August 6, 1999 Dialing Up Earnings By Monica Rivituso
  smartmoney.lycos.com
              IT'S AMAZING, the power of little products. PCs --             they're pretty small, and still an OK business to be in.             Laptops? Smaller still, and selling at a faster rate than             PCs. But think even tinier -- like the little whatzit on the             side of a laptop that lets you connect to the Internet or a             local-area network. It just so happens those whatzits, or             interface cards, can be pretty big business. 
              They sure are for Xircom (XIRC), which makes             integrated PC cards and PC card products. In 1998,             these credit-card-sized gizmos were the driver behind             Xircom's 49% jump in revenue. This year, analysts are             expecting 47% year-over-year growth. Earnings are             also impressive. After the company halted production             in 1997 to drain excess inventory, revenue was cut in             half and Xircom lost 46 cents a share. But the company             emerged tighter and leaner, earning 78 cents a share             the following year. "We took some short-term pain for             long-term gain," says Xircom's chief financial officer,             Steve DeGennaro. This year, the company is expected to increase earnings by a             staggering 127%. In 2000, analysts expect Xircom to see a 20% improvement. 
              And that's just according to the consensus numbers. While DeGennaro says that he's "very             comfortable" with the Street's expectations, analysts and investors have grown             accustomed to Xircom beating Wall Street estimates. "Every quarter for the last four             quarters I've had to raise estimates," says William Becklean, an analyst with SunTrust             Equitable Securities. For this reason, we picked Xircom for this week's Earnings Revision             Screen. After sifting through companies that had market values greater than $200 million,             four quarters of year-over-year earnings improvements and an upward revision of earnings             estimates, we came up with Xircom. 
              In the third quarter (the most recent), the company beat Street expectations by a nickel and             earned 48 cents a share on $12.1 million in net income. That was 28 cents more than a             year ago, and six cents better than in the second quarter. Revenue was $103.1 million, a             45% increase from $71.3 million a year ago and a 5.5% rise from $97.7 million in the             previous quarter. 
                             "These guys are very, very good at what they do, and that's                            connecting portable devices to networks," says Advest analyst                            Michael Whitney. 
                             The Thousand Oaks, Calif.-based company is riding two strong                            waves: the growing popularity of notebooks and the increasing                            rate at which these machines are connected to networks.                            According to market-research firm Dataquest, shipments in the                            mobile market (which includes laptops) are expected to grow                            13% in 2000 and then climb steadily by 14% a year for two years                            after that. Analysts peg year-over-year unit growth for notebooks                            alone at 20% to 25%. "Even if you have corporations                            downsizing, increasingly, companies are realizing that             notebooks are an efficiency tool," says Xircom's DeGennaro. 
              And that's where their PC cards come in. Xircom isn't going after Joe Consumer who's             shopping at Staples. Rather, it's focusing on companies like Price Waterhouse, which has             an IT manager who runs a fleet of about 5,000 laptops, explains SunTrust's Becklean. And             standardizing equipment like modems for portable PCs has become a necessity for large             companies, including Arthur Andersen, AT&T (T) and Disney (DIS) -- all of which are             Xircom's clients. 
              The company's latest product, the RealPort, is one of the reasons the company is             consistently beating the Street's earnings estimates. Introduced about a year ago, RealPort             is a PC card that analysts say is a huge improvement for notebook users. RealPort             eliminates the extra wire and adapter for connecting to a phone jack. Instead, users can             just plug the phone wire right into their laptops. "You would end up in a hotel in Denver, and             you'd realize you left the [wire] in Omaha," says Becklean. In the third quarter, RealPort             represented 55% of Xircom's revenue, up from 5% a year ago. RealPort also helped boost             gross margins by 10% during the most recent quarter. 
              Xircom also has a robust business selling its products to original equipment manufacturers             (OEMs), such as IBM (IBM), Toshiba (sorry, no snapshot available), Hewlett-Packard             (HWP) and Compaq Computer (CPQ). These companies repackage Xircom PC cards             and products as their own. In addition, the company has developed a strategic relationship             with Intel (INTC). Last year, the chipmaker took a 12.5% equity stake in Xircom. Another             plus: The pricing environment for products Xircom makes has become more stable in the             past year and a half, says DeGennaro. And while Wall Street bemoans the erosion of             average selling prices in the desktop PC market, portable PCs haven't seen such a dire             drop. 
              Xircom's biggest competitor, 3Com (COMS), isn't solely focused on the PC card market             the way Xircom is. 3Com competes in a variety of markets, and PC cards aren't even its             biggest business. For Xircom, "it's a nice position to be in," says Advest's Whitney. 
              And what about the prospect of wireless Internet access? Xircom's DeGennaro professes             to be unconcerned. The RealPort product line already offers some wireless access. And as             wireless -- which still operates at painfully slow speeds -- takes off, Xircom is expected to             be along for the ride. "A lot of the advancements in technology will come in wireless, and             we play right into that," says Xircom's DeGennaro. 
              Analysts also say Xircom has a slew of new products on the horizon. First, it will roll out an             upgrade of the RealPort product line. It's also expected to have a broadband connectivity             product as well. "So, they'll be ahead of the game," says CIBC World Markets analyst             Martin Pyykkonen. DeGennaro says Xircom will likely team up with a company such as             Broadcom (BRCM), and then scale down the product for mobile use. 
              For investors who are getting itchy for some fundamentals to back up the nosebleed prices             of Net stocks, Xircom offers earnings and revenue growth and a reasonable price, says             Pyykkonen. With a target price that's just 20 times next year's earnings, it's not as pricey as             some of those other highfliers (the recent Nasdaq correction notwithstanding). Says             Pyykkonen: "This is a more reasonable way to play the Internet."  |