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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Globalstar Telecommunications Limited GSAT -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sawtooth who wrote (3009)2/19/1999 9:14:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 29987
 
Captain Jean-Luc Picard uses a Globalstar© phone...
[okay, it's the last one...]

Top:Business and
Finance:Stocks:Services:Communications Services:IRIDF
(Iridium World Comm. Ltd.)
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Captain Jean-Luc Picard uses a
Globalstar© phone...
by: SnowyFluffyFido (99/M/Anytown, USA)
8302 of 8318
The Federation uses only Globalstar phones. (Buy 16 1/4; GSTRF-Nasdaq).
One time, when Enson Will was stranded in a Federation Scout, his Iridium
phone hit a "dead" spot. He floated for two weeks and had to drink his own
urine to survive (I never liked him anyway). He grew a long beard and looked
like Ivan Boesky by the time they rescued him.

If he had a Globalstar© phone, he never would have been stranded. After that
incident, Captain Picard entered into his Captain's log, a recommendation to
Starfleet Command that the Federation switch to Globalstar© phones
exclusively, a recommendation that was followed by Starfleet Command. Today,
Globalstar© is the only phone a Federation Officer will use!

For clear, secure, reliable service, it's Globalstar©!!

Posted: Feb 19 1999 3:50PM EST as a reply to: Msg 8295 by BrahmaFear1



To: Sawtooth who wrote (3009)2/19/1999 9:16:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 29987
 
FYI, discussion on GSTRF yahoo threat about GBLX making GSTRF/IRIDF obsolete. Any comments? Here's a taste...

Top:Business and
Finance:Stocks:Services:Communications Services:GSTRF
(Globalstar Telecommun.)
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G* & I equity investors on the
Extinction List - Why?
by: DoDoFeaster
4166 of 4197
Yes, Satellite comm has a place in the telecosm, but not at the prices & discount
rates that are built into the DCF models that the analysts all use to arrive at their
price targets on these stocks.

The chart is screaming the story:
quote.yahoo.com/q?s=GSTRF&d=2ym

Note how it peaked in Apr/May 98 when GBLX lit it first cross-atlantic line.
Two months later the short-term trend line broke through the long-term trend line
& every single attempt to break back up has failed. The stock doesn't even
respond to good news or good markets.

Why?

The G* & I business models are affected by the Fiber Carriers in two critical
ways:

1) They will not be able to charge even 1/2 of the prices that they expect to
charge. Low-cost Ionics cellular linked to the IP Telephony fiber optic carrier in
each region will compete for the same customers at .20 / minute retail to the
caller. GSTRF's wholesale cost to its distributors is projected to be .47 minute &
to the retail cost to the consumer is expected to be at least twice that. It ain't
gonna happen. At .20 to be competitive G* will have to take .10-.15 per minute.

2) IP Fiber carrier only came into being over the past three years. The Sat
carriers planning never saw it coming....Analysts will soon begin to revise price
targets down with the justification that they have to bump their discount rates &
eventually their pricing assumptions.

That will be just enough cash flow to service its senior debt. Subordinated debt
holders will have to restructure. Equity holders in G* & I will be wiped out - it's
a straightforward case. It happens time & time again throughout the history of
project finance - the Chunnel, Whoops, etc..

This is going to be a painful seesaw Up & down as the naive hopeful bulls pray
& the informed bears feast...

Please bid it up! YumYum!

Kiss your flightless little fowl fannies good-bye...

Posted: Feb 19 1999 12:20PM EST as a reply to: Msg 4164 by DominicTightrope



To: Sawtooth who wrote (3009)2/19/1999 9:23:00 PM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29987
 
National wireless networks in vogue. Race heats up to build seamless 'virtual' infrastructure [see the bottom in particular]
cbs.marketwatch.com

By Jeffry Bartash, CBS MarketWatch
Last Update: 5:26 PM ET Feb 19, 1999

WASHINGTON (CBS.MW) -- The field of aspiring national wireless phone
carriers is getting crowded these days.

In the race to erect coast-to-coast networks, AT&T, Sprint and Nextel have
vaulted to a quick lead, but two other carriers appear poised to jump in: Bell
Atlantic and SBC Communications.

Like its rivals, the two Bells believe the ability to offer wireless will play a key
role in the pursuit of market share for other telecom services as well. The
buzz in the industry these days is that the winners of the 21st Century will be
those that can offer homes and businesses a complete package of services
-- local, long-distance, wireless, data and Internet -- in one bill.

This idea also has an accompanying, if inelegant, buzzword -- bundling.

To that end, AT&T (T) and Sprint (FON) are making
a big push to seize market share. Last year, each
initiated popular one-rate payment plans under
which customers can call anywhere in the country,
paying a set fee for a fixed number of minutes.
Nextel (NXTL), a lesser known operator, followed
suit.

Wireless had already been facing explosive demand
amid falling prices and higher quality. The birth of
one-rate plans, which ostensibly eliminate costly
and unpopular "roaming" charges attached to
out-of-region calls, sharply accelerated it.

Quite naturally SBC and Bell Atlantic, which have
national if not global aspirations, don't want to miss
out on a slice of that rapidly rising pie. The two
Bells, however, have chosen different approaches.

Real network

Bell Atlantic, for its part, tried to snap up No.2 U.S. cellular
provider AirTouch Communications two months ago, but
lost out to a higher bid by Vodafone PLC of Britain. The
purchase of AirTouch (ATI), along with its pending acquisition of
GTE Corp. (GTE), would have given Bell Atlantic (BEL) the skeletal
outline of a national network.

Some analysts hold out hope Bell Atlantic might be able to strike a deal
with Vodafone under which the U.S. carrier could peel off AirTouch's
extensive domestic operations from the valuable foreign properties that
drew the British concern to make an offer in the first place.

"There is still a possibility that Vodafone and Bell Atlantic could reach an
agreement of some sort. It would make eminent sense," said wireless
analyst Herschel Shosteck, who runs his own consulting firm in Wheaton,
Md. Bell Atlantic declined to comment.

Failing that, Bell Atlantic could still maintain its PrimeCo joint venture with
AirTouch even after Vodafone (VOD) completes its acquisition. PrimeCo
is the second largest U.S. operator of digital PCS, or personal
communications services, based on a standard known in the industry as
CDMA.

Bell Atlantic isn't taking any chances. The carrier has sued AirTouch to
ensure that a non-compete clause signed before the Vodafone buyout
offer doesn't prevent the Bell from going after markets in which both
companies operate or plan to operate. PrimeCo operates mostly in the
South and Midwest.

Still, its failure to beat out Vodafone for AirTouch leaves Bell Atlantic with
some big gaps in its network, particularly on the West Coast, where
AirTouch was especially strong.

The acquisition of GTE, which also owns wireless operations in the West,
will remedy part of the problem. "It would give us coast-to-coast
coverage," asserts spokesman Jim Gerace.

Not quite. The company still has to do a lot more work,
analysts say, before they it can really make that claim. And
that almost certainly will include more acquisitions of smaller
carriers. "We don't rule out anything," Gerace replied.

Virtual network

Like Bell Atlantic, SBC (SBC) asserts that a pending acquisition, of
Midwestern Baby Bell Ameritech (AIT), will give it the framework of a
coast-to-coast network.

"I think you can argue that SBC is close to having a national presence
after the Ameritech closure," Stan Sigman, chief executive of SBC
Wireless, told CBS.MarketWatch.com in an interview. See full story.

Nevertheless, the carrier's network would only cover about half the U.S.
population. And that means it would need to either acquire more carriers
or strike roaming agreement with other wireless operators.

Though SBC agreed last month to pay $1.7 billion for the Northeastern
cellular business of cable TV operator Comcast (CMCSK), the Bell
seems less eager to expand it budding wireless empire through further
large acquisitions.

Instead, the carrier aims to create what Sigman calls a "virtual national
network." He said the company will use its size to extract beneficial
roaming deals from other carriers to ensure that its wireless customers can
call anywhere in the country.

Some industry observers think that's a losing proposition. "A strategy like
that over the long term is a failed strategy," said Bob Egan, research
director for wireless communications at Gartner Group.

"How do you lower the cost of your services?" he asks. "You own the
facilities." Without them, companies will pay higher fees to third parties to
connect calls, forcing SBC to either raise prices or accept sub-standard
profits, he said. Technical complications also could arise.

Other analysts, such as Eliott Hamilton of Washington, DC-based
consultant The Strategis Group, believe reselling has proven itself to be a
viable approach in the long-distance sector and will prove it as well in
wireless.

While a reseller may not wring out as much profit, Hamilton said, it could
still earn enough to make wireless operations worthwhile. More important,
he said, not owning one's own wireless network won't prevent carriers
from bundling services.

"The next national carrier will be a reseller," he states.

Patchwork coverage

Despite all the buzz, a truly seamless national network
doesn't exist -- one in which a wireless caller can reach
any other wireless caller, no ifs, ands or buts.

In large part, that's because the industry is divided by
signal-transmission standards, with an alphabet soup of
contestants -- CDMA, TDMA, GSM -- vying to become the
worldwide leader. Then there's the rift between analog and
digital, which everyone agrees will eventually be resolved
in favor of the latter.

Innovate new wireless phones that can receive signals
from a combination of any of those sources are likely to
render the problem of incompatible networks moot, but
that won't change the second major problem.

Wireless networks are still mighty expensive to build and
take years to cobble together. The cellular business has
been at it for more than a decade, Sigman points out, and
there still isn't a truly national carrier. Digital networks are
even more expensive and laborious to construct.


Jeffry Bartash is a reporter for CBS MarketWatch.

© 1997-1999 MarketWatch.com, Inc. All rights reserved. Disclaimer.
MarketWatch.com is a joint venture of CBS and Data Broadcasting Corporation.
CBS and the CBS "eye device" are registered trademarks of CBS Inc.






To: Sawtooth who wrote (3009)2/19/1999 9:25:00 PM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29987
 
Guest Opinion: Wireless Already An Alternative To Landline Service Abroad

wirelessweek.com

From the February 22, 1999 issue of Wireless Week


By Tom Bartlett

Over the past couple of months, our industry has been buzzing over stories of individuals, small
businesses and even whole rural U.S. towns that have gone completely wireless. Reporters,
analysts and colleagues keep asking me if I think wireless will ever become a truly viable landline
alternative. My answer? Just look past the U.S. borders and you'll see it's already happening. In
Finland, 50 percent of all phones and more than half of all traffic is wireless.

Let's just say it: Most people prefer the freedom of wireless to the bonds of landlines. Wireless
adds mobility, convenience and security to our lives. As networks grow to meet demand, they
offer more powerful services and increasingly competitive pricing.

The U.S. market, with high landline penetration resulting from low prices, relatively high network
quality and sophisticated customer care, may take several years for a
"wireless-as-landline-alternative" model to fully develop. But the timeline will be far shorter in areas
where landline service is less competitive and where few differences exist between the two service
offerings. I see this happening today.

For example, unlike the United States, Europe's calling party pays standard encourages wireless
users to leave their phones on, and having a single technology standard provides simple and
transparent access to service across the continent and beyond.

As Finland achieved late in 1998, wireless penetration in Italy should be deeper than landline late
this year with more than 30 million subscribers. Omnitel, which added more than 6 million
customers in its three years of service, delivers coverage everywhere, from the Vatican steps to the
Alpine peaks and offers peerless customer care levels in the European telecommunications
industry. In addition, landline service quality issues, calling party pays, more favorable
long-distance rates for mobile customers and aggressive lifestyle marketing helped create a large
customer segment that sees their "telefonini" (or "little phone") as their primary communications
tool.

In Mexico, 90 percent of the population has no access, or hope of access, to a landline phone.
Iusacell, the country's second largest communications company, has served more than 16,000
customers in a wireless local loop trial for more than two years, and hundreds of its wireless pay
phones now dot the Mexican landscape. Iusacell's prepaid rates, market-leading customer care
and new digital service already have helped drive "celludensity" beyond 2 percent, with population
coverage far beyond that of landline. With several new potential competitors entering the market
and calling party pays scheduled for early 1999, celludensity should surpass teledensity within 10
years.

At Bell Atlantic, we are helping our investments worldwide understand and maximize the
opportunity this trend will present. And while the timelines and drivers may vary by market,
especially in develop-
ing nations, the result will be the same: Wireless has and will become a viable landline alternative
on a wide scale.

Tom Bartlett is president and CEO of Bell Atlantic International Wireless.

Please send comments and suggestions on this Web site to jcollins@chilton.net
Wireless Week, 600 S. Cherry St., #400, Denver, CO 80246
Voice: 303-393-7449, Fax: 303-399-2034
Published by Cahners Business Information
© Copyright 1999. All rights reserved.



To: Sawtooth who wrote (3009)2/19/1999 10:26:00 PM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29987
 
To the thread, there was a rumor that GSTRF and COMS will have a relationship for the Palm VII. Have you heard anything? Does this make any sense? djane

From yesterday's BusinessWeek article

This summer, it will ship Palm VII, with wireless
Internet access. The Palm VII will be key to another
3Com push--handheld computers that go online. The
cost of a Palm VII will be partly subsidized by data
services customers sign up for, such as stock quotes
from E*Trade or driving directions from MapQuest.
3Com will deliver data--and take part of the
revenue--via a service called Palm.net. Robin Abrams,
named president of the Palm Computing division on
Feb. 2, will head the launch.


Full article:

NEWS: ANALYSIS & COMMENTARY

More Palmy Days for 3Com?
It's launching new models, but big rivals are
circling

The Palm Pilot and its progeny have created a whole
new market niche--truly useful handheld computers.
These gizmos, which store addresses and appointments
at the touch of a pen, have long been de rigueur among
the digerati. Now, the Palm Computing division of
3Com Corp. has bigger plans. On Feb. 22, Palm will
introduce two snazzy new models, then try to convince
the world that Palm has set the standard for handheld
computers. ''The Palm is evolving from a popular
product into a whole industry,'' brags Janice Roberts,
senior vice-president at 3Com.

The new models are key to making good on that boast.
The $369 Palm IIIx is an upgrade of the Palm III that
offers more memory and a better screen. The $449
Palm V packs the IIIx's features into a package just
half the size. And later this year, Palm will offer new
devices for as little as $199. The expanded product line
should help Palm boost sales from 1.8 million units last
year to 2.5 million in 1999 and 4 million by 2002,
figures International Data Corp. (IDC).

At this point, 3Com might be expected to coast a bit.
Palm has about 77% of the market, according to
Dataquest Inc. Software developers have created some
2,500 programs for the Palm. And companies like
Coach do a brisk business in Palm accessories such as
leather cases. All told, Palm-related business fetches
revenue of $1.2 billion, more than half of that for
3Com, figures analyst Ken Dulaney of consulting firm
Gartner Group Inc. ''We've started to create a new
Palm Economy,'' says Roberts.

But rivals crave a piece of the market--without joining
the Palm Economy. Hewlett-Packard Co. and
Compaq Computer Corp. will soon bring out new
machines using Windows CE, a slimmed-down version
of Microsoft Windows for handhelds. Though CE has
not caught on big yet, IDC projects that Windows CE
will be on 62% of handheld computers by 2002--when
Palm's share will fall to 29%. Other market researchers
and 3Com dispute that scenario.

NET PUSH. Still, competition is rising. Another
software ''platform,'' Epoc32, is being readied by
Symbian, a joint venture of Britain's Psion Ltd. and
cell-phone giants Nokia, Ericsson, and Motorola.
3Com is ahead now, says Prudential Securities Inc.
analyst Luke T. Szymczak, but ''it's way too early to
declare victory.''

That's why Palm is pushing. It took the No. 1 spot in
Europe late last year and just rolled out a Kanji Palm in
Japan. This summer, it will ship Palm VII, with wireless
Internet access. The Palm VII will be key to another
3Com push--handheld computers that go online. The
cost of a Palm VII will be partly subsidized by data
services customers sign up for, such as stock quotes
from E*Trade or driving directions from MapQuest.
3Com will deliver data--and take part of the
revenue--via a service called Palm.net. Robin Abrams,
named president of the Palm Computing division on
Feb. 2, will head the launch.

3Com is also working on distribution and licensing
deals. IBM and Symbol Technologies Inc. now sell
Palms to corporate accounts, for example, and
Qualcomm Inc. has built Palm software into its new
PDQ wireless phone. But can Palm stand up to its
rivals? Symbian's backers are the top names in mobile
communications. Microsoft could be even scarier: It
has vast financial resources and strong ties to software
writers.

For now, Palm has an edge with developers. But in the
end, they'll write for the platform with the most users,
so the next two years will be crucial. Roberts is
convinced 3Com can turn Palm into its own industry.
''All sorts of businesses will be spawned from Palm,''
she says. The trick will be to keep swimming faster than
the other fish.

By Andy Reinhardt in Santa Clara, Calif.

_