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| BOOM AND BUST | |
August 31, 2001 |
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The telecommunications industry is suffering from severe financial troubles. |
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TOM BEARDEN: A bankrupt telecommunications company auctioning off its property in northern Virginia. The company is Winstar, a provider of high-speed Internet access, a business not long ago considered practically a license to print money. Its failure is just one example among hundreds in the once high- flying telecommunications industry. Winstar is selling just about everything-- fax machines, office furniture, even pricey specialized Internet equipment-- at fire sale prices. AUCTIONEER: A Cisco 2600... |
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| The power of fiber optics | ||||||||||||||||||||
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ACTOR: You're a wizard, Harry. HARRY POTTER: I'm a what? TOM BEARDEN: William Kennard sees an unlimited future for all that capacity. As an example, he uses his wireless devices to link up to the Internet every day. The former chairman of the Federal Communications Commission is now with the Carlyle Group, an investment firm.
TOM BEARDEN: A few years ago, the capital markets were just as excited about the potential as Kennard. Investors were throwing money at companies almost faster than they could spend it. Kevin O'Hara is president of Level 3 Communications, a Denver company that began building a new fiber network three years ago. KEVIN O'HARA: Capital became very, very, very easy to get for anybody that had a business plan that mentioned Internet or mentioned optical technologies. TOM BEARDEN: Level 3 raised $10 billion to build its new network. They're laying the last section of it near Santa Barbara, California. The company chose to lay much of its cable along railroad tracks, routes that offered the easiest way to connect major American cities.
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| The bubble burst | ||||||||||||||||||||
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TOM BEARDEN: But Level 3 was only one of many companies racing to build new fiber networks. The result is that there are now 39 million miles of fiber, enough to circle the earth 1,500 times, so much that some observers wonder if all that capacity will ever be used or whether the companies that own it will ever turn a profit. Late last year, the financial bubble burst. Investors lost confidence in the industry, sold off their stock, and share prices collapsed. Kennard says too many fiber optic network companies were overoptimistic about future demand.
For Level 3 Communications, the downturn has battered its stock price. It was $130 in the spring of 2000; this June it was down to $4. That's when the company said it would cut 1,400 jobs, 25 percent of its workforce. In all, an estimated 250,000 telecom workers have lost their jobs in this year, three times the losses in the dot-com industry, which was focused on Internet commerce and was expected to use a lot of fiber network capacity as they expanded. TRADE TABLE: We ask if you could drop your business card because there will be a drawing this evening.
TOM BEARDEN: You've been out of work since when? HOWARD WALLACE: Since April 3, at 5:00 P.M. TOM BEARDEN: How many companies have you talked to since then?
TOM BEARDEN: Gary Gaessler's also looking. He helped start up a high-speed Internet access company that went under. He says the industry got caught up in a land grab.
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| The industries effect on the Denver economy | ||||||||||||||||||||
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TOM BEARDEN: The losses are starting to affect the Denver regional economy. In a high-tech office parks like Interlocken, almost 40 percent of the office buildings sit vacant. And there's now a three-year supply of homes priced over $500,000 on the area real estate market. Some see disturbing parallels between the fiber boom and bust and what happened to the railroads in the 19th century. The seminal event for the railroads was the 1869 completion of the Transcontinental Railroad, when officials drove the golden spike at Promontory Summit in Utah. The completion of the link between East and West helped settle the West, expanded commerce, and made the US a continental power. It also created a railroad building frenzy. Financed by large loans from the bond market, four additional routes were laid to the Pacific. Historians say they built twice as many tracks as the country needed at the time. The bust came just four years later, in 1873, with the collapse of the Northern Pacific Line. Investors deserted the industry en masse, and 89 heavily indebted railroads went under, sparking a four-year depression. To economist Michael Goldstein, of Boston's Babson College, both the railroad and telecom industries were victims of their own unsupportable optimism. MICHAEL GOLDSTEIN: If you have a lot of competition, everyone is just going to compete themselves to death, and they're going to create too much in the beginning, and then they're going to fall apart. It's inefficient to build five times what you need and then wait to grow into it as a society. TOM BEARDEN: Goldstein says the telecom industry is going through corporate natural selection: Survival of the fittest.
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| Looking to the future | ||||||||||||||||||||
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TOM BEARDEN: While observers think dozens of companies won't survive the shakeout, Level 3 says it will survive because it has enough cash on hand to make it through. Level 3 also says it's network is unique. The company didn't put just one conduit in the ground filled with fiber. They put dozens of empty pipes in the same trench, giving them the ability to add better technology and new capacity as the market develops. Bob Berger plans to be a survivor, too. He's the CEO of Citynet, a rare example of a telecom company that is still able to raise venture capital. Citynet uses robots to put fiber in, of all places, city sewers.
BOB BERGER: If you look outside the window where we're sitting or in any city in the country, you'll find an asphalt and concrete jungle. So to build within the city in an efficient manner, means you are basically ripping up every street and every sidewalk. For 20 years, people have been trying to solve the holy grail, the great enigma, of telecom: How do you build not between cities, that's easy - you're trenching along railroad right-a-ways - through dirt - but how do you build in cities without devaluating the roadway infrastructure and the sidewalks of a community, because if you can't bring your telecom traffic, your communications traffic not between city to city but really to the doorstep of the end user, you've built highways to nowhere. And that's kind of where we are today. SINGER: When I think back on these times -
MICHAEL GOLDSTEIN: If you add your cell phone bill and your cable bill and your cable modem bill, if you have one, and maybe a second phone line, we're getting up to like $200 a month. Well, if you ask yourself, "what else do you pay $200 a month for?" I mean, not a whole lot. You have your rent, or your mortgage, your food. You know, $200 a month is a sizable amount, so each one of these telecom people think consumers will pay $2 more a month for having this service. Well, you know, I don't know about other people. But I'm getting to my saturation point. TOM BEARDEN: The ultimate question is how long will the shakeout of the telecommunications industry take? Some say a year; others, up to three. For now, the remaining players are trying to avoid the auction block and hold on till demand catches up with supply. |
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