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Technology Stocks : Winstar Comm. (WCII) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: SteveG who wrote (9595)12/16/1998 11:33:00 PM
From: Joe Valente  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12468
 
I hope no one's posted this already. Nice mention of WCII and Teligent :

To: wrm1 (9591 )
From: Paul Ferguson
Wednesday, Dec 16 1998 2:52PM ET
Reply # of 9594

Something to read while you wait...

Broadband Week for December 14, 1998

LMDS COMPANIES EYE NEW COURSE

By FRED DAWSON December 14, 1998

The fledgling wireless broadband sector continues to be plagued by
uncertainties, forcing companies to examine new strategies. That, in
turn has boosted the likelihood that established telecommunications
entities could end up in the driver's seat.

In Canada, government impatience with the pace of rollouts at the
28-gigahertz tier, non-existent two years after licensing, has led to
preparations for auctions of spectrum at the 24-GHz and 38-GHz levels,
where commercial activity is already underway in the United States.

And, in the United States, it appears increasingly likely that the lineup
of players in LMDS (local multipoint distribution service) would shift
dramatically before real deployments begin.

"The problem is there aren't enough vendors delivering on their
promises," said the senior executive of one leading supplier who asked
not to be named. "You can't have a market without multiple suppliers."

That translates into trouble for LMDS players' efforts to raise money,
where the most important source of funds isn't Wall Street or venture
capital but the vendors themselves.

Vendors will need to have convincing solutions as well as deep pockets
and a commitment to the market if their customers are going to have a
shot at competing with the fast-moving leaders at 24 GHz and 38 GHz.
They have already locked up sizeable financing commitments from
Nortel Networks and Lucent Technologies Inc.

"Vendor financing is the key step, on which the entire success of LMDS
will rest," said David Mallof, CEO of WebCel Communications, which
remains active in the field after sitting out the LMDS auction last
spring. "The industry needs some of the big suppliers to step in and
move things forward."

With Lucent committing up to $2 billion in financing to 38-GHz player
WinStar Communications and Nortel financing Teligent Inc. for $800
million, the biggest suppliers in the market who might have financing to
offer are Ericsson, Alcatel, Siemens, Newbridge Networks and Bosch
Telecom.

Sources said it remained to be seen how many, if any, of these suppliers
would offer support on the scale of Nortel or Lucent.

In Canada, where the two major license holders in what is known as
LMCS (local multipoint communications system) are waiting for
equipment before they begin commercial deployments, the government
is preparing to auction non-LMCS spectrum segments. It has proposed
up to four two-way 100-MHz blocks at 24 GHz and seven at 38 GHz.

"There's a lot of frustration in Canada that the promise of LMCS has not
been delivered on, especially as they see U.S. companies rolling out
services at 24 and 38 GHz," said an executive at a leading vendor.

Canadian LMCS licensees say they have been making good faith efforts
to get off the ground but have been hamstrung by
longer-than-anticipated delays in technology.

"Our view is that licensees at 28 GHz should be afforded the
opportunity to establish a competitive presence in the marketplace
before additional spectrum is let out," said Joel Bell, deputy chairman
of MaxLink Communications Inc., a consortium involving Canadian
and U.S. interests that holds half of the major licenses issued for LMCS
in Canada.

MaxLink, with a long-running trial offering services over hubs
positioned in Ottawa, is waiting for the next release of Newbridge's
system before moving to its first commercial rollouts, now slated for
that market and two others, he said.

"Our plan is to become operational in these markets in mid '99," Bell
said.

The other major Canadian LMCS licensee, WIC Connexus, a subsidiary
of Western International Communications Ltd. of Vancouver, B.C., is
also counting on delivery of Newbridge gear. WIC has plans to get
underway with the next product release from the vendor starting in
Toronto by early next year, said Robert Watson, newly named president
and CEO of Connexus.

While bandwidth-on-demand, delivered via ATM (asynchronous
transfer mode) is vital to the long-term marketing strategy at Connexus,
the initial Toronto deployments will use "nailed-up" connections,
employing ATM to deliver multiple types of service at pre-set rates,
Watson said.

"The customer will be able to burst service and, therefore,
bandwidth-on-demand, but we'll be adding true bandwidth-on-demand
over time as the technology matures," he added.

Newbridge also has won the first contract from a U.S. LMDS licensee,
with a commitment from Central Texas Communications Inc. for
deployments in San Angelo, Brownwood and Goldthwaite, Texas, in
mid-1999.

"From what we're seeing, based on our dealings with a number of
[LMDS] companies in the U.S., you can expect to see some
deployments starting in the second quarter," said Bernard Herscovich,
assistant vice president for broadband wireless at Newbridge.

But there were growing concerns that the general liftoff for LMDS in
the United States would be stalled, pending resolution of financing
issues, including the turnover of spectrum to players who currently don't
hold licenses.

WNP Communications, the largest LMDS spectrum holder, publicly
remains committed to becoming a full-fledged operating company and
rolling out services, but insiders assert other plans are in sway.

"They are going to flip the spectrum," said an industry executive who
said he received confirmation of this intention from a Wall Street
investment banking firm.

"I don't think anyone doubts that is the case," said a Wall Street source,
speaking on background.

This view was widely expressed among vendor representatives and
other players as well.

The rocky state of financial support and intentions among the
entrepreneurial startups that walked off with the lion's share of LMDS
spectrum translates into a big opportunity for major telecom companies
who bypassed the auctions. Sources said they are in talks with vendors.

One industry executive noted that, given the delays, the three-year
period of exclusion affecting local telco and cable participation in the
market is less a barrier than it might have been.

"LMDS spectrum could become a major tool of the RBOCs, despite the
government's intentions to use it to promote competition," the executive
said.

The limited number of LMDS markets slated for launch next year and
the fluidity of expectations concerning supply of equipment play to the
advantage of Teligent and WinStar, observers said.

WinStar is expected to announce commercial rollout plans soon for
point-to-multipoint (PMP) systems in New York and many other
markets in the wake of the big supply contract with Lucent. Teligent has
launched PMP services commercially in 13 markets, said Teligent
spokesman Robert Stewart.

Teligent, with plans to be in 40 markets by the end of 1999, is offering
packages of voice and data services at 30 percent off what customers
have been paying, Stewart said. Response to a heavy marketing
campaign in startup markets has met expectations, he added.

With LMDS players struggling to get footing and Teligent racing
forward with nationwide rollout plans, some players looked on
WebCel's recent filing of a petition with the U.S. Court of Appeals in
Washington as a last-ditch ploy from the LMDS sector to delay or derail
Teligent.

"Is this the action of just one frustrated party, or are other entities
involved?" asked one party to the proceedings, who asked not to be
named.

Mallof declined to comment on the case.

WebCel is asking the court to vacate the Federal Communications
Commission's decision to grant Teligent its current spectrum slot -- a
decision intended to resolve a conflict over spectrum use between the
military and holders of the DEMS (digital electronic messaging service)
licenses originally slated at 18 GHz.

The commission made the shift, including a four-fold increase in
spectrum to compensate for the disadvantages of moving DEMS to a
higher frequency, without public proceedings, which WebCel contends
was a violation of the Administrative Procedure Act.

Teligent last week moved to intervene in the case and filed a motion to
dismiss. "Nothing we've seen gives us any reason to change our view
that the FCC did the right thing in this matter," Stewart said.

WebCel was among petitioners who persuaded the FCC to reconsider its
DEMS decision earlier this year, which the commission did without
ordering any changes.

No other action has been taken by the other petitioners, which included
Hughes Communications and BellSouth Corp