Outlook 2001: Bandwidth Demand Could Spare Networkers Woe (12/28/00, 8:05 a.m. ET) By By Meg Walker, TechWeb News
As the New Year approaches, doubts have surfaced about the fortunes of networking vendors who have built the foundation for the information superhighway.
While networking powers like Cisco Systems Inc. (stock: CSCO) will not likely feel the effects of a slowing economy as acutely as dot-com e-commerce companies, analysts worry that reduced spending on corporate IT and capital spending from the telecommunications providers will take its toll on the smaller fry.
Shares of Cisco -- a long-time Wall Street darling -- tumbled recently after Michael Ching, a Merrill Lynch analyst, downgraded the stock on Dec. 20 from "buy" to "accumulate."
Ching said he lowered the stock's rating because a Merrill Lynch survey suggested there could be downward pressure on the prices of data networking equipment.
Reduced IT spending could also affect the enterprise, small, and medium, business market, which make up about 65 percent of Cisco's revenues, he said.
But other analysts and company representatives say that though there may be some turbulence among the service providers who number among the top buyers of networking gear, Cisco and the like will end up thriving in 2001 because of insatiable demand for high-speed Internet.
"We'll see a continuation of interest in broadband and the access network," said Bruce Wootton, vice president of communications services and technologies for The Hurwitz Group, a consultancy in Framingham, Mass.
"Because of the demand, the business issues here will ultimately be resolved," Wootton continued. "Broadband access has only penetrated 10 percent of the market, and ultimately a significant number of people want that high speed access -- and that means upgrades."
Cisco CEO John Chambers is very optimistic about that company's prospects. He told analysts in early December that despite a declining stock price, Cisco would maintain aggressive annual growth of between 50 and 60 percent.
Cisco, San Jose, Calif., could keep on course by introducing more products aimed at stimulating Internet use, and by continuing to invest in or buy smaller companies, he said.
Other Cisco execs echo the theme.
"Our projection for the New Year is that the enterprise business will continue to show strength, and the networks will continue to have value," said Peter Alexander, Cisco's vice president of enterprise marketing.
Companies can't afford not to upgrade networks in an economic downturn because the better their e-business services are, the better their productivity and customer support will be, Alexander said.
He sees demand for services in IP telephony products; content networking; virtual private networks; and wireless LANs.
Analysts said the optical networking market will continue to heat up in 2001 and forecast a battle among Cisco, Nortel Networks Corp. (stock: NT), as well as Ciena Corp. (stock: CIEN) and Yipes Inc. in San Francisco.
"It'll be optical networking next year, in particular the use of optical switches in the core of the network, which will push routers out close to the edge," said David Passmore, research director for the Burton Group, a Salt Lake City researcher.
"There's a huge amount of data to transport and carry, and optics is the only way you can do it," said Stephane Teral, director of European optical transports for RHK, telecommunication analysts in San Francisco.
Cisco has just begun to enter the optical market with its purchases of transport companies Cerent Corp., Petaluma, Calif., and Monterey Networks, Richardson, Tex.
Teral said that though Nortel, Bramption, Ontario, has been the king of optical networking, the company must take action in 2001 to keep that spot, either by acquiring small companies or advancing its own home-grown technology aggressively.
"When you're No. 1 it's good, but it's also bad because you have to figure out how to stay there," he said.
Jeff Matthews, a general partner in RAM Partners, a hedge fund in Greenwich, Conn., said that even the big networking vendors will have to scale back spending because of the slower economy.
He cites Foundry Networks Inc. (stock: FDRY) as a cautionary tale. Shares of the San Jose, Calif., maker of switches and routers fell 50 percent after it warned its revenue growth has been hurt by spending slowdowns at Internet service providers.
Merrill Lynch's Ching wrote in a report that Foundry's announcement was the first sign that cutbacks in capital spending could hurt suppliers of next-generation switching solutions.
These vendors, often termed as infrastructure players, have so far been largely insulated from the fallout of devastated dot-com companies and other once high-flying sectors.
"Cisco is the best house in a bad neighborhood, and I have no doubt they will outgrow the market," Matthews said. "But when a high flier like Foundry announces problems, I can assure you that Cisco's customers are feeling the same heat."
Matthews has other cases to prove his less-than-rosy forecast.
Second-quarter revenue for 3Com Corp. (stock: COMS), the networking hardware maker in Santa Clara, Calif., slipped 5 percent because of troubles in the telecommunications industry.
Sales of networking equipment to telecommunications companies alone fell 43 percent in the quarter ending Dec. 1. The company hopes to shore up declining business by creating a new division -- CommWorks Corp.-- that will cater solely to network service providers.
"We've been very careful where we extend credit," said Bruce Calflin, 3Com's incoming CEO. "We've concentrated on the larger players and we don't think they are credit risks, but where it does affect us is in orders that slow down. You don't ship as much product, you don't get as much revenue."
Still, Claflin is confident about the future.
"Customers for years have enjoyed the benefits of networking, but you had to go there, and people now want to be connected to the networks wherever they are," he said. "We think there's an explosion in wireless demand that we can capitalize on in the next year." |