The Anglo File: Colt Likely Riding High, if Stung a Bit by Euro Slide
LONDON -- The trouble with doing business in Europe at the moment is the euro.
That's likely to be the message from the Colt Telecom (COLT Quote), which is expected to report a slight decline in revenue growth because of the currency's weakness when it announces its third-quarter results Tuesday. Colt remains susceptible to any declines in the euro's value because around 65% of its sales come from the Continent, but it reports its figures in sterling. So with the euro mining new lows despite futile efforts by the European Central Bank to prop it up, analysts have been cutting their revenue forecasts for the quarter to aroundA Galloping Colt
Following strong quarterly demand for Internet protocol connectivity and other bandwidth services reported last week by rival KPNQwest (KQIP Quote), Colt also is expected to show sustained growth in the quarter, driven by the rollout of additional city networks as well as the contribution of new services such as Web hosting. During the quarter, Colt added Rome and Antwerp, Belgium, to its fiber-optic network. This will be followed by Stockholm in October. With the completion of Birmingham, England, and Dublin before the end of the year, Colt will have fiber-optic networks in 27 cities in 11 European countries, giving it one of the most extensive local-access networks in Europe.Switching Business
Colt is also showing progress in moving away from its reliance on the switched minutes business -- voice or data traffic that is billed per minute -- which is coming under increasing pricing pressure as competitors undercut each other. Concurrent with building the network, Colt is rapidly building local data centers, with seven operational and 20 planned by the end of 2001. "It is here that many investors are looking, the deployment of value-added services," Julie Lamirel, of Lehman Brothers, wrote in a report Monday. "These not only enhance margins and reduce churn but also drive demand for additional bandwidth capacity from existing customers." (Lehman has no investment banking relationship with Colt, and Lamirel rates the shares a buy.) Bill Dixon, an analyst at Robertson Stephens, picks out Web hosting as a key business for Colt. "The economics are really magical," Dixon said. "For every- Loading Comments...
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