Comtech Telecommunications Corp.

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Comtech Telecommunications Corp.

105 Baylis Road
Melville, New York 11747
U.S.A.
Telephone: 9631) 777-8900
Fax: (631) 777-8877
Web site: http://www.comtechtel.com

Public Company
Incorporated:
1967 as Comtech Laboratories, Inc.
Employees: 842
Sales: $307.9 million (2005)
Stock Exchanges: NASDAQ
Ticker Symbol: CMTL
NAIC: 334110 Radio and Television Broadcasting and Wireless Communications Equipment Manufacturing

Based on Long Island, New York, Comtech Telecommunications Corp. develops communications equipment in three business segments through a number of subsidiaries, serving customers such as defense contractors, satellite systems integrators, communications service providers, and oil companies. In the Telecommunications Transmission area, Comtech owns five subsidiaries (Comtech EF Data Corp.; Comtech Systems, Inc.; Comtech AHA Corp.; Comtech Antenna Systems, Inc.; and Comtech Vipersat Networks Inc.) providing products and services for voice, video, and data transmission in satellite, wireless line-of-sight, and over-the-horizon microwave telecommunication systems. Products include modems, amplifiers, satellite transceivers, fiberglass and aluminum antennas, software to optimize satellite bandwidth usage, and forward error correction technology. Comtech's RF Microwave Amplifiers business is conducted through a single subsidiary, Comtech PST Corp., which in turn operates Hill Engineering. Comtech PST supplies broadband high-power, high-performance RF microwave amplifiers used in a variety of military applications as well as medical oncology systems. Hill designs and produces high-power switches, limiters, and duplexers. Comtech's third business segment is Mobile Data Communications Services, conducted through a pair of subsidiaries: Comtech Mobile Datacom Corp. and Comtech Tolt Technologies, Inc. Comtech Mobile develops mobile data communications systems for the U.S. military, with its primary focus on the Movement Tracking System (MTS). MTS uses satellite, terrestrial, and Internet-based communications to create a way to keep track of military vehicles, ships, and aircraft while also providing two-way, real-time communications between command bases and the field. Comtech Tolt provides this technology to the civilian market, such as trucking fleets that want to track the precise location of their vehicles. Although it has been in operation for decades, the company did not begin to enjoy exceptional growth until the late 1990s. Revenues have increased from $30.1 million in 1998 to more than $300 million in 2005. Comtech is a public company listed on the NASDAQ.

Company's Founding in the 1960s

Comtech was founded in Smithtown, New York, in 1967 as Comtech Laboratories, Inc. by Jack C. Greene, who also served as the company's chief executive. The company started out by designing and manufacturing satellite communications receiving equipment and related subsystems for commercial purposes. In March 1972 Comtech was taken public at $5 a share. Sales topped $10 million in 1974 and reached $16.5 million in 1975.

Greene stepped down as CEO in 1976, replaced by Comtech's current chairman, president, and CEO, Fred V. Kornberg. Born in Poland, Kornberg earned a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering at New York University in 1958 and a year later received a master's degree from the same school. He worked as a staff engineer at Radio Engineering Laboratories until 1962, and then became director of research, a position he held until 1969, when he became general manager at Nardcom Group. Kornberg joined Comtech in 1971 as an executive vice-president and general manager of the telecommunications transmission unit. Under Kornberg, Comtech expanded beyond satellite communications to become involved in the microwave transmission field through the 1977 acquisition of R.F. Systems, Inc.

Early 1980s: Verge of Disaster

Over the next several years Comtech prospered as a manufacturer of telecommunications components and subsystems, but it suffered a significant setback in the early 1980s serving the military market. It won a contract to install 21 satellite communication earth stations for the U.S. Army's Signal Corps, but its $52 million bid proved to be a major miscalculation. On the verge of ruin, Comtech began in March 1981 to pursue a merger with Aeroflex Laboratories Inc. Talks continued for a full year before breaking off after the Army granted Comtech another $17.5 million to complete the contract. The price of Comtech's stock soared on the news, making it a much less attractive deal to Aeroflex.

Comtech was fortunate to break even on the Signal Corps contract and now installed safeguards to make sure there was no repetition of such a blunder. Kornberg also began to tap the financial markets to fuel an expansion drive and to become involved in the end-user segment of the telecommunications market. In 1983 the New York Times reported that Comtech offered 750,000 shares at $8.50 each through Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. The money was used to acquire Premier Microwave Corp. and Storage Technology Corp., a Colorado manufacturer of voice communications products. Comtech raised another $12 million to pay down debt by selling off Comtech Data Corp., which made communications equipment for the satellite, microwave, broadband, and cable markets, to Fairchild Industries.

Despite efforts to diversify its product offering, Comtech became overly dependent on large military contracts, which through much of the 1980s accounted for more than 70 percent of revenues. With the demise of the Soviet Union, however, the United States began to cut back on defense spending, forcing Comtech to make some adjustments. Having already sold Comtech Communication Corp. for $4 million in 1985, Comtech now unloaded Premier Microwave in 1987, adding $7.5 million in cash and notes to the coffers. Also in 1987 Comtech decided that its future lay overseas. The company had been dividing its focus between the United States and foreign markets, but now decided to concentrate on the international telecommunications sector, which was growing much faster than was that of the United States. The strategy worked so well that by 1991, about two-thirds of the company's $13 million in revenues were the result of export sales, primarily from sales to South America and the Pacific Rim. Of that $10 million, some 95 percent was contributed by subsidiary Comtech Systems Inc., which sold tropospheric scatter communications systems, a less expensive alternative to satellites. Tropo systems bounced radio waves off the upper atmosphere rather than a satellite. Although sales to the U.S. military may have fallen off, the foreign military market heated up for Comtech, as some countries began to expand their military forces to compensate for a cutback in U.S. protection.

The early 1990s was a period of transition for Comtech. Reductions in military spending continued to cut into sales, making the decision to focus on foreign markets a wise one. Domestically, Comtech saw opportunities in the expanding wireless and satellite telecommunications as well as microwave transmissions industries. Revenues crested at $22.3 million in 1993, then plunged in 1994 to $14.9 million. Comtech began to rebound due in large part to the creation of subsidiary Comtech Communications Corp., a satellite communications equipment manufacturer formed in February 1994. Products included frequency converters, solid-state power amplifiers, low noise amplifiers, and satellite subsystems. By the latter part of 1995 the unit was making a major contribution to the company's domestic commercial sales. In fiscal 1995 revenues increased to $16.5 million.

The upward arc continued in 1996, when sales improved to $20.9 million, due mostly to robust international sales, which for the year accounted for 56 percent of all revenues. This was a significant improvement over the 37 percent in 1995. International sales remained strong in 1997, when revenues climbed to $24.7 million, due to a continuing global demand for wireless and satellite telecommunications. It was a fortunate trend for Comtech, because sales to the U.S. government continued to slip, representing 20 percent of all sales in 1996 but only 17 percent in 1997. Increased international sales of over-the-horizon microwave equipment fueled business in 1998, with revenues topping $30 million. It was at this point that Comtech was poised to enjoy exponential growth as it began to transform itself into a product-driven company.

Forming Key Subsidiaries in the Late 1990s

In the autumn of 1998 (fiscal 1999) Comtech formed a pair of subsidiaries. Comtech Wireless, Inc. was established to design and manufacture Wireless Local Loop systems for the rural and remote telephony market. Comtech Mobile Datacom Corp. grew out of the acquisition of Germantown, Maryland-based Mobile Datacom Corp. to provide packet data communication services between remote mobile and fixed assets and home-base using high-tech tracking technology. Applications included remote meter reading, inventory/asset in-route management, messaging, and position reporting. Although the focus of the unit was intended to be the energy and transportation markets, its Movement Tracking System (MTS) product would find a ready customer in the U.S. military. As a result, the amount of government sales, which decreased to just 9 percent of Comtech's total revenues in 2000, now began to surge. In June 1999 the U.S. Army signed an eight-year, $418 million contract with Comtech to install MTS in its vehicles. The system would permit vehicles in the field to communicate with one another and to a command center. As a result, commanders would be able to know where everyone was located at any moment and maintain a constant line of communication. Aside from the income the Army contract brought in, it allowed Comtech a chance to work out any bugs in the technology, which could then be sold to trucking companies without any major changes. The first order of the contract, representing $3.1 million, was received in August 2000 to deploy MTS to 460 U.S. Army logistic vehicles and mobile control stations. By the end of 2000 Comtech announced that it was now ready to offer MTS to commercial truck fleets as well.

Company Perspectives:

Comtech designs, develops, produces and markets innovative products and services for advanced telecommunications solutions.

The pace of the Army's rollout of MTS would increase sharply with the start of the Iraq War in 2003. In the meantime, Comtech made strides on other fronts. In May 2000 Comtech acquired EF Data, the satellite communications division of Adaptive Broadband, at a cost of $54.2 million. With annual revenues in the $100 million range, EF Data was larger than Comtech, which posted $37.9 million in 1999. The EF Data business was merged with Comtech Communications to become Comtech EF Data Corp. The capabilities of the two units complemented one another, resulting in the creation of a powerhouse player in the telecommunications transmission field. Also of note in 2000, Comtech acquired Hill Engineering for stock. Furthermore, the company gained some recognition in 2000, named by Forbes magazine as one of the top 200 best small companies in the United States, ranked 131st based on five-year and 12-month return on equity, and five-year sales and earnings per share.

Sales increased to $66.4 million in 2000, then soared to $135.9 million in 2001. Net income of $6.7 million in 2001 also set a record for Comtech. Much of these increases were due to the EF Data acquisition, but the company's two other businesses also achieved record revenues, this despite the difficulties experienced by many of its telecommunications' customers. The Mobile Data unit continued to deploy MTS to the Army and also received its first foreign sale, a contract with a value-added reseller in Venezuela to provide MTS technology to commercial truck fleets.

The telecommunications slump finally caught up to Comtech in 2002, when revenues fell to $199.4 million and net income dipped below the $2 million mark. Compared with other telecommunications companies, however, it still turned in a solid year, with all segments of its business turning a profit. Moreover, Comtech bounced back quickly in 2003, achieving a record year with sales increases across the board as the efforts of previous years came to fruition. For the year, the company posted sales of $174 million and net income of more than $9.7 million. Comtech enjoyed another record year in 2004, as sales increased to $223.4 million and net income more than doubled to $21.8 million. The trend continued in 2005 when Comtech's revenues topped the $300 million mark, totaling $307.9 million, and net income soared to $37.8 million. To many Comtech was an overnight success, but in truth the hard work of several decades was finally paying off and the Long Island-based company appeared well positioned to enjoy strong growth for some time to come.

Principal Subsidiaries

Comtech EF Data Corp.; Comtech Systems, Inc.; Comtech AHA Corp.; Comtech Antenna Systems, Inc.; Comtech Vipersat Networks Inc.; Comtech PST Corp.; Comtech Mobile Datacom Corp.; Comtech Tolt Technologies, Inc.

Principal Competitors

EMS Technologies, Inc.; Gilat Satellite Networks Ltd.; ViaSat, Inc.

Key Dates:

1967:
The company is incorporated as Comtech Laboratories, Inc.
1972:
The company is taken public.
1976:
Fred Kornberg is named chief executive.
1981:
A miscalculated bid puts Comtech on the verge of ruin.
1994:
Comtech Communications Corp. is formed.
1998:
Comtech Mobile Datacom is formed.
1999:
Comtech is awarded a $418 million contract.
2005:
Sales top $300 million.

Further Reading

Angell, Mike, "Military Supplier Finds Its Way to a Windfall," Investor's Business Daily, September 8, 2003, p. A08.

Citrano, Virginia, "Telecom Contracts Spur N.Y. Exporters," Crain's New York Business, March 8, 1993, p. 17.

"Comtech Receives $8.9 Million in New Orders for U.S. Army's Movement Tracking System," EDP Weekly's IT Monitor, February 25, 2002, p. 8.

Conroy, Michael P., "Comtech Nails $3.1M Army Satellite Contract," Long Island Business News, August 11, 2000, p. A5.

Frederickson, Tom, "Company Becomes Soldier of Fortune," Crain's New York Business, September 19, 2005, p. 30.

Rosenblum, Michael, "Defense Play," Barron's National Business and Financial Weekly, August 9, 1982, p. 62.

Shaw, Craig, "Army Spending Boosts Telecom Firm's Profit," Investor's Business Daily, August 27, 2003, p. B08.

Solnik, Claude, "Comtech Takes Aim at Trucking Biz," Long Island Business News, December 29, 2000, p. A5.

Sonenclar, Robert, "Coming Off the Floor: The Cautionary Tale of Comtech Telecommunications," Financial World, November 15, 1983, p. 35.