- Joined
- 27 June 2010
- Posts
- 4,203
- Reactions
- 329
....Bevan Slattery has a fantastic track record in these types of businesses ( I.T. type )
Let's hope that he does the same for NXT that he and Stephen did for PWK!
Anyone watching this stock? It's jumped about 40 cents in the last week or two, wish I had of bought in when I started watching it; can't understand why it has gone up so much though.
Also, what are the barriers to entry? I mean apart from stumping up the cash to build the centre and staff it?
I can see the need for secure external storage of ever increasing data volumes with a stable power supply. But how does NXT plan to take market share from the incumbents?
Cheers,
Kenny
It seems to be a very capital-intensive business, and unless NXT locks in its customers to long-term contracts, there seems to me to be a risk of low switching costs and therefore low barriers to entry.
And to investors. New customer $60 million revenue over 5 years and investor update resulted in a 13% share price jump.
A bit unexpected, I was ready to act on stop at $2.29
Cheers
Country Lad
View attachment 52712
I can't go along with that.
It doesn't matter who the competition is, the capital costs will be very similar, even if the prospective customer decides to have the facility in-house. So competitors are in the same boat but NXT at least has the cash for more capital expenditure.
Their target is large corporations which they are signing up for 4 or 5 year contracts plus options. For that customer to then switch at the end of the period will be no quick 'n easy task, disruptive and expensive, so as long as NXT meets customer expectations, there will be no reason to switch.
I like the business model.
Cheers
Country Lad
But having advised a number of clients in this field, I suggest that switching costs may not be as high as you think. Customers should be insisting on their service providers make it as easy as possible to extract their data to avoid problems of "vendor lock-in", and those service providers do that in most situations.
NXT is not the only provider of data center infrastructure in Australia, and I'd say that the market is becoming crowded with quite a few choices available.
I believe there are a number of international entrants to this space in Australia with very deep pockets, indeed.NXT is not the only provider of data center infrastructure in Australia, and I'd say that the market is becoming crowded with quite a few choices available.
Always very interesting to hear someone's view who is close to the business.
Is Macquarie Telecom in the same market or do they have distinct points of difference - I have never quite been able to work it out. Who would NXT's other main competitors be?
And isn't Amazon Web Services going to blow all of them away in any case?..
I believe there are a number of international entrants to this space in Australia with very deep pockets, indeed.
Microsoft also is getting into the game here in Australia some time in the future, but I believe that's only to support their clients that use SharePoint and Azure, not as a general data centre provider.
I've also heard that Amazon Web Services are making a decent splash into Australia. I also believe that Telstra is another company that's looking at this area of the market, to support its cloud computing applications.
There are some private operators that I'm aware of in Australia, including Interactive and Dimension Data, who offer the same or similar services to NXT. They might not be quite on the same scale as NXT, but they have a decent head start on NXT.
I wish NXT all the best, as I think that there is definitely space in the market for a well-run data centre provider, but I'm not sure that it'll have a big profit margin.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?