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Technology Stocks : Cisco Systems, Inc. (CSCO) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (48399)2/7/2001 2:20:13 PM
From: Kenneth E. Phillipps  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 77400
 
From the Street.com - SBC bad news is bad news for Cisco. December article still relevant.

SBC Warning Gnaws at Cisco's Plans
By Scott Moritz
Senior Writer
12/19/00 6:38 PM ET

Cisco's (CSCO:Nasdaq - news) entry into telecom equipment sales may have once
seemed like a cinch. But lately the gear maker has been feeling the pinch.

The latest setback for the computer-networking
giant came Tuesday, when SBC (SBC:NYSE -
news) cut its profit and sales forecasts for next
year. Foremost among problems at the nation's No.
2 local phone company was a slower-than-expected
expansion of digital subscriber line, or DSL,
high-speed Internet service.

Wall Street sold Cisco on the news and asked
questions later, pushing the stock down $1.19 to
$41.75 in a late-afternoon tech rout. Cisco has a $1
billion contract with SBC to provide data networking
equipment, specifically for SBC's high-speed
Internet access rollout. SBC plunged $6.75, or
13%, to $46.56.

The Ironing Board

SBC said DSL installations in the Midwest, the territory acquired in the Ameritech
merger, aren't progressing as rapidly as expected. Specifically, regulatory
wrangling over how SBC should share its phone gear with competitors and a
shortage of installation crews have hampered the effort. Because of that, SBC says
it will take a "measured" approach to DSL installation until these issues are ironed
out.

On a conference call with analysts, SBC said the slowdown in DSL expansion
wouldn't change its agreement with Cisco. A Cisco spokesman declined to
comment during a phone interview, but emailed the following response: "We do not
comment on deployment schedules for individual customers, but we are working
closely with SBC and continue to meet necessary milestones for building out the
next generation DSL network."

Two analysts said they felt a touch of deja vu and pointed out that AT&T (T:NYSE -
news) had made similar comments about how its troubled efforts in broadband
wouldn't hurt its suppliers. But within months, suppliers like Antec (ANTC:Nasdaq -
news) and Harmonic (HLIT:Nasdaq - news) were sent reeling by contract
cutbacks.

Leveling Off

SBC also said it wouldn't increase capital spending next year. The company
expects it will spend approximately the same amount next year on network
equipment and other expansion as it has this year. SBC puts that figure at $12
billion. Early in 2000, investors and analysts were betting industrywide spending
would continue to rise in 2001, boosting the prospects of gear pushers like Cisco.

But lately the pressures of a spending slowdown, combined with Cisco's exposure
to cash-strapped phone and Internet service providers, have trimmed nearly a
quarter from Cisco's market capitalization in barely a week.

Slowdown fears were heightened last week, when Cisco disclosed a $275 million
provision for potential losses from such things as deadbeat customers. Cisco
clarified the provision Tuesday with a regulatory filing. The company said it
increased doubtful account provisions to $14 million from $5 million a year ago.
Cisco also doubled its provisions for inventory reserves, to $143 million from $70
million. Typically, provisions for inventory mean the company isn't selling as much
product as it expected to. The remaining $118 million of the provision was used to
cover potential losses on investments.

Expect investors to keep a close eye on the changes in these provisions in coming
quarters as spending continues to drop and inventory piles up.



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (48399)2/7/2001 2:34:30 PM
From: Uncle Frank  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 77400
 
>> Frank, hope you kept some powder dry...

You bet I did, mm, and I'm using it to buy ntap.

uf