Analysts: "The company's shares trade at about 25 times estimated 2001 earnings, Lecoq said. ``That's pretty low,'' Lecoq said.
Ericsson AB, the biggest supplier of wireless networks, trades at about 40 times estimated earnings, according to Bloomberg data. Nokia Oyj, the No. 1 maker of mobile phones, sells shares at about 37 times and Siemens trades at about 24 times estimated earnings."
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Paris, April 26 (Bloomberg) -- Alcatel SA, Europe's fourth- biggest phone equipment maker, said first-quarter profit fell 19 percent and cut its full-year sales forecast because of falling demand for its mobile phones and network gear.
To stem losses at the handset unit, Alcatel said it will concentrate European production of mobile phones at its plant in Laval, France, and transfer it to Flextronics International Ltd. The Singapore-based manufacturer will also take over 830 workers.
Like rival Siemens AG, which said today it would cut 3,500 more employees, Alcatel has been hurt as consumers and debt-laden phone companies delay purchases amid an economic slowdown. It expects sales this year to grow between 5 percent and 15 percent.
``The range of sales growth indicates a very low level of visibility going forward,'' said Eric Burkel, an analyst at Global Equities who advises investors buy Alcatel shares. Still, it ``seems to have pulled a rabbit out of its hat, publishing sales growth against our upper forecast of 17 percent.''
Net income fell to 210 million euros ($188 million), or 18 cents a share, from 258 million euros, or 26 cents, in the year- earlier period. Sales rose 21 percent to 7.4 billion euros, beating forecasts.
Alcatel shares rose 1.35 euros, or 4.2 percent, to 33.63, valuing the company at 40.7 billion euros. The shares have lost 44 percent since the beginning of the year, compared with a 7.5 percent drop on Paris's benchmark CAC 40 index.
No Bad News
Shares reacted to the lack of bad news, said Philippe Lecoq, who helps manage about 1.4 billion euros at Ofimo Gestion in Paris. ``Their outlook is dim but people were bracing for catastrophic news,'' he said.
The company's shares trade at about 25 times estimated 2001 earnings, Lecoq said. ``That's pretty low,'' Lecoq said.
Ericsson AB, the biggest supplier of wireless networks, trades at about 40 times estimated earnings, according to Bloomberg data. Nokia Oyj, the No. 1 maker of mobile phones, sells shares at about 37 times and Siemens trades at about 24 times estimated earnings.
Phone equipment makers have been beset by slumping orders in recent quarters. Ericsson also farmed out its mobile phone production to Flextronics to save costs. Lucent Technologies Inc., which plans to cut 16,000 jobs, reported a larger-than-expected loss on Tuesday.
Lucent Bid
Lucent also plans to sell a business that makes optical fibers used in telecommunications networks. The unit is expected to fetch about $5 billion, analysts said. Alcatel today said that it made a bid for the unit.
``This is a determining event for all the actors in this market,'' said Serge Tchuruk, Alcatel's chief executive, at a press conference in Paris. ``Everyone is looking into it and so are we.''
Tchuruk wouldn't say how much the company bid for the unit.
Last week, Nortel Networks Corp. said it expected to cut 20,000 positions by midyear, or a fifth of its workforce. It reported a widening first-quarter loss and falling sales on slumping demand for fiber-optic equipment.
Alcatel said it plans to cut costs by 1 billion euros this year by saving on travel expenses, delaying hiring new staff or putting off some research programs, Chief Financial Officer Jean- Pierre Halbron said during a conference call with reporters.
Flextronics
Alcatel sold one of its two French handset factories to Flextronics, which will handle production and development of mobile phones while Alcatel handles research and marketing. Alcatel will also stop phone-making production at its second factory, which will switch to making optical components.
``Mobile phones are in crisis in Europe,'' Halbron said. ``That's hurting us most.''
The company expects the unit, which sold 2.4 million handsets in the quarter, to return to a profit by the end of the year, Halbron said.
Alcatel forecast single-digit sales growth for the second- quarter because of larger losses for the mobile phone unit in that period. Excluding the handset unit and the company's cable unit, which it plans to sell, Alcatel sees second-quarter sales growth of around 10 percent in the second quarter.
Operating profit, or earnings before interest and taxes, rose 4.4 percent in the first quarter to 118 million euros, trailing analysts' consensus it would grow 12 percent, according to a Bloomberg poll. Sales in the quarter were expected to grow 16 percent to 7.12 billion euros from 6.12 billion euros in 2000.
In January, Alcatel forecast full-year sales growth of 20 to 25 percent. Since, it has reduced its forecast once, in March, to under 20 percent.
Since taking over in 1995, Tchuruk, 63, has converted the former state-owned conglomerate, founded in 1898 as the Compagnie Generale d'Electricite with businesses ranging from car batteries to high-speed trains, to focus on telecommunications.
Earlier this month, Tchuruk said he expected to complete the sale of Nexans SA, Alcatel's cable unit, before the summer. After it is sold, all of Alcatel's revenue will be telecom-related, compared with 35 percent in 1995. Analysts have valued the unit, which accounted for 15 percent of sales last year, at 1 billion euros.
Alcatel's Optronics unit, which makes optical components, posted a 79 percent jump in net income to 18.4 million euros in the quarter, as sales more than doubled to 155.8 million euros. The company, whose shares rose 4.5 percent to 29.46 euros, forecast a 50 percent sales growth this year with a 20 percent operating margin. |