June 29, 1998, TechWeb News Understanding The Far-Reaching Ramifications Of Merger Mania By John T. Mulqueen
Do you have $140 billion? If so, you may be able to buy Cisco. That's what analysts say the king of internetworking would cost. Cisco's market value already exceeds $87 billion, and with an annual growth rate of more than 35 percent, you'll have to shell out big bucks if you want it.
If Cisco doesn't catch your fancy, your $140 billion can still go a long way. You can buy Ameritech for $62 billion, MCI for $38 billion and SNET Corp. for $4 billion. You'll still have enough left over to buy Ascend Communications Inc. for maybe $14 billion, Cabletron for $4 billion, Fore Systems for perhaps $4 billion, Newbridge Networks Inc. for a cool $6 billion and Xylan Corp. for, let's say, $2 billion.
There's no disputing that Cisco is a great company. It has accomplished something no other company in the history of data networking has done-grown rapidly over a 10-year period. It has bought a grab bag of companies and integrated them successfully into its operations, and those it acquired that didn't make it haven't hurt it. And Cisco's major acquisition of StrataCom Inc. has helped it enter new markets. Cisco has won some major contracts for StrataCom's frame relay and ATM switches from telecommunications carriers. At the same time, Cisco is managing the slowdown of its core router business.
But the idea that Cisco is worth more than several telephone companies and almost all of its traditional competitors combined is patently absurd. It's not Cisco's fault. Investors are irrational, plain and simple. Analysts complain that money managers will pay any price for a stock in the belief that growth will last forever.
That's what is driving Cisco's share price up, along with the idea that the networking industry is coalescing around a few big players and that Cisco will be one of the winners.
Two weeks ago, Northern Telecom announced its $9 billion bid for Bay Networks, Ericsson Inc. was supposed to be ready to buy Ascend, then it seemed Lucent Technologies Inc. might buy everybody in a few months.
"What data networking industry? There won't be one next year," one analyst said.
He pointed to some interesting statistics. So far in 1998 there have been 19 acquisitions of communications equipment vendors, valued at $22.7 billion. In 1997, 34 deals were made, valued at $15.8 billion. In 1996, acquirers spent $9.1 billion in 41 transactions.
The dynamics of the market mean that Lucent, Nortel and Cisco are going to dominate the networking arena. All three will sell carrier and enterprise networking devices. Cisco's specialty is data; the other two, voice. Nortel turned to Bay for data and Lucent is "stringing pearls" with purchases of small data networking companies. Cisco has admitted it wanted to partner with either Lucent or Nortel. Now it will have to go it alone.
After the Nortel-Bay deal was announced, Lucent said it is suing Cisco for infringing patents on routing, frame relay and ATM technology. Investors did not care-Cisco's stock price has risen to $87.85 per share from $80.69, and its market value rose about $4.25 billion.
The lawsuit is odd. Lucent has performed beyond expectations since it was spun off AT&T, but it's not exactly a name in routing, frame relay or ATM. It paid $1 billion for Yurie Systems Inc.'s ATM capability and bought Agile Networks Inc. for its intelligent switching products, and it resells Bay's internetworking gear and General DataCom Corp.'s frame relay and ATM switches. Lucent and Cisco have talked about a partnership. Some say Lucent actually offered to merge with Cisco. The lawsuit looks almost like an act of spite or perhaps the reverse side of the merger picture: If you can't join 'em, sue 'em.
In any case, all the mergers mean that network managers will find themselves with fewer vendors to deal with, at least in the short term. Some will like that. Some buy into the idea of one-stop shopping. It seems most don't want a single vendor; they'd rather pick and choose.
But the idea that mergers will end innovation doesn't impress. Ten years ago while walking to a news conference where Unisys was about to announce its acquisition of Timeplex, I met a securities analyst who had just finished a report on the data networking industry. In addition to the Timeplex deal, two LAN hardware companies had recently been acquired. The analyst complained she would have nothing to cover-just as her colleague hinted after the Nortel-Bay deal.
John T. Mulqueen is business editor of InternetWeek.
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