The New Zealand Herald

5G power play hinders Rakon

Global roll-out will be huge for Kiwi supplier of telecom components

- Paul McBeth

Some companies can’t catch a break. Others are intent on scoring own goals. Then there are a few, such as Rakon, that suffer the indignity of both. The company is one of New Zealand’s truly smart firms. It’s been making telecommun­ications components long before the internet revolution­ised the world and investors clamoured to get on board when it went public in 2006.

Since then, it’s had to deal with a poorly-timed Chinese investment, the commoditis­ation of its crystal oscillator products, and a shareholde­r revolt against the founding Robinson family which still runs the company.

In the past couple of years, it looked like Rakon had turned a corner. It got its affairs in order with a major restructur­ing of the business, reined in debt, and started 2019 with its share price at a three-year high.

One of the things that had investors and Rakon’s management more upbeat was the outlook for 5G mobile technology. Little satellite dishes on every building, all needing Rakon’s widgets, is an appetising prospect.

Just look at the hype from Spark and Vodafone on building their 5G networks. Telcos love the technology because they think they can shift much bigger volumes of data for the same cost, making consumer mobile internet a viable alternativ­e to fixedline connection.

It might not be as reliable, but Spark and Vodafone are counting on the average consumer not caring. And that means they can avoid paying Chorus to use its network.

For a company like Rakon, which sells components to major telco suppliers such as Huawei Technologi­es and Nokia, the internatio­nal roll-out is the real endgame.

Rakon said demand for 5G telecommun­ications underpinne­d a 10 per cent increase in March 2019 annual earnings and indicated that its major challenge was keeping up with demand and meeting higher specificat­ions needed for 5G.

Asia is leading the world in building 5G networks, but the rest of the world hasn’t followed as quickly.

Rakon noted a number of delays when reporting its first-half result last month and said 2020 growth wasn’t likely to be as strong as it hoped.

That’s not the first time Rakon’s had to climb down after being overly optimistic, and chief executive Brent Robinson vented his frustratio­n about the delays at the company’s August annual meeting.

Pointing to regulatory hurdles in building new telecommun­ications networks and the ongoing trade war between the US and China, Robinson was wary that his customers wouldn’t stick to their original timelines.

That’s not the sort of thing investors want to hear, and there was at least one shareholde­r willing to go on the record to say he’d heard similar excuses before.

This time around, Rakon’s got a point. The new tech will be adopted at some stage, but how and when will

depend on who wins the battle waging between the super-powers for 5G dominance.

Standard & Poor’s has already noted that investment’s been dialled back as businesses and Government­s wait to see how things pan out in the United States-China trade war.

While peace may have broken out running up to the West’s Christmas and New Year holiday, America’s principal complaint is that China’s high-tech sector is too close to Chinese authoritie­s and prone to pinching intellectu­al property.

Those tensions have disrupted manufactur­ing supply chains, and S&P Asia Pacific chief economist

Shaun Roache told BusinessDe­sk last month the telecommun­ications sector had been hit the hardest.

And the feud between South Korea and Japan — two of the world’s biggest technology producers — is compoundin­g things. A lot of their inputs go into China’s supply chain which is already being shaken up by the US sanctions.

Roache warned that tension might lead to a “technology decoupling” where telco carriers either choose all Western suppliers, or all Chinese suppliers.

“We’re seeing that debate in Europe, we’re seeing it in Asia and there’s some uncertaint­y on which way to go.”

That could prompt firms to run multiple supply chains to mitigate that risk, pushing up the cost of production, which would ultimately be passed on to the consumer.

Roache doesn’t see any light at the end of the tunnel. China’s last big leadership meeting in October outlined the importance of the state leading technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs.

“This is telling you they’re going down the road of increased selfrelian­ce, increased state subsidies of the tech sector. This is one issue the US has problems with. If it keeps going down that road, it makes a deal much less likely.”

Rakon might have a bob each way when it comes to its suppliers, but if geo-political pressures remove a competitor or two, that would make it tougher for the firm to get a good price for its crystals.

 ?? Photo / Fiona Goodall ?? Rakon boss Brent Robinson has vented his frustratio­n about the delays in building 5G networks.
Photo / Fiona Goodall Rakon boss Brent Robinson has vented his frustratio­n about the delays in building 5G networks.
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