The End of Telecom As We Know It and I Feel Fine
-
Font Size:
But at the end of the day, there seems to be a lack of home-run ideas in Telecom infrastructure. I challenge anyone here to name a publicly traded Telecom component or equipment company that will be worth 10x what it is today in five years based on fundamental growth. Another way to look at it - name a public company that will increase revenues by 10x without eroding margins.
It was not always this hard. Where do the big 10x opportunities exist in the telecom & communications sector today? Nothing jumps out, at least to me.
I think it is pretty clear the whole industry is ripe for some major disruption. Rather than be pessimistic, it’s time to be optimistic, and identify what trends could reverse the industries fortunes.
Let’s look at the key ingredients for stratospheric growth:
1. Relatively small market cap today. It’s a lot easier to grow from $1BB to $10BB than it is to go from $10BB to $100B. So throw out many of your household component and equipment names.
2. Defensible concept. Optical module makers like Finisar (FNSR) and Avanex (AVNX) may be big and vertically integrated but as of today there are few barriers to entry. Toss out most of the component vendors.
3. Fat margins. Usually the result of #2. Intel, Broadcom, Cisco (CSCO) are good examples.
4. Sticky. Once embedded, can’t be cleansed. Microsoft Windows. Your home phone number. The first email address you used widely. It’s hard to throw out a Broadcom Ethernet switch because the software investment, not the silicon itself.
Yeah, yeah, I know it’s a Five Forces ripoff.
It is exceptionally hard to identify existing communication infrastructure companies that meet these criteria. Many opportunities exist for 2-3x valuation based on consolidation. But where is the home run based on growth, and not decomposition? A critical look at the criteria above bring to mind a software company, not a hardware company.
It is increasingly clear to me that the growth opportunity in Telecom is going to be on the software side, not the hardware side.
Much like sexy big-iron computing hardware was commoditized into a common platform by Microsoft, sexy big-iron Telecom will follow the same path. The worst offenders appear to be specialty hardware boxes for specific applications, like Video Servers, Core Routers, or softswitches. Why not buy a few racks of bladeservers that can do all of the above?
When I think of Telecom companies today, just like analysts in 1980 thought of computers, I think of tricked out hardware. But there appears to be much more upside in turning communications equipment in a commodity and moving the value into software.
People think of Cisco as a hardware company. Take away 25% of Cisco’s operating income from marking up optical modules, and look at where the value really is. It’s IOS, the software that welds together all of their systems. The hardware exists only to monetize that software monopoly. Maybe they should just sell the software and let Huawei/3Com (COMS), HP (HPQ), and Dell (DELL) kill each other building the hardware.
Today, I can name 5 communication hardware companies for every software company. In 10 years, I expect this will invert. I intend to start focusing more of my time to understanding this transition.
Inspired by Martin Geddes' excellent post "IMS is just an application".
Get Seeking Alpha Free Stock Alerts by Email!
Get Free Stock Alerts by Email!
ETFs In Focus
-
Editor's Picks
-
Most Popular
- Financials and Housing: The Outlook Remains Ugly
- Martin Wolf on Capitalism
- Interview with Jim Rogers, Part I: Bigger Financial Shocks Loom
- Four Brazilian Profit Plays
- Apple & Google: A Detailed Comparison
- Hey Vanguard, Can We Get a VMT and a VMTX?
- Full list of Editor's Picks »
- The Disconnect Between Supply and Demand in Gold & Silver Markets »
- The Great Consumer Crash of 2009 »
- Apple: Great Company with Lofty Valuation - Due for Pullback »
- Time to Pull the Trigger on Four Oil Service Stocks »
- Petrobras: Buy and Sit Tight Like Soros »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
- 5 Potential Buyout Targets in Biotech - Barron's »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
- 5 Impressive Stocks in This Difficult Market »
- With Help from California, Solar Gets Fired Up »
- Don't Cancel Motorola's Funeral Just Yet »
-
Long Ideas
-
Short Ideas
-
Cramer's Picks
- Interested in Bank of America? Consider the Preferred Shares
- Northgate: Mid-Tier Gold Producer with Strong Cashflow
- Toll Brothers Staying Alive - Fast Money Midday Recap (8/19/08)
- Hedge Fund Tracking: Blue Ridge Capital (John Griffin)
- Petrobras: Buy and Sit Tight Like Soros
- Screener Picks, Part II: Three Mid-cap Growth Stocks
- Lowe’s Weathers a Tough Retail Market
- 5 Impressive Stocks in This Difficult Market
- Take Advantage of Phishing Scams With Security Software
- Johnson & Johnson: The Type of Growth Stock I Favor
- Full list of Long Ideas »
- Salesforce.com: It's All About the Guidance
- Three Casino Stocks Rolling Over
- New Web Site For Short Sellers: You Gotta Love Capitalism
- Commodity Carnage: Where to Turn Next?
- Fannie and Freddie Shareholders Run for the Exit
- Goldman: Readying Short Position Initiation Sequence
- Apple: Great Company with Lofty Valuation - Due for Pullback
- Russia's Too Risky - Barron's
- Fannie, Freddie Shareholders Will Be Left Holding the Bag - Barron's
- Pilgrim's Pride: The Weakest Link in the Food Chain
- Full list of Short Ideas »
- Still Growing - Cramer's Mad Midday (8/19/08)
- Which Stock to Pick - Cramer's Mad Money (8/18/08)
- Buy Weyerhauser - Cramer's Lightning Round (8/18/08)
- The Price of Oil - Cramer's Mad Money (8/18/08)
- Great Execution Pick - Cramer's Mad Money (8/14/08)
- Beaten Down Buy - Cramer's Lightning Round (8/14/08)
- The Fry Guy - Cramer's Midday Mad Money (8/14/08)
- Go Orbital - Cramer's Mad Money (8/13/08)
- Buy AMD Here - Cramer's Lightning Round (8/13/08)
- Time For Google - Cramer's Midday Mad Money (8/13/08)
- Full list of Cramers Picks »
Trading Center
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »




This article has 3 comments:
Short MSFT, buy IBM?
Editors
- David