|

CABLE---L.A.
Cable Battle A Ways Off
by Hans Ibold and Howard Fine
7/30/01
On its face, the franchise agreement reached last week between the
Los Angeles City Council and fiber-optic company Western Integrated
Communications sounds grand.
If Mayor James Hahn approves the deal, which he is expected to do,
the city will allow Western Integrated to install fiber-optic and
coaxial cable and, in eight years, all city residents will get a
potentially cheaper provider of slick broadband services
be it voice, data or video.
All of which will provide much-needed competition to the citys
current cable systems.
Trouble is, it takes a massive amount of capital to build the kind
of system that Western Integrated known by its product brand
name WINfirst has promised the city. And serious questions
remain about the financial stability of WINfirst, a two-year-old
Denver start-up with an unproven business model.
In fact, no start-up in the ailing telecommunications sector is
in good shape right now. Early stage ventures of almost any kind
are anathema in the risk-averse investment community, which has
lost unprecedented billions of dollars in telecom. The picture doesnt
seem to be brightening. Earnings and revenues continue to fall sector
wide. The window for initial public offerings is slammed shut for
telecom start-ups, and valuations of private companies in the sector
have dropped off the table.
WINfirsts venture in L.A. is particularly risky. The company
is betting that once it gets Hahns approval and invests hundreds
of millions of dollars here, there will be enough demand for its
high-speed Internet access, video and telephone services to justify
its costs.
Were taking a major risk, said Councilwoman Janice
Hahn of District 15, who along with Councilman Nate Holden of District
10 voted against WINfirst. Hahn said she was discouraged by a City
Administrator Office report that indicated WINfirst did not have
the capital to build out the system.
WINfirst plans to begin construction as soon as this year and have
its first Los Angeles customers 12 to 18 months after breaking ground.
Under the city ordinance, WINfirst must complete construction by
2009 and half the project by 2007. It is required to wire all of
the city, not just the franchise areas where demand might be the
highest. As a safeguard, WINfirst put up a $29 million performance
bond for repairing streets in case it runs out of money before completing
the project.
The network in L.A. will cost $1.5 billion, according to WINfirst
president Frank Cassaza. He said WINfirst will only need to spend
between $200 million and $250 million in L.A. in order for the project
to become cash flow positive. At that point, Casazza said revenues
would fund the rest.
Rounds of financing
The company has completed two rounds of financing one in
February 2000 and one last July and raised $850 million from
investors J.P. Morgan, First Union Bank, Blackstone Group, GE Capital
and others.
While raising $850 million in a year is a triumph for any start-up,
its only a fraction of the funds the company will need to
complete its ongoing projects in Dallas and Sacramento and its third,
proposed project in L.A.
And WINfirst has other franchise agreements with San Diego, Austin,
Texas, Houston and Seattle. While it has no revenue generating projects
yet, the company said it is less than two months away from launching
in Sacramento.
The companys strong investor base and its ties to Bechtel
Group, Accenture and Lucent Technologies Inc. all of which
have taken equity stakes are a vote of confidence in the
business model and the management team a group of telecom,
cable and Wall Street veterans.
Company chairman and chief executive Jim Vaughn co-founded FrontierVision
Partners in 1995, which he sold to Adelphia Communications for $2.1
billion in 1999. He took several former FrontierVision executives
with him when he started WINfirst. But steller management doesnt
resolve concerns about the business.
The question is: if youre going to spend this money,
does it cost you what it says its going to cost and does it
meet with the level of demand? said Sharon Armbrust,
senior analyst with Carmel-based Paul Kagan Associates, a cable
marketing consulting firm.
They have to show cash flow in order to be able to continue
to borrow, said Rohit Shukla, one of the members of the citys
Information Technology Agency, which gave preliminary approval to
WINfirsts bid. Its going to be mighty, mighty
challenging for them.
Self-sufficiency predicted
WINfirst insists it will have access to the capital markets as soon
as the company launches commercially. Besides, Casazza said, if
capital markets didnt change and we couldnt raise another
dime, we could become self-sufficient in three to four markets with
what we have today in terms of capital.
Not if WINfirsts competitors can help it. The current franchise
holders are formidable rivals to a start-up with no cash flow. Besides
Adelphia, WINfirst must first steal customers from deep-pocketed
AT&T Broadband, AOL Time Warner (which has expressed an interest
in acquiring AT&T Broadband), Charter Communications and Cox
Communications, which currently serve a total of about 620,000 households
in the citys 14 franchise areas.
Incumbents like AT&T already are offering voice, data and video
to customers and, with further upgrades, could ultimately be indistinguishable
from WINfirsts services.
WINfirsts agreement with the City Council follows on the heels
of a failed attempt by Princeton, N.J.-based RCN Corp. to build
a network in five of the citys 14 franchise areas.
You
can visit the Los Angeles Business Journal at www.labusinessjournal.com
|