Monday, November 10, 2008

Trip is Tripping

Every month, Trip Chowdhry, the one-man band who covers all things tech under the moniker Global Equities Research, writes a piece he calls Silicon Scoop on current trends and gossip from the Valley. It’s always a good read, but this time around it is especially full of eye-opening predictions, many of them seriously distressing. It reads like Nostradamus has decided to cover the tech business. There’s so much here, it’s hard to know where to start. Anyway, in no particular order, here are some of Trip’s current prognostications:

Almost every Silicon Valley company is facing deteriorating business conditions and will cut their workforce by 3%-10% by year end.
Project cancellations are accelerating in almost every vertical, including financial services, retail, transportation and public sector.
“Many startups are starting to fold.” He contends that “almost every” VC funded open-source company is struggling and will run out of funds within the next 6 months. He also says that “many VC funded Web 2.0 companies are shutting down…the Web 2.0 fad is now coming to an end.” He has a similarly dark view on the prospects for software as a service start-ups.
He thinks the death of many start-ups will be trouble for Google (GOOG), which he says gets 7% of AdWords related revenue from start-up companies.
He also sees a coming glut of used hardware arriving on the market early next year, selling at 20%-25% of original prices, and depressing the market for computing and networking gear. He thinks that IBM, Hewlett-Packard, Cisco and Juniper in particular are vulnerable to this phenomenon, and could soon find themselves competing with their own used hardware.
“Every enterprise software company,” including Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, CA, BMC and Sybase are negotiating lower prices on maintenance contracts.
Indian outsourcing companies, including Infosys, Satyam, Cognizant and Wipro are seeing project pipelines “drying up.” He contends “there is not enough work to keep employees busy.”
He says Sohu, Baidu, Netease and Sina are struggling to maintain top-line growth, as multinationals cut back their online marketing campaigns in China.
Web browsers are growing in importance; he thinks Oracle and IBM will offer their own browsers within 12 months.
Motorola could get a life line in the form of equity investments from Microsoft and possibly Google, in return for supporting the Windows Mobile and Android mobile phone platforms.
First-generation SAAS companies - NetSuite, Kenexa, RightNow, Salesforce.com, Rackspace, SuccessFactors, DemandTec - “continue to struggle and probably will not see any recovery in their business, irrespective of the economy.”
Salesforce.com’s business “continues to deteriorate, the best is over, the worse is still to come.” He writes that one of his contacts describes the company as “a modern day Visi-Calc.”
Cisco is feeling pressure from Microsoft and Arista Networks; he expects layoffs at Cisco of 5%-10% by year end.
VMware, he says, is seeing business deteriorate. He expects 10% layoffs by year end.
Apple, he says, is going to start selling iPhones via Costco at $149 starting in January.
A grim world view, to be sure. You can pick nits with some of it - Salesforce.com as VisiCalc seems a little harsh, and I dunno about $149 iPhones from Costco - but directionally, it feels like he’s getting it right. We’ve got some dark months ahead.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I think he's right.

But i think you're right that Trip is tripping.

Trip is not the sharpest tool in the shed if you know what I mean.

Analysts can make bold statements a la Meredith Whitney if they stand to gain more media press especially from bloggers like you.

Anonymous said...

Even if he is 50% right, it still portends some bad news for nasdaq regardless of an year end rally.

Anonymous said...

position: short the QQQQs , Apple, Salesforce and Google.

Google is going to 250 by 2h09.