Tag Archives: technology

Verizon And FCC Push ‘MmWave’ For 5G Wireless, In Dot-Com Twist

Federal regulators and Verizon Communications ( VZ ) have zeroed in on airwaves that could make the U.S. the global leader in rolling out 5G wireless services. One market opportunity for 5G may be as a challenger to the cable TV industry’s broadband dominance. Think Verizon Wireless, not Verizon’s FiOS-branded landline service, vs. the likes of Comcast ( CMCSA ) or Charter Communications ( CHTR ). First, though, airwaves need to be freed up for 5G. That’s where high-frequency radio spectrum, also called millimeter wave, comes in. In particular, U.S. regulators are focused on the 28 gigahertz frequency band, analysts say. Most wireless phone services today use radio frequency below 3 GHz. If 28 GHz or millimeter wave rings a bell, that’s because several fixed wireless startups (WinStar, Teligent, Nextlink, Terabeam) tried and failed in commercializing products relying on high-frequency airwaves during the dot-com boom of the late 1990s. Business models were suspect, and their LMDS (local multipoint distribution services) were susceptible to interference from rain and other environmental conditions. Waves Of The Future? When the tech bubble burst in 2000-01, the LMDS startups perished. Technology advances, however, could make the high-frequency airwaves prime candidates for 5G. “In the 1990s, with LMDS, mobile data wasn’t mature, and neither was the Internet, and neither was the electronics industry — it couldn’t make low cost, mmWave devices,” said Ted Rappaport, founding director of NYU Wireless, New York University’s research center on millimeter-wave technologies. “Wi-Fi was really brand new then, and broadband backhaul was not even built out. LMDS was originally conceived to be like fiber, to serve as backhaul (long-distance), or point-to-multipoint, and was not for mobile services. Fast forward to today, backhaul is in place to accommodate demand, and electronics at mmWave frequencies are being mass-produced in cars. Demand for data is increasing more than 50% a year, and the only way to continue to supply capacity to users is to move up to (millimeter wave).” The Federal Communications Commission in October opened a study looking at 28, 37, 39, and 60 GHz as the primary bands for 5G. While the FCC says 28 GHz airwaves show promise, some countries have been focused on higher frequencies rather than 28 GHz. FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler, speaking at a U.S. Senate committee hearing on March 2, said: “While international coordination is preferable, I believe we should move forward with exploration of the 28 GHz band.” Wheeler said that the U.S. will lead the world in 5G and allocate spectrum “faster than any nation on the planet.” Verizon Makes Deals Verizon, meanwhile, on Feb. 22 agreed to buy privately held XO Communications’ fiber-optic network business for about $1.8 billion. In a side deal, Verizon will also lease XO’s wireless spectrum in the 28 GHz to 31 GHz bands, with an option to buy for $200 million by the end of 2018. XO’s spectrum covers some of the largest U.S. metro areas, including New York, Boston, Chicago, Minneapolis, Atlanta, Miami, Dallas, Denver, Phoenix, San Francisco and Los Angeles, as well as Tampa, Fla. and Austin, Texas. Verizon CFO Fran Shammo commented on the XO deal at a Morgan Stanley conference on March 1. “Right now we have licenses issued to us from the FCC for trial purposes at 28 GHz. The XO deal gave us additional 28 GHz,” Shammo said. “The rental agreement enables us to include that (XO spectrum) in some of our R&D development with 28 GHz. So that just continues the path that we’re on in launching 5G as soon as the FCC clears spectrum.” He noted that Japan and South Korea plan to test 5G services using 28 GHz and 39 GHz airwaves. Some analysts doubt 28 GHz airwaves will be on a fast track. “We are skeptical, not only on the timing of the availability of 28 GHz, but also its ultimate viability in a mobile wireless network,” Walter Piecyk, analyst at BTIG Research, said in a report. Boosting signal strength at higher frequencies is a challenge for wireless firms. Low-frequency airwaves travel over long distances and also through walls, improving in-building services. One approach to increase propagation in millimeter wave bands, analysts say, is using more “small-cell” radio antennas, which increase network capacity. Wireless firms generally use large cell towers to connect mobile phone calls and whisk video and email to mobile phone users. They also install radio antennas on building rooftops, church steeples, or billboards. Suitcase-sized antennas used in small-cell technology are often mounted on lamp posts or utility poles. Verizon has been testing small-cell technology in Boston. When Will 5G Happen? Verizon says it will begin rolling out 5G commercially in 2017, though its plans are still vague. While many wireless service providers touted 5G plans and tests at the Mobile World Congress in February, makers of telecom network equipment are being cautious. “General consensus (at MWC) seemed to indicate that the 2020-time-frame will mark full-scale 5G deployments,” Barclays analyst Mark Moskowitz said in a report. Verizon has said it doesn’t expect 5G networks to replace existing 4G ones. While 5G is expected to provide much faster data speeds, wireless firms also expect applications that require always-on, low-data-rate connections. The apps involve data-gathering from industrial sensors, home appliances and other devices often referred to as part of the Internet of Things. Both Verizon and AT&T ( T ) have recently touted 5G speeds up to 1-gigabit-per-second. That’s roughly 50 times faster than the average speeds of 4G wireless networks in good conditions. AT&T Chief Executive Randall Stephenson recently said 5G speeds could match fiber-optic broadband connections to homes. At the Morgan Stanley conference, Verizon’s Shammo also said 5G could be a “substitute product for broadband.” Regulators would like to create new competition for cable TV companies. But, Verizon says, it’s still early days. “With trials, we’ll figure out exactly what we can deliver, what the base cases are,” said Shammo. “5G has the capability to be a substitute for broadband into the home with a fixed wireless solution. The question is can you deploy that technology and actually make money at a price that the consumer would pay?” Sanyogita Shamsunder, Verizon’s director of network infrastructure planning, says high frequencies can support 5G. “Radio frequency components today are able to support much wider bandwidth (think wide lanes on the highway) when compared to even 10 years ago. What it means is we are able to pump more bits at the same time,” said Shamsunder, in an email. “Due to improvements in antenna and RF technology,” she added, “we are able to support 100s of small tiny antennas on a small die the size of a quarter.”

5 Chip Stocks To Watch, With Apple’s Big Event March 21

A basket of top-rated chip stocks are making moves around buy points now. And Apple ( AAPL ), a big user of semiconductors, just sent out press invitations for a March 21 event where it’s expected to introduce a small iPhone and another iPad. So which chip stocks are highly rated by IBD and get at least some of their business from Apple?  Broadcom ( AVGO ), IBD Leaderboard stock  Macom Technology ( MTSI ), Cirrus Logic ( CRUS ), Mellanox ( MLNX ) and Nvidia ( NVDA ) make the list. All are at least somewhat diversified, with revenue streams in everything from data center and mobile networking systems to powerful graphics chips for virtual reality and gaming, to connected car technology and now even artificial intelligence. Chips And Profit Going into Friday trading, IBD 50 stock Broadcom was a few percentage points into buy range from a double bottom base. Broadcom made IBD’s Stocks On The Move screen early Thursday, heading up in high volume alongside Google owner Alphabet ( GOOGL ) and a few other stocks. Early Thursday, Broadcom’s management team had presented at a Susquehanna Financial analysts’ conference. “It’s a great time to operate in the semiconductor industry,” CEO Hock Tan said there. “You have a substantial profit pool … compared to similar industries of the same size.” Loading the player…   Broadcom started giving up some of its gains as stock indexes dipped into the red with falling oil prices, but it ended up with a 1.7% rise for the day. Several other top-rated chip stocks declined Thursday. Mellanox slipped to the bottom of buy range. So did Macom Technology. Nvidia edged down to about 4% under a buy point from a cup base. While the stock market’s in a confirmed uptrend, much of the action is choppy with ups and downs in oil prices and economic concerns around the globe. All five of these top-ranked chipmakers have fallen from a week ago, between 1% and 7%, with the S&P 500 index down 1%. Cirrus Logic and Mellanox were up 14% and 15% this year, respectively, going into Friday. Macom was up 1% while Avago was down 1% and Nvidia down 4%. Nvidia, an IBD 50 stock, has the strongest IBD Composite Rating of the bunch, a best-possible 99, taking into account earnings growth, stock price gains and several other metrics. The others range between 90 and 98 in Composite Rating. Apple Chips It will take awhile for teardowns to show whose chips go into whatever new products Apple introduces, and longer for those chips to translate into reported sales, and lagging iPhone sales growth lately hasn’t helped the chips. Apple Sets March 21 To Launch Small iPhone, New iPad, Watch Bands https://t.co/MxIpxMFKvc pic.twitter.com/iPxQ1lTAFF — Investors.com (@IBDinvestors) March 10, 2016 Other markets are driving growth, however. Nvidia, for instance, said in its fourth quarter report, in February, that it’s at the “center of four exciting growth opportunities — PC gaming, VR (virtual reality), deep learning and self-driving cars.” Nvidia is a partner to electric car maker  Tesla Motors ( TSLA ) and other auto manufacturers, and said last month that it’s in an alliance with Facebook ( FB ) and Chinese Internet company Alibaba Group ( BABA ) for speedy artificial intelligence chips.

If Arista Networks ‘Superbly Positioned,’ What Drove Down Stock?

Needham issued a glowing report on Arista Networks ( ANET ) Thursday, but it fell 4.1% to 61.11 in the stock market . And Arista’s No. 1 switching rival  Cisco Systems ( CSCO ) closed down 0.8% to 27.38. On a trading day when indexes started out on an up note, declined and ended mixed, a fractional slip for Cisco after its 2.1% gain Wednesday can be taken in stride. However, both stocks saw rather wide trading ranges Thursday — especially Arista — coming off its 3% gain Wednesday. There “could be confusion on SONiC,” Needham analyst Alex Henderson told IBD. SONiC stands for “software for open networking in the cloud,” free software-defined networking (SDN) that makes Cisco’s high-speed switches less needed. Microsoft ( MSFT ) announced this contribution to the Open Compute Project at the OCP U.S. Summit in San Jose, Calif., on Wednesday. “SONiC will enable cloud operators to take advantage of hardware innovation while giving them a framework to build upon an open source code for apps on the network switch and the ability to integrate with multiple platforms,” posted Kamala Subramaniam, principal architect of Azure Networking, on a Microsoft blog Wednesday. “SONiC is not just prototyped software but deployed today and planned to run at scale in the future.” Arista is part of Microsoft’s team that created SONiC, along with Broadcom ( AVGO ), Dell and Mellanox Technologies ( MLNX ). Broadcom stock closed up 1.7% to 144.42. But Microsoft stock fell 1.5% to 52.05 Thursday and Mellanox slipped 0.6% to 48.42. As for Arista, SONiCally confusing or not, the company is “superbly positioned” to grow, Henderson wrote in a research note issued Thursday. “We like to think we are pretty technology savvy, but we always feel humbled when we go into Arista and delve into the technology landscape in detail,” Henderson said. “We hit a number of key issues including the 10G to 25G transition, the quality of the Broadcom Tomahawk, the opportunities in storage, the potential of the Jericho chip in the Edge router market, and the advantages Arista has in the SDN market. “This last point is particularly punctuated by the Microsoft contribution of . . . SONiC to the Open Compute Foundation. We come away convinced that ANET has multiple avenues of growth, and we expect continuing share gains.” He reiterated Needham’s buy rating and 105 price target. Henderson noted that “Cisco has been questioning the quality of the Tomahawk chip” but Arista, which made the Tomahawk chip set available in its switches in September, “argues the bugs in this first pass are minor and easily worked around in software” and has “good traction in the market already.” He said Arista “seems to be seeing accelerating conversion of storage area networks (SAN) to storage over IP as “major customers drive to a single unified architecture over IP.” He also observed a “solid ramp,” starting in the second half of this year, for Arista’s 25G/50G/100G speed transition and learned that “Arista thinks some portion of that (Edge router) market can be addressed with much lower-cost switches.” Arista’s “Linux-based, open, programmable and merchant silicon-based products are winning, and the trends continue to increase its advantage,” Henderson said. “We expect ANET to continue to outperform Cisco.” He probably means Arista should outperform Cisco’s growth rate. In the fourth-quarter, Arista grew adjusted earnings per share by 51% to 80 cents, on revenue up 42% to $245 million. In Cisco’s last quarter, ended in January, it grew adjusted EPS by 8% to 57 cents on flat revenue of $11.9 billion. In the current quarter, analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expect adjusted earnings to grow 22% for Arista and 2% for Cisco. Image provided by Shutterstock .