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To: Night Writer who wrote (87438)12/5/2000 2:10:22 PM
From: Piotr Koziol  Respond to of 97611
 
NW, and thread, some good stuff on PC's...

/Piotr

2HRS2GO: 3Com call sheds positive
light on PCs

By Sergio G. Non 22GO ZDII


COMMENTARY -- Too bad 3Com (Nasdaq: COMS) has
been discarded by much of Wall Street, because the
company still has plenty of insight into large segments
of the technology industry.

Latest News on COMS

2HRS2GO: 3Com call sheds
positive light on PCs...
U.S. stocks rocket as Wall Street's
uncertainty evaporates...
MIDDAY MARKETS: Nasdaq gets
Greenspan bounce...

A quick look at the number of analysts covering 3Com
shows how far the company has fallen below the
investing horizon. Twenty-five analysts responded to
First Call's survey of earnings estimates in fiscal 1999.
Thirteen analysts bothered with 3Com in 2000. Just 11
have churned out COMS estimates for 2001.

Yesterday's analyst discussion provided more evidence
of 3Com's loss of status. Conference calls of heavily
followed companies typically focus entirely on
sell-siders. You don't want to hear mutual fund
representatives asking more questions than brokerage
analysts.

It's especially bad when a journalist gets to ask a
question, which is what happened Monday afternoon
with 3Com. But this time, we should be glad New York
Times reporter Matt Richtel got in, because otherwise,
we might not have uncovered 3Com's gem of hope for
PCs.

Wall Street frets about the PC industry. Leave it to
3Com, on an otherwise depressing day for the
company, to provide a reasonably upbeat picture during
this exchange between Richtel and 3Com President
Bruce Claflin:

Richtel: "Bruce, I wanted to have you reiterate
and maybe elaborate on the point you made
about PC sales impacting the business. What
are you guys seeing in that area? How are you
characterizing the slowdown in that area, both
relative to your business and then more
generally? And what do you see as the outlook
there?"

Claflin: "Let me comment on what sales in the
PC business means to us from what a business
standpoint, and then I'll elaborate. We view the
PC industry trends as important for two reasons.

"First, we do sell products that directly integrate
into PCs, either by customers after they buy the
product, or by original equipment manufacutrers
as they sell out the door.

"And therefore if those volumes decline, so do
our attach rates and the ability to sell through
them. At a broader level, PCs are still a principal
source of attachment to network infrastructure,
and so a slowdown in PCs could also signify
some effect broadly on infrastructure sales,
(although) far less than direct than would be the
case on integrated technology. So we watch PC
sales closely."

In other words, 3Com is exposed because it sells
networking cards and broadband access products for
PCs. Claflin went on to note that 3Com hasn't been hurt
by PCs so far:

"We have read as have all of you about reported
slowdowns in the PC industry. In Q2 they have
not affected us. Our businesses for PC-related
sales remain consistent with our objectives, and
we're very pleased with what we see going
forward.

"However, we run very tight supply lines with the
PC manufacturers. We supply them through
hubs from which they pull parts to integrate into
their products. If they experience a slowdown,
the time between their experiencing it and our
experiencing it is generally short. There is no
buffer.

"So to date we have not experienced a
slowdown, it has not affected our customers that
we see. But we watch this very closely because
it could have an impact on our business, if the
slowdown is in the sales of PCs that use 3Com's
technologies. It was a wordy answer, but I hope
it answered your questions."

I can't speak for Richtel, but Claflin's response should
have satisfied most questions about the PC industry.
3Com's short lead times to its vendors means it would
be one of the first companies to notice PC market
changes, but Claflin and his team haven't felt any pinch
so far.

Earlier in the call, Claflin pointed out that a PC
slowdown could affect 3Com's results in the current
quarter. That's 3Com being properly cautious, given its
messy financial history in recent years.

More important from a broader view is that 3Com hasn't
seen any ill effects from PCs, despite reports from
Gateway (NYSE: GTW) and Micron Electronics
(Nasdaq: MUEI) about weak post-Thanksgiving sales.

Combine 3Com's observations with positive declarations
recently from Compaq Computer (NYSE: CPQ), whose
CEO told an investment conference audience that
Compaq saw "pretty robust sales" during the
Thanksgiving weekend. Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HWP)
reported similar results during a quarter update released
last week.

Sure, the PC industry has issues: maturing market,
commoditization of the core product and a potential
shift to non-PC devices. Those challenges don't change
the fact that the near-term picture for PC sales doesn't
doesn't appear nearly as poor as some folks have would
have you believe. 22GO