Longreads + Open Thread

Cryonics, Gas, Fiction, Compaq, Dollars, Margins, Bandwidth

Longreads

Books

Bandwidth: The Untold Story of Ambition, Deception, and Innovation That Shaped the Internet Age and Dot-Com Boom: We talk about the "dot-com boom" rather than "the telecom boom" because relatively more dot-com money went to Super Bowl ads, not to mention consumer-facing applications. The rise of bandwidth consumption per capita is just one of those gradual, invisible quality-of-life improvements, like your higher-than-historical odds of surviving car accidents or gunshot wounds, or the steady decline in the inflation-adjusted price of a basic coffee machine, refrigerator, etc. The book's author, Dan Caruso, played a role in this as an executive in several of the companies involved, most recently Zayo, which was taken private in 2020 for $14bn.

This is an unusually relevant story today because we're in the midst of another capex-heavy buildout underwritten by aggressive demand projections. As with the early stages of the telco boom, basically every disappointment has been from underestimating rather than overestimating demand. One feature of such booms is that often, there's a fixed cost to adding a certain amount of capacity, and a low marginal cost to adding more: the book mentions that during fiber optic buildouts, most of the cost was the digging, not the cables, and that one company, AboveNet, took this seriously and used many more fibers than competitors, paying 20% more and getting ten times the capacity.

The telecom boom went through roughly four phases:

  1. Everyone who didn't invest the maximum possible amount in capacity felt stupid, as the ones who did got high market values and attractive M&A offers.
  2. Everyone who did invest as much as possible in capacity felt stupid, and there was a massive fiber glut. A surprising fraction of these companies resorted to various kinds of accounting fraud. The most common techniques were basically barter deals, where two fiber companies would buy similar amounts of capacity from each other, with both sides booking revenue. In other cases, they just reclassified expenses as capital expenditures instead of operating expenses. Caruso mentions a few cases where he was in the room when such deals were proposed, but managed to extricate himself without doing anything that would lead to jail time.
  3. Demand growth slowed, stocks went down, and many people in the industry did, in fact, spend some time in prison. Many of the companies they built went bankrupt, and slightly more patient or more savvy telecom investors picked up the pieces.
  4. All of these irresponsible and sometimes criminal executives were in some sense vindicated by the fact that we now live in a world of ubiquitous high-bandwidth connectivity, where it's not at all strange to watch a high-resolution streaming video on a palm-sized mobile device, or to acquire a game that's tens of gigabytes by downloading it.

So, read this if you want a vast collection of stories about how people can be basically right about the long-term outlook and, through their own mistakes, lose all of their money and perhaps their freedom. You have to get more than the big picture right.

Open Thread

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