|

New
Tech Stars Rise to Fill Void Left by E-Tailers
1/8/01
by HANS IBOLD
Most
L.A. dot-coms may be in the Dumpster, but a new breed of tech company
is stepping up to cash in on the ongoing tech frenzy and the willingness
of investors to get a piece of it.
The
new players are part of the exploding yet decidedly unsexy communications
infrastructure business, making products that help high-demand devices
like cell phones and hand-held computers work faster and cost less.
“L.A.
is poised to be an important center and an important player in the
communications infrastructure space,” said Rohit Shukla, CEO of
the L.A. Regional Technology Alliance.
The
need for that technology continues to explode – shakeout or not.
Demand for bandwidth is skyrocketing as use of the Internet and
other data communications services increase. At the same time, the
Telecom Act of 1996 has opened access to existing telecommunications
cables, resulting in scores of new carriers hungry for cutting-edge
equipment to build their networks.
“With
businesses like these, you’re investing in a real technology that
is attempting to solve a real problem, as opposed to most of the
B2C plays and other dot-coms that weren’t using technology to solve
a problem,” said Massoud Entekhabi, managing partner with TL Ventures.
Indeed,
waiting for those tech companies to find their markets is what many
neglected to do last year, when vulture-like investors scoured the
tech landscape for fast cash. That approach spelled disaster for
many local Internet companies.
As
evidence of the mounting strength of the communications infrastructure
sector, Shukla pointed to the ongoing tech growth along the Ventura
(101) Freeway corridor from the San Fernando Valley to Ventura County,
where examples of fast-growing firms include Moorpark-based Accelerated
Networks Inc. and Calabasas-based Ixia Inc.
Ixia,
which held a massively successful IPO in mid-October, provides network
performance analysis systems for broadband-access devices. Its equipment
evaluates the quantity and speed of transmission of so-called data
packets and whether the information is received intact and in order.
Large
customers
Customers
include giant network equipment manufacturers like Cisco Systems
and communications chipmakers like Lucent Technologies. Last month,
the company inked deals with telecommunications service providers
AT&T Inc., Sprint Corp. and others.
Accelerated
Networks makes equipment that telecommunications service providers
use to send voice and data over broadband networks. The company’s
voice gateways convert voice signals from broadband networks into
the format recognized by standard phone networks.
Accelerated
Networks also makes devices that combine voice and data transmissions
and the systems used to manage networks. The company sells to telecommunications
service providers like CTC Communications, FirstWorld Communications
and MCI WorldCom. Siemens AG, also a customer, owns about 18 percent
of the company.
Another
local infrastructure business is Westlake Village-based Diodes Inc.
The company makes semiconductors, primarily for computer and communications
companies. Diodes has been profitable for a whopping 41 consecutive
quarters. Revenues for the third quarter ending Sept. 30 increased
49 percent to $32.3 million, compared to $21.8 million a year before.
Other
tech firms moving to cash in on the growing market are Westlake
Village-based Troika Networks Inc., a provider of storage networks;
Calabasas-based Malibu Networks, a provider of wireless broadband
technology; and Xylan Corp., a Calabasas-based subsidiary of French
telecom giant Alcatel.
Ready
workforce
L.A.’s
legacy of the aerospace and defense industries has provided a ready
supply of brain-power for those firms.
“The
broader L.A. area has a lot of companies that have historically
nurtured those kinds of engineers,” Entekhabi said.
“These
newer companies are staffed by people from the aerospace and defense
industries, and many of them have strong connectivity and communications
backgrounds.” These technology companies may have been under-hyped
and overlooked last year because they are not appealing to investors
looking for overnight riches.
“To
get the effect of what they’re developing today, you have to look
down the road,” Shukla said. “The products that they develop today
will be in full bloom three or four years from now.”
The
markets of 2000 focused investors on near-term gains, something
Shukla believes was a mistake.
“These
aren’t dot-com businesses that you can ramp up in two months,” he
said. “The market has made us all observe the day-to-day changes
in the stock value. It’s about time that our investment community
gets more sophisticated and allows for technological innovation,
which should be rolled out slowly and deliberately.”
|