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Technology Stocks : Sycamore Networks Inc-(SCMR) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bill who wrote (362)10/21/1999 12:17:00 PM
From: William F. Wager, Jr.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2249
 
Bill, your post made the WSJ and CNBC this morning LOL--->

October 21, 1999

Overheard:
Online Investors Expect a
Sizzler
From Sycamore Networks' IPO

By CARRIE LEE
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL INTERACTIVE EDITION

Investors expecting a sizzling stock-market debut from Sycamore
Networks this week have one more reason to be excited: The
fiber-optic technology firm nearly doubled the price range of its
initial public offering.

The increase in the price of an IPO
usually is a sign that underwriters and
the company have seen strong
demand for a deal during "road-show"
presentations aimed at drumming up
interest among institutional investors.

"This was to be expected. It's a hot deal and will be a very large
company very quickly..." wrote one investor on the Silicon Investor
message board devoted to the company (www.techstocks.com).


Sycamore, which is based in Chelmsford, Mass., disclosed in a
filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on
Wednesday that it was raising the expected price range for the
deal to $36 to $37 a share from $18 to $20.

Company officials declined to comment, citing securities rules
that impose a "quiet period" on companies selling new stock.

Sycamore plans to sell 6.5 million
shares. The shares are expected to
price after the market closes on
Thursday and will begin trading on
Friday, according to lead underwriter
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co.
Based on a $36 mid-point price,
Sycamore will have a market value of
$2.78 billion.

The increase in the price range of an IPO just before its debut
isn't unusual, but a boost the size of Sycamore's is. Only five
companies in the past year have raised the price of their IPO that
much, according to CommScan LLC, a New York research firm.

However, analyst believe the price increase is an indication of the
company's potential. They said Sycamore is entering a hot and
burgeoning area. The company makes hardware that boosts the
amount of voice, data and Internet traffic that can be carried over
fiber-optic networks.

Sycamore is the latest company in the networking-solutions
business to go public. Others include Juniper Networks, Foundry
Networks and Alteon WebSystems -- which have all had highly
successful initial public offerings recently.

"Networking equipment stocks are among the top performers
IPOwise this year," noted Ken Fleming of Renaissance Capital's
IPO Plus Aftermarket Fund, in Greenwich, Conn.

Mr. Fleming said Sycamore and its competitors could expect
booming business. He said many companies are building
systems that will utilize their equipment and technology. "A lot of
potential customers out there are building their networks. These
companies are in a good spot right now, they can grow revenues
quickly," Mr. Fleming said.

Steve Tuen, an analyst at the IPO Value Monitor, a New York
research publication, agreed. "It's basically a play on Net
infrastructure," Mr. Tuen said. "Given the growing Internet base
and the increase in data transmissions, I think Sycamore is going
to be a hot property."

Sycamore has 173 employees. The company, which will reap
about $216.6 million in net proceeds from the IPO, made its first
sale in May. It has one customer, Williams Communications
Group, of Tulsa, Okla., a newly public and unprofitable company
that provides voice, data, Internet, and video services to
communications-service providers.

In its SEC filing, Sycamore said Williams is not obligated to
purchase any minimum quantities of products. Sycamore said it
will not be successful if it doesn't expand its customer base.
However, in the foreseeable future, the company said
substantially all of its revenues will depend on sales to Williams
and a limited number of potential new customers.

Like other high-tech start-ups, Sycamore is not profitable. For
fiscal 1999 ending in July, the company reported a net loss of
$19.5 million on revenue of $11.3 million. The company said it
expects to continue posting losses in the future. Sycamore has an
accumulated deficit of $20.2 million.

Indeed, Mr. Fleming acknowledged that upstart companies face
tough challenges, but he said Sycamore's experienced
management team and the industry's potential are a plus. "There
are always risks when you're getting your company off the ground,
but this is a management team that's already done it before," he
said.

Sycamore was founded in February 1998 by Desh Deshpande
and Dan Smith, who built Cascade Communications and sold it
to networking-equipment maker Ascend Communications for
$2.6 billion two years ago. Lucent Technologies purchased
Ascend this year in a $25 billion deal.