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Technology Stocks : Alcatel (ALA) and France -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: zbyslaw owczarczyk who wrote (3239)4/27/2001 6:08:53 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3891
 
...unlike Alcatel which is entirely focused on telecommunications.

READ IT PLEASE!!!
Lex: Siemens
Published: April 26 2001 19:40GMT | Last Updated: April 26 2001 19:46GMT



The clunky old engineering businesses that were making big losses for Siemens a few years ago sprang to the company's rescue in the second quarter. Power generation, transport and medical performed well while the great hope for the future, mobile telephony, was barely profitable. The number of mobiles sold rose to 6.9m, prompting a claim from Siemens that it was ahead of Ericsson in the handset league. But in a business where you have to be called Nokia to show a profit, making number three is something of a hollow victory.

Despite plans to cut more than 6,000 jobs, Siemens looks determined to sweat it out in the mobile market. It expects consolidation among the smaller players but views itself as a buyer rather than a seller. Its commitment to this strategy would be tested if losses continue.

Siemens may be struggling but it does have a broad spread of activities, unlike Alcatel which is entirely focused on telecommunications. Handset sales fell by more than half to 2.4m in Alcatel's first quarter, contributing most of the E159m operating loss from its e-business division. Alcatel is responding by outsourcing manufacture and cutting back in weaker markets. But it is not adopting a purely defensive strategy, as its bid for the fibre-optics division of Lucent shows.

The short-term outlook for telecoms remains uncertain. Siemens will not make a second half forecast while Alcatel has trimmed its sales and profit forecasts. For all the restructuring that is going on, a mobile revival is still a long way off.



To: zbyslaw owczarczyk who wrote (3239)4/27/2001 6:27:03 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 3891
 
Profit Falls at Alcatel
Reuters Reuters Friday, April 27, 2001

iht.com

PARIS The French telecommunications equipment maker Alcatel SA posted on Thursday a 19 percent drop in first-quarter net profit, scaled back its 2001 outlook and said it would outsource mobile phone production.
.
The company also said it had made an initial offer for the fiber-optics division of Lucent Technologies Inc., which analysts estimate could be worth $4 billion to $8 billion.
.
Alcatel's net income fell to E210 million ($188.2 million) from E258 million a year earlier. But sales rose 21 percent to E7.4 billion, beating forecasts, and first-quarter operating profit gained 4 percent E118 million.
.
The company once again revised downward its forecast for telecommunications sales. Alcatel now expects growth this year of between 5 percent and 15 percent, compared with its previous forecast of 20 percent. Alcatel shares rose E1.36 to E33.63, apparently because cuts in its full-year outlook were not deeper.
.
"The mobile-handset market is in crisis in Europe," said Jean-Pierre Halbron, the Alcatel chief financial officer. "This has cost us something like E150 million in the first quarter of 2001."
.
Alcatel plans to outsource its European mobile phone production to the Singapore-based electronics contract manufacturer Flextronics International Inc. Ericsson made a similar move this year.
.
"The Flextronics partnership is a win-win deal that means Alcatel can focus on its core business which is the conception of new products and selling and marketing them," said Olivier Houssin, head of Alcatel's mobile-phone division.
.
"The unfavorable U.S. economic context is continuing," Serge Tchuruk, Alcatel's chief executive, said. "In Europe, even while demand for broadband access and carrier networking should remain robust, we are beginning to see some localized pockets of slowing growth."
.
Mr. Tchuruk said Alcatel was open to an alliance in the mobile phone business. He said he was confident about the rollout of third-generation mobile phone technology, despite the fact that NTT Docomo Inc. is pushing back the commercial introduction of the faster wireless services.
For Related Topics See:
Technology

< < Back to Start of Article PARIS The French telecommunications equipment maker Alcatel SA posted on Thursday a 19 percent drop in first-quarter net profit, scaled back its 2001 outlook and said it would outsource mobile phone production.
.
The company also said it had made an initial offer for the fiber-optics division of Lucent Technologies Inc., which analysts estimate could be worth $4 billion to $8 billion.
.
Alcatel's net income fell to E210 million ($188.2 million) from E258 million a year earlier. But sales rose 21 percent to E7.4 billion, beating forecasts, and first-quarter operating profit gained 4 percent E118 million.
.
The company once again revised downward its forecast for telecommunications sales. Alcatel now expects growth this year of between 5 percent and 15 percent, compared with its previous forecast of 20 percent. Alcatel shares rose E1.36 to E33.63, apparently because cuts in its full-year outlook were not deeper.
.
"The mobile-handset market is in crisis in Europe," said Jean-Pierre Halbron, the Alcatel chief financial officer. "This has cost us something like E150 million in the first quarter of 2001."
.
Alcatel plans to outsource its European mobile phone production to the Singapore-based electronics contract manufacturer Flextronics International Inc. Ericsson made a similar move this year.
.
"The Flextronics partnership is a win-win deal that means Alcatel can focus on its core business which is the conception of new products and selling and marketing them," said Olivier Houssin, head of Alcatel's mobile-phone division.
.
"The unfavorable U.S. economic context is continuing," Serge Tchuruk, Alcatel's chief executive, said. "In Europe, even while demand for broadband access and carrier networking should remain robust, we are beginning to see some localized pockets of slowing growth."
.
Mr. Tchuruk said Alcatel was open to an alliance in the mobile phone business. He said he was confident about the rollout of third-generation mobile phone technology, despite the fact that NTT Docomo Inc. is pushing back the commercial introduction of the faster wireless services. PARIS The French telecommunications equipment maker Alcatel SA posted on Thursday a 19 percent drop in first-quarter net profit, scaled back its 2001 outlook and said it would outsource mobile phone production.
.
The company also said it had made an initial offer for the fiber-optics division of Lucent Technologies Inc., which analysts estimate could be worth $4 billion to $8 billion.
.
Alcatel's net income fell to E210 million ($188.2 million) from E258 million a year earlier. But sales rose 21 percent to E7.4 billion, beating forecasts, and first-quarter operating profit gained 4 percent E118 million.
.
The company once again revised downward its forecast for telecommunications sales. Alcatel now expects growth this year of between 5 percent and 15 percent, compared with its previous forecast of 20 percent. Alcatel shares rose E1.36 to E33.63, apparently because cuts in its full-year outlook were not deeper.
.
"The mobile-handset market is in crisis in Europe," said Jean-Pierre Halbron, the Alcatel chief financial officer. "This has cost us something like E150 million in the first quarter of 2001."
.
Alcatel plans to outsource its European mobile phone production to the Singapore-based electronics contract manufacturer Flextronics International Inc. Ericsson made a similar move this year.
.
"The Flextronics partnership is a win-win deal that means Alcatel can focus on its core business which is the conception of new products and selling and marketing them," said Olivier Houssin, head of Alcatel's mobile-phone division.
.
"The unfavorable U.S. economic context is continuing," Serge Tchuruk, Alcatel's chief executive, said. "In Europe, even while demand for broadband access and carrier networking should remain robust, we are beginning to see some localized pockets of slowing growth."
.
Mr. Tchuruk said Alcatel was open to an alliance in the mobile phone business. He said he was confident about the rollout of third-generation mobile phone technology, despite the fact that NTT Docomo Inc. is pushing back the commercial introduction of the faster wireless services. PARIS The French telecommunications equipment maker Alcatel SA posted on Thursday a 19 percent drop in first-quarter net profit, scaled back its 2001 outlook and said it would outsource mobile phone production.
.
The company also said it had made an initial offer for the fiber-optics division of Lucent Technologies Inc., which analysts estimate could be worth $4 billion to $8 billion.
.
Alcatel's net income fell to E210 million ($188.2 million) from E258 million a year earlier. But sales rose 21 percent to E7.4 billion, beating forecasts, and first-quarter operating profit gained 4 percent E118 million.
.
The company once again revised downward its forecast for telecommunications sales. Alcatel now expects growth this year of between 5 percent and 15 percent, compared with its previous forecast of 20 percent. Alcatel shares rose E1.36 to E33.63, apparently because cuts in its full-year outlook were not deeper.
.
"The mobile-handset market is in crisis in Europe," said Jean-Pierre Halbron, the Alcatel chief financial officer. "This has cost us something like E150 million in the first quarter of 2001."
.
Alcatel plans to outsource its European mobile phone production to the Singapore-based electronics contract manufacturer Flextronics International Inc. Ericsson made a similar move this year.
.
"The Flextronics partnership is a win-win deal that means Alcatel can focus on its core business which is the conception of new products and selling and marketing them," said Olivier Houssin, head of Alcatel's mobile-phone division.
.
"The unfavorable U.S. economic context is continuing," Serge Tchuruk, Alcatel's chief executive, said. "In Europe, even while demand for broadband access and carrier networking should remain robust, we are beginning to see some localized pockets of slowing growth."



To: zbyslaw owczarczyk who wrote (3239)4/27/2001 8:22:20 AM
From: MikeM54321  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 3891
 
ZO- I just read a report that Serge cut overall revenue growth (less cable I thought) from his previous 20% growth projection to possibly as low as 5% for 2001. Now I can't find the article. Is this accurate?? -MikeM(From Florida)