Covad names Rogers Wireless exec CEO
The beleaguered DSL wholesaler appoints a new chief executive after searching for candidates for seven months.
Charles Hoffman, who will leave his post as chief executive at Toronto-based Rogers Wireless Communications on June 25, will take the reins, replacing interim CEO Frank Marshall. Marshall will remain on the board as vice chairman.
Marshall replaced Robert Knowling Jr., who resigned in November after calling the Covad post "the hardest job I've ever had in my life."
Hoffman inherits a company mired in red ink and on the verge of being delisted from the Nasdaq exchange. Unless significant investment capital is raised, it is likely to run out of cash within the next year.
"I think the revenue growth is going fine, but there's a definite distribution challenge there," Hoffman said. "My biggest priority will be to convince the employees to hang in there while we sort out all the back-office issues, especially collecting fees and converting customers from those companies who have gone broke."
Some analysts say Covad's lengthy search process may have paid off.
"I am really impressed Covad got someone of his quality. He knows how to do what he must do at Covad," said Don Sinsabaugh, an analyst at Punk Ziegel & Co. "In the past two years, he raised more than $1 billion in cash for Rogers and took it from No. 4 to No. 1 among Canadian wireless companies.
"He's basically going to be doing the same things he's been doing at Rogers for Covad now," he said. "I think this is a very good sign."
Hoffman said that although Covad's technology is sound and appreciated by its customers, the company will need to secure additional financing to stay afloat.
"Sure, we're going to need more financing," he said. "But there's a clear path to profitability there. In fact, (Covad) will reach profitability much faster than most of the wireless industry, which is going through some real tough times right now."
In the fiscal 2000 earnings report, Covad reported a $1.44 billion loss and said that auditors who helped prepare the financial results and annual report now rate the company a "going concern," accounting parlance that essentially means the company does not have enough cash to sustain operations for the next year.
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