Silicon Valley News

Showing posts with label Acme Packet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Acme Packet. Show all posts

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Acme Packet a key player in the building of VoIP networks

Acme CEO Andy Ory
I've been a big fan of Acme Packet for some time as the best way to invest in the accelerating transition to VoIP. Acme shares have soared nearly 400 per cent in the past year as demand for its VoIP gear has skyrocketed.

The Bedford, Massachusetts-based company makes session border controllers, which connect businesses with Internet networks to allow the secure transfer of voice, video and other data. Acme, which saw revenue surge by 63 per cent last year to $231 million, expects continued growth as large telcos build faster next generation Long Term Evolution networks.

Acme is the top holding of my iTech portfolio, which has outperformed the S&P by over 30 percent annually. I recently discovered BroadSoft, a small  company in Gaithersburg, Maryland that sells VoIP software to Verizon.  The company's shares have quadrupled since it started trading on June 16. I picked up a few shares of BroadSoft for my iTech fund, just to have some skin in the game.

Verizon  and other phone companies compete with Cisco and Avaya to sell Internet network equipment to corporate customers, says Diane Myers, an analyst at research firm Infonetics.

"For phone companies," she points out, "there's a lot to gain as businesses move to IP telephony."

A significant part of Acme's growth comes from helping phone companies contain the costs of expanding their wireless networks, says Acme co-founder and chief executive Andy Ory.

"They have to lease out connections from other managed network service providers," Ory says. "so if they set up their own wireless networks and trade traffic with each other for free they can end up taking advantage of IP and significantly improve their economics."

Ory also points out that there is a "movement away from TDM, or time-division multiplexing, to IP for voice, video and other types of services. That's a global phenomenon, and that's a big driver for Acme Packet."

Marketing research firm In-Stat issued a report last month pointing out that business mobile VoIP is on the rise. "One of the key benefits of mobile VoIP for enterprises is extending desk phone functionality to mobile devices," says In-Stat analyst Amy Cravens. Expenditures on mobile VoIP gear will exceed $6 billion by 2015, predicts In-Stat, who sees mobile business users increasing 10-fold during that time.

Mobile VoIP is moving beyond just being an inexpensive alternative for making international phone calls.  In-Stat recently forecast that there will be some 139 million mobile VoIP users by 2014.

Acme's growth will continue as more and more people use cell phones to make VoIP calls. Acme marketing executive Kevin Mitchell said that the "most significant trend in 2010 was the rise of mobile VoIP," especially after Apple "stepped into the fray with FaceTime."

Verizon will begin selling the iPhone for the first time next Thursday. FaceTime video calling on the Verizon iPhone will be restricted to Wi-Fi networks, the same as it is for the AT&T iPhone. Video calling, including FaceTime,  does not work well over 3G networks. Verizon Wireless chief technology officer David Small says that "my team and the Apple team have both been using that feature" over 3G connections. At present, however, neither Verizon nor Apple have announced plans to offer FaceTime over 3G.

Social networking will also be a big catalyst for mobile VoIP. In-Stat's Cravens says that as mobile apps combine with "social networking apps, the realm of potential use is expected to broaden. This has created a great deal of jockeying among mobile VoIP players trying to develop market share and mobile operators trying to determine the best response to this potentially disruptive service."

The popular VoIP service offered by Skype has recently been integrated with Facebook.

This post originally appeared on Benzinga.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Google buoyed by rise of VoIP

Like many investors, I dumped Google's stock following its January 12 announcement that it would no longer censor the results of its search engine in China. Google was one of the top holdings of my Silicon Valley 2.0 fund. The portfolio has outperformed the S&P by over 30 percent annually for the last two years and I did not want to let Google's China Syndrome drag the fund down.

The tide has begun to turn for the Silicon Valley titan recently as its Google Voice initiative gains traction. Its stock has outperformed the tech-laden Nasdaq since its August 25 announcement that Google Voice has been enhanced to allow its users to make and receive calls through Gmail. The emergence of Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP), and the distinct possibility that Google may dominate this telecommunications paradigm shift, has settled the nerves of anxious investors.



An epic battle is brewing over the future of communications. When Google Voice introduced its Gmail feature, it was advertised as an historic event. A promotional infograph and short video chronicled the history of modern human communications. It's ironic that a Federal Communications Commission investigation into Apple's initial rejection of a Google Voice app for the iPhone involves the three most important corporations in the past, present and future of communications. The third party to the FCC investigation, AT&T, was once the most widely held stock, largest and most respected company in the world. Riding the coattails of the shift to wireless communications and the popularity of the iPhone, Apple now reigns supreme. Google does not appear to have lost its mojo, however,  as it waits in the wings while it lays the groundwork for the future - VoIP.

The VoIP market is set to double in the next five years to $20 billion, according to forecasts by ABI Research.  A huge part of that growth comes from the rapidly increasing deployment of Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) trunking, which  enables voice and video communications over the internet. The proliferation of SIP trunking has led to the skyrocketing use of Session Border Controllers, devices that control the traffic and provide security for VoIP networks. "The SBC market is on fire," exclaims Diane Myers in an Infonetics Research report last month.

The SBC market leader is Acme Packet. The Bedford, Massachusetts company is the top holding in my iTech fund, which has outperformed the S&P by over 31 percent annually. Acme's stock has more than quadrupled over the past year. Its revenue is forecast to grow some 54 percent for the fiscal year ending in December.

As efforts to stem the erosion of legacy landlines have proved futile, both AT&T and Verizon have begun to deploy residential VoIP services more widely. Last year, Verizon announced that it plans to move to an all-IP network in seven years. VoIP services for Verizon Wireless customers are also being overhauled as the telco giant builds out its next generation LTE network. "By 2012, the voice we sell on LTE will be VoIP," says Lowell McAdam, Verizon Wireless CEO.