Lehman Maintains Rating, Revenue, EPS Estimates

Picture 1-69
In the wake of the CTIA conference last week, Lehman Brothers came away with some sense of comfort regarding Nortel’s CDMA/GSM prospects, while maintaining its 2008 and 2009 revenue and EPS estimates at $11.1B/$1.03 and $11.6B//$1.33.

Here’s a synopsis of the Lehman report:

“NORTEL: Sees LTE Deployments Earlier than Anticipated; CDMA/GSM to Carry Stable Revenues Near-Term

We met with Richard Lowe, President of NT’s Carrier Networks group, who highlighted a healthy outlook for NT’s carrier business. NT is not seeing a slowdown in carrier activity aside from Sprint, with VZ continuing to be very bullish. Lowe reiterated comments we heard from Mike Z. last month that LTE should happen sooner than anticipated, with commercial deployments beginning in 2010. Until then, NT expects CDMA/GSM to carry stable revenues through 2008, with TDM declines offset by solid carrier VoIP growth (looking for double-digit growth).

NT continues to expect flat revenue and stable margins for its carrier business in 2008. Overall, we are encouraged by NT’s focus and vision around 4G technologies (25% of R&D spent on 4G), but we monitor for its success given heavy LTE competition. We maintain our 2-EW rating on NT.


Discussing LTE, NT feels comfortable with its competitive positioning, helped by its solid CDMA incumbency (29% share according to Dell’Oro vs. ALU’s 47%). NT feels its strong CDMA installed base gives NT deep knowledge of the carriers’ networks, with LTE being a complementary technology to CDMA. Lowe noted NT is responding to ~3 RFPs in addition to VZ/Vodafone. NT also highlighted it is not investing in UMTS as its competitors are, providing an additional advantage as NT focuses sharply on LTE.

Additionally, NT feels it can leverage its WiMAX investments for LTE, noting much of the investments are reusable. For both GSM and CDMA, carriers can upgrade to
both WiMAX and LTE by reusing existing antennas, cables, etc., with existing amps being 4G ready. Lowe noted that upgrading to LTE would only require adding RF cards to the existing base stations, rather than replacing the entire base station.

Furthermore, the backwards compatibility between LTE and GSM is likely to be better than LTE and UMTS. Vendor wise, NT noted the players remain the same as in the past (though more consolidated), with the exception of Huawei which may impact the price structure.

With respect to market opportunity for LTE, NT believes the spectral efficiency (2x-3x more efficient) should deliver a cost advantage over UMTS. NT expects LTE should be less expensive to deploy than going from 2G to 3G, as it is more compatible with existing infrastructure, driving lower capex. Furthermore, UMTS led operators to spend billions of dollars of spectrum. In addition to infrastructure revenues, Lowe noted that compared to 3G, operators now rely on outsourcing applications, services, and network management, presenting incremental revenue opportunity for vendors.

On GSM and CDMA, NT sounded optimistic and is predicting a longer tail in these businesses than others are expecting. NT expects 2008 will be a stable year, with carriers such as China Mobile refreshing their GSM networks, and European operators putting more money into GSM. Lowe added operators continue to spend on EV-DO (e.g. U.S. Cellular). Supporting these views, NT highlighted last week’s announcements, including a 5-year CDMA wireless network deal with U.S Cellular, and a $100M deal with India’s BSNL to expand its GSM network. NT also noted VZ continues to spend on CDMA, with Sprint also needing to support its CDMA network despite its current pause.

Overall, Lowe noted that excluding Sprint, NT’s carrier business is not seeing slowdowns from carriers despite macro concerns, as data traffic on networks continues to grow rapidly. With NT guiding flattish growth in its carrier business in 2008, Lowe expects growth to resume in 2010, driven by early LTE and WiMAX revenues. Lowe continues to look for stable margins in the carrier business, with NT’s overall margin expansion expected from NT’s Metro Ethernet and Enterprise businesses.

[Slashdot] [Digg] [Reddit] [del.icio.us] [Facebook] [Technorati] [Google] [StumbleUpon]
This entry was posted in Analyst Coverage. Bookmark the permalink. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.
  • The question here, is how reliable and secure are Nortel's carrier VOIP deployment productS? How difficult and complex is it to deploy? What vulnerabilities are inherent with Nortel's Carrier Grade products? What are the statistics on uptime with Nortel's Carrier VOIP products in comparison to other vendors? Looks like Nortel has missed the opportunity to widely deploy a reliable 5 9's carrier VOIP product in the carrier space. The cable companies have moved on to other more reliable VOIP products, by engaging other Carrier Grade vendors that have gained market share in the carrier space.
    It's going to be an uphill battle for Nortel to sustain a foothold within the carrier space.
  • Nortel Will Survive
    It's hard to believe your comments given that Nortel remains as the #1 market share leader in Carrier VoIP. http://www.voipmonitor.net/2007/12/04/Carrier+VoIP+Equipment+Sales+Up+5+In+3Q07+From+2Q07.aspx

    Do you work for Sonus? Very good attempt at spreading false and misleading information which is standard for this blog unfortunately.
  • The Psychiatrist
    Nortel Will Survive- I concur with your comments,unfortunately this blog is overrun by the same few with nothing but disgruntlement on their minds.
  • Apple
    The Psychiatrist
    Your posts are here for anyone to read and see how delusional_crooked you have been about NT stock in last years.
    What's wrong with you?
    Can you imagine that all the predictions of NT stock critics_bears are fulfilled?
    So who needs the Prozac_Zoloft?
    Bulls or bears?
    NT is 70 Cents stock now! /pre split/
    Q1 2008 is coming soon /Friday, May 02/
    What's your prediction about NT stock?
    Stop talking about posters, talk about NT!
    Maybe you want to say anything about "new" $100 mill bsnl deal for 2.5 mill lines?
    How much is for one line?
    How much ERIC gets for one line?
    Is it natural for you that NT signed main bsnl deal about $800 mill below market value?

  • Not An Accountat
    Nortel Breakup May Boost Shares by 35 Percent, Merrill Says

    By Alexis Xydias

    April 10 (Bloomberg) -- A breakup of Nortel Networks Corp., North America's largest telephone-equipment maker, may boost the company's shares by more than 35 percent, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. analysts.

    The Toronto-based company could sell its wireless business, where ``profits have peaked,'' and concentrate on its wireline and enterprise-solutions units, Merrill wrote in a report to investors dated today.

    The individual parts of the company combined are worth about $10 per share, the note said, compared with yesterday's closing price of $7.14 in New York trading and C$7.26 in Toronto.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601082&sid=akIDW7pX8xQI&refer=canada
blog comments powered by Disqus
  • TwitterCounter for @markevans
  • Seeking Alpha Certified
data recovery software