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


To: Joe Brown who wrote (3456)3/17/1999 1:13:00 AM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29987
 
Jack, I'm not so sure that I* won't be successful on some level, although maybe not for their shareholders vis-a-vis competing investments, i.e., G*. Do you think I* can come close to filling its 1.5B minutes/year capacity with sales to govts, military, ocean goers (who don't choose the much lower cost G* if available for their needs), other high-end users with global needs who don't care about the cost and don't want to wait 6 months for G*? Maybe I* can charge $3-$10/minute for its very valuable, unique service and fill up the 1st constellation? Obviously, G* management has a great chance to learn from I* experience and mistakes.



To: Joe Brown who wrote (3456)3/17/1999 7:44:00 AM
From: Michael Allard  Respond to of 29987
 
Jack:

I agree that Iridium is a technological achievement. The problem I see is that it was accomplished at a cost that outweighed a reasonable business plan. NOT initially, remember Iridiums business plan has changed twice since the technology was launched, first because they could not accomplish in building penetration, and now because they have not developed a big enough market. But these last two changes in focus were both applied to adjust to their technology. I believe the GSTRF system, from the beginning, first found a market, and are applying a technology to fit the need.

Can you imagine what the conditions for Iridium would be like today, if the Zenit had not exploded, and GSTRF was launching service last month, selling handsets for $750 and service for .45/min! Iridium must be thanking their lucky stars! (pun intended).

Good Luck to all.



To: Joe Brown who wrote (3456)3/17/1999 1:41:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 29987
 
*LA Times. Too Many Doubts to Take a Flier on Iridium's Stock [G* reference]

latimes.com

Tuesday, March 16, 1999

STOCK EXCHANGE / JAMES PELTZ and MICHAEL HILTZIK
By JAMES PELTZ, MICHAEL HILTZIK


tock Exchange gives readers a chance to
listen in as staff writers James Peltz and
Michael Hiltzik debate the merits of individual
stocks.

Iridium World Communications (IRID)
Mike: You can't get much higher-tech than this
stock, Jim.
Jim: That's for sure. Iridium is a global wireless
communications system that's costing some $5
billion. It uses a fleet of 66 low-Earth-orbiting
satellites that enable you to be anywhere in the
world and make a call with your hand-held phone.
Mike: Now, this service--which costs several
thousand dollars just to sign up--is aimed at the
globe-trotting executive and, uh, well frankly, I
don't know who else. Do you?
Jim: Supposedly seafarers and others far from a
phone booth. But I'm not sure how many of them
will need Iridium, and that goes to the core of my
problems with this outfit.
Mike: First we should note that this is what's
known as a "tracking" stock. Care to enlighten us?
Jim: Iridium is actually a consortium of
companies, including Motorola, that are backing
the system. So this stock simply tracks Iridium's
performance, even though it's not really a single corporation in the
normal sense.
Mike: Right. Now, Iridium has been plagued with trouble since it
launched service last November. That's not unusual for a brand-new
tech company, but I'd say both of its customers are probably
dissatisfied.
Jim: Ouch.
Mike: OK, that's a joke. It actually has more than two customers,
but in the grand scheme of things not too many more.
Jim: Actually it's several thousand, but that's well below initial
forecasts. Yet Iridium still expects to have more than 500,000
subscribers a year from now.
Mike: We'll see.
Jim: The company's start-up problems have included its phone,
which is said to be clunky.
Mike: It's a big, heavy handset. It's not like your little Motorola
StarTAC that fits in your pocket. This thing has to be hauled around; it's
like a walkie-talkie almost.
Jim: The perfect tool for the fast-moving, globe-trotting executive.
Mike: And that's because it has to communicate with satellites that
are several hundred miles up in space.
Jim: Then there have been delays getting the system going, problems
with the phone sales forces not having enough trained people*. . .
Mike: . . . and it's facing growing competition, which is something
you wouldn't expect for a business this arcane, but it's true.
Jim: All this has taken its toll on Iridium's shares. The stock got as
high as $72 last May, but it's since plunged to the low 20s because the
system isn't, well, getting off the ground as planned.
Mike: And there's another problem: Iridium has to ramp up its
business before it must put up more birds.
Jim: Huh?
Mike: Satellites. Iridium's satellites only last about six years, so it has
to get its system up to speed before it has to incur the cost of putting
new ones in orbit.
Jim: A strict deadline, I'd say.
Mike: Exactly. So, what do you think about the stock? Its big price
drop does make it cheap.
Jim: I'd pass, at least for now. On the plus side, this is obviously a
system that a lot of smart people think will work--just look at the heavy
hitters like Motorola that have plowed billions into making it work.
There's also no question this whole communications industry is growing
by leaps and bounds. And eventually Iridium will work out its bugs. But
in the meantime, I'm worried about how much demand there really is for
this system.
Mike: And not just for Iridium, but for its rivals in waiting too.
Jim: Excellent point. What I really fear is that just as Iridium works
out the kinks, gets its system running smoothly and even signs up a few
more subscribers, along come its new competitors. As you know,
similar satellite-based outfits such as Globalstar will be coming on line
shortly. As that happens, I see Iridium's stock coming under renewed
pressure.

Mike: Iridium to me is the epitome of a stock for which I wish we
had more choices than just "buy" and "don't buy." This is about as
far-reaching a venture as you can find, but in the long term I think
Iridium could hit it big.
Jim: Certainly Motorola and others have placed a big bet that it will.
Mike: But I agree that right now, it's very hard to see where this
company is going in the next year or two. There are just too many
questions about where the market is for this system and whether Iridium
will work things out not only before its competition arrives in waves, but
before it faces that jump in capital spending for new satellites. The
technology, while certainly intriguing, is full of unknowns. Anything can
happen here.
Jim: As Fortune magazine pointed out recently, Iridium might turn out
to be the next Apple Computer--or the next Betamax VCR. We just
don't know.
Mike: That's right, and frankly, the alternatives to buying an Iridium
phone and hauling it around the globe aren't that onerous for Iridium's
potential customers. It just means having two or three small, compact
cellular phones, with each one working in some part of the world. I think
at this point, most of the potential customers are going to prefer that to
worrying about whether they can rely on Iridium.
Jim: Iridium, in a way, poses a classic economic question: Is it pulling
in customers by fulfilling a service that they're demanding, or is it pushing
customers toward the service by persuading them that they need it?
I'm
not convinced either way, at least not enough to buy its shares.
* * *
Write or e-mail with a stock you would like to see discussed in this
column. James Peltz (james.peltz@latimes.com) covers the markets and
corporate financial trends. Michael Hiltzik (michael.hiltzik@latimes.com)
covers technology and entertainment and is the author of a new book,
"Dealers of Lightning: Xerox PARC and the Dawn of the Computer
Era." Either can also be reached at Business Section, Times Mirror
Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053

* * *

Iridium, Monday: $20.13

Copyright 1999 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved

Search the archives of the Los Angeles Times for similar stories about:
IRIDIUM (CONSORTIUM), SECURITIES, INVESTMENTS, FINANCIAL
PLANNING. You will not be charged to look for stories, only to retrieve one.