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Technology Stocks : JDS Uniphase (JDSU) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: zbyslaw owczarczyk who wrote (16599)1/16/2001 10:33:25 PM
From: N. David Lessani  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24042
 
r<<We sell our products to Network builders, not Wall Street Analysts>>

Thank you Pat Mudge. You posted at least over 100 posts on this thread for the past six months proving there was NO significant slow down in fibro-optic business. These analysts(better name for most of them should be charlatans) telling us business slowing down and dump these stocks.
Regards,



To: zbyslaw owczarczyk who wrote (16599)1/16/2001 10:36:47 PM
From: zbyslaw owczarczyk  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 24042
 
San Jose, California, Jan. 16 (Bloomberg) -- JDS Uniphase Corp., the biggest maker of
fiber-optic components, is in talks to sell a Swiss factory to Nortel Networks Corp. for about
$3 billion to gain U.S. antitrust clearance for its acquisition of rival SDL Inc., people familiar with
the negotiations said.

While the companies have outlined a sale agreement, some issues are unresolved, the people
said. Reconciling those differences and getting a transaction approved by the U.S. Justice
Department may delay the purchase until mid-February, they said.

JDS Uniphase is selling the plant in Zurich, Switzerland, to satisfy U.S. regulators, who insist
on the divestiture to preserve competition in the market for telecommunications lasers, the
people said. Nortel wants to acquire the factory to strengthen a components unit in which it
plans to sell shares, they said.

``How to deal with Zurich has always been the sticking point in the merger,'' said portfolio
manager Giri Devulapally of T. Rowe Price Associates, a holder of both JDS Uniphase and
SDL shares.

The plant makes 980-nanometer pump lasers, a type of device that amplifies signals in fiber
networks. JDS bought it from International Business Machines Corp. for $45 million in 1997.
The company then constructed a new building and purchased new manufacturing gear,
increasing sales and boosting the value.

Transaction Value

JDS in July agreed to acquire SDL in a stock transaction now valued at $16.9 billion, down
from an initial $41 billion. It postponed a shareholder vote to approve the purchase until Jan.
26 and probably will have to reschedule it again, one person said.

Nortel spokesman Andy Lark declined to comment on the negotiations. JDS officials couldn't be
reached for comment. Justice Department spokeswoman Jennifer Rose also declined to
comment.

The outlined agreement calls for Nortel to pay mostly shares to acquire the Zurich plant, the
people said. Nortel, the biggest maker of fiber-optic equipment, also is prepared to increase
spending on JDS products as part of the agreement, they said.

``Even though selling to Nortel means helping a competitor, it also strengthens a relationship
with a very important customer,'' Devulapally said.

Nortel is one of JDS Uniphase's top three customers.

While the companies negotiate, the Justice Department is requesting documents and
scrutinizing the proposed terms for antitrust concerns, the people said. Nortel already is among
the biggest makers of fiber-optic components and would increase its share of that market by
purchasing the Swiss factory.

To ensure that regulators approve the divestiture, the companies are including language in the
agreement that explains how the factory will stay competitive with Nortel as the owner, the
people said.

Market Share

Without a divestiture, San Jose, California-based JDS would double its share of the market
for 980-nanometer pump lasers to about 80 percent. That's a level that antitrust regulators find
objectionable, the people said.

JDS Uniphase wants to keep the factories in San Jose and Santa Clara, California, where
SDL makes a powerful version of the lasers that some customers prefer, the people said. It
had planned to complete the acquisition by the end of 2000, though negotiations with antitrust
regulators and bidders on the plant up for sale dragged on longer than expected, one person
said.

If the Justice Department does approve the Zurich plant sale, JDS probably will get clearance
to acquire SDL shortly afterward, the person said.

Stock Sale

Nortel plans to sell about 15 percent of its components business in an initial public offering this
year. To become the favored bidder on the Zurich factory, the Brampton, Ontario-based
company beat out competing proposals from Furukawa Electric Co. and Corning Inc., the
people said.

Furukawa, which owns about 11 percent of JDS shares, never held talks to acquire the plant,
spokesman Osamu Suzuki said.

``It would have been an ideal situation if Furukawa were paying with the JDS stock they
own,'' Devulapally said.

Corning officials couldn't be reached immediately for comment.