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Technology Stocks : Ciena (CIEN) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: James Fulop who wrote (7849)12/11/1999 10:45:00 AM
From: SteveG  Respond to of 12623
 
H&Q Lipton: DWDM Business Expanding; CoreDirector and Metro Gaining Traction
· Ciena reported $141M/0.03 for Q4. EPS met our estimate and came in ahead of the $0.02
consensus number. Revenue was essentially in-line, and gross margin continues to expand.
· The Company's product and customer base are diversifying nicely. Importantly, Ciena met its
goals with early customers Sprint and MCI Worldcom, each accounting for <10%.
· CoreDirector and Metro products are gaining traction. The outlook for EdgeDirector is
uncertain.
· Our FY:00 estimate remains at $0.45. Our new FY:01 number is $1.00. With an established
position, increasing visibility, and attractive relative valuation, we reiterate our BUY.

CIENA is a leading supplier of optical networking systems, including dense wavelength division
multiplexing (DWDM) equipment, which increases fiber capacity for long-distance and local exchange
carriers.
Notes: f
Q4 essentially in-line with our estimate, slightly ahead of consensus: Ciena reported
$141M/0.03 for Q4:99. Earnings were in-line with our $0.03 estimate and ahead of the $0.02
consensus estimate. Revenue was slightly shy of our $142 estimate but a bit ahead of the $140
consensus number. Gross margin was 41.0%, up 260 basis points sequentially and better than our
40.1% estimate. The Company attributes this improvement to broad cost savings initiatives and
manufacturing improvements. On the balance sheet, Ciena's cash position remains healthy at
$251M. Consistent with management's guidance, DSOs increased sequentially from 72 to 92 as
international business grew significantly (63% in Q4, up from 40% last quarter) and flexible
payment terms continue to be a factor in winning new business. Inventory turns dipped from 4.9
to 4.2 Q/Q as Ciena builds inventory of a broadening base of products (especially hard to
manufacture OC-192 cards) and customers increasingly require shorter lead times.
Product and customer base diversifying: The most significant developments in Q4 to us are
improvements in product and customer diversification. On the product front, Ciena recognized
revenue from seven products – all but CoreDirector. The 40 channel box was the biggest
contributor, with the CoreStream product ramping nicely.

Ciena sold products to 23 customers during the quarter, up from 18 in Q3. Seven customers in the
quarter were new (Completel, Fibernet, and Cable & Wireless USA, with the other four
unannounced). Three customers each accounted for more than 10% (we believe they were iaxis,
Hermes, and Crosswave (Japan)), but in aggregate comprised 46% of revenue, down from 58%
last quarter. Notably, the Company met its numbers without Sprint ($68.69, FON, NR) and MCI
Worldcom ($76.19, WCOM, NR) as 10% customers. During the quarter, Ciena announced an
expanded agreement with iaxis, which now includes not only long-haul DWDM business, but
also CoreDirector and Metro products. We believe rapid ramps at iaxis, Hermes, and Crosswave,
and to a lesser extent Telia, Completel, Fibernet, DDI, KDD, and Japan Telecom explain the Q/Q
ramp in international business from 40% to 63%.
Progress with CoreDirector driving the stock; Metro a positive surprise. Although most of
Ciena's revenue over the next year will be from its core DWDM business, other product lines
seem to be more of a factor driving valuation. Over the last week, the lessening of concerns over
CoreDirector glitches at Williams, as well as new business at iaxis for CoreDirector and Metro
have improved our confidence in these products and cleared the way for a stock move. Also, we
believe initial unpublicized CoreDirector evaluations at Qwest and possibly MCI (and others) are
going well and these carriers could materialize as beta customers over the next half year. In total,
we believe Ciena now has two early trial customers for CoreDirector (iaxis and Williams),
although only the Williams trial has begun. For Metro, we believe the Company has four
customers (Cable & Wireless and Completel, and two others unannounced), orders from iaxis,
and more than five other ongoing trials. We'd also like to point out that most of the start-ups
targeting the metro space are focused on the access part of the network. There appear to be fewer
competitors in the metro/core segment, with Optical Networks and Nortel (Cambrian) (NT,
$82.50, MP) posing the most serious threat.
Long-haul DWDM business continues to rebound. The outlook for this business continues to
improve. From a customer standpoint, the Company's revenue stream is far more diversified than
in the past, and we expect at least one more customer to materialize during the next quarter. Ciena
continues to meet expecations despite early customers Sprint and MCI Worldcom becoming less
of a factor. We believe demand visibility, at least for the coming quarter, is good, especially for
CoreStream systems and OC-192 (10 Gbps) cards; OC-192 channels are selling as fast as the
Company can make them. Also, Ciena, in our view, remains one of the leaders in optical
innovation. To meet the needs of next-generation, ultra long-haul networks with full optical
functionality, Ciena has announced its high-density, ultra long-haul transport “feature set” that is
similar in vision to Corvis's and Qtera's products, as well as Lucent's long-standing efforts to
commercialize dispersion managed soliton systems.
On the downside, competition continues to intensify, especially from Nortel and Lucent (LU,
$81.25, B). Additionally, we believe Alcatel (ALA, $42.94, NR), Pirelli, Siemens, and Fujistu, in
addition to Corvis, Qtera, and some other well-funded start-ups, are stepping up their efforts.
However, market fundamentals remain strong and will support a wider range of players, and we
believe pricing is stable. Assuming a $3.7 billion market (worldwide) for DWDM gear in 2000,
Ciena does not need to achieve a majority share to reach our estimates. If the Company achieves
what we expect to be a reasonable target of 15-20% market share, Ciena should be able to meet
our revenue estimate. Moreover, the Company continues to invest in its sales organization to
leverage the opportunity. In the near-term, one of our concerns remains Ciena's ability to
manufacture sufficient quantities of its OC-192 products. Overall, despite increasing competition
and some element of competitive noise, we view Ciena as one of the few companies with proven
optical technology and manufacturing capabilities.
The jury is still out on EdgeDirector: While the Lightera acquisition (CoreDirector) and Metro
product initiative appear to be working out well, the jury's still out on EdgeDirector (Omnia).
Ciena did recognize a small amount of EdgeDirector revenue this quarter from one customer, and
is in two other beta trials, but we believe the ramp for this product will be slow.
Valuation and Recommendation: This quarter's results reinforce our believe that Ciena's core
long-haul DWDM business continues to rebound, and visibility is improving. Also, CoreDirector
and Metro seem to be on-track. We are adjusting our FY:00 revenue estimates slightly from
$736M/0.45 to $743M/0.45. Our new FY:01 estimate is $1.14B/1.00. To put valuation in
perspective, we are using as comparables JDS Uniphase ($240.38, JDSU, B), Lucent, Sycamore
($242, SCMR, NR), and Tellabs ($64.13, TLAB, B) (Figure 2), which trade in the 5-150x (!!!)
range of CY:00 revenue.

Using a sum of the parts valuation methodology (Figure 3), we calculate an approximate
valuation of $88 per share.

Ciena has established itself as a long-term player in the optical equipment space with proven
design and manufacturing capabilities, and visibility is improving. CoreDirector and Metro also
seem to be gaining traction. We are setting an $88 six-month price target and reiterate our BUY
recommendation.



To: James Fulop who wrote (7849)12/11/1999 10:50:00 AM
From: SteveG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12623
 
BBRS Silverstein: Key Points:
· For its fourth quarter of fiscal 1999, Ciena reported revenues of $141.4 million and
EPS of $0.03 versus our estimates of $138 million and $0.02, respectively.
· Better-than-expected gross margins of 41%, versus our estimate of 40%, drove the
company's better-than-expected EPS.
· The company continues to broaden its customer base and to lessen its revenue
concentration, shipping to 23 customers--including seven new customers, four of
which have yet to be announced--during the quarter, versus 18 customers in the
preceding quarter, and 14 customers in the fourth quarter of fiscal 1998.
· Demand for Ciena's new OC192, metro DWDM and, most importantly, Core
Director optical switch systems appears to be strong. Core Director is scheduled to
enter six customer trials in January. MultiWave Metro now has four customers and is
in five to ten customer trials.
· We are maintaining our fiscal 2000 revenue and EPS estimates and are initiating
estimates for fiscal 2001.
· We are reiterating our Buy recommendation on the stock.

SUMMARY:
As the following table shows, Ciena reported 1999 fiscal fourth quarter revenues of $140 million and
EPS of $0.03 versus our revenue and EPS estimates of $138 million and $0.02, respectively. Overall
revenues increased by $12.5 million, or 9.7%, sequentially, and increased by $50.2 million, or 55.1%,
year over year.
Table 1
Robertson
Actual Stephens Consensus
Revenues $141.4 $138.0 $140.0
EPS $0.03 $0.02 $0.02
Source: Company reports and Robertson Stephens estimates.
Better-than-expected gross margins drove the better-than-expected increase in EPS. For the fourth
quarter in a row, gross margins increased sequentially, improving to 41.0% in the quarter, up from
38.4% in the preceding quarter and 31.2% in the fourth quarter of 1998.
We believe the quarter offers investors another signpost marking Ciena's ongoing recovery, which
commenced three quarters ago in the January first quarter of fiscal 1999, following the decline in the
company's operating performance during fiscal 1998. A number of data points from the quarter
address in the affirmative lingering concerns on the Street regarding Ciena's ability to effectively
compete and prosper in the face of Lucent, Nortel, and other similar competitors. Showing marked
improvement in the quarter, diversification of Ciena's customer base and attenuation of revenue
concentration continue to head in the right direction. Regarding the former, Ciena shipped to seven
new customers during the quarter including four customers that the company has yet to announce.
Seven different products generated revenue during the quarter, including the fourth generation 96
channel new CoreStream MultiWave (mix-and-match OC48/OC192) DWDM long-haul system,
OC192 blades, the MultiWave Metro DWDM system, and the Edge Director next-generation SONET
Add-Drop Multiplexer. Demand appears to be strong for new products addressing three important new
markets for Ciena: OC192 long-haul, metropolitan DWDM and optical bandwidth management.
The metro DWDM market and optical bandwidth management market represent substantial addressable
market opportunities (amounting to several billion dollars over the next decade, by our estimates) that
are each at the stage of inception. Ciena's product offerings for each of these markets appear ready to
burst out of the starting blocks. Ciena shipped MultiWave Metro to two customers during the quarter,
has announced three customers during the quarter, we believe already has won a fourth customer, and is
in five to ten customer trials. The Core Director optical switch is progressing nicely, with six different
customer trials scheduled to begin in January.
We are maintaining our forecast of Ciena's fiscal 2000 revenues and EPS on the basis of the solid
financial performance during the quarter. We also are initiating fiscal 2001 revenue and EPS estimates
of $1.12 billion and $1.05, respectively. We are reiterating our Buy recommendation on the stock
given the following:
§ The robust and accelerating demand for DWDM systems driven by the on-going demand tornado
for bandwidth as the Internet continues to be widely utilized for information, recreation and
commerce;

§ The continued increase in Ciena's revenues, gross margins, and customer base, and improvement in
revenue visibility; and
§ The expected benefits resulting from the introduction of new products gained from the acquisitions
of Lightera Networks and of Omnia Communications (Core Director and Edge Director) and
developed internally (OC192 long-haul and MultiWave Metro--in short, the transformation of
Ciena from a provider of raw bandwidth for the core of carrier networks into a provider of end-to-end
managed optical transport solutions. We estimate that, together with Ciena's existing OC48
long-haul systems, the four new optical networking segments Ciena is in the process of entering
represent an addressable market opportunity of over $15 billion.
REVENUE/PRODUCT BREAKOUT:
Customers/Revenue Concentration. Ciena continued to grow its customer base, shipping to a total
of 23 customers during the quarter compared to the 18 customers it shipped to in the third quarter of
fiscal 1999 and the 14 customers it shipped to in the fourth quarter of fiscal 1998. Seven of the 23
customers during the quarter represent new customers of the company. Four of these seven new
customers have yet to be announced by the company. Regarding revenue concentration, while three of
the 23 customers each accounted for in excess of 10% and collectively accounted for 46% of Ciena's
total revenues in the quarter, this compares favorably with the three greater-than-10% customers that
accounted for 58% of total revenues in the preceding quarter.
Continuing its trend of attenuating its revenue concentration, three of the 23 customers were 10% or
greater customers during the quarter and collectively accounted for 46% of total sales compared to three
greater-than-10% customers in the third quarter of 1999 that collectively accounted for 58% of total
sales and three such customers that collectively accounted for 71% of total sales in the fourth quarter of
fiscal 1998.
Products/Revenues. DWDM systems accounted for 90% of the company's revenues in the third
quarter with services contributing 10% of total revenues. Demand for Ciena's core DWDM transport
products remains strong. The majority of Ciena's customers are deploying Ciena's 40 and higher
channel count systems, which Ciena has now been shipping for the past six quarters. Demand outside
of North America continues to be very strong as international sales accounted for 63% of total sales in
the quarter compared to 40% in the third quarter.
Ciena's long-haul MultiWave Sentry 4000 (40 channels) DWDM system made the largest contribution
to the company's revenue, although the company noted that its 96 channel fourth generation
CoreStream long-haul DWDM system was close behind and is finding strong acceptance among next-generation
service providers.
Notably, there appears to be considerable customer demand for Ciena's new CoreStream MultiWave
OC192 DWDM system as well as considerable interest in Ciena's new CoreDirector optical switch,
which is scheduled to enter field trials with Williams Communications in the US and Iaxis
Communications in Europe in January, and in Ciena's Metro DWDM system, which shipped for the
first time in the third quarter of fiscal 1999 and now has three announced customers. In addition, the
Core Director, which enables the end-to-end management of traffic within optical fiber networks, is
scheduled to enter into six different customer trials in January and the MultiWave Metro is already in
five to ten customer trials. On the conference call announcing its earnings, management noted its
confidence that the Core Director system will ship on schedule, with field trials in January and
commercial shipment slated for the second quarter of calendar 2000. This conviction stands in sharp
contrast to the cautionary tone taken by the company in its fiscal third quarter conference call when it
warned that there was no further margin for any additional delays in the final stages of development of
the product. Our own conversations with Williams Communications, the first announced customer and
beta site for the CoreDirector, support the company's confidence.
While Ciena shipped the Edge Director, which is a next-generation SONET Add-Drop Multiplexer
which utilizes ATM, to its first customer during the quarter, it appears that it will take several quarters
for this product to ramp. Investors have reason for optimism on the basis of the experience encountered
by ADC Telecommunications with its CellWorx platform, which similarly took several quarters to find
customer acceptance.
Core Director: Management noted that Ciena has lined up six customer field trials (scheduled to
begin in January), including Williams and iaxis, for the Core Director optical switch, which in our
opinion represents the most important product for Ciena's future. Both existing and prospective
customers have expressed significant interest in Lightera's Core Director optical switch platform. As
noted above, the company noted that it is highly confident that the system will begin field trials in the
first calendar quarter of 2000 as planned and to commercially ship for revenues early in 2000.
MultiWave Metro: Ciena shipped to and recorded revenue from two customers for its new
MultiWave Metro DWDM system in only its second quarter of shipment. MultiWave Metro is a ring-based
system targeted for metropolitan area networking (MAN) “collector-ring” and inter-office
applications. The company announced two new customers during the quarter for MultiWave Metro
including iaxis, a pan-European carrier, and Completel, a France-based carrier. In addition, we believe
that Qwest has recently signed on for this product, thereby giving Ciena four reference accounts in the
early stage of what by all indications is shaping up to be a very large market. The company also
announced that the MultiWave Metro is in trials with five to ten additional customers.
CoreStream MultiWave (mix-and-match OC48/OC192) DWDM Systems: The newest family of
core DWDM transport systems, the CoreStream systems scale up to 192 channels of OC48 and 96
channels of OC192 transmission rates. In only its second quarter of shipment, CoreStream already is
approaching the sales level of Ciena's 40 channel system MultiWave systems.
OC192: The company's management noted that there is strong demand for Ciena's new CoreStream
MultiWave OC192 DWDM systems and some, albeit relatively little, OC192 revenues were recognized
during the quarter. The company is in the process of ramping manufacturing to address this demand
and we expect to see a material contribution to revenues in the current first quarter of fiscal 2000 with
full manufacturing ramp completed by the fiscal second quarter. Ciena shipped its OC192 systems to
its first customer during the quarter and noted that it has several additional strong prospects. This new
platform offers Ciena an interesting opportunity to the extent that to date Nortel (NT $43) has virtually
owned the OC-192 DWDM market with approximately 90% market share. Just as carriers that rely on
Ciena's OC-48 DWDM systems not surprisingly seek second source suppliers to lessen their
dependency on and increase their bargaining power vis-à-vis Ciena, so too we would expect Nortel's
current OC-192 DWDM customers to consider alternative suppliers.
International. International sales accounted for approximately $89 million, or 63%, of total revenues
which represents a sequential increase of approximately $38 million compared to last quarter's $51
million, or 40% of total revenue. The $89 million of international sales in the third quarter represents a
substantial increase over foreign sales of approximately $38 million, or 41.9% in the second quarter of
fiscal 1998.
Margins. Following four quarters of dramatic decline during fiscal 1998, gross margins increased to
41.0% during the quarter compared to 38.4% in the third quarter of fiscal 1999 and 31.2% in the fourth
quarter of fiscal 1998. Management attributed this increase to continued stabilization in the pricing
environment in the industry and to the beneficial impact of cost reductions in their products. Over the
next two quarters we expect the company to benefit from continued significant product cost reductions.
Although we note that the DWDM market remains fiercely competitive, once the respective Lightera
and Omnia products begin to ship in fiscal 2000, allowing Ciena to compete on the basis of a managed
end-to-end optical transport solution rather than on the basis of raw bandwidth, we believe that price
will become significantly less important and that Ciena will enjoy a corresponding increase in gross
margins.
ESTIMATES:
We are maintaining our revenue and EPS estimates for fiscal 2000, given the solid operating
performance during the quarter. We also are initiating fiscal 2001 revenue and EPS estimates of $1.12
billion and $1.05, respectively.
1999A 2000E 2001E
New
Revenues(mm) $482.1 $755.0 $1,120.0
EPS $0.09 $0.55 $1.05
Old
Revenues(mm) $478.7 $755.0
EPS $0.08 $0.55
Source: Robertson Stephens estimates and company reports.
BALANCE SHEET:
Ciena's balance sheet suffered some deterioration during the quarter. Accounts receivable DSOs
increased by 20 days to 92 days from 72 days in the preceding quarter as, consistent with
management's guidance at the end of the third quarter, international revenues increased significantly
during the quarter. Foreign carriers typically receive extended payment terms relative to their North
American counterparts. Part of the increase was also due to favorable terms given one particular
customer and competitive pressures. Inventory levels increased by approximately 12 days to 86 days
from 73 days with inventory turns decreasing to 4.2 from 4.9 times as a result of continuing
diversification of the company's customer base and product portfolio. This customer and product
diversification is necessitating a higher level of inventory on hand. The company's net cash position,
including marketable debt securities, increased by roughly $36 million to approximately $262.4
million from $298.3 million in the preceding quarter.
The company's financial performance, as measured by its ROIC, improved modestly during the quarter.
Annualized ROIC was 2.7% in the quarter compared to (0.2%) in the third quarter. Invested capital
was $359 million compared to $334 million in the third quarter while NOPAT increased to $2.3 million
from ($0.7 million) in the third quarter. We expect to see substantial improvement in this metric in
fiscal 2000 once the Lightera and Omnia products begin to ship for revenue and Ciena can realize the
benefits of their synergistic solutions.

ACTION NOW: Ciena is rated a Buy.
THE COMPANY:
Ciena is a leading provider of advanced high-bandwidth fiber-optic Dense Wave Division Multiplexing
(DWDM) systems. DWDM systems are next-generation physical devices used to increase the
bandwidth transmission capacity of fiber optic telecommunication networks by expanding the
bandwidth transmission capacity of fiber optic cables. Ciena's DWDM systems send multiple
independent information streams on different wavelengths, or colors, of light on a single optical fiber.
Each one of these wavelengths is commonly referred to as a channel. By deploying Ciena's DWDM
systems, a telecommunication or network service provider can thereby transmit or carry the same
amount of information over a single fiber that previously required multiple separate fibers. For
example, Ciena's 40 channel DWDM system can carry the same amount of information that formerly
required 40 separate optical fibers. As a result of deploying Ciena's products, service providers can
increase the transmission capacity of their existing networks at a fraction of the cost of laying additional
optical fibers. The principal market for Ciena's products are telecommunication and network service
providers' fiber optic transmission networks.
INVESTMENT RISKS: Among the risks are that Ciena competes against a number of companies
much larger in size and having much greater financial, marketing, R&D and other resources and Ciena
has only a relatively small number of customers, which increases the risk of volatility in the company's
revenues and earnings.