BAD NEWS ON SYQUEST "THE MOTLEY FOOL"
      SYQUEST TECHNOLOGY (NASDAQ: SYQT) IS A Fremont, California-based     maker of removable storage devices     whose EZ-135 drive has been pushed as a legitimate competitor to Iomega's     (NASDAQ: IOMG) Zip drive. Many who view     themselves as latecomers to the "Iomega Party" are clambering onto the shares as a     way to play on the success of removable     storage in a way that they believe might have been overlooked by the Street. In an     ironic, reverse parody of what has come to     be known as the "Iomega Story", SyQuest surged $2 1/8 to $11 5/8 after a similar rise     yesterday merely on unschooled talk in     print, on the phone and online that somehow the EZ-135 is a good product. 
      THE CORE OF THE IOMEGA STORY was consumer research. People who     bought the Zip drive and found it to be an     excellent product started to look over Fooldom's most famous stock early in 1995 and     began to debate the relative merits. The     most common comment about SyQuest? Shoddy products that many were forced to     buy because they had no real alternative.     Specific comments about the EZ-135? In the words of one Washington-based radio     commentator, "it sucks". Tune into the     message board and you will see a litany of complaints about the product that is causing     investors to jump in today. 
      CAUGHT WITH ITS PANTS DOWN LATE LAST YEAR by the rapid consumer     adoption of the Zip, SyQuest managed to     squeeze out the EZ-135 after a few hasty weeks of development. The company's     research and development department     essentially slapped a hard-drive into a plastic case and called it removable storage.     SyQuest EZ-135 disks are very fragile as a     result, much like your hard-drive. The slightest bump or speck of dust could render the     entire back-up worthless, negating the     very reason why many users buy removable storage devices in the first place. 
      SYQUEST IS A COMPANY IN SERIOUS FINANCIAL TROUBLE. In the last     reported quarter, the company had a net     loss of $51.1 million on revenues of $47.4 million. Revenues decreased from the same     period a year ago by a whopping 38%.     Ponder all that for a moment. SyQuest essentially lost more money than they had in     revenues because they were selling the     EZ-135 at a loss in order to be able to compete with Iomega. And even that did not     enable them to compete very well. 
      CASH-FLOW CRUNCH IS A' COMING. The company clearly stated that they did     not expect a return to profitability in the     next quarter, even after they slashed 1500 people from the payroll. Despite the     train-wreck on the profit and loss statement,     SyQuest's sales, general and administrative expenses *increased* 32.6% in the quarter     to a whopping 30.2% of net revenues.     The company has been forced to retain Needham and Company to assist it in     evaluating a debt or equity offering to fund itself.     Major suppliers are willing to make payment arrangements that convert debt to equity,     but this will dilute the current     shareholders' stake. Cash decreased to $7 million in the quarter from $27 million in the     prior period, while inventories exploded     by 20%. Accounts payable blossomed by almost 100%, leaving the company with     negative working capital. 
      LET'S BE CLEAR ABOUT THE DIRE FINANCIAL SITUATION. Last quarter's     problems wiped out all accumulated     shareholder's equity. The company has no book value, showing a deficit of $1.5 million     after the disaster that was Q2. And Q3     apparently is not going to be much better. Negative working capital, dwindling cash     reserves, product piling up in the     company's inventories, massive accounts payable that could be converted into equity,     diluting the value of current shareholders     -- this is a major disaster in the making here. 
      WHY ARE INVESTORS JUMPING IN? In the mindless search for the "next"     whatever, it appears a substantial group of     investors have latched on to SyQuest as the Great White Speculation for their     portfolio. From a Foolish fundamental     perspective, it looks like an enormous mistake. UnFoolish investors scanning the     markets with a mind toward opportunities lost     and not the new opportunities to be had tend to jump on "also-rans" -- the companies     that seem to be in the business of a     winning stock. These companies tend to be disasters, as Peter Lynch has aptly noted in     his first two books on investing. Fools     would be well advised to take that advice to heart when examining the shares. 
      ANOTHER FOOLISH THING  |