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DragonWave cuts loss, promises to be in black

DragonWave cuts loss, promises to be in black By:  Howard Solomon On: 07 May 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

The Canadian microwave equipment maker says it's riding a wave of sales to mobile operators. Find out why an industry analyst agrees that despite the recession the demand is there



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An Ottawa maker of Ethernet backhaul microwave gear believes it will get into the black this year after tightening its losses.

Peter Allen, president and CEO of DragonWave Inc., made the prediction Friday after releasing the company’s figures for the year ending Feb. 28, in which it lost $6 million on sales of $43.3 million. That was better than the $8.3 million it lost the previous year.

"The future is exciting and it's starting now," he told financial analysts on a conference call.

That $43.3 million in sales was a seven per cent increase over fiscal 2008 and was helped by $11 million in revenues in the fourth quarter, the second highest in the company’s history. Allen says that figure will be beaten in the first quarter.

The figures are some evidence that a number of mobile service providers are willing to spend on upgrading their networks despite the increasing global recession.

The company added 55 new customers during the year, including one in China, and has already started receiving revenue from an unnamed North American provider – believed to be Clearwire – for $15 million worth of its Horizon radios. It’s Clear division is starting to build a WiMAX network across the U.S. In addition, a provider in Pakistan just chose DragonWave for the first phase of a network rollout. The company is looking at opportunities in the Asia Pacific, Caribbean and South Africa regions. As a result, Allen justified his optimism.

“As I look forward I believe fiscal 2010 will be a breakout year for DragonWave, and we expect strong growth from existing customers,” he said. “We’re only at the very early stage of a network transition for mobile carriers as they reshape their networks for the major wave of increased mobile date as they deploy 3G, HSPA and 4G systems.”

Carriers with 2G networks can handle traffic with copper lines between transmitters, he said. But once they shift to 3G and the increased data it will carry, carriers that don’t have a fibre optic network will have to turn to wireless backhaul to meet the capacity, he maintained.

In a report issued last month, Infonetics Research of Campbell, Calif., noted that carriers are increasing their spending on Ethernet technologies in general, with Ethernet microwave for backhaul expected to be the fastest growing segment. “One market that’s completely defying the downturn in every part of the world is mobile backhaul,” said Michael Howard, Infonetics’ principal analyst.

With handset users increasingly using their devices for data – accessing Web pages, downloading music and sending video - many mobile providers are adding data capacity to their networks. But most backhaul has been designed for voice so traffic, in his words, is being “scrunched.” Infonetics calculates that in North America alone it will take five years to replace the copper cable connecting cellular sites with fibre. Meanwhile operators carriers like have to pay telcos that own the fixed lines billions of dollars in backhaul fees.


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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon Howard Solomon is assistant editor of Network World Canada covering network infrastructure and communications issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, he has written for several of IT... more

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