Tag Archives: apple

Amazon, Comcast Content Delivery Network Push Could Hurt Akamai

Comcast ( CMCSA ) and Amazon Web Services, part of Amazon.com ( AMZN ), are becoming bigger players in the content delivery network market, posing a challenge to CDN leader Akamai Technologies ( AKAM ), according to Goldman Sachs. CDNs increase the speed of e-commerce transactions, business software downloads and video streaming to mobile devices. “Amazon is growing its Cloudfront CDN to an estimated $1.8 billion in 2016 revenues and shifting its own video delivery from independent CDNs to its own network, and startups like Fastly are growing share,” Goldman Sachs analyst Heather Bellini said in a research report. AWS is part of the e-commerce giant’s fast-growing cloud computing business. Amazon stock surged to an all-time high  on Tuesday, as the Wall Street Journal reported that Salesforce.com ( CRM ) was building a new service that uses AWS. AWS was a big reason Amazon reported its highest sales growth in nearly four years when it posted first-quarter earnings on April 28, sending the stock up nearly 10% the following day. Amazon is an IBD Leaderboard stock, with a strong IBD Composite Rating of 95, where 99 is highest. Akamai has a 59 CR. Bellini, who has a sell rating on Akamai stock, attended the 2016 Content Delivery Summit in New York on Monday, gaining views on market trends. “A key takeaway was that the competitive landscape remains intense, as Comcast looks to triple its CDN capacity next year,” wrote Bellini. Comcast, the No. 1 cable TV company, has been expanding commercial services to businesses. Comcast  moved into CDN services in late 2014, Bellini noted. One market trend could work in Comcast’s favor, said the Goldman Sachs analyst. “Multi-CDN deployments were a key theme of the conference,” she wrote, “with new startups making it easy to route traffic across multiple CDNs.” Cambridge, Mass.-based Akamai is the No. 1 provider of CDN services. Worries that big customers such as  Apple ( AAPL ) and  Facebook ( FB ) are shifting more of their data traffic to their own CDNs have pressured Akamai stock. Aside from AWS and Comcast, Akamai competes with  Level 3 Communications ( LVLT ),  Limelight Networks ( LLNW ), and Verizon Communications ( VZ ), as well as startups Fastly and CloudFlare.

Stocks Aren’t Bad, They’re Just Not Good

When we’re doing our due diligence on an Alternative Investment, one of the first questions we ask managers is what are the market environments in which the program struggles to find returns. And once we get into when they’re likely to do poorly, we then analyze just what that poor performance looks like. In essence – how bad is it when it’s bad? Does everyone/anyone who tracks the stock market with low cost index tracking ETFs do the same? With stocks all but flat since mid-way through 2014, some investors are starting to question where the returns are, rightly so. But the stock indices aren’t human. We can’t tell them to try a little harder. Or go for a moonshot. Or shake off the rust and get back into the game. No, the stock indices are a rule-based investment model. So while pundits and economists are grasping at straws to identify the problem, we’re more apt to ask the manager of the investment model “Why is the current market making it difficult for your trading model to find returns?” We’ve said this before, but it bears repeating, stock indices like the S&P 500 are a trading system; or if you prefer a set of investment rules or stock picking model. Look no further than Winton Capital’s CEO on the matter. We really couldn’t have said it better. Harding: “The S&P 500 is a trading system. The S&P 500 is a set of rules for buying and selling stocks. And by the way… not a very good one! Think about this for a second. If you took the S&P 500’s monthly returns and put them under some sophisticated sounding hedge fund name, everyone would tell you the drawdowns are too large and last too long, while the annualized volatility is too high for the performance it generates. There would be a Bloomberg article demonizing the system for large drawdowns and for tricking investors. And what’s worse, this model is a one trick pony. It’s solely focused on one asset class, and only makes money when that asset class goes up. Of course, it does have the Fed doing everything in its power to avoid a 20% drawdown in the markets at the cost of creating a future bubble. Not to mention buybacks are preventing real growth while 3 companies make up 10% of the market’s capitalization . Put that all together and the S&P 500 is nothing more than an investment model that is high reward-high risk. We dare say, it’s a very basic equity focused hedge fund, choosing which stocks to “own” and which to avoid. To paraphrase Captain Barbossa, “You better start believing in hedge funds Ms. Turner – you’re in one !” There’re bouts of volatility, drawdowns, and low risk-adjusted returns. But that doesn’t make the most beloved system in the world a bad investment. By all means, take a look at it. There’s a lot to like. Chief among them is probably choosing to align yourself with the majority of investors out there; the government and a huge industry hell-bent on seeing it go up year after year. The S&P 500 isn’t a bad investment, it’s just not a good one. It will test your nerve, and then test it some more. As a recent post by Reformed Broker noted: Just because it’s cheap and easy to get exposure to stocks these days, that doesn’t mean it’ll be mentally cheap and easy to stick with them.