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Technology Stocks : 3Com Corporation (COMS) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: mike thomas who wrote (32264)7/5/1999 7:20:00 PM
From: Mang Cheng  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 45548
 
"3Com captain remains calm despite stormy forecasts"

By JIM DUFFY
Network World, 07/05/99

MARLBOROUGH, MASS.
- 3Com faces a number of
major challenges as it
moves to diversify its product portfolio.

In an exclusive interview with Network
World at 3Com's new East Coast
operations headquarters, company
President and CEO Eric Benhamou
defended the absence of a core product
around which to build an information
access infrastructure. He also reiterated
the synergy he claims exists between
3Com and US Robotics, the modem giant
3Com acquired two years ago for $7
billion that many analysts are now saying
the company should sell.

Benhamou also says quarterly revenue
growth in fiscal 2000 will be in the "high
single digits" as 3Com looks to reduce
dependency on revenue from mature
product lines - network interface cards
(NIC), modems and hubs - by more than a
third.

Many analysts have subsequently lowered
their forecasts for the company and
downgraded their investment
recommendations (NW, June 28, page
16).

"As we finish fiscal 2000, we will have
50% of our revenue from established
growth businesses, 25% from emerging
very high-growth businesses and only
25% from classical mature products,"
Benhamou says.

Some analysts think quarterly growth in
the high single digits for fiscal 2000 is
still overly optimistic.

"I'm actually forecasting flat growth,"
says one analyst who requested
anonymity. "Maybe they'll get there,
maybe they can't. We'll have to see."

High-growth businesses

Currently, NICs, modems and hubs
account for 39% of 3Com's overall
revenue, which in fiscal 1999 was $5.8
billion. The emerging high-growth
businesses include LAN telephony, and
wireless network access via handheld
devices, such as 3Com's wildly popular
PalmPilot.

Benhamou consistently mentioned Palm
and scenarios involving Palm computing
in last week's interview, and said sales of
the handheld device will account for $1
billion of 3Com's fiscal year 2000
revenue. Benhamou and other 3Com
executives generally decline to detail
revenue from specific products or product
lines.

Yet Benhamou stopped short of
designating Palm, or any other product
line, as 3Com's showcase offering.

Some analysts have criticized 3Com for
being unfocused by not having a
foundation product, the way Cisco has
with routers.

"We don't have a centerpiece," Benhamou
says. "I don't think we should have a
centerpiece. We're really focusing on
delivering personalized access to
information. Multiple products are used
to create that personalized information
ac-cess service. I would like to be known
for delivering that service. I would not
like to be known for any one of these
products."

Benhamou declined to comment on recent
speculation that 3Com, or any of its
business units, is an acquisition target.
3Com's stock has slipped from the low
50s in December to the mid to high 20s,
helping to fuel this speculation.

Friday rumors

"Interestingly, these rumors tend to occur
most frequently on Fridays and during the
week before earnings," Benhamou says.
"I'm not drawing any inference from this,
but statistically this is very clear, very
visible."

One business unit that pops up as an
acquisition/divestiture candidate is the
carrier business unit, which
predominantly is made up of the US
Robotics business. Notably, this is also
the business unit with the mature,
declining-growth modem products.

Strategic fit

Yet Benhamou last week reiterated his
stand that the carrier unit is a strategic
one for 3Com. Departing again from the
previous practice of not discussing
revenue by product or business unit, he
says carrier products will account for
$700 million to $800 million of 3Com's
fiscal 2000 revenue.

US Robotics is also the foundation for
3Com's future growth with products that
address emerging markets, such as LAN
telephony and broadband access.

Acquiring US Robotics "was a very smart
move. It is extremely synergistic,"
Benhamou says. "Because US Robotics,
in fact, gave us a way to build up cable
modem and [digital subscriber line]
expertise. We didn't have any at 3Com.
Voice over IP is something that really
came about with US Robotics."

"It's very important to understand that
today, connectivity has grown into
something that's not only delivered to
corporations," Benhamou adds, providing
his rationale for the US Robotics business
and 3Com's changing landscape. "We're
increasingly delivering connectivity to
small businesses and consumers."

networkworld.com

Mang