Veritas Research analyst Neeraj Monga has published an extensive and critical report on Vonage after some serious number crunching. Entitled "Not Too Late to Hang Up", Monga concludes Vonage is a "sell" and its stock is worth less than $5. "Vonage is caught up in the perfect storm," he said. "Regulatory uncertainty, competitive pressures, lawsuits, unhappy customers and a damaged brand will derail its business plan. Time to hang up." While the company's supporters point out Vonage could have 4.5-million to 7-million customers by 2009, Monga said growth will come at a cost: $777-million to $1.28-billion of cash burn. If things come in on the high of the range, he thinks Vonage may have to make a debt or equity offering next year.
Vonage is starting fight back after a post-IPO quiet period that lasted until June 19. In a BusinessWeek story, spokeswoman Brooke Schulz said "we're not toast", and that people who look at the cash burn are ignorning the fact "we have a healthy business here". That's a certainly optimistic outlook, which it ignores the fact Vonage is bleedling rink ink and it has no plans to become profitable any time soon as it focuses on subscriber growth. It should also be noted Vonage just hired a new senior v.p. of investor relations, Craig Streem, who will a huge job trying to convince the investment community that the company is headed in the right direction. Vonage shares closed yesterday at $8.85, just above the 52-week low of $8.25. Just in case you forgot, the company did its IPO at $17 a share.
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Analyst: Not too Late to Hang Up on Vonage
by
Mark Evans
on Thu 22 Jun 2006 08:04 AM EDT | Permanent Link
Comments
Re: Analyst: Not to Late to Hang Up on Vonage
The only real value Vonage holds is the value of their customers phone numbers to the big guys, in their push for the triple/quadruple play consumer.
Losing a phone number makes people think twice about switching(wireless service in Canada) LNP is a pain for many. Re: Analyst: Not too Late to Hang Up on Vonage
Hello Mr. Evans...
Thank you for the opportunity to speak (I guess) within your blog. We have been following the VoIP news up here in Canada (eh!), the U.S. and around the world and WHY is Vonage bleeding so much money? Do they not know when to stop and put a bandaid in place. As you may know the pricing competition in Canada is not so great as it is in the U.S. Take for instance, we opened www.vst-voip.com (short form for www.voicespectrumtelecom.com, now you see why I shortened it). We are now the MOST competitive VoIP provider in Canada, have the most FREE features (21) and we are using a U.S. telco that has been around for 15 years to supply the backbone. How about unlimited local and long distance calls throughout Canada and the U.S for under $23.95 p/m Canadian. Can Vonage even get close to that type of pricing? Vonage, I think, started off the pricing way TOO high and is now fighting for position. Yes, it is a new technology and all, but holy cow, pricing is way out of range. The marketing $$ they are spending is letting everyone in the world know about VoIP, then the newcomers may not have to spend so much. Well that is my short story for now. Take care. |
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