To: Douglas Nordgren who wrote (2480 ) 11/30/2000 2:47:32 AM From: Douglas Nordgren Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 4808 Brocade Sews Up a Good Quarterlightreading.com During Brocade Communications Systems Inc.’s (Nasdaq: BRCD) fourth quarter earnings call Wednesday, CEO Greg Reyes tried to see how many times he could say, “heterogeneous block-data networking” in a single day. However annoying it may sound, the Reyes mantra is an important step for Brocade as it implies the company is working with several technologies to connect their customer’s storage area networks using optical technologies. More on that later. As numbers go, Brocade delivered impressive results (see Brocade Announces Q4, Stock Split ). Its fourth quarter revenues rose to $132.1 million from $30.1 million during the year-ago quarter. Brocade earned $27.2 million in the quarter, up from $3.6 million a year ago and its net earnings per share climbed from $0.03 to $0.22 cents a share (see Brocade's Business Booms ). Wall Street analysts expected Brocade to earn $0.20 cents per share with revenues of $118.9 million. For its fiscal year 2000, Brocade generated $65.7 million in cash, invested $40.7 million in capital equipment, and made minority investments totaling $14.3 million. Brocade will begin fiscal year 2001 with $155.0 million in cash. For fiscal 2001, CFO Michael Byrd said Brocade expects to make $830 million in revenues, some two and a half times its revenues for fiscal 2000. Brocade shares dropped $7.25 to from $153.75 during trading Wednesday. After hours, the stock had slipped to $148.25, according to Island ECN. Evidently some droplets of worry about a slowing economy, reduced telecom spending, and seasonal slowdowns are continuing to form big clouds in the investment world. Brocade also announced a 2-for-1 stock split would apply to shareholders of record on Dec. 11, 2000. The stock will trade on a split-adjusted basis on December 22. One concern for the company continues to be that, though it dominates the SAN market, more than 80 percent of its revenues come from its eight largest customers. Now back to the CEO's fascination with heterogeneous block-data networking: A short while ago, Fibre Channel was the technology of choice for hooking storage area networks (SANs) to each other and to corporate computer systems. Now, since more companies want to connect remotely located SANS, Internet Protocol-based systems have been making headway. Hip to this trend, Reyes is guiding Brocade to focus on connecting SANS over distances using optical networking technologies. Now Brocade uses DWDM and ATM technologies, in the future, however, it promises to play well with IP. That’s a good thing because one of its influential resellers, Cisco Systems Inc. (Nasdaq: CSCO), is migrating that way in a hurry. Earlier this year Cisco has invested in one storage-over-IP firm, SAN Valley Systems, and it acquired NuSpeed, a start-up in that same genre (see Cisco to Acquire NuSpeed Internet ). Storage-over-IP isn’t a hostile threat to Brocade yet, but when it gets there, Brocade hopes it can interoperate so as not to be end up as the Apple Computer of the SAN market (see SAN Surprise Jolts Market ). That’s why, in between chirping buzzwords, Reyes noted that Brocade invested $18 million in interoperability labs, equipment, and testing resources during 2000. “It’s not about who’s ASICs are bigger or how many ports you can jam into a chassis,” Reyes says. “It’s about being able to scale.”