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To: OverSold who wrote (32200)6/30/1999 12:18:00 AM
From: thebeach  Respond to of 45548
 
Do your own DD. This just in from COMS: Apple deal inevitable IMHO and is
worth 3-4 points to the stock at least.

"Apple continues to ponder coming out with multicolored Palm handhelds
under its own name, although the project has been put on the back burner to
ensure that its new consumer portable gets out the door.

Prototypes of a handheld organizer, which use 3Com's Palm operating
system, have been spotted around the company's Cupertino, California,
headquarters, said sources close to the company. Like the iMac, the
Palm-based devices, if released, would come in a variety of colors and be
marketed under the Apple brand.

For 3Com, the deal has precedent: Palm Computing makes an organizer
that has IBM's name on it. For Apple, the move signals an ongoing interest in
a market it pioneered, then abandoned in 1997 with the cancellation of the
Newton handheld computer. Because the development is largely controlled
by Palm, a Palm licensing strategy presents far less risk for Apple.

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To: OverSold who wrote (32200)6/30/1999 9:25:00 AM
From: Al Cano  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 45548
 
Candace: I'm looking for the article today. Nonetheless, read the attach article by Janet Haney, CBS MarketWatch.

Lucent CEO talks of progress
No layoffs seen after Ascend deal's close
By Janet Haney, CBS MarketWatch
Last Update: 7:15 PM ET Jun 28, 1999 Also: NewsWatch

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS.MW) -- Capping a deal-packed week, Lucent Technologies said Monday it has no plans to lay off any employees in light of its now-completed $24 billion buy of Ascend Communications.

In a media briefing in San Francisco, Lucent (LU: news, msgs) Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Rich McGinn called the possibility of layoffs "rubbish" and said the Murray Hill, N.J.-based company "seeks to acquire the best talent."

As a result of Ascend's merger with Lucent, the telecommunications equipment maker now has 4,000 employees in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Profit outlook---
McGinn, who said the company is in a "quiet period," did say that Lucent is "not changing our guidance for the year: It's 19 percent to 20 percent for the year and 35 (percent) for the bottom line."

The First Call profit estimate for the third quarter is 23 cents, with a 1999 prediction of $1.20 a share.

McGinn said analysts expect Lucent and Ascend's sales to reach $38 billion or more this year. The company anticipates spending more than $4 billion on research and development this year.

Lucent, an AT&T (T: news, msgs) spinoff, has 7 percent of the world's market share in communications networking in a market that's expected to reach $650 billion by 2001, McGinn said, with more than 1,000 new service providers anticipated to join the industry in the next two years.

"We're not limited by opportunity at all. We think consolidation will continue in the industry. We're focused on the highest-growth segments and are hoping expectations continue to grow," McGinn told CBS.MarketWatch.com. Level 3 and Lucent
Last Wednesday, Lucent and Level 3 Communications (LVLT: news, msgs) announced that Level 3 would buy Lucent software switches in a deal potentially worth $1 billion over five years. See related story.

Of Level 3's CEO, McGinn said: "Jim Crowe is one of the visionaries in the industry. I believe that (Level 3 has) looked broadly, widely at what they need to do to form a really highly reliable, scalable IP network."

As part of the four-year, $250 million agreement, Lucent will provide Level 3 with switches for Internet protocol networks to enhance telephone voice service.

Further touting his company's credentials before his San Francisco audience, McGinn said Lucent's chip customers include Sun Microsystems, Apple, Compaq, Dell and Cisco.

Lucent's stock gained 2 to close at 65 11/16 Monday, and Level 3 shares rose 1 13/16 to end the day at 68 1/2.
Lucent on Friday formally revealed what had long been suspected: It's buying privately held Nexabit Networks for $900 million in stock.
Later..... Al.




To: OverSold who wrote (32200)6/30/1999 11:17:00 AM
From: Al Cano  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 45548
 
Candace: Found another LU article & McGinn mentions 3COM consolidation. - I'll find it. Sorry.. al
Silicon Valley
Jun 29, 1999
Meet Rich, Lucent Chief
By Adam Lashinsky
Silicon Valley Columnist

Many people get their 15 minutes of fame; on Monday, I got my 15 minutes with Rich.

That's Richard A. McGinn, CEO of Lucent Technologies, (NYSE:LU - news) in old-world off-line lingo. But he's just plain Rich in new-world online speak. And McGinn is merely another Rich to the 150,000-plus employees of Lucent, including the newly assimilated troops at Ascend Communications, which Lucent gobbled up last week for about $24 billion in stock.

See, in case you haven't figured it out by now, McGinn wants the world to think of Lucent as a Silicon Valley startup that just happens to be based in Murray Hill, N.J., and has a little R&D function called Bell Laboratories behind it. Lucent itself is the former equipment arm of AT&T (NYSE:T - news) , which Ma Bell spun off a couple years back.

McGinn breezed through San Francisco Monday, at least partly to schmooze Lucent's employees, about 3% of whom can phone Silicon Valley without making a long-distance call. With the acquisition of Ascend, Lucent now claims to be No. 1 in all sorts of data networking categories: packet-switching equipment (the key to carrying data calls), remote-access gear (modems for phone carriers), voice-over-IP equipment (shorthand for zapping spoken words over data networks using Internet Protocol technology) and billing software, to name a few.

Rich isn't done, though. Last week Lucent agreed to exchange $900 million worth of stock for Nexabit Networks, a "pre-revenue," next-generation router company with about 120 employees. And he intimates Lucent will keep its wallet open until it is No. 1 in data networking, a spot Cisco Systems (Nasdaq:CSCO - news) continues to occupy.

"I expect to see the same pace of acquisitions continue," says the casually dressed McGinn (remember: Silicon Valley CEOs don't wear ties), who adds that Lucent invests in its own technology simultaneously while hunting for companies to buy. The shopping list, says McGinn, includes companies providing technology for wireless communications, optical networking, software, professional services, broadband communications and communications-oriented semiconductors.

In fact, there's only one company McGinn doesn't seem to want to buy, and that's Cisco. "It hadn't been on my mind," he says. McGinn acknowledges that despite the media's Lucent vs. Cisco preoccupation, the two companies don't actually compete directly on each others' strongest products (a point elucidated here by TSC's Kevin Petrie four weeks ago). Given the might of Lucent's European and Asian competitors, however, a merger with Cisco isn't nearly as nutty as it sounds.

Says McGinn: "It would be a very aggressive combined competitor in addressing broadband communications."

Such a combination nearly would be a merger of equals: Cisco is worth $200 billion to Lucent's $175 billion, although the older company's annual sales, at about $33 billion, are three times Cisco's.

Speaking of broadband, though, one wonders why competitors like Juniper Networks (Nasdaq:JNPR - news) , Broadcom (Nasdaq:BRCM - news) , Nexabit and others even exist, considering the power of Lucent's vaunted R&D efforts.

"There are always going to be some guys who decide they want to go out and roll their own," says McGinn, referring to the startups that exploit their passion and easy access to venture capital to attack a corner of Lucent's business. He describes this as "barbell innovation," with startups like Juniper, Broadcom and Nexabit occupying one end of the barbell and giants like Lucent and Cisco the other.

What about the middle of the barbell, the mid-tier companies with less buzz, like 3Com (Nasdaq:COMS - news) , for example? "They get consolidated," says McGinn.

Lucent's biggest recent triumph isn't spending a billion dollars for a startup or convincing former Ascend CEO Mory Ejabat to attend Monday's briefing when he surely must have had other things he'd like to be doing (Ejabat isn't expected to stick around Lucent for an overly long time). Lucent's big score is the up to $1 billion contract over five years it inked last week with Level 3 Communications (Nasdaq:LVLT - news) , the phone carrier that's building a "greenfields" network. Level 3 already is a major Ascend customer. Now it will buy so-called software switches from Lucent that will give Level 3's customers the services typically associated with trusted public phone networks.

According to McGinn, seven other carriers, some building from scratch and others building on top of existing systems, are negotiating similar contracts with Lucent.

Customers willing to sign billion-dollar contracts with Lucent presumably can call Rich McGinn anything they damn well please. And they probably get more than 15 minutes to chat with him too.

Sorry, still looking ..... Al



To: OverSold who wrote (32200)6/30/1999 12:13:00 PM
From: Al Cano  Respond to of 45548
 
Candace: McGinn says, LU to focus on high-growth businesses. As you know, 3COM a small player compared to LU is focusing on high growth products and getting out of the slow growth products. To some degree, 3COM is not a very fast high-growth business yet or at this stage however in one or two years, 3COM will be the sleeping giant. And,in my opinion, LU knows 3COM's potential. Anyway, the following article is provided. al

Lucent hones Net strategy with Ascend
By Ben Heskett
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
June 28, 1999, 10:50 a.m. PT
update SAN FRANCISCO--Telcommunications equipment maker Lucent Technologies today unveiled its new push for Internet networking technology following its completed merger with Ascend Communications.

In the past, Lucent's strength was in producing back-end equipment for seamless voice networks. But with the growth of Net traffic, the company is looking to be the leader for technology that can work with the new networks run by Internet service providers and communications companies.

is positioned to be a clear leader in communications networking," said Lucent chief executive Rich McGinn at a press conference in San Francisco.

The marriage of phone and data networks is one of the biggest trends in the networking industry. The growth of the Internet has forced communications companies to alter their network build-out plans to include a larger amount of Internet-based equipment able to carry data "packets" at a high speed.

A scheduled event today in San Francisco showcased Lucent's plans for Ascend, as well as for Nexabit Networks, the high-end equipment start-up Lucent purchased last Friday for $900 million.

The Ascend acquisition closed last week, following a shareholder vote. Integrating Ascend's technology will allow Lucent to better compete with the likes of Cisco Systems and Nortel Networks, among others, in its bid for a piece of the Internet equipment pie.

With Ascend, Lucent expands its Silicon Valley empire that now includes over 4,000 employees across 10 cities in the area. "It is really becoming a bi-coastal company," said McGinn. "We are following the talent."

McGinn characterized published reports of a recent 10 percent staff cut through layoffs and departures at Ascend as "rubbish" and "not true."

McGinn said the company could continue to grow at 3 to 5 percent above the average for the networking industry--a result, he claimed, of the firm's focus on high-growth businesses.

"We see the opportunities continuing to grow," he noted.

Lucent will organize its newly acquired technology into five groups. The firm plans to focus on the Internet using voice-on-data networks, as well as offer virtual private networking (VPN) technology. Lucent will also introduce advanced uses of Internet protocol (IP)-based software and other associated services, according to a Lucent spokeswoman.

For the high-end market, Lucent now has several weapons, including its own IP and asynchronous transfer mode (ATM)-based network switches, as well as those of Ascend, and the speedy routing technology it acquired from Nexabit. Nexabit's switching technology is currently in tests.

Ascend is now part of Lucent's newly crafted InterNetworking systems unit.

Mory Ejabat, former chief executive of Ascend, plans to stay on with Lucent as a consultant for an "undetermined" period. In previous interviews, the executive said he would stay through the transition. Ejabat has already taken board positions with a handful of other companies in the networking and communications industry.




To: OverSold who wrote (32200)6/30/1999 12:39:00 PM
From: Al Cano  Respond to of 45548
 
Candace: Found it. Read last paragraph. Please note, it does refer to overseas operations. Nonetheless, in my opinion and I firmly believe that in order to gain market share in the communication networking industry, LU needs more acquisition and 3COM could still be considered. Regards, Al--- "3COM manufactures and links the things that make communications work". my phrase. In addition, I believe LU wants to be complete communication service provider (ie.. an end to end communications solution provider thus they reaps all the profits from the manufacturing in order to tailor data networking products for customers, and to the servicing end etc..... . In short, they want all the profits. ).

Tuesday June 29 12:32 AM ET
Lucent Sees More Acquisitions
By Duncan Martell
PALO ALTO, Calif. (Reuters) - Lucent Technologies Inc. (NYSE:LU - news), the largest maker of telecommunications equipment, plans to make more acquisitions and will continue to add to the more than 4,000 workers it has in California's Silicon Valley.

In comments made during a press conference Monday to celebrate Lucent's $25.2 billion purchase of data-networking company Ascend Communications Inc. and in a later interview, Lucent Chairman and Chief Executive Richard McGinn called the Ascend deal a ''textbook'' merger and said Lucent's pace will only quicken going forward.

''Now we are prepared to hit the ground running so our customers will get the benefit of the new company from day one,'' McGinn said at a news conference in San Francisco. ''With the merger, Lucent now has the industry's broadest, most powerful and most reliable data networking product line.''

Of course, some of Lucent's competitors in the converging world of data and voice networks, such as Cisco Systems Inc. (Nasdaq:CSCO - news), Nortel Networks of Canada and others, would take exception to such a characterization.

Nonetheless, analysts have said the combination of Lucent's deep relationships with service providers, such as its former parent AT&T Corp., MCI Worldcom Inc. and others, with the data-networking expertise of Ascend make it a formidable competitor.

Ascend had been Cisco's fiercest competitor in selling networking gear to Internet service providers and telecommunications companies. That was largely due to Ascend's high-speed ATM, or asynchronous transfer mode switch, for shunting data back and forth across networks.

Not that there aren't obstacles, of course. For example, there is still a dearth of engineering talent worldwide, though ther situation is somewhat better in the San Francisco Bay Area, McGinn and Ascend's former Chairman Mory Ejabat said.

''We are in a war for talent in this industry,'' McGinn said. In an interview, McGinn all but dismissed the law of large numbers -- that it gets increasingly difficult to increase revenue and earnings at a rapid pace if the numbers are already large to begin with.

Our growth ''is a function of the industry. If your industry is growing slowly, or if you have 40 percent market share like Coke, you can't grow the topline at 20 percent,'' he said.

In Lucent's case, he noted that the company has only seven percent market share worldwide, but said the industry is still fragmented and will continue to consolidate.

Those factors, coupled with Lucent's focus on the fastest- growing areas of the data networking and telecom equipment market, will help propel sales and profits, McGinn said.

He reiterated that he believed the overall telecommunications equipment and data networking market will grow by 14 percent, and that Lucent should be able to beat that figure by 3 to 5 percentage points.

At the news conference, McGinn also repeated comments that the company is on track to boost revenue as much as 20 percent in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30 and earnings by about 35 percent.

McGinn also took issue with some reports that Lucent and Ascend had been quietly trimming the workforce and that they plan further cuts.

''It's rubbish,'' he said in the interview. ''We don't have a plan to do that.''

McGinn also said he continued to be dissatisfied with Lucent's ability to collect more quickly money that customers owe. When Murray Hill, N.J.-based Lucent reported first-quarter results, its revenue growth -- 6 percent -- was less than expected because of a delay in getting certain contract documentation completed in time.

McGinn said part of the issue was that as its overseas business grows, those regions are marked by longer payment cycle times. ''We need more steam to get the money due to us faster,'' McGinn said. ''I'm not happy'' with where it is now.