Dow Jones - Nortel, Bay Ntwks Merger Combines Cos. With Similar Visions June 15, 1998 5:19 PM By Joelle Tessler
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--The planned merger of Northern Telecom Ltd. (NT) and Bay Networks Inc. (BAY) will bring together two companies that have relatively different product lines and customer bases, but share the same vision for the networking industry.
While Nortel is a giant in the telecommunications equipment market and Bay Networks is a leading vendor in the computer networking business, both companies believe the future of networking lies in the convergence of the two industries.
Nortel's planned acquisition of Bay Networks will position the two companies to cross-sell voice and data networking equipment to both vendors' customers, and will enable them to combine their research efforts to develop products that integrate both forms of communication.
"Bay is all data and Nortel is all voice, but they are coming together," said Lazard Freres analyst Michael Duran. "The product overlap is slight ... but they both are headed in the same direction."
Northern Telecom earlier said it has agreed to acquire Bay Networks for about $9.1 billion. Under the terms of the deal, Bay Networks stockholders will receive 0.6 of a Northern Telecom common share for each Bay Networks share. Based on Nortel's closing stock price of 63 11/16 on Friday, this would value Bay Networks at $38.21 a share.
Nortel's NYSE-listed shares were recently down 7 11/16, or 12.1%, at 56, amid a sharp decline in the overall market. Volume was 5.1 million shares compared with an average daily volume of 806,600.
It's common for a suitor's stock to slip on the day a merger is announced. But one analyst said he believes Nortel's shares also are down because "there are plenty of people out there who just don't like Bay" and believe the company faces an uphill battle in competing against networking giant Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO).
Meanwhile, Bay Networks' NYSE-listed shares were above their Friday close at 28 5/16, but well below $38 a share. The stock was recently up 3 7/16, or 12.1%, at 31 3/4 on volume of 8.3 million compared with an average daily volume of 5.3 million.
Although some on Wall Street took this as a sign that the deal may not go through, others noted that Bay Networks' shares are simply trading close to what they would fetch in the deal given Nortel's stock price Monday. Going forward, the two stocks will trade in lockstep, Duran explained.
Several analysts added that they expect Nortel's stock to rebound, lifting the price that Bay Networks will receive in the deal.
Noting that $38 a share represents a substantial premium over where Bay Networks was trading Friday, Duran said he believes the company is getting a fair price. He said the takeover price is equal to about 2.7 times Bay Networks' sales based on results from last quarter.
But Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. analyst Paul Sagawa said Nortel is getting a bargain if the deal goes through. He said he thinks Bay Networks believes it deserves a premium equal to at least four times sales, or a price in the low 40s.
Cos. Focused On Different Mkts
Nortel's proposed acquisition of Bay Networks would merge two companies that are focused on different markets and serve different customer bases.
To start, there is little product overlap between the two. Although Bay Networks has been acquiring technology to put voice traffic over data networks, the company doesn't have a presence in the telecommunications-equipment market.
And while Nortel said it does have a data-networking business with a run rate of about $1 billion, it is mostly focused on ATM and frame-relay switches, said Sagawa of Sanford C. Bernstein. Bay Networks, on the other hand, sells Ethernet-based products.
Although both companies do have some remote access products, Hambrecht & Quist Inc. analyst Erik Suppiger added that even these products don't overlap since Nortel's product line - which it acquired through the purchase of Aptis Communications Inc. in April - is a higher-end offering than Bay Networks'.
The companies also sell to different customer bases. Bay Networks largely provides local area data networking equipment, selling mostly to corporate enterprise customers. Nortel, on the hand hand, sells much of its voice equipment to telecommunications carriers - in other words, the wide-area-networking market.
There is some market overlap, however, since Bay Networks sells equipment to some carriers and small Internet service providers, while Nortel sells PBX switches to enterprise customers.
Some analysts see the limited overlap between the two companies in a positive light.
According to Sagawa, the purchase of Bay Networks "helps Northern Telecom get into the LAN and the enterprise and the Internet-focused carrier market." He added that Nortel doesn't want to concede the enterprise market to Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO), the giant of the data-networking industry.
In addition, said Duran of Lazard Freres, the two companies' differing focuses position them well to cross-sell their products into each others' installed customer bases.
"There is sales synergy," Duran said, "because every business, every phone company buys both voice and data products."
But some analysts have said they aren't convinced the combination makes a great deal of sense.
Forrester Research analyst Brendan Hannigan questioned why Nortel wants to enter the competitive LAN switching market.
Bay Networks is facing growing competition in the market for low-end workgroup switches, for instance, and has cut prices on its BayStack 350 switches to pre-empt competition from Cisco and 3Com in fast Ethernet workgroup switches.
In addition, the company's new Acclear Layer 3 switch is also facing competition from Cisco's Catalyst 8500, which it introduced in April.
In its most recently reported third quarter, the pressure on Bay Networks' business was evident. Sales fell from second-quarter levels in hubs, switches, routers and remote access products.
And noting that Bay Networks is selling for less than he expected, Sagawa questioned whether the purchase price could signal that Bay Networks is in for another disappointing quarterly report.
"I think Bay has run out of gas," Hannigan said.
Voice, Data Markets Converging
Despite the differences between the two companies' businesses, Duran of Lazard Freres believes Northern Telecom and Bay Networks share the belief that the future of their industry lies in the convergence of voice and data networks.
Because "these technologies are coming together" as more and more voice and data traffic travel over the same networks, the two companies should benefit by joining their research teams to develop products that integrate both, Duran said.
For instance, said Suppiger of Hambrecht & Quist, the acquisition of Bay Networks will enable Nortel to bring Internet Protocol technology to its carrier customers.
Still, even though "they've got the shared vision," Duran sees potential pitfalls to proposed the merger. For one, the companies could run into difficulties executing their shared vision, particularly as they try to integrate two large corporations.
Or "they could get there too late" because the convergence between voice and data networking technology is already well under way.
Monday's announcement ended weeks of speculation that Nortel was interested in buying Bay Networks and would make a formal offer for the company.
Bay Networks has been seen as a potential acquisition target since it reported a disappointing fiscal third quarter. A number of Wall Street sources have also said Bay Networks has been shopping itself around in recent weeks.
Although Nortel was the company repeatedly named as the most likely suitor, Sagawa of Sanford C. Bernstein said he believes other interested parties could yet surface and wouldn't rule out the possibility of a bidding war for Bay Networks.
He mentioned L.M. Ericsson Telephone Co. (ERICY) and Lucent Technologies Inc. (LU), also big telecommunications equipment makers, as well as Intel Corp. (INTC) as possibilities. - Joelle Tessler; 201-938-5285 |