After much speculation, Vonage has finally filed to raise as much as $250-million through an initial public offering. The strange part of the announcement was that I initally saw the news about Tyco International executive Mike Snyder replacing Jeff Citron as CEO, which immediately caused to think it was a precursor for an IPO. The interesting part of the Vonage filing is it wants to use some of the proceeds to make acquisitions and make strategic investments. Does this mean Vonage will try to consolidate the market by going after 8x8, Sun Rocket, etc.? What's far more interesting is Vonage's finances and ownership information. For the nine months ended Sept. 30, 2005, the company posted a loss of $189.4-million on sales of $174-million. This includes $176.2-million of spending on marketing (that accounts for all those online banner ads) and $98-million SG&A. You have to wonder how much of an appetite there will be among investors for a company posting huge losses in a competitive marketplace? If Vonage manages to sell the IPO, Citron looks to make out like a bandit. He currently owns 41% of the common shares, which seems high given Vonage has raised $408-million of venture capital. One theory is he's been investing in each financing round. Other equity holders are Bain Capital (8%), Meritech (22%) and New Enterprise Associates (10%). Citron also owns 46.5% of the outstanding options - 1 million at $2.65 a share and 10 million at $3.15 a share.
Update: Russell Shaw warns that Vonage "better execute or else", which is putting it mildly, and provides a lengthy post on their strategy going forward. Meanwhile, Joseph Lazlo does a little number-crunching and talks about his bullishness about the VoIP market. I don't think he spends enough time looking at Vonage's huge losses and marketing expenses, which are far more important than churn and subscriber numbers.
Update: BusinessWeek's Olga Kharif has a story about Vonage's battle to stay competitive amid competition from cablecos, Google, Yahoo and Microsoft. It's just more evidence about how investors should be extremely cautious about investing in the IPO.
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Wednesday, February 8
by
Mark Evans
on Wed 08 Feb 2006 01:56 PM EST
by
Mark Evans
on Wed 08 Feb 2006 11:30 AM EST
Update: The domain Zillow.ca is owned by Stuart MacDonald, who started Expedia.ca before becoming senior vice-president of marketing for Expedia.com.
by
Mark Evans
on Wed 08 Feb 2006 08:00 AM EST
by
Mark Evans
on Wed 08 Feb 2006 07:45 AM EST
A new report by In-Stat suggests global cable telephony revenue will nearly doubled by 2009 to $10-billion from $5.6-billion in 2005 - a forecast that comes as no surprise given the growing inroads made by Time-Warner and Cablevision in the U.S. and Videotron and Shaw in Canada. In-Stat analyst Michael Paxton said the advantage cablecos have over carriers is their lower costs. "Based on our analysis, it costs between 17% to 25% less to provision a VoIP cable telephony subscriber than a traditional circuit-switched cable telephony subscriber", he said. |
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If you're interested in the red-hot real estate market (or just curious about the value of your home and your neighbours!),
Nortel CEO Mike Zafirovski's work to clean the decks has moved to the legal world on news the company has reached a