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To: JHP who wrote (100803)5/8/2001 11:59:41 PM
From: Shack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
No shit? What the hell did they want from you?



To: JHP who wrote (100803)5/9/2001 1:06:10 AM
From: Eurobum1  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
JHP...ask them to read this...

lightreading.com

In a word, Cisco Systems Inc.'s (Nasdaq: CSCO - message board) third quarter for fiscal 2001 was brutal.

"You deal with the world the way it is, not the way you wish it was,” said Cisco CEO John Chambers in a conference call with analysts and investors this afternoon. And the world is now rather... well, brutal, as Cisco’s executives somberly telegraphed during the course of the call.

Cisco net sales for the quarter were $4.73 billion, down 4 percent from last year's $4.93 billion figure. But after considering the effects of the charges against earnings, the story becomes worse.

During the quarter, Cisco recorded a $1.17 billion restructuring charge against earnings and took an excess inventory charge of $2.2 billion. Put another way, in just one quarter Cisco wrote off about half of all its 1996 revenues, due to excess (and largely unusable) inventory.

The company's pro forma earnings -- ignoring stuff like acquisition charges, payroll tax on stock option exercises, restructuring costs, and an excess inventory charge -- were $230 million or 3 cents a share. This is a 77 percent drop from its year-ago number of $1 billion or 13 cents a share.

Cisco’s actual net loss for the quarter was $2.69 billion or 37 cents a share. A year ago, Cisco’s actual net earnings were $641 million or 8 cents a share. So in one year’s time, Cisco’s actual earnings per share have plunged 78.4 percent.

Cisco CFO Larry Carter attributed the significant drop in revenues to three things: an unfavorable product mix, slowed shipping volumes and increased overhead, and an increase in deferred revenue.

Last month, the networking giant said revenues for Q3 would be about $4.69 billion, down about 30 percent sequentially from its Q2 revenues of $6.7 billion. For its fourth fiscal quarter, Cisco executives timidly suggested that revenues would be in the range of $4.22 billion to $4.69 billion, or flat to down 10 percent when compared with Q3 (see Cisco's Inventory Woes Mount ).

The slowing economy’s effect on service providers was illustrated in one rollicking anecdote Chambers relayed regarding Cisco’s sales to alternative carriers, such as CLECs. The company had previously been accustomed to book $500 million worth of orders each quarter from that one group of customers, he said. But this quarter, the number of orders from those carriers dropped by about 75 percent.

On the call, Cisco CFO Larry Carter detailed the firm’s excess inventory charge for analysts, pointing out that it was a bit less than the $2.5 billion the firm had previously expected. He attributed 80 percent of the excess inventory to raw materials, including about $300 million in semiconductor memory; $450 million in optical components such as lasers and transponders; $150 million in electo-mechanical parts; and $1.3 billion in other non-memory components, such as ASICs. The other 20 percent, or $400 million, of the excess inventory charged off was attributed to “work-in-progress,” or subsystems.

Chambers explained that when the demand for Cisco’s gear dropped so dramatically, what was normally a four- to five-week supply of parts became a year’s supply.

Meanwhile, Carter assured investors that Cisco would exclude from its pro forma results any benefit the company realizes from selling the inventory. Most of Cisco’s parts are custom made, and any income from sales of its excess inventory would be “nominal,” Carter said.

Apparently, Cisco investors had already been prepared for the worst. In regular trading today Cisco shares climbed $1.13 to $20.38. In after-hours trading on the Island ECN, Cisco’s stock had dropped slightly to 19.70.



To: JHP who wrote (100803)5/9/2001 2:06:16 AM
From: patron_anejo_por_favor  Respond to of 436258
 
HO HO HO! Did they offer you the Med-Patent IPO as well?<G>



To: JHP who wrote (100803)5/9/2001 12:08:21 PM
From: pater tenebrarum  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
geez...they must have inventory they want to get rid of...well, i guess with those 7.3 billion shares outstanding almost everyone in the biz is sitting on a lot of inventory. that's normal with former 'must own' stocks.