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To: zbyslaw owczarczyk who wrote (17835)3/5/2000 9:56:00 AM
From: Glenn McDougall  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 18016
 
The Wall Street Transcript Publishes Communications Equipment Report in Robertson Stephens Technology 2000 Special Issue

NEW YORK, March 3 /PRNewswire/ -- Twenty-one leading analysts and top management of thirty-three Technology firms examine the Robertson Stephens Technology 2000 sector in the latest issue of
The Wall Street Transcript (212-952-7433) or twst.com .

In a crucial review of this sector for investors and industry professionals, this valuable 174-page Special Issue features:

1) Communications Equipment -- In an in-depth Analyst Interview

(2,600 words), Paul Silverstein, Senior Analyst with Robertson

Stephens, talks about the communications equipment data networking

sector, growth in end-user demand, modernization of newly privatized

telecom companies, and deployment of broadband services. Silverstein

favors the communications equipment industry as a great place for

investors to be placing money.

Silverstein states, "This is a sector that is experiencing extremely robust demand. There are two fundamental drivers that are mutually reinforcing. One is phenomenal end-user demand being driven by the
Internet. The other trend, along with the phenomenal demand for bandwidth and services from communications service providers, is competition among service providers unleashed by deregulation".

Silverstein declares, "smaller companies such as CIENA (Nasdaq: CIEN), Advanced Fibre (Nasdaq: AFCI) and Carrier Access (Nasdaq: CACS) that are focused on one particular market segment of the
communications equipment industry, have the advantage of focus. Advanced Fibre, has a product that not only is extremely technologically capable but also has been out in the field for several years now,
deployed extensively throughout North America as well as outside of North America, and the company has the benefit of an impressive base of reference accounts. The same comment can be made with
respect to CIENA, which I should have mentioned before. It will certainly be one of the participants in terms of the need for additional capacity in the core carrier network. CIENA addresses optical
networking. It addresses essentially every segment of the optical networking industry. CIENA is a company that, when it wins, wins on the basis of technology and focus; on the other hand, it is true that
when it loses it tends to lose, due to lack of marketing clout."

According to Silverstein, "the North American providers have been much faster to get off the dime and to address this opportunity, in part because North America has been in the lead in deploying these
services, in particular the traditional large, integrated communication equipment providers -- Lucent (NYSE: LU), Nortel (NYSE: NT), Alcatel (NYSE: ALA), Ericsson (Nasdaq: ERICY), Siemens, Nokia
(NYSE: NOK), along with Cisco (Nasdaq: CSCO) from the data networking world. Lucent and Nortel (which was the first to identify the opportunity and address it), coming out of the traditional voice
world have moved much more quickly than have their European competitors in terms of addressing demand. Now, it is true that those European competitors are moving quickly to try to catch up, but
most of them find themselves behind the eight-ball, with the notable exception of Nokia, which obviously has a great platform addressing wireless. Ericsson's wireless business is also very strong."

"The investment community, having taken note of the phenomenal runs of Cisco, Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) and Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), has been embracing those companies perceived to be facing
similar market opportunities and has to date been willing to pay up to on these companies early on in the cycle. So in this marketplace, what we tend to focus on is relative valuation, looking at a company
relative to the other companies in the sector," Silverstein notes.

Silverstein asserts, "if you compare CIENA to Sycamore (Nasdaq: SCMR), to other next-generation companies that have gone public in the last year, CIENA is not expensive. Relative to Sycamore, it's
one-third the valuation, and that would be the most direct comp."

Silverstein also says, "Core holdings, certainly include Lucent and Tellabs (Nasdaq: TLAB), as well as Nortel. Tellabs' Titan digital cross-connect system generates approximately 60% of the company's
revenue. The product has done phenomenally well, and right now I think it is fair to say it is exceeding most investors' expectations."

This 174-page Robertson Stephens Technology 2000 Issue also includes:

2) The following Robertson Stephens Tech 2000 Analyst Interviews

(avg. 3,000-words) include:

Outlook for Robertson Stephens, Robert Emery

Outlook for Tech 2000, John Rohal

Business Software, Eric Upin

Semiconductor Capital Equipment, Susan Billat

eNetworking Software, John Powers

Outlook for Computer Hardware, Daniel Niles

Outlook for eServices, Stephen Birer

Next Generation Networks, Paul Johnson

Outlook for eBusiness, Marshall Senk

eTailing, Lauren Cooks Levitan

Outlook for eFinance, Scott Appleby

Outlook for Semiconductors, Arun Veerappan

Computer Services & Outsourcers, Andrew Jeffrey

Outsourced Infrastructure Services, Richard Juarez

eMarketing, Lowell Singer

Digital Media Infrastructure, Arnab Chanda

eBusiness Applications, Kash Rangan

European eBusiness Software & IT Services, Sharon Corr

Network Storage, Dane Lewis

3) 33 extensive (average 2,000 words) CEO Interviews with top management

from the following sector firms discussing the outlook for their firm

and the Technology sector:

For a complete list of CEO interviews see twst.com

To obtain a copy of this insightful 174-page report, see twst.com , or call 212-952-7433. This special section is also included in the Technology Sector of TWST Online at
twst.com .

The Wall Street Transcript is a premier weekly investment publication interviewing market professionals for serious investors for over 36 years. Available at twst.com . TWST Online provides
free Interview excerpts. For highlights, recent recommendations by analysts and money managers and business news, visit twst.com .

Do a free search of the extensive TWST Archives at archive.twst.com .

The Wall Street Transcript does not endorse the views of any interviewee nor does it make stock recommendations.

SOURCE The Wall Street Transcript

CO: Wall Street Transcript; CIENA; Advanced Fibre; Carrier Access; Lucent; Nortel; Alcatel; Ericsson; Siemens; Nokia; Cisco; Microsoft; Intel; Sycamore; Tellabs

ST: Connecticut

IN: PUB

SU:

03/03/2000 07:17 EST prnewswire.com



To: zbyslaw owczarczyk who wrote (17835)3/5/2000 5:40:00 PM
From: jeff greene  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 18016
 
Alcatel files 13D, already acquired 22% in open market:

freeedgar.com