Aerospace/Defense
DigitalGlobe's IPO Hits Tech Radar
04/21/08 - 12:44 PM EDT
Updated from April 18 Investors looking for a viable IPO candidate may be surprised to find that one of them -- DigitalGlobe -- has long been watching them. Longmont, Colo.-based DigitalGlobe filed this week to go public on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker DGI. The company's satellites orbit the Earth, snapping high-resolution pictures that are used by governments and companies alike. And demand for those pictures is rising: despite increasing competition, DigitalGlobe's rising revenue and profit has investors circling the company's name as a potentially hot IPO to watch for down the road. DigitalGlobe has only two satellites, but it claims it uses the most sophisticated technology and offers the highest resolutions of any commercial market satellites. Together, they can take detailed snapshots of a million square kilometers every day -- an area larger than France and Germany combined. The company draws its revenue from both government and private vendors, and both sources delivered strong growth last year. Revenue from defense and intelligence customers rose 47% to $103.4 million in 2007, while commercial revenue gained 33% to $48 million. Its biggest single customer is the Defense Department's National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (its motto: " Know the Earth ... Show the Way"), which collects satellite imagery and distributes it to other U.S. agencies for primarily national security reasons. Other U.S. agencies use the images for non-defense purposes, such as disaster response. DigitalGlobe is increasingly reaching out to civil agencies abroad. As the prospectus notes, "International civil agencies represent one of the fastest growing opportunities for us, especially in rapidly growing markets in Asia, Russia, the Middle East and South America." DigitalGlobe's images are prominently featured in Google
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