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Printable version |
From: | "david.gibson" <david.gibson@k.co.nz> |
Date: | Thu, 1 Apr 2004 09:34:48 +1200 |
In
establishing a value for MUL.ASX, I suggest the following questions/points need
to be taken into account:
1) The technical characteristics of
satellite communication are that they offer reasonably high downlink bandwidth
at a very high latency. Modern web applications have modest bandwidth
requirements but demand very low latency. (Applications like video
conferencing and VoIP do not need high bandwidth - the 764M requirement in the
report is rubbish - they demand constantly available bandwidth (isochronous) and
very low latency.
2) The world has a glut of raw
bandwidth. Since the Teleco boom of 1995 and the Dot Com bubble of
1999-2000 - bandwidth infrastructure investment has vastly outstripped
demand.
3) Coverage to third world nations or
arid deserts is only really of interest to the US Military. You don't make
money with coverage - you make it by having high bandwidth, low latency, WELL
SUPPORTED, infrastructure in large metro areas.
I have some grave concerns over the revenue
forecasts produced in the recently circulated report. I hope there are
other reasons, not disclosed in the report, that support the revenue
projections. My main worry is that the infrastructure being touted is
being valued on the basis of bandwidth=$$ - this is not the case. Look at
the difficulties the Southern Cross Cable system is having in selling its high
bandwidth, LOW Latency service connected into the US POP!!
MUL.ASX have not released enough technolgy
architecture detail to be convincing that thy have something special. If
they had an optical fibre story - I'd buy it, at a multiple to NTA of about 2.5
(not 7 as is current).
Caution!
Disclosure: does not hold
MUL
/dbg
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