Iridium Turnaround Continues With IPO
$200 Million Will Replace Satellites

By Mike Musgrove
Washington Post Staff Writer

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/09/29/AR2009092903224_pf.html


Bethesda-based satellite firm Iridium, a company that once crashed and 
burned in spectacular fashion, continued its turnaround with a public 
offering of stock on Tuesday.

Iridium said it plans to use the estimated $200 million raised from the 
deal to begin replacing its satellites, originally launched 12 years ago. 
The firm, which reported a profit of $108 million last year, owns 66 
operational satellites that fly in low Earth orbit. The company intends to 
replace those satellites starting in 2014.

At the end of 1999, Iridium sought bankruptcy protection after burning 
through $5 billion in capital from investors including Motorola. In recent 
years, the company, which was acquired by investors in 2001, has built a 
customer base that includes the U.S. government and maritime firms. The 
U.S. military uses the company's service to connect personnel in war zones; 
maritime companies use the service to track ships and shipping containers.

Iridium, now traded on Nasdaq under the ticker symbol IRDM, didn't go 
public in the conventional way. A year ago, the company -- then known as 
Iridium Holdings -- agreed to merge with GHL Acquisition Corp., a 
"special-purpose acquisition company" formed by Wall Street investors with 
the intention of buying another company. Such "blank-check companies" have 
been an increasingly popular means of financing in recent years as banks 
have become resistant to making large loans.

The acquisition by GHL received the Federal Communications Commission's 
blessing last month, and the companies completed the transaction Tuesday 
with the simultaneous offering of new Iridium shares. The stock closed at 
$11.55 Tuesday, giving the company a market value of $962.7 million, 
according to Bloomberg.

Iridium chief executive Matthew J. Desch said that the deal brought in more 
than a traditional IPO likely would have. "This generates more cash for the 
company and puts us on a solid financial footing," he said in an interview.

Investors have recently poured $8 billion into the coffers of satellite 
firms, said Tim Farrar, president of TMF Associates, a consulting company 
specializing in the satellite industry. That's a lot of money for an 
industry that brought in $1.2 billion in revenue last year. While Tuesday's 
announcement is a positive one for Iridium and its customers, Farrar said, 
there is some concern about overinvestment.

"It does raise the risk of overcapacity in this industry, which already was 
a big worry for some people," he said. "To justify that level of 
investment, you'd have to see very rapid growth."

Iridium has 347,000 subscribers worldwide. Despite the recession, the 
company has seen larger profits this year than last, Desch said.

Government customers account for nearly a quarter of the company's revenue, 
and analysts pointed to that bond as an especially important one for the 
company. "The relationship they have with the government is a very strong 
one and not likely to diminish," said Andrea Maleter, technical director at 
aerospace consulting firm Futron Corp.

Some analysts have said that satellite phone pioneers, like Iridium and its 
former rival GlobalStar, originally failed because they underestimated the 
speed at which terrestrial-based cellphone networks would catch on. 
Consumers, meanwhile, never had much interest in the clunky and expensive 
satellite phones offered at the time.

Two local firms, TerreStar and SkyTerra, will soon be trying to enter the 
satellite phone market with sleeker devices that will meld terrestrial 
phone service with satellite phone service. The two Reston-based companies 
will offer competing services across the United States. TerreStar announced 
Tuesday that its service, through a partnership with AT&T, will debut in 
the first quarter of 2010.


=================================================
George Antunes                    Voice (713) 743-3923
Associate Professor               Fax   (713) 743-3927
Political Science                    Internet: antunes at uh dot edu
University of Houston
Houston, TX 77204-3011         

***********************************
* POST TO MEDIANEWS@ETSKYWARN.NET *
***********************************

Medianews mailing list
Medianews@etskywarn.net
http://lists.etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews

Reply via email to