August 21, 2000 
  interactive.wsj.com
       Barron's Cover
    Early Bird
    An MFS fund tries to hop on rising stocks ahead of   the momentum gang 
    By DAVID FRANECKI
    Mark Regan looks for fast-growing companies whose stock is on the   rise, but don't dare use the "m" word -- momentum -- to describe him.   He says he's not a momentum player.
    Regan, who runs the MFS Mid-Cap Growth fund,   doesn't think highly of momentum investors. The   44-year-old portfolio chief asserts that it doesn't take   much thought to be a member of their tribe, to watch   stock charts for fast-climbing issues, hop on and hope   the ascent continues. Instead, he tries to locate   winners before they've surged. To Regan, being   early isn't a mistake; it's a modus operandi.
    He doesn't like companies with too many   competitors. Instead, Regan looks for outfits whose rivals have been   weeded out to about two or three and industries in which it's clear   who the leader is. If he finds a company attractive, he'll buy it and   jump off when the stock hits his target price. The former engineer and   McKinsey consultant looks for companies that are growing 25%   annually and that don't seem overpriced -- a factor that separates him   from the momentum pack.
    While more than half of the stocks in MFS Mid-Cap Growth are   traditional growth issues, Regan is also willing to give some fallen   darlings a second chance. About a quarter of the stocks that have   dropped by 60%-70% melted down because of short-term problems,   which masks the fact that they are still great businesses, he figures.   Consider Network Solutions (now owned by VeriSign). The stock   went from $72 last March to about $30 in May amid fears that it   would be stripped of its government-sanctioned monopoly on issuing   Internet domain names -- the .com, .net, .edu and .org at the end of   Web addresses. Regan says MFS's analysts realized before the   market did that an agreement the government had negotiated with   Network Solutions couldn't be ended without an act of Congress.   Thus, a change was unlikely and, if one were to occur, it would take   years to implement.
    What Regan saw was a company growing 100% annually, with a   monopoly on what it calls "building permits for the Internet." You   can't open a Website without doing business with Network Solutions   because you need a domain name for every site, making the   company neatly positioned to profit from the Internet boom. Regan   made the stock his top holding, and it went from $29 in March to   $244 in September -- one of the best investments he's ever bought.
    Because Regan avoids momentum investing, MFS Mid-Cap growth   won't shoot the lights out when the market is roaring, but Regan's   steady approach has paid off over the long term. The fund has   returned 39.34% annually for the past three years, and is up over   21% this year. That record puts it in the top 20% of its peers, in both   periods.
    One of Regan's favorite stocks falls into the second-chance category.   VISX makes equipment for laser eye surgery, the increasingly   popular procedure used to correct vision. Not only do the machines   needed for this fetch as much as $500,000, but most of VISX's   revenues come from royalties doctors pay when they perform surgery   with the equipment.
                           For much of 1999, the company                          was humming along, with a 70%                          annual growth rate and a                          commanding market share. Its                          stock hit $103 last July, but was                          rocked in December after a                          court ruled that Nidek, a                          Japanese competitor that doesn't                          charge doctors a per-procedure                          fee, could sell equipment in the                          U.S. VISX shares slid further in                          January, when it was learned   that fourth-quarter demand for the surgery had sagged; this later was   shown to be just a seasonal slowdown, as people put off undergoing   procedures until after the holidays. And the stock was smacked again   in February when VISX announced that it would slash the royalty   doctors must pay, to $100 from $250 per procedure. Analysts cut their   earnings estimate to 85 cents a share this year, about half of what   previously had been expected. By February, the stock had tumbled   80%, to around $16.
    VISX last month adopted a poison-pill plan to deter corporate raider   Carl Icahn, who announced his intention to buy $15 million of its   stock -- about 11% of the outstanding shares -- at the then-current   price. Regan thinks the interest of Icahn, normally a deep-value   buyer, is evidence that VISX is undervalued by Wall Street.
    Regan believes a rebound is ahead for the company, which still has   70% of a fast-growing market. He figures that the royalty reduction,   which has let doctors dramatically cut their own fees, will boost   demand substantially. Whereas last year the operation cost about   $2,100 per eye, now about half of the doctors doing the surgeries are   charging that amount for both eyes. Only a few million procedures   have been done so far, and there are about 85 million eyes out there   that could be corrected with laser surgery, meaning the market is   barely penetrated. It also helps that several high-profile athletes --   most notably champion golfer Tiger Woods -- have raved about the   procedure.
    Table: Top 10 Holdings
    Regan says the key for VISX will be to maintain its market share and   keep the procedure growing at a 70% clip. Although some analysts   believe VISX will lose share, Regan disagrees, pointing out that the   company controls the market for doctors who perform the highest   volume of eye surgeries and that VISX machines have a superior   record of reliability, compared with competitors'. He expects the   company to earn 85 cents a share this year, $1.35 in 2001 and $2.10   in 2002. With a 65%-70% annual growth rate, the stock, he contends,   could easily crack $100 again by 2002. It recently was around 24.   One thing that's helped MFS Mid-Cap Growth beat its peers this year   is that it owns fewer tech stocks than most of them. However, Regan   isn't afraid to buy technology, if he finds an enticing issue.
    One of his favorites is Emulex, which makes adapters crucial to data   storage. Many fund managers have jumped on the storage   bandwagon, snapping up better-known names like EMC, but Regan   thinks Emulex will grow as fast or faster than EMC and is cheaper.   Emulex trades at 80 times expected 2000 earnings; EMC, at 123   times. "It's hard to find a storage area that's reasonably valued,"   Regan says. In March, the stock got as high as $218, then backed   down into the 40s. Lately, it's been in the low 70s.
    Every storage device must hook up to what techies call a "bus,"   which is essentially a pipe. In order to make this connection, they   need adapters, formally known as "host bus adapters," which is what   Emulex makes. Only two or three companies produce these devices.   And Regan likes companies that have few direct rivals. The fund   manager expects Emulex to make around $1.30 a share in fiscal   2001, which would mean growth of about 60%. Regan thinks that   will push the stock up to $90-$100 in the next six months. |