as would ownership of the Indian Ocean and Atlantic Ocean region slots of Intelsat.

Will this happen? I think something more than a faint resemblance of what was written above makes economic sense. But it is one of a number of possible scenarios and, as I suggested, hypothetical. As for timing, I think this scenario (or its similitude) would unfold in steps over the next year, and not be something all at once.

Subject: ICO Gloabl andG* Price
Date: Wed, Jul 22, 1998 16:34 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072220345100.QAA23914@ladder01.news.aol.com>

It occurs to me that the softening in G*'s price is a function of the ICO road show which has been in effect for the past two weeks. I attended the ICO briefing.

It is my opinion that my impressions on Iridium 2nd generation pricing (and the ability to finance a second system thereby, even at a cost 40% lower than the first) that I posted here a while ago were in fact not uncalled for afater all. There is one engineering fact that says it all to one who is in the satcom industry: total capacity.

Each ICO MEO has 4,500 satellite channels, which can handle 60 minutes/hour each. Total ICO Global capacity is 24 billion minutes/year.

That figure is an answer from the ICO Chief Executive Officer Olof Lundberg in direct response to my question on ICO's total capacity.

While other variables enter into the overall finacial table of a satcom telephony company, total capacity allows break-even flexibility which I suggested Iridium's second generation looks not to have-- at least as far as I can see relative to G* and ICO. It occurs to me that "break-even" is the beginning of all "return on equity": ROE is an increasing function of break-even.

In any event, ICO will be priced I believe next Tuesday or Wednesday. I do not see ICO as a competitor to G*. The three systems together at total capacity perhaps number 7 million subscribers for ICO, 6 million for G*, and 1.5 million for Iridium. That leaves room for systems to fill a demand for some 17-18 million more users in the year 2002. It appears to me that we are looking at a per minute retail price for ICO in the neighborhood of $1.95.
which is nearly equivalent to G*.

The genuine question, it occurs to me, that an investor needs to calculate in his decision now is to pivot that decision off the break-even number of all three systems.

These are my initial impressions from the ICO meeting yesterday. I am not going to comment really on ICO, any more than these initial impressions. ICO will be operational in August 2000, and it appears to me that we are looking at somewhere in the proximity of $180 million in net profit in the year 2002 (as a benchmark against which to measure G* and Iridium World), accelerating rapidly thereafter.

As always my impressions will be tested by the facts, which will either disprove them or confirm them.

Subject: Re: ICO Gloabl andG* Price
Date: Wed, Jul 22, 1998 18:16 EDT
From: Toothog
Message-id: <1998072222163500.SAA08099@ladder01.news.aol.com>

hOW IS THE WEAK g* PRICE AFFECTED BY ico?
I thought it may be a launch delay rumor of something

From what you have been hearing is demand still seem as strong or is it just normal market crap

Subject: Re: ICO Gloabl andG* Price
Date: Wed, Jul 22, 1998 19:16 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072223160300.TAA16331@ladder01.news.aol.com>

Because, those with a profit in G* and Iridium will sell them to buy ICO at a lower price. In fact, this is what a number of money managers (4) have told me is being done.

The capacity for the demand is very inadequate. The 5 systems approved (Iridium G*, ICO, Ellipso, ECCO) will not meet the demand for even 30 million users. That was acknowledged in the ICO presentation by Olof Lundberg, ICO CEO.

As I mentioned there are no more non-GEO systems that will be approved. The bidding is closed, done. The 5 systems that have been approved may expand, but no more systems will be allowed.

You have a number of GEO systems, therefore, that are being developed, which will probably get us up to 25-26 million capacity by 2003. For Quality of Voice demand, however, the LEO systems (no latency) will be the choice of those sensitive to latency.

Subject: G* brokerage report
Date: Wed, Jul 22, 1998 19:06 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072223063700.TAA15034@ladder01.news.aol.com>

A New York based brokerage today began G* with a "neutral".

A reading of the report seems to indicate that the craw in it is the broker's caution about G*'s lack of timely launching by Zenit and G*s launching 75% of its sats on the Zenit.

That opinion derives from this: his G* subscription numbers for 1999 are 900,000 with a higher subscription number for 2002, according to the writer, than G* mangement's (though the number is not given by the writer).

He puts a $28 value on G for 1999, which his published G* subscriber assumptions for 2002 do not support. He assumes 140 minutes of usage per month (we assume 100), and a 75% mobile user market. Should one be baffled at his pricing model? It would be interesting to see what others who read the report think of the calculations he hasmade.

Discounting back to 1999 his 2002 subscriber number for G* (which he says are above G* management's) and minutes of usage per subscriber per month, one gets to almost $57/share at the end of 1999 for earnings of G* in 2002 (using G* management's pro forma 2002 numbers) and assuming 86 million fully diluted shares. He uses $.47/minute as G*'s per minute revenue (87% margin).

Going out to 2007 (for which the broker puts numbers), use a 30% discount rate, and a terminal multiple in 2007 of 9 (which is the broker's terminal multiple). His EBITDA for G* in 2007 is $4.8 billion, with an EBITDA margin of 92%. Assume 86 million fully diluted shares. You have earnings in excess of $44/share in 2007, with a stock price (terminal multiple of 9) of $396/share.

Fascinating (I think the adjective is appropriate): taken from this broker's analysis in his report today, G* will appreciate, according to him, from $28/share at the end of 1999 1,500% by 2007.

One can suggest that the G* launch scenario would have been abetted by usage of other launch vehicles [2 Zenits, instead of three, with more Deltas perhaps. (Can one really say though? If the G* launches on Zenit are all successful, what difference would it have made?]. I think, after reading the report, it is the launch scenario, the "high roller stakes" he perceives in it (while others may not), that has the broker "miffed". For his numbers that he
presents in his report for G* simply do not bear out his year-end 1999 target.

Subject: Re: G* malaise
Date: Wed, Jul 22, 1998 22:33 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072302330700.WAA17114@ladder01.news.aol.com>

The notion that Hyundai wanted "out" of G* is not exactly correct. Their Asian and Korean financial crush induced by whatever the causes resulted in its management needing to devote all its efforts to meeting IMF reorganization demands, which just three years ago Hyundai could never have envisioned. The effect of the new capital requirements it faced could be likened to a cement pile driving through a glass window.

Berenard Schwartz relayed in a conference call in April to institutional investors that Globalstar management in late March began becoming somewhat concerned about Hyundai's resultant lack of focus on its G* commitments, as well as becoming edgy over Dacom's also. Globalstar and the two companies mutually began discussions about what the best course for both would be.

You will note that AirTouch, which experienced none of the financial uncertainties that faced Hyundai and Dacom, sold none of its Globalstar stock. In fact, there was talk here and there in the industry that AirTouch wanted to increase its stake.

I bring this up because the brokerage report referenced earlier by me today in a prior post mentioned misgivings about Hyundai's withdrawal as possibly representing a lack of faith in future substantial upward pricing possibilities for the shares of Globalstar. The brokerage report did not mention AirTouch's decision to not sell, nor the rumors (which I think have credible basis, otherwise I would not have posted it here) of its desire for more
ownership, nor the George Soros investment.

More likely than not, as I think of the brokerage report I referenced earlier, it appears that the writer has a point of view to press-- which is fine, so long as all the facts are presented in a report. When they are not, as I have indicated above that they were not, the report loses cogency. That sometimes, though, is because the writer has a point of view to press and some facts just don't fit that point of view.

***

As I attended the ICO conference, if I may post a fully personal (but hopefully not totally subjective) observation, I was astonished at the almost total lack of understanding exhibited by the questions of those in attendance. These were "money managers" who seem not to realize that some 10,000 hours of work goes into each satellite from start to final orbit, that the delivery of communications from space so far away is an absolute miracle of human
ingenuity, that the capabilities to deliver a new technology so difficult and exacting as satellite technology is represents an enormous capacity of mind, that just to even begin to understand frequency doctrine requires a discipline of study habits that express commitment and resolve not characteristically displayed in everyday commerce. These money managers seem so "bent on the next quarter-- will the earnings be there in time"-- totally oblivious
to the largesse of the revolution unfolding before their eyes. I would venture that given the impatience of these individuals to see earnings, they would lack the patience to see any satcom project through.

I have not been to a Wall Street satcom "IPO road show" in quite some time, nor to any Loral conference for that matter (except for the secondary in May since their business plan had been substantially emended), since our east coast office attends and sends me transcripts from them. I was just struck with the difference between their impatience, and the actual excellence of skill and time required to effect the revolution in technology that satcoms
present to the populated world. It was quite an eye opener.

Subject: Re: G* malaise
Date: Thu, Jul 23, 1998 11:22 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072315221100.LAA19284@ladder01.news.aol.com>

I can't address "short-term" movements in stocks at all, davkar529. I am baffled, personally, how some stocks can trade a 7% spread in one day. I just don't understand how that occurs.

I do not know all the individual ownerships of LOR, G*, or Iridium. In trying to ascertain the cause (if there are causes in the short-term) of G*'s price decline over the past few days I had been told by a number of portfolio managers that "hot money" was probably selling G* (since they made their profit) to buy into ICO, with the expectation of realizing a "quick" gain as was the case in Iridium and G* in the past. I heard nothing from ICO's
principals at their breakfast that would have caused a long-term investor to suddenly sell stocks in ICO's competitors. Quite the contrary, the ICO principals spoke well of both G* and Iridium.

Subject: Re: ICO Global andG* Price
Date: Thu, Jul 23, 1998 12:02 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072316021900.MAA23758@ladder01.news.aol.com>

ICO has a spectrum advantage over G*, but that is offset, one can argue, with the latency of a MEO (about 1/4 second) relative to a G* LEO. One can go back and forth on these issues, e.g., one can say that ICO management has never really been in a free market environment (what with all the governmental oversight), while Loral has been. The launch of a MEO is somewhat more important than that of 4 LEOs at a time since it takes longer to
manufacturer a MEO, and on and on as that affects possible launch mishaps. I think it's best one do a lot of research on the company and then make the about it. I would need to spend at least 200 hours on the company before I could pretend to have a reasonable estimate of it. And I have only glanced at ICO, and have not a scintilla of competence in it at all.

Subject: Lost Birds.
Date: Thu, Jul 23, 1998 09:50 EDT
From: TASTYCHAP
Message-id: <1998072313502600.JAA10199@ladder01.news.aol.com>

Readware.

What do you think the effect of the 2 lost Iridium Sats. will have on LOR.

TIA.

Best Regards & May the Schwartz be with you.
T.C.

Subject: Re: Lost Birds.
Date: Thu, Jul 23, 1998 12:40 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072316404500.MAA28200@ladder01.news.aol.com>

I only hope its not the momentum wheels. From the report, it looks like it is, which would be an issue of attention to detail on the assembly line and at the testing facility. As fine a company as Motorola is, this looks really inexcusable and annoying. There are people who watch the Iridium sats through their telescopes (there are a lot of people who do that as a hobby, by the way). Once they start talking about flashes it's not a good
sign. You can follow any sat yourself by getting the software. It's called "clock tracking".

Subject: Thomas Watts, Iridium, and Merrill Lynch
Date: Thu, Jul 23, 1998 20:43 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072400433200.UAA01772@ladder01.news.aol.com>

In his first research report on Iridium World in the Spring of 1997, the Iridium World analyst at investment bank Merrill Lynch (1) began research coverage of Iridium World with a "near-term accumulate rating", a "long-term strong buy" rating and target price in 1998 of $54/share and in the year 2002 of $215.

(2) On 16 October 1997, this same analyst cut his rating on Iridium World to "intermediate term neutral" and "long-term accumulate", with a 1998 target price of $66/share and a 2002 price of $178.

(3) On 24 March 1998, the same analyst announced a "near-term and long term accumulate" rating on Iridium World "updating our 12-18 month valuation to $82", and a $203/share price in 2002.

(4) On 23 July 1998 the same analyst lowered his rating on Iridium World to "neutral from accumulate but maintaining a long-term buy rating". No target price for the year 2002 appears in the report.

This analyst also covers Loral Space and Communications. He lowered his rating on Loral Space to "neutral" only some 40 days after rating it a "long-term buy" because he did not have the political/military/intelligence contacts who could explain to him the politics/mendacity/calumny of the China fiasco. Then, just four weeks later he raised his rating on Loral to a long term buy again from "neutral".

Can anyone explain to me how this individual keeps his job? Am I missing something?

Subject: Re: Iridium fallout
Date: Fri, Jul 24, 1998 17:39 EDT
From: AjitC
Message-id: <1998072421395000.RAA12202@ladder03.news.aol.com>

In my earlier years, I had project responsibility if offshore oil and gas platforms... which pale in comparison with the complexity with Iridium LEO project. One thing that did happen was that the more complex the project the more things went wrong. So I avoided the latest gizmos and kept things simple... had less problems. So, I have been feeling marginally better having invested in the dumb reflector in the sky G*.

Still there are too many things that can go wrong from the launches, satellites, gateways, handsets - and competition. Now I have to worry about ICO with its billion of minutes capacity. I know that Readware has not had the chance of doing his customary in depth assessment... but does anybody have an idea what the threats ICO pose to G*? Are ICO costs lower? What is their big picture?

Ajit.

Subject: Re: Iridium fallout
Date: Fri, Jul 24, 1998 18:53 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072422534700.SAA14816@ladder01.news.aol.com>

Ajitc: While I have not done an in-depth assessment of ICO Global, I can propose a general answer to the questions you posed:

If satcom telephony demand in 2002 is 30 million subscribers, the total number number of all systems planned and to be in operation in 2002 (LEO and GEO) comes to 27 million user capacity. You get that number by taking all the proposed systems and finding the subscriber user capacity the satcom providers of them assert their system has. In that regard it would not appear that ICO would be a competitive threat to G* or Iridium-- all things held equal.
Each will have a part of the market.

However: the following thoughts:

(1) Not all things are equal. ICO stated that its average retail cost/minute will be between $1.97/minute to $2.10/minute. ICO will, like G*, be a wholesaler to local telcos. Iridium World is not. It is a bypass system. ICO did not state at the breakfast I attended what its cents/share of wholesaling would be.

I say not all things are equal because while ICO's retail cost/minute is similar to G*'s, it is sharply different, as is G*'s, from Iridium's. I have seen two brokerage reports speak of Iridium lowering prices in the future to keep market share. We will see. Iridium, contrary to what one brokerage report wrote, did not lower their cost in the United States this year for per/minute usage. That had been their intended cost in the US after they decided
on a three-card capability for their phone in June 1997. If Iridium lowers its cost/call, it has the problem of break-even, which I have posted here in the past. Since its capacity is not even anywhere near G*'s or ICO's, the ability to lower costs with such undercapacity relative to G* or ICO is financially limited.

Further, we do not believe there will be a price war in satcom telephony till late in 2001. The cellular model that is used to argue for this decline, we believe, is inapt in this case. The reason is rather plain: the limited number of particpants that can deliver satcom telephony infrastructure (space and land) makes the supply side of the market somewhat constrained, as opposed to simply increasing supply relatively easy by building thousands upon
thousand of cells for land based cellular systems. However, it is supply that drives down cost, and we simply do not see a flexibility in supply of satcoms. It is no easy thing to develop such systems. They are not like putting up towers.

(2) Iridium, I believe, but am not sure, will be receiving some monies from the sale of handsets-- neither G* nor ICO shall, however.

(3) There is the meaningful question of why it is that ICO's 12 MEO constellation has a 24 billion minutes of usage/year capacity. It has only a capacity for 7 million users because of the orbital configurations and the resultant number of calls that can be received at the same time. When I asked the ICO CEO the question on total capacity he suggested at the breakfast not to be too attentive to that 24 billion capacity number. Their break even
number is not available since their equity dollar amount they were to raise from the road show is obviously not finalized.

(4) ICO has a 4 tier model: cellular roaming, basic mobile, specialty mobile, maritime.

(5) Because it is operating at a higher altitude, there are frequency (non-noise/interference) advantages ICO can claim over G* and Iridium, which in turn can claim absence of latency for their system. There have been some claims that Iridium does have a 1/4 second delay which I have read in three places, which Iridium denied when I asked them about it in December of 1997. I will take Iridium at its word, having no reason to doubt their veracity or
total professionalism.

(6) ICO has an advantage that G* and Iridium had to work years to acquire: licenses and connections. ICO has been delivering a form of satcom telephony for years, and thus has licensing and gateway accesses etc. in place.

(7) ICO will cost about $4 billion. A MEO is a far more valuable piece of machinery than a LEO. A MEO lasts about 11-12 years, which has some advantages if technology in satcoms does not change. However, it does rapidly so the life of a MEO as an advantage over a LEO is a two-edged sword. A MEO is in a probably more inhospitable orbit in space than a LEO but that is not a matter about which to be too concerned. Finally, like G*, ICO is a hybrid
system, unlike Iridium's ISL.

So there are 3 unique constellations emerging: G*-- a LEO bent-pipe hybrid lowest cost system. ICO: a MEO bent-pipe hybrid system with a better look angle than G* or Iridium, and conceivably has less of a hand-off problem (which G* and Iridium have presumably resolved in the engineering of their fleet). Iridium: a highly complex bypass system with no cooperation with earth stations that needs 66 sats at all times for global coverage, with a much
lower capacity than either G* or ICO, with the advantage over G* and ICO of being able to be free of terrestrial mishaps.

A demand of 30 million subscribers, then, should not make ICO a threat to any of the other systems believed to be available for the year 2002.



To: Thomas who wrote (4071)7/27/1998 8:51:00 AM
From: Geoff  Respond to of 10852
 
More...

=========

Subject: Re: Thomas Watts, Iridium, and Merrill Lynch
Date: Fri, Jul 24, 1998 19:35 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072423354000.TAA19989@ladder01.news.aol.com>

My comment on Thomas Watts pertainto his continual change of mind regarding one business entity, sc. Iridium. Arguendo, we can disregard his Loral change of mind.

If you are going to continue to change your mind (rating recommendation) on a company, it indicates that you cannot regress away effectively whatever contingencies might develop in the company you propose to cover as a Wall Street equities analyst. Accordingly, you should not cover that company, or pretend to have a competence to cover that company.

In any event, I did get the answer to my question about why Watts changes his mind so much-- brokerage commissions. As far as I can tell in studying the method of Warren Buffett, the "oracle of Omaha" (for whom I have the highest respect) does a bit more work on a company than a brokerage analyst before he buys shares in that company. He doesn't change his mind every few months. He foresees the possible variables and pitfalls.

But then Mr. Buffet doesn't need the commissions. Then, again, he might be a bit more intelligent.

Subject: Re: ICO Global andG* Price
Date: Fri, Jul 24, 1998 23:00 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072503000700.XAA21853@ladder03.news.aol.com>

ICO should be priced next week some time.

I do suggest you do a lot of research on the company and its MEOs, and its suppliers, and its market demand, of course, and not in any way just read or depend only on what I have written. I was only passing along what I had read and heard at the ICO presentation. What you want to do most is find out how their capital structure (debt plus equity) compares with the other systems, and how its total capacity of minutes per year compares with the others
in the case that price softness does become an issue (which I do not think it will-- but it is important to know how much financial flexibility in pricing its calls ICO has relative to others in a "price war").

Subject: Re: Thomas Watts, Iridium, and Merrill Lynch
Date: Fri, Jul 24, 1998 22:54 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072502542300.WAA21093@ladder03.news.aol.com>

A neutral, to answer your question if I may, is not an "accumulate". Nor is it a buy.

The criticism of Watts, and other analysts it turns up as I have learned from asking portfolio managers over the past two days (interested, it appears, at my puzzlement over these constant changes of opinions of honest Wall Street analysts) is well-founded: he scares the bejeebers out of investors by opining some grave doings about a possible delay in Iridium's start-up date from 23 September to 15 November 1998. Result-- the price of the stock drops
almost 19% in one day. And over two million shares trade... Did someone say commissions?

Is this not nonsense? If there is a delay in the start-up by two months, and you have a $200 plus price target for the stock only three and half years later [(2002) a 4 fold appreciation], you live with the delay. Remember: you have stated in your first report on the company that the company will exceed $200/share by the year 2002. Perhaps you should not have written that in your first report. Correct?

If you keep changing your opinion on the stock over the next six-eight subsequent months, it's like shouting "fire" in a theatre five, six, seven times in one night when there is no fire...

Watt's analyses-- and I do not single him out-- Smith Barney Salomon started Iridium with a "buy" the afternoon immediately before the stock dropped 19%-- manifest a grossly overpaid inability to judge a company over the near, intermediate, and long-term. That is why I said he should not cover Iridium. He obviously has little grasp of the satellite industry. He's either guessing or seeking to generate commissions. What conviction can he have of his
$200 price target for Iridium in 2002 when the stock is $54/share if a slight delay in its roll-out bothers him enough to reduce his rating on the company he once lauded to a "neutral"? The fact that he has changed his recommendations on Iridium five times in less than two years seems evidence enough to draw that conclusion.

That, to answer your question if I may, is the point of the criticism. I don't really see what is so difficult for you to see. I suspect, in fact, there is nothing difficult at all for you to see, that you understand quite well the criticism.

Res ipse loquitur

Subject: Loral FY 2000 Earnings estimates
Date: Sat, Jul 25, 1998 13:41 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072517414100.NAA26907@ladder03.news.aol.com>

Below is a table for one way of considering Loral's year-end 2000 business performance.

We assume, for purposes of reference, a 37% growth rate in year 2001 over year 2000, and a 29% growth rate in year 2002 over 2001.

The year 2002 growth assumption is exclusive of Cyberstar-Skyrbridge.

Our RONTA and Discount Rate valuations imply, on a froward looking basis, however, C*-Skybridge.
*******************************************************************************************************
FY 2000 estimates

GEO transponder revenues: 477 transponders

[For purposes of calculation we use a 71% weighted average utilization and $1.45 million/year weighted average revenue/transponder, and a 33% US tax rate]

Loral Orion: 99 transponders
Revenues $140 million (EBITDA $112 million)

SatMex: 82 transponders
Revenues: $60 million [Loral portion] (EBITDA: $43 million [Loral portion]

Skynet: 296 transponders
Revenues: $335 million (EBITDA: $271 million)
(We assume a 71 average "fill" rate. For purposes of reference, Loral's pro forma assumes an 85)

Cyberstar: (lease off Telstar 5 & 7)
Revenues: $48 million (EBITDA: $33 million)

GEO transponder totals:

Revenues: $583 MILLION
EBITDA: $459 MILLION
Net Earnings: $391 million (net earnings and net earning per share are exclusive of start-up, development costs, and inter-company elimination).

Space Systems Loral:
Revenues: $1.63 billion
Net earnings: $66 million (EBITDA: $89 million)

Globalstar
Revenues: $988 million (EBITDA: $899 million)
Net earnings (Loral portion): $124 million (Revenues $415 million [EBITDA $373 million)
For purposes of reference, Loral's pro forma projects $1.344 billion in revenues and an EBITDA $1.229 billion, with a net income of $637 million)
*******************************************************************************************************
FY 2000 estimate totals

Total Revenues: $2.628 billion
EBITDA: $921 million
Net earnings: $581 million
Total shares: 300 million (Loral has 331 million shares fully diluted; we assume 300 million as the FY 2000 divisor)
Net earnings/share: $1.94

Valuation measures:

RONTA (net operating income/net tangible assets): 28% (RONTA rises with the utilization of new satellites, and is higher as a percentage the smaller the satellite base from which the growth in utilization emerges).
ROE: 34%
EBITDA multiple: 15 (We use 15 as commensurate with a RONTA of 28%).
Projected FY 2000 year-end share price: $76 (as a multiple of 2001 EBIDTA)
Required return on equity: (13.7%)
WACC (Weighted after-tax average cost of capital): 12%
Discount rate (12%)

Subject: Re: ICO Global andG* Price
Date: Sat, Jul 25, 1998 01:37 EDT
From: AjitC
Message-id: <1998072505373600.BAA09302@ladder03.news.aol.com>

Readware:
Thanks for your comments on ICO. My initial impression is that ICO @ $4 B cost, with long lasting MEO orbits of 11-12 years and 24 B minutes/yr or 7 M customers will have a lot more pricing flexibility than G* based on discounted cash flow - economics assuming G* is not upgraded. Individual investor return will depend how much we will be paying for what we get for those shares.

Ajit.

Subject: Re: ICO Global andG* Price
Date: Sat, Jul 25, 1998 16:44 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072520442900.QAA16664@ladder03.news.aol.com>

Ajitc: Actually, it is where you can price the call/minute and still clear all costs that determines pricing flexibility. G* is at $.07/share in that regard. It can lower its wholesale price of $.47/minute almost 6 fold and still clear, i.e., "break even".

Once one sees how much equity ICO raises their break-even will become clearer. Because of its orbital configuration it cal only take on 7 million users. If you read back to one of my posts, you will see my mention of that. That is why I had asked the ICO CEO about the 24 billion minutes of capacity. In some ways it appears excessive, and I have not calculated the cost to ICO of that excess (it is capacity that really will never be used, is what I am
saying). I really am not going to go into their financials in depth, however, since we are not going to be covering them. Our work on ICO will be for acquaintanceship only purposes. The emergence of broadband, as I had posted a while ago, is becoming an increasing area of focus here which means getting a grasp of Skybridge, Mitsubishi, technologies for Ka-band, frequency imporvements in broadband, ground station components, development of
interactive tereminals for satcom broadband, European market demand, and on and on.

To follow a company (and get salaried for it), you really have to know almost every interstice of the company. In the case of ICO, that means the suppliers of the MEO components and their reputation, what the quality of the components is, what the rate of technological improvement is for competitor components, the gateway providers, their suppliers, the chip designers of the handsets, the flow of goods to ICO, the order flow, the schedule of
implementation and timeliness of building each MEO, not to mention the rocketry for launching, and on and on.

You just cannot read a report or two or ten and speak to the management once or twice or five times, and then hope for the best. A research analyst of a company, it seems to me, must know almost as much as the CEO and CFO of the company he/she is covering, and have a good degree of cross-check capabilities, a good degree of skepticism in other words.. It seems to me that is about the only way one can expect to be reasonably fair in his assessment of
a company's value.

I will not have capability with ICO.

Subject: Re: ICO Global andG* Price
Date: Sun, Jul 26, 1998 13:42 EDT
From: AjitC
Message-id: <1998072617423000.NAA02312@ladder03.news.aol.com>

Readware:
As an investor I do have to be aware of the challenges ICO will pose to my current investment in LOR/G*. Obviously, I do not have all the data including the capability if ICO to design and execute this project. However, I must assume that their execution will be as good as G* if not better because of the industry learning curve.

As a novice in this area, I was getting all ready to do a discounted cash flow analysis assuming: a) $4 B initial invesment + 25% contingency, 12 year double declining depreciation, operating expenses @5% of invesment - plus a customer base that peaks at 7 million with a usage time at a maximum of 4.76 hours/month with various per min charges. Had no idea what to assume for a discount rate for these risky project. It did not take me long
for me to figure that this would be a "garbage in garbage out exercise" since I did not have sufficient reliable information.

However, simple math tells me that if ICO collects $25/mo from each of the 7 M users it will amount to $2.1 B/year. That will be quite a competitive challenge to G - inspite of the industry supply limitations mention. Since different time frames are involved what the market place and technology will be when ICO starts is something I have not idea... obviously LOR/G will not be standing still. Again, I have no idea how efficient these satellites
systems can be made over time. I can not but notice that today's top of the line Pentium II in 3 years will be an overweight door stopper.

G* stock price has taken a hit even though there are no bad news relating to Zenit. It appears to me that in view of the ICO roadshow (and perhaps Iridium's problems), the market is discounting heavily G* prospects. Once I get more info, it may make sense for me to edge by making an investment in ICO if the price is right.

Subject: Re: ICO Global andG* Price
Date: Sun, Jul 26, 1998 15:42 EDT
From: Readware
Message-id: <1998072619420400.PAA13252@ladder01.news.aol.com>

Ajitc: I do not believe that the general investor marketplace has any idea genuinely of the demand for satcom telephony. Satellite industry managements obviously do-- at least relative to Wall Street market participants, it can be strongly argued. What follows is my opinion relative to the competition issue you brought up.

(1) One needs to continually, it can be suggested, to consider why it is that satellite manufacturers are spending billions and billions of dollars to launch telephony systems if supply of these systems is an unregressable variable (i.e., is not able to be economically/financially calculated with respect to the countervailing demand) . These systems are not being launched with the view that price pressures three years out are going to cut by a half,
or a third, EBITDA margins. As a rule of thumb, satellite services seek at least a continual year-over-year healthy high 50s EBITDA margin at the least for DTH. I do not think that G* is coming to market with a 94 EBITDA margin in 1999 to see it drop in three years to 60. Satcom DBS providers did not, e.g. launch satcoms for direct broadcast with a 58 EBITDA margin only to expect it to decline to 30. The margins in fact have been kept relatively
intact over a 10-year period.

(2) And, then again, one needs to travel extensively to see what the demand is for satcom telephony. The investor has no ability to do that, obviously. We continue to believe, with considerable evidence I believe, to see capacity as a continuing problem for satcom suppliers to meet telephony demand.

(3) A long view over the horizon three, four years out has to be maintained constantly, as well as the knowledge that these systems are limited by the ITU to 5: G*, Iridium World, ICO Global, Ellipso, and ECCO. The GEO systems to be launched will not have QoS (quality of service value) to the mobile user given the annoyance of GEO voice delay and interference/noise issues that GEOs present to the "user on the move". GEO telephony appears to have some
value in certain intranet applications and rural areas. But as a quality of service alternative to mobile no-latency systems they are not compeptitive. Accordingly, if one keeps to the 5 system profile for satcom telephony in areas of the world where cellular cannot be serviceable, it becomes highly difficult to conceive of a competition problem between G* and ICO.

(4) The premis again: only 5 satcom systems will ever have mobile user licensing by the ITU. That appears to be a supply constraint. If the demand is as we believe it is, competition seems to be an issue that is highly debatable. Again, I reiterate this is an opinion, but one I think with some teeth.

The "problems" Iridium is said to have are (1) 7 faulty sats out of 66 launched and (2) a "software" programming test-out delay. These are "perceptual" difficulties to what appears to this non Wall Streeter as a highly short-term " need the euphoria at this moment and not a moment later" participants in publicly traded stocks. (One needs only look at the price swings in stocks such as Computer Associates, COLTY, Telebras-- it is absolutely
mind-boggling what goes on. To a disposition that looks for incremental and steadily positive price appreciation as a reasonable measure of profitable investing, these aformentioned price swings are simply baffling. But that's me.)

The sats that have failed in the Iridium constellation do no damage to Iridium over a longer-term, nor do the software issues mentioned by Iridium in its conference call bring the system to see a loss of 19% in its share price in just one day in its price. While I believe, as I think a number of other observers do, that Iridium is an over-built system for what satcom technology could and can provide at a subsantially lower cost (and still be
reliable), and this might be reason to see the current price as too high (and I believe it is, based on other matters than these brief technology snafus), the recent issues in Iridium World to those in the satellite industry are not material actually to its share price movement-- at least of the magnitude they recently underwent. My belief in Iridium's share price as being somewhat too high (and it is only my opinion) is the 2002 multiple at which it
is trading relative to G*'s. One system is far more cost efficient, far more financially viable than the other, has far more capacity, and the like: the mutliple accorded to Iridium in this regard seems to me excessive. I do think Iridium will fare well, till the second generation financing becomes an issue. But we will see.

As for G*: G* is priced today as if the marketplace is not expecting the system to be available till the end of 1999 (if our pricing model has any value). It is puzzling that thie stock could reach $37 share (split price) early this year, and now as it gets closer to its actual inaugaration the price has declined over 30%.

There is very good reason to believe, I think from various dependable sources, that the G* Zenit-2 launches should be relatively event-free. A Smith Barney analyst, who never spent a day in the satellite industry, wrote a report last week where he questions Loral's use of the Zenit-2 as a G* launch vehicle. Space Systems Loral has been in existence since 1957, has manufactured 111 satellites in a 40 year period. Its President (Robert Berry) is
the former undersecretary of Defense under then Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. His area of responsibility was rocketry. I have been told by non-Loral satellite people that he is one of the most knowledgeable individuals in the United States on the Russian rocket systems, of which the Zenit-2 is a paradigm. And yet an analyst from Wall Street, who has never spent a day in the satellite industry, pretends to a level of competence, it appears to me,
to question the use of the Zenit-- in the teeth of the 40 year experience of SSL and the background of its President. I find that remarkable.

In the recent Loral China fiasco, I might add as an aside, it was never mentioned that the individual (Robert Berry) who runs SSL, the division that allegedly abbetted China's weapon interests, was a former US undersecretary of Defense under a Republican Administration with highest security clearance, and an individual with an impeccable reputation. But who cares, right?

I have gone on way too long, opinionating. I do not see the competition issues you do as far as ICO relates to G*. I would hesitantly opine that marketplace uncertainty about demand outcomes relative to system supplies might be an issue causing the recent price decline of G* and Iridium. However, after watching the markets for two years now, I am not certain that any reason drives short-term pricing at all-- it appears more to be rumor, fear,
and innuendo that do. That, combined with the unalterable demand of many for instant wealth "now", may be the phenomena one needs to examine as far as G* and Iridium's present pricing is concerned. (In this regard I am reminded of the old saw, "money easily made is money easily lost"). The thought of some suggested to me that G* was being sold to buy into ICO seems to me to assume that those selling G* for ICO are thinking ICO will appreciate in
price in the same way as Iridium and G* have since their Wall Street debut.

However, sometimes "familiarity breeds contempt"-- in this case, familiarity with the satcom telephony stories may have taken some enthusiasm out of "expectations" (discounting) for a system (ICO) that is much more distanced from its actual operatinal date than G* and Iridium are.

We will see.