The Wires: Investors Fret, Cut Nortel 12%, But Bay Deal Is Praised {Doug, this is an earlier DJ article which you may be interested to read]
June 15, 1998 2:27 PM By Shawn Young
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Northern Telecom Ltd. (NT) will round out a key product line by buying Bay Networks Inc. (BAY) in a stock deal valued at $9.1 billion, but investors took their worries about Bay's earnings out on its would-be parent Monday.
By agreeing to buy Bay, Northern Telecom, a Brampton, Ontario, telecommunications equipment maker, strengthens its standing in the data networking market that is increasingly important as the distinction between data networks and conventional phone networks begins to collapse.
Buying Bay helps position Northern Telecom, known as Nortel, to hold off assaults on its market by data networking giant Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO). The acquisition also comes as Nortel's biggest competitor, Lucent Technologies Inc. (LU), takes aim at the data networking market.
Sprint Corp. (FON), the nation's third-largest long-distance company, recently bypassed Nortel and Lucent to select Cisco as lead vendor for a massive network upgrade.
"A lot of the equipment vendors are really nervous about Cisco," said Furman Selz Inc. analyst Michael Neiberg. "The telecom equipment guys want to make sure they have a full line of products.
"The big companies feel they need to do everything," Neiberg added.
The Bay deal puts Nortel in a good position to cope with the changes taking place in an industry that suddenly finds itself in the throes of a consolidation craze. Earlier this month, Tellabs Inc. (TLAB) agreed to buy Ciena Corp. (CIEN) for $7 billion, Alcatel Alsthom (ALA) took out DSC Communications Corp. (DIGI) and World Access Inc. (WAXS) agreed to merge with Telco Systems Inc. (TELC).
Nortel's announcement follows weeks of rumors that it was in talks with Bay, which had been regarded as takeover bait since it failed to hit earnings targets in March. The Santa Clara, Calif., data networking company has fallen short of analysts' earnings estimates in five of the last nine quarters.
Concern that Nortel won't be able to turn Bay into a consistent financial performer helped knock Nortel's NYSE-listed stock down 7 11/16, or 12.1%, to 56 on volume of 5.1 million. Average daily volume is 806,600.
The merger announcement boosted Bay's NYSE-listed shares 3 7/16, or 12.1%, to 31 3/4 on volume of 12.4 million, compared with a daily average of 5.3 million.
"The market is worried about whether Nortel can execute with Bay and use it to their advantage," said ABN AMRO Inc. analyst Kenneth Leon.
"With Bay the level of confidence obviously hasn't been there," Leon said.
No Details Yet On Charges
Nortel didn't specify the charges it expects to take from the acquisition with Bay Networks, saying it is still working out the details. Nortel is accounting for the deal as a purchase. It isn't touting the deal as a money-saver, instead officials of both companies stressed that their businesses are complementary.
The companies said they have compatible, technology-based cultures.
But some analysts aren't so sure. Pay scales are different and telecommunications equipment makers tend to work a little more slowly than data networking companies, analysts said. Then there is Bay Networks' spotty earnings history.
Problems integrating the acquisition could be considerable in the short term, and that is part of the reason Nortel's stock is being battered more than usual for an acquirer, analysts said.
"In the long run, we're going to look back on this and say it was a good move," said Gregory Geiling, an analyst at J.P. Morgan Securities Inc.
"The whole game right now is Lucent and Cisco versus everybody else," Geiling said. The Bay Networks acquisition will help keep Nortel competitive with its two giant rivals.
Even though data networking is already a $1 billion a year business for Nortel, it "obviously needed a stronger product line in data networking," said Leon of ABN AMRO.
The company was under some time pressure. In October Lucent will be free from restrictions linked to its spinoff from AT&T Corp. (T) that bar it from using pooling-of-interests accounting for mergers. When that restriction lifts, Lucent can do bigger deals than it has to date.
"This was Nortel's window of opportunity to get Bay," Leon said. Company officials said in a conference call that they began talking to Nortel about a merger "a few months ago."
As merger mania seizes the industry, a likely next target could be Ascend Communications Inc. (ASND), which might be attractive to Lucent or the combined Tellabs and Ciena, analysts said.
Investors need to look critically at upcoming mergers in this sector to make sure they are solidly grounded and aren't chiefly motivated by frenzy or anxiety about all the good partners being snapped up, an analyst said. -Shawn Young; 201-938-5248 |