More News***Wednesday August 30, 2000 dailyherald.com business section
Booming fiber-optics industry keeps Stratos Lightwave on hectic pace "WHAT WE USED TO THINK WERE STANDARD, COMMODITY-TYPE ITEMS ARE GETTING MORE AND MORE DIFFICULT TO MAINTAIN A CONSISTENT SOURCE OF SUPPLY." - STRATOS LIGHTWAVE'S JIM W. MCGINLEY chief executive. The fiber optics industry, which includes Lucent Technologies Inc. and other heavyweights, is booming because optical networks translate the ones and zeros of computer language into light signals that travel faster, farther and in greater volumes than traditional electronic signals. Only 20 percent to 30 percent of telecommunication access lines are fiber, said industry analyst Ted Moreau of Robert W. Baird & Co. The rest are electric wires that generally slow data-traffic down. As companies upgrade from wire to fiber, equipment suppliers such as Stratos rush to fill an avalanche of orders. Order backlog for Stratos in the quarter ended July 31 jumped to $47 million, up 88 percent over the previous quarter, McGinley said. The magnitude of the increase took the company by surprise. "What made our success in the marketplace was the ability to deliver," McGinley said. Now "we're scrambling, trying to get the capacity in place in a rapid manner so we can support (customers') needs." Stratos sells optical subsystems and components to companies that build networking equipment and telecommunications systems, including Nortel Networks Corp., Alcatel Alsthom S.A. and Cisco Systems Inc. Its main competitors include Agilent Technologies Inc., IBM Corp., Finisar Corp., Lucent Technologies Inc., Infineon Technologies Inc. and Lisle-based Molex Inc. The optical subsystems Stratos makes translate electronic signals into light signals and send them down fibers, and pick up light signals at the end of fibers to convert them back into electronic form. The company is racing to meet year-end production targets of 100 percent growth in optical subsytems and 200 percent growth in optical components, McGinley said. Stratos plans to hire more than 200 new employees, increasing its staff size by about 33 percent. It's stocking up on basic parts such as resistors, capacitors and circuit boards. Formerly the optical division of Chicago-based Methode Electronics Inc., Stratos Lightwave made an initial public offering on June 27 that generated $183.8 million from 8.75 million shares at $21 per share. The company took home $170.9 million after the underwriting discount. Methode, which has plants in Rolling Meadows, still owns 86 percent of Stratos' outstanding common stock but plans to spin off the company by June 2001, according to the Stratos prospectus. The stock is trading around $40, well above its initial offering price. Analyst Steve D. Levy of Lehman Brothers Inc. forecasts Stratos will generate $110.6 million in revenue during fiscal 2001, ending next April, and $170 million the following year, compared with $71.78 million in fiscal 2000. He expects earnings for fiscal 2001 will increase 120 percent to $8.38 million, or 13 cents per share, up from $3.81 million in fiscal 2000. Lehman Brothers was the lead underwriter of the Stratos IPO. To keep pace with demand, Stratos needs to ward off competitors who have been trying to poach the company's key engineers. It lost only one of about 80 last year, McGinley said, "and the reason why we didn't lose more is because they knew the IPO was coming." In fact, he added, one of the main reasons Stratos went public was to create a stock options incentive program that would help retain engineers. Now, the human resources department is looking "almost globally" for more optical engineers and is recruiting locally to fill more than 200 manufacturing positions. But labor isn't the only thing that's tight at Stratos. Even nuts-and-bolts parts that used to be plentiful are harder to acquire. "What we used to think were standard, commodity-type items are getting more and more difficult to maintain a consistent source of supply," McGinley said. "Even circuit boards are more difficult to get in a quick time frame." To help shore up supplies as well as boost research and development, Stratos acquired the compound semiconductor division of Spire Corp. in December 1999 for $13 million. "We felt that to be committed to the business long-term, we really had to have the capability of making our own devices," McGinley said. "We didn't want to be dependent on the merchant market forever as far as when we could release a new product." The nonstop pressure to send more data faster over communications networks is straining Stratos Lightwave Inc., a Chicago-based fiber-optic equipment supplier. "Here comes the wave - you're just trying not to get killed by it," said Jim W. McGinley, 44, the company's president and chief executive. The fiber optics industry, which includes Lucent Technologies Inc. and other heavyweights, is booming because optical networks translate the ones and zeros of computer language into light signals that travel faster, farther and in greater volumes than traditional electronic signals. Only 20 percent to 30 percent of telecommunication access lines are fiber, said industry analyst Ted Moreau of Robert W. Baird & Co. The rest are electric wires that generally slow data-traffic down. As companies upgrade from wire to fiber, equipment suppliers such as Stratos rush to fill an avalanche of orders. Order backlog for Stratos in the quarter ended July 31 jumped to $47 million, up 88 percent over the previous quarter, McGinley said. The magnitude of the increase took the company by surprise. "What made our success in the marketplace was the ability to deliver," McGinley said. Now "we're scrambling, trying to get the capacity in place in a rapid manner so we can support (customers') needs." Stratos sells optical subsystems and components to companies that build networking equipment and telecommunications systems, including Nortel Networks Corp., Alcatel Alsthom S.A. and Cisco Systems Inc. Its main competitors include Agilent Technologies Inc., IBM Corp., Finisar Corp., Lucent Technologies Inc., Infineon Technologies Inc. and Lisle-based Molex Inc. The optical subsystems Stratos makes translate electronic signals into light signals and send them down fibers, and pick up light signals at the end of fibers to convert them back into electronic form. The company is racing to meet year-end production targets of 100 percent growth in optical subsytems and 200 percent growth in optical components, McGinley said. Stratos plans to hire more than 200 new employees, increasing its staff size by about 33 percent. It's stocking up on basic parts such as resistors, capacitors and circuit boards. Formerly the optical division of Chicago-based Methode Electronics Inc., Stratos Lightwave made an initial public offering on June 27 that generated $183.8 million from 8.75 million shares at $21 per share. The company took home $170.9 million after the underwriting discount. Methode, which has plants in Rolling Meadows, still owns 86 percent of Stratos' outstanding common stock but plans to spin off the company by June 2001, according to the Stratos prospectus. The stock is trading around $40, well above its initial offering price. Analyst Steve D. Levy of Lehman Brothers Inc. forecasts Stratos will generate $110.6 million in revenue during fiscal 2001, ending next April, and $170 million the following year, compared with $71.78 million in fiscal 2000. He expects earnings for fiscal 2001 will increase 120 percent to $8.38 million, or 13 cents per share, up from $3.81 million in fiscal 2000. Lehman Brothers was the lead underwriter of the Stratos IPO. To keep pace with demand, Stratos needs to ward off competitors who have been trying to poach the company's key engineers. It lost only one of about 80 last year, McGinley said, "and the reason why we didn't lose more is because they knew the IPO was coming." In fact, he added, one of the main reasons Stratos went public was to create a stock options incentive program that would help retain engineers. Now, the human resources department is looking "almost globally" for more optical engineers and is recruiting locally to fill more than 200 manufacturing positions. But labor isn't the only thing that's tight at Stratos. Even nuts-and-bolts parts that used to be plentiful are harder to acquire. "What we used to think were standard, commodity-type items are getting more and more difficult to maintain a consistent source of supply," McGinley said. "Even circuit boards are more difficult to get in a quick time frame." To help shore up supplies as well as boost research and development, Stratos acquired the compound semiconductor division of Spire Corp. in December 1999 for $13 million. "We felt that to be committed to the business long-term, we really had to have the capability of making our own devices," McGinley said. "We didn't want to be dependent on the merchant market forever as far as when we could release a new product." |