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Technology Stocks : LHSP: Lernout En Hauspie -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: marginmike who wrote (2097)3/28/2000 11:39:00 AM
From: Boplicity  Respond to of 2467
 
Hello Mike, I love that dead money. LOL Here's a news release that I like.

<<Lernout & Hauspie To Buy Dragon Systems for $593 Million
Get Quote, Company Info: LHSP
from Bloomberg News

IEPER, Belgium (March 28) -- Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products NV agreed to buy Dragon Systems Inc., its leading U.S. competitor, for about $593 million in stock to form the biggest maker of speech-recognition software for consumers.

The Belgian company will pay about 5.45 million of its shares, which closed yesterday on Nasdaq at 108 3/4 per share. Privately held Dragon is the largest U.S. maker of speech- recognition software while Lernout is the largest in Europe. Lernout's shares rose as much as 18 percent.

``It's a very good move -- Dragon was a pioneer in speech technology,' said Johan van Geeteruyen, who manages about 100 million euros ($96 million) in Belgian stocks at Petercam in Brussels. The takeover will prevent Lernout's competitors, which include International Business Machines Corp. and Royal Philips Electronics NV, from buying Dragon, he said.

Demand for electronic speech recognition is exploding, Lernout said, partly because of the growing use of mobile phones to access the Internet. The acquisition allows it to combine the best technologies and research efforts of both companies to produce systems that are increasingly effective and easy to use.

The current markets for voice-recognition on personal computers and for telephone software total more than $2 billion per year, Lernout said. The company gained access to the $6 billion business of transcribing medical reports earlier this month when it agreed to buy Dictaphone Corp. for about $936 million.

Newton, Massachusetts-based Dragon will add 35 patents and 170 scientists and engineers to Lernout's 1,400 research and development staff. Dragon also was ahead in developing speech recognition for Italian, Spanish and Japanese, and the acquisition will boost Lernout's sales in these markets, the company said.

Number One

``There are not enough talented, experienced people in this field; today we can safely say that we have most of them with us,' said Jozef Lernout, one of the company's founders and chairmen. ``With the acquisition, we will definitely be No. 1 in number of customers, number of dollars generated and number of scientists and engineers.'

Lernout & Hauspie will use about 8 percent of its total market value to acquire Dragon, said Carl Dammekens, the chief financial officer, in a statement. The shares rose as much as 19.5 to 129 and recently traded at 127 on Easdaq.

The worldwide use of mobile phones is expected to increase to more than 500 million devices in five years, and most of them will be ``a combination of phone and pocket computer,' Lernout said. The company's software would allow the devices to find text information on the Net and then read out summaries of that information, he said.

``Mobile phones are such tiny little things, it's difficult to enter text through their keyboard. Speech-recognition technology will be a way to do that,' said Petercam's van Geeteruyen, who plans to hold the Lernout shares he bought about a month ago.

Alliances

Lernout recently demonstrated a prototype hand-held device with a dictation system to send and receive e-mail, surf the web and conduct online commerce. It's in talks to form alliances with device manufacturers towards producing the first such devices by the end of the year, although it's too early to give details, said Pol Hauspie, the other founder and chairman. Palm??

Dragon also was working on software for mobile devices, and its engineers should help speed up and improve development of the new device, Lernout said.

Lernout also plans to offer complementary products to Dragon's customers, who include major companies such as Boeing Co., Citibank and Dell Computer Corp.

Dragon reported a loss of about $22 million in 1999, down from a profit of $10.3 million in 1998. Revenue fell to $60 million in 1999 from about $71.4 million. The U.S. company announced plans for an initial share sale in December 1998, but dropped the plan last April.

Dragon has focused on one market, software for dictation, while Lernout & Hauspie developed software for producing speech and for a variety of markets, the company said.

As a ``one-stop shopping place,' the Belgian company was able to win some contracts away from Dragon, Lernout said.

Microsoft Investment

``Dragon was head-on in competing with us and other companies,' he said. ``Our philosophy is to spread risk and be involved in everything that has to do with linguistics.'

The U.S. company designed its NaturallySpeaking dictation software to run on the Windows operating system manufactured by Microsoft Corp., which is developing speech-recognition software of its own. In October, Microsoft bought Entropic Inc., a Washington-based speech-recognition software company for an undisclosed price.

Microsoft has invested $60 million in Lernout & Hauspie, and the companies cooperate on some products and compete on others, Hauspie said.

Mar/28/2000 6:00



To: marginmike who wrote (2097)3/28/2000 12:37:00 PM
From: gc  Respond to of 2467
 
You want the big GC, I'm the little gc, didn't get to enjoy any of that crazy QCOM, Hope you did and made a fortune.