Hi Dan,
I’m beginning to think and you seem to confirm, that there are no real projections for such things as future buildouts of Big Data and Data Centers, is that fair to say? And at a glance it appears that making one’s own projection with any degree of accuracy, requires complete immersion in the industry, and that those projections are something that must be absorbed over time from the shadows more than learned from any few sources. Do I have that mostly right?
I am not sure that you can understand the growth even if you are completely immersed in the industry. On the last CC for AAOI they didn’t even understand the growth in the industry. Here is a statement on what Stefan Murray, from AAOI had to say.
I don’t have any data on – I mean where the industry is in that transition. I can only speak to our numbers as I said, we’re seeing very strong results for 100-gig and 40-gig. 40-gig actually started with a higher base. So the growth rate there is less, 100-gig is growing very strongly. But I can’t really comment on the overall industry outlook, I don’t have that data.
That shocked me. I thought that he would have had a better answer than that. Other companies in the space seem to give a better answer to this question, but not always correct. I work for a local phone company and we skipped the 40 gig standard altogether. I have ran 100 gig circuits into the data centers for companies like FB and other big telco’s but mostly 10 gig and 1 gig circuits are going into the data centers.
A statement right after that by Stephan Murray.
Right now we’re basically shipping everything we can manufacture. So the growth rate is not dependent on demand its dependent on our ability to continue to ramp or manufacturing. So, we talked just a moment ago with Troy, he mentioned some of the figures that we had projected in terms of laser sales. I think you can draw some conclusions from there. But there is a limit to how fast we can increase our production capacity. So that’s really the limiting factor to the growth rate.
So they seem to be able to sell everything they have. That’s pretty interesting.
I don’t pretend to know Big Data (Paul, feel free to jump in here!) but would it be correct to think that only a very few organizations will ever likely build Data Centers in the near future, or is the market for big data so huge that many likely will?
This is my opinion and I could be wrong. I think all of the big data companies, Google, Fb, Amazon, etc will have their own data centers. Also I think their will be some small private data centers that will operate. Finally there will be data Reits that will be operated. For some reason the Telco’s do not seem to want to be in this market. I do not know if it is the cost of operating one but it seems it would be right up their alley.
http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2017/05/01/done-…
http://fortune.com/2016/11/04/centurylink-data-center/
I don’t mind cyclical, although this appears to be cyclical to a degree I’ve not experienced before. But I don’t have the inclination to immerse myself in learning fiber-optics construction techniques to project the market either, if that’s what it takes.
This is what I am thinking and if someone thinks different please speak up. I do not think knowing the construction is going to help anyone, what to look for is are they growing customer count, are they selling all over the world and is Revenue and earnings going up. Also if their margins start slipping it could be competition is moving in and they are cutting prices to keep market share. I was invested in Infinera and though I made a little money it wasn’t enough for the time invested. (One) of the many problems with Infinera is that they couldn’t get into China. I haven’t looked very deep into AAOI but if they are in the Data Centers, which we know they are, and in China then I would be very interested. They are growing very fast but is it sustainable?
Andy
Long ACACIA