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Tellabs Makes Play for IP Core with WiChorus Acquistion

To accelerate its transition from an optical transport vendor to an Internet Protocol network equipment company, Tellabs is acquiring mobile packet core maker WiChorus for $165 million in net cash.


Tellabs counts 43 of the top 50 service providers as customers, with their IP mobile backhaul products deployed by 120 network operators.  The acquisition extends Tellabs wireless backhaul products to a fast growing adjacent market- gateways for mobile IP traffic (such as the ASN Gateway for mobile WiMAX).  That market is expected to reach $2.6B in 2013, sporting a better than 22% compound annual growth rate.  The transaction is expected to close no later than February 2010.

"We are very excited about this acquisition and believe that, together (the combined company), will revolutionize the mobile Internet," said Tellabs Marketing Communications Manager Ariana Nikitas.  She further stated the acquisition would extend Tellabs mobile backhaul product portfolio (see CHART below) to a fast growing adjacent market.  "The resulting products will enable service providers to deliver richer experiences to mobile end users," she said.

Tellabs has a large portfolio of transport and network management products for wireless backhaul.  These include the following:

Tellabs Product portfolio
Tellabs® 6300 Managed Transport System
Tellabs® 7100 Optical Transport Series
Tellabs® 7300 Metro Ethernet Switching Series
Tellabs® 8100 Managed Access System
Tellabs® 8600 Managed Edge System
Tellabs® 8800 Multiservice Router Series
Tellabs® Intelligent Network Management


Analysis:

Tellabs recognizes the mobile Internet is taking off and WiChorus has a product their service provider customers need to take advantage of this opportunity.  Sales of smartphones are growing more than 30% a year while netbook sales have been very strong.  People are spending more time surfing the Internet while on the move.  As a result, Tellabs' mobile customers expect mobile data traffic to grow 30% to 50% a year for the foreseeable future.  AT&T recently indicated its mobile traffic has quadrupled over the past year.

Such high growth demands scalable, next-generation network architectures to deliver 3G and 4G multi-media and video services.  This acquisition will enable the combined company to help facilitate delivery of those services, while providing richer experiences to mobile Internet users.  It will enable Tellabs to compete with Ericsson, Alcatel-Lucent, and Cisco (which recently announced its acquisition of Starent Networks) in the 4G/3G mobile packet core market.

Since Tellabs (and many other companies) haven't been spending much money on R&D, they were forced to make this acquisition to remain competitive in the mobile backhaul market.  Independent of that, Tellabs has a very high opinion of WiChorus' mobility management and routing technology.

On a conference call Thursday, Tellabs CEO Robert W.  Pullen said the Wichorus platform was a "purpose- built 4G (WiMAX, LTE) architecture that is backward compatible with 3G (GGSN, HSPA, HSPA+)." As a result, it can be sold to WiMAX operators now and 3G or LTE operators in the future.  Tellabs stated there were two potential service provider customer types for the WiChorus platform:

- Those that are optimizing their 3G mobile networks and evolving to 4G (LTE).
- Those that have leapfrogged 3G to deploy 4G (Mobile WiMAX and LTE).

Wichorus' "best in class" deep packet inspection capability and performance was particularly attractive to Tellabs.  It was said to produce much less throughput degradation than competitor mobile packet core products.  Tellabs claims that the WiChorus 4G packet core product offers eight times more throughput than competitive offerings. 

The Wichorus SmartCore™ platform was said to address the unique requirements of the mobile Internet:

- Includes a full range of mobile IP products (from low entry price to highly scalable) for applications including GGSN, LTE and WiMax, plus new application enablement with superior DPI capability. 

- Offers 8 times more throughput, 4 times more simultaneous Internet connections and active users, compared with competitive platforms in gateway applications.

- Uniquely combines world-class application analytics with a mobile core gateway for improved traffic engineering and network optimization. 

- Enables customers to analyze and monetize more than 400 of the top mobile Internet applications. 

- Makes mobile networks content-aware and context-aware, with personalized application-awareness. 

- Outperforms other platforms in delivering mobile Internet capacity.  For example, competitors' capacity significantly degrades (as much as 30% to 50%) during deep-packet inspection (DPI)

- Delivers new and differentiated applications such as Internet offload and distributed LTE gateway.  The SmartCore™ platform can offload as much as 70% of traffic at the network edge, increasing core network efficiency and improving user experiences.  As a result, customers can save as much as 50% in capital expenses, compared with the present method of operation. 

The WiChorus ASN Gateway is being sold to Clearwire and trialed by other mobile WiMAX network providers.  Tellabs CEO Pullen said that the company's next product will be for "business services delivery" using femtocells and picocells. 

When asked to comment on future product plans, Ms.  Nikitas declined, stating that the acquisition had not yet taken place and could not comment till the merger had actually been consummated.

Opinion:

We think this is a very good move for both companies and we predict more acquisitions and consolidation in the network equipment market.

Reference:
http://www.tellabs.com/news/2009/index.cfm/nr/79.cfm


 

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Friday, October 23, 2009 in Business  | Permalink |  Comments (11)

Will this acquisition succeed?

Posted by Expert at 2009-10-23 12:49 PM
Thanks for a very incisive article, but it remains to be seen if Tellabs is able to penetrate the North American mobile infrastructure equipment market with the acquisition of WiChorus.

The legacy US mobile operators are all on the 3G/LTE track and buy wireless infrastructure from network equipment vendors such as Ericsson, Huawei, Alcatel-Lucent, and Nokia-Siemens. For example, Ericsson sells to Sprint, T-Mobile USA, and Rogers in Canada. NSN sells to Bell Canada and Telus. Cisco sells routers to AT&T and VZW, while Starent Networks sells most of its gear to VZW.

To date, Wichorus has only sold WiMAX ASN Gateways as a "packet core." Evolved packet core (EPC) solution for LTE is a combination of IP routing hardware and session management and control software. Not clear what Wichorus has for EPC.

Meanwhile, Tellabs presence is in transport based markets- like wireless backhaul, cross-connect and optical transmission. Previous attempts to get into high performance routing (via a acquisition in 1999) have failed.

Does Tellabs now plan to sell the Wichorus ASN Gateway along with optical transport products for WiMAX backhaul? Will Wichorus have a competitive EPC product that Tellabs can leverage to legacy mobile carriers?
With LTE years away, will Wichorus be a player in 3G/3G+ mobile packet core market? These are the critical questions analysts have to ask to determine if this acquistion will enable Tellabs to penetrate the mobile Internet infrastructure business.


Success of the acquisition isn't the issue

Posted by Robert Syputa at 2009-10-26 07:43 AM
Tellabs faces the amalgamation of capabilities into the hands of Ericsson, AL-LU, Huawei, NSN and others. They face a shift in market demand to flat IP networks and streamlined applications support that is reshaping the focus of suppliers. Tellabs is compelled to expand their product portfolio even if history shows it likely will lead to squashed to modest results.

-Robert Syputa

Success of the acquisition isn't the issue

Posted by anonymous at 2009-10-26 02:26 PM
Then what is the issue? If Tellabs is to compete with the legacy wireless infrastructue companies (Ericsson, NSN, et al), this aquisition must succeed. Else, Tellabs won't be a player in the mobile networking market.

Hardly

Posted by Robert Syputa at 2009-10-27 10:49 AM
You place too much importance on this acquisition: WiChorus represents a segment of the market that Tellabs must move into but the fate of the acquisition hardly will make or break them.

Will this acquisition succeed?

Posted by Rob Rice at 2009-10-26 07:43 AM
It depends on whether Tellabs is able to successfuly integrate WiChorus’ technology into its other optical backhaul platforms. Tellabs will try to combine the WiChorus SmartCore platform functions with its Ethernet switching and Network Management products. That combination would be very attractive to SP customers, because optical backhaul transport and mobility core management and control would all be in a single box.

The unknown factor is how WiChorus' non-WiMAX products (e.g. for GPRS/HSPA and EPC/LTE) will be accepted by mobile operators.
Thanks for a very informative article with insightful info from Mr. Pullen and Ms Nikita.

Tellabs' mobile and data position

Posted by George Stenitzer at 2009-10-28 03:29 PM

Tellabs holds a strong position in mobile infrastructure today, focusing on mobile backhaul. We serve more than 120 mobile customers worldwide. Our customers include 9 of the top 10 and 43 of the top 50 global telecom service providers.

The WiChorus acquisition logically extends Tellabs’ market into the mobile packet core with the SmartCore gateway. Customers and industry analysts are giving us positive feedback on the deal.

Today, data products are Tellabs’ fastest-growing product area. Recent industry analyst reports indicate that Tellabs is gaining market share. For the first nine months of 2009, Tellabs’ data revenue grew 62% over the comparable period a year ago.

Why acquistions like this one are important

Posted by Alan J Weissberger at 2009-10-26 07:43 AM
Don't know if this acquisiton will succeed, but I predict more consolidation in the mobile backhaul space.

The coming clash of much more mobile Internet traffic and a shortage of licensed spectrum will lead to a redesign of mobile access networks. There will be many more cell sites, each serving fewer subscribers. Many of these small cell sites will be "pico-cells." As these many pico-cells get added to the mobile access network the bandwidth bottleneck shifts to the mobile backhaul network. Mobility control and management is needed at the edge of the backhaul network and it is that technology that WiChorus and Starent have designed and produced.

Optical transport vendors (like Ciena) as well as router vendors (like Juniper Networks) need those kinds of mobile management platforms to complement their existing products for the mobile backhaul market. Hence, we see more acquistions forthcoming in this space. It might even be conceivable for Juniper to merge with Ciena. Wouldn't that be a kick in the head?

Alan J Weissberger

Correction: Ciena NOT Cisco

Posted by anonymous at 2009-10-26 07:43 AM
Meant to write that it Ciena (NOT Cisco) would be on the prowl for a mobile packet core company or technology. Cisco recently acquired Starent.

Network Equipment Companies on the Prowl for 3G/4G mobile packet core

Posted by anonymous at 2009-10-26 07:43 AM
Most likely, Juniper Networks and Cisco will try to acquire 3G/4G mobile packet core technology- either by acquisition of a start up company or by licensing software.

Good job of reporting the motivation for the acquisition and the plan for Wichorus' pico/femto cell product in the pipeline.
What's next in telecom merger land?

Tellabs Earnings Call- revenue down, flat sales forecast

Posted by Alan J Weissberger at 2009-10-28 12:13 PM
Tellabs reported revenue falling 8.2 percent to $389 million and a forecast of flat sales for the fourth quarter. Third quarter revenue at the Naperville, Il.-based telecom vendor fell short of the analyst expectations of $394 million. However, company earnings per share were on track.

Tellabs' CEO Rob Pullen painted a cautiously optimistic picture about the company's growth prospects because many of the company's largest customers are still figuring out what they can and are willing to spend in the next quarter. "I've got customers saying, 'Hey Rob, I have budget money, I'm going to spend,'" Pullen said on the earnings conference call. "I have customers saying, 'I need to spend, but I don't know if I have budget money,' and I have customers saying, 'I think we're going to be cautious in the fourth quarter,' so it's a mix."

Regarding WiChorus, Pullen stated, "We announced the acquisition of WiChorus, which shows our commitment and our fervor in the mobile internet base. Both Tellabs employees, WiChorus employees and our customers are excited, in fact I was just out visiting our new employee this past Friday and Saturday of this week.

We are adding the innovative SmartCore mobile packet solutions, which means we can deliver rich differentiated user experiences, such as mobile internet, mobile video and mobile commerce. With smartphone sales up 30% year over year and mobile data traffic growing 30% to 50%, we want to help our customers make the most of this growth opportunity in the mobile internet and we are excited about this space.

We can help service providers improve the mobile internet user experience, deliver new applications to generate revenue or monetize content, and simplify networks to achieve significant savings. This acquisition brings our customers breakthrough technology for the mobile internet. It logically extends our mobile business into an adjacent high growth market and helps ensure our future growth."

Tellabs reported that its broadband division's revenue was $206 million, transport was $128 million, while its services division brought in $55 million during the third quarter.

http://seekingalpha.com/article/168919-tellabs-inc-q3-earnings-call-transcript?page=2


Tellabs and the wireless infrastructure market

Posted by joe jencks at 2009-11-03 01:14 PM
With no growth in wireline infrastructure, Tellabs needs WiChorus to compete in wireless infrastructure market. Established vendors like Ericsson, NSN, Alcatel-Lucent all offer complete solutions, Combining Tellabs optical transport and net management platform with Wichorus mobile packet core box makes a lot of sense, if the latter does a good job of supporting 3G and LTE (EPC).

Appreciate all the great comments on this fine article.



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