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Technology Stocks : Corvis (CORV) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: mact who wrote (133)7/25/2000 1:22:21 AM
From: Techplayer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 325
 
mact, I am certainly not underestimating him. I will load up at 30 if given the chance. I do not expect to be given that chance. tp



To: mact who wrote (133)7/25/2000 7:38:37 PM
From: ms.smartest.person  Respond to of 325
 
<You too can own this report for $4500>. Report Forecasts Metro Winners, Losers

Want to know which optical technology will dominate metro networks for the
foreseeable future?

One word: Sonet.

That’s the conclusion of a report due out next month from Pioneer Consulting.
Called “Optical Edge Networks: Market Opportunities for Integrated Optical
Network Solutions in Metro Networks,” it’s the first to divide the players in the
labyrinthine metro market into easily understood categories and then assign a
dollar value to each. By doing so, it sheds some light on which of the optical
networking solutions now being pitched for the metro market, and which of the
vendors backing them, are likely to succeed -- and which will stumble.

The report’s key conclusion: For all the hype over next-generation optical metro
technology, it's products that are based on Sonet -– a 20-year-old veteran of
carrier nets –- that will continue to dominate the metro scene for the foreseeable
future.

“Sonet is not going away, particularly for major carriers. Conceding the traditional
Sonet market to the incumbents such as Fujitsu, Lucent, and Nortel simply
concedes them the wealth,” says Scott Clavenna, principal analyst at Pioneer.

Pioneer forecasts that service providers will spend $6.09 billion this year on
“traditional” Sonet and DWDM metro solutions. Of that total, more than 98
percent of the money will be spent on Sonet gear, not DWDM, according to the
report. “The metro DWDM market is nothing right now,” says Clavenna.

In contrast, carriers will spend less than half that total -- $2.59 billion -- on
“emerging” metro technologies.

Pioneer divides the new metro technologies into three classes:

· Next-generation Sonet equipment -- from vendors such as Cisco Systems Inc.
(via its Cerent acquisition), Redback Networks Inc. (via its Siara acquisition), and
Cyras Systems Inc. –- that comprises small, low-cost Sonet ADMs with built-in
data capabilities.
· Integrated metro DWDM equipment -- from vendors such as Luxn Inc., Sorrento
Networks Inc., and ONI Systems Inc. –- that add TDM and data features to
traditional DWDM lambda services.
· Optical IP platforms -- from vendors such as Extreme Networks Inc., Force 10
Networks Inc., Lantern Communications, World Wide Packets, and Zuma
Networks –- that run IP over Ethernet over fiber.

Of the three new technologies it is, again, the Sonet-based solutions that will
dominate, Pioneer says. Sales of next-gen Sonet kit will account for $930 million
in sales this year. That’s compared to $220 million for integrated DWDM and
optical IP platforms, combined. By 2004, Pioneer forecasts, sales of
next-generation Sonet hardware will increase to $6.3 billion.

Pioneer’s report looks like good news for incumbent players like Alcatel SA,
Fujitsu, Lucent, and Nortel, who dominate the market for traditional Sonet gear.

Conversely, even though Pioneer is bullish on next-generation Sonet, the
success of the vendors playing in this area is by no means assured. Many
believe that there are still far too many startups for the size of the market and that
a shakeout is imminent.

And, while Pioneer is bearish on the DWDM market overall, Clavenna points out
that the prospects for companies working on this equipment may actually be
better than those of the new Sonet outfits, simply because there are a lot fewer of
them. “The good news for a company like ONI is that they don’t have a lot of
competition right now,” he says.

“The optical access space is over-crowded,” agrees Jeff McCarthy, general
partner at North Bridge Venture Partners. He says Northbridge is refocusing its
investments away from the metro market. “Access is behind us. Long haul
[products] and components -- they’re what’s happening.”

One of the biggest surprises in the report is the size of the market for
IP-over-Ethernet technology. Pioneer predicts that vendors will see slim pickings
from this segment for at least the next four years, partly because the technology
has limited appeal to traditional carriers. However, it covers its bet by saying that
beyond that point, things could change. “It has extraordinary long-term potential
because of its ability to perform IP switching at a low cost, at line rates,” says
Clavenna. “This could be the sleeping giant of the metro market.”

Pioneer’s report is available August 1st. It costs $4,500.

—Stephen Saunders, US Editor, Light Reading, (http://www.lightreading.com)



To: mact who wrote (133)7/25/2000 8:48:52 PM
From: jghutchison  Respond to of 325
 
Hi Mac, David Huber and Corvis will make out just fine. But the $35 BB market cap you estimate within six weeks seems a bit rich for a startup with no revenues to speak of. My estimate has centered around $20 BB, based on current market conditions, sector earnings, and M&A activity. I understand the security underwriters have just about doubled the IPO price. No surprise there at all. At least they have left some room for the inevitable gap up on D Day.

I wish Dr. Huber well. The world owes a great deal of gratitude to the man for his pioneering efforts in DWDM. And I owe a great deal to him for helping me increase my net worth substantially through my ownership of Ciena stock.

There is room for one more.

Jack Hutchison

P.S. Your post hit big on Cool Posts on SI. Congrats.