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To: Andrew N. Cothran who wrote (1)5/25/2001 3:43:08 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 72
 
You are not alone.



To: Andrew N. Cothran who wrote (1)5/25/2001 4:17:05 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 72
 
"If Agere Systems Inc. stops supplying us with components, we may experience
manufacturing delays, which could harm our customer relationships.

We currently contract with Agere Systems to supply us with optical
transceivers, a critical component of our optical switches. Lucent
Technologies, Inc., a major stockholder of Agere, is also one of our major
competitors since it develops and markets products similar to ours. If Agere
determines not to supply us with optical transceivers because of its
relationship with Lucent, we will have to rely on other sources and may
experience delays in manufacturing our products, which could damage our
customer relationships.



To: Andrew N. Cothran who wrote (1)5/25/2001 4:20:53 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 72
 
S H A R E H O L D E R I N F O R M A T I O N Page 4 /10 AGERE SYSTEMS INC-A

INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERING
Date of offering 3/01
Shares offered 600.00M
Share Price $ 6.00
Lead Manager MORGAN STANLEY DEAN WITTER
Type Common Stock
Lock-up Expiration Date 9/23/2001

INSIDER TRADING INSTITUTIONAL OWNERSHIP
Net $ Value Buys and Sells As Of 05/15/01 # of Buyers 87
(1985 - Present In Dollars) # of Sellers 0
Lowest activity 04/01 -519.30MLN # of Holders 92
Highest activity 03/01 605.00 Shares Held 200.99ML
Mean: -259.65MLN % Shares Out. 27.65
Most recent 45 days -519.30MLN No Change .00
______________________________________________________________________________________________

S H A R E H O L D E R I N F O R M A T I O N Page 4 /10 TELLIUM INC

INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERING
Date of offering 5/01
Shares offered 9.00M
Share Price $ 15.00
Lead Manager MORGAN STANLEY
Type Common Stock
Lock-up Expiration Date 11/12/2001

INSIDER TRADING INSTITUTIONAL OWNERSHIP
Net $ Value Buys and Sells n.a. # of Buyers 4
(1985 - Present In Dollars) # of Sellers 0
Lowest activity n.a. # of Holders 7
Highest activity n.a. Shares Held 610,371.00
Mean: n.a. % Shares Out. .56
Most recent 45 days n.a. No Change .00



To: Andrew N. Cothran who wrote (1)5/25/2001 4:25:15 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 72
 
"Oh, No! Not Lucent! Spinning Off Agere, It Exposes Itself

by Christopher Byron

Pardon me, but do I detect the faintest whiff of panic in the
air? No, we’re not talking about the stock market. We’re
talking about the antics across the river at Lucent
Technologies Inc. of Murray Hill, N.J.

As far as the stock market goes, well, frankly it’s good news
in all directions. Not only are prices returning to more
justifiable valuations, but I can assure you—based on our
infallible honker for fashion trends—that from here on out, no
one sporting blue hair and a ring through his tongue will be
invited to make a deal-pitch on Wall Street ever again.

Take it from me: The dot-com dress code is dead, and if stock
prices will only sink a wee bit more, I think we’ll be able to
kiss goodbye to casual Fridays as well. This could be the most
salutary development in the entire market downturn: It was
hell while it lasted, but it’s finally getting good to be a
grown-up again. So, break out the Brionis, boys. In the
endless hunt for money on Wall Street, it’s once again O.K. to
dress for success.

As for what’s been going on across the Hudson, that’s another
story. In case you missed it, we’ve lately been witness to the
curious spectacle of Lucent’s vice chairman and one of his own corporate
spokeswomen issuing dueling—and seemingly contradictory—statements to the
press concerning the fate of an initial public offering of Lucent’s prized business
asset, a chip-maker bearing the pointless and white-bread name of Agere Systems
Inc.

Meanwhile, the offering itself continues to undergo so many mark-down repricings
and redraftings that it is beginning to look like a discount schmatte from the
irregulars rack at T.J. Maxx—the predictable result of an effort by Lucent and its
investment bankers, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Company, to stick a false
nose and mustache on $2.6 billion of Lucent debt and sneak it into the Agere
I.P.O. disguised as equity.




Room-Emptying Dud

When the ill-tempered cranks here at Curmudgeonly Arms first called attention to
the hustle six weeks ago, the fancy-pants crew at Morgan Stanley got so bent out
of shape you’d have thought we’d suggested that they were no better than the
bunch at Whale Securities—especially when we labeled the overpriced offering a
“fiasco in the making” and declared that if we turned out to be wrong, we would
kiss Phil Purcell’s fanny in a Macy’s window.

Six weeks later, the offering has proved to be such a room-emptying dud with
road-show investors that the price, as measured by the market value, has been cut
by 40 percent, and the attempted bamboozle by which Lucent’s debt was to be
converted into Agere equity has been removed from the deal (replaced by a much
smaller swap that would take place only if, by some miracle, the offering is
oversubscribed).

And in spite of all that, the fate of the deal still seems in doubt. This is terrible
news for Lucent, which desperately needs to extract some ready money from
somewhere. The company’s revenue is slumping, its expenses are rising, and it has
slipped into the red on both an operating and net-income basis.

What’s worse, Lucent’s tangible net worth has slipped to less than $5 a share, and
the company has lately been burning through its remaining $3.8 billion of cash and
equivalents at a rate of close to $5 billion a year.

During the three months ended Dec. 31, revenue dropped by 28 percent, to $5.8
billion, and net income from continuing operations plunged almost $1.6 billion into
the red, even as $1.1 billion of cash from operations flew out the window.

The company recently announced a seven-point restructuring plan that will
supposedly fix all that—and they’d better hope it succeeds, because if the situation
doesn’t turn around fast, the cash drawer will be nearly empty by Labor Day.

This is all certainly distressing for a company with Lucent’s resources, expertise
and market clout, and it goes to show the damage that can be done when you miss
even a single product cycle on the Mach-10 track of high technology. Before you
know it, the entire company is crashing into the guard rails.

As you’ll doubtless recall, Lucent began life as a hodgepodge of assets spun off
from AT&T Corporation back in April of 1996. There was a manufacturing
operation (Western Electric), a research arm (Bell Labs), a chip-making business
(the Agere bunch), a networking business and other stuff besides. Since then, the
company has shed one operation after the next in an effort to pare down the
business to its core activity of designing and hooking up network systems for
telephone companies.

This made Lucent increasingly—and by now, almost totally—dependent on a
business that was viewed two years ago as being at the cutting edge of the
information revolution: networking the world for the presumed explosive growth of
the Internet.

Unfortunately, it is that very business that has collapsed, dragging down such
companies as Cisco Systems Inc., JDS Uniphase Corporation, Nortel Networks
Corporation and many others.

Lucent has been beaten up the most, with its stock price falling from a
split-adjusted high of close to $80 a share in December 1999 to its current price of
about $11, cutting the company’s market value from $255 billion to $37 billion.

Meanwhile, Lucent’s problems have been worsened by misreading demand for its
own networking products, with the result that the company was more than a year
late in developing a kind of super-fast optical-networking product known as an
OC-192—which gadget, I am told, was the must-have thingamajig for Lucent’s
customers looking to build out their networks.

Through it all, Wall Street kept raising the performance bar for all networking
companies, with the result that Lucent, like many others, was soon ginning up new
business by financing the sale of its products to upstart companies with doubtful
business prospects.

This ill-advised tactic—which amounted to little more than conjuring up the
appearance of growth by taking money out of one pocket and putting it in the
other—has now placed Lucent on the hook, as of Dec. 31, for $740 million worth
of “guarantees” on customer borrowings, with potential exposure of $1.8 billion.

On top of those guarantees came another $1.8 billion of actual, out-and-out loans
by Lucent to the customers themselves—with potential exposure in the latter
category running to a startling $7.3 billion.

All in all, you’re talking about more than $2.5 billion of revenue that was
concocted out of loans and loan guarantees alone, with the potential total running
to more than $9 billion.

A lot of these loans and guarantees have been to outfits like Winstar
Communications Inc. of New York, which still has $300 million to $350 million of
credit available to it on a $1 billion–plus credit-line facility from Lucent.

Winstar operates a wireless network based on line-of-sight rooftop antennas on
office and apartment buildings in cities all over the country. Financially speaking,
Winstar looks like the networking world’s answer to Amazon.com, with rising
revenue, accompanied by deepening losses, being posted in almost every quarter
without let-up for years now.

Winstar’s debt has lately been downgraded to junk-bond status, and its stock has
plunged 75 percent in just March alone. The shares now sell for less than $3,
whereas a year ago they were changing hands at $66. Lucent won’t comment on
the matter, but at least one Wall Street investment firm recently published a report
to clients indicating that perhaps as much as $700 million of this junk debt now sits
on Lucent’s balance sheet as a result of the credit deal with Winstar.

How much doubtful debt there is altogether, from all such deals, is hard to say. But
if you wipe out the $2.5 billion of exposure the company already has as a result of
its loans and loan guarantees, tangible net worth on the balance sheet would drop
to no more than $4 a share as of Dec. 31.



Burning the Furniture

And if you assume that another $1 billion of cash was burned up in the
January-March quarter, tangible book value might by now be approaching $3.75 a
share. These numbers explain why Lucent has been so frantic to fob off its
chip-making operation, Agere Systems.

Agere is a money-maker, to be sure. In fact, it’s the biggest single money-maker
Lucent’s got, providing 11 percent of Lucent’s year 2000 revenue and literally all
its operating-cash flow. But it’s cold outside in Murray Hill these days, and Lucent
needs to keep warm through the winter. So, having already thrown the living-room
sofa—i.e., the company’s power-systems business—into the fireplace in a $2.5
billion cash sale to Tyco International Ltd., Lucent is now throwing the family’s
prized Hepplewhite dining-room table—Agere—into the blaze as well.

The original idea behind the Agere I.P.O., as spelled out in this space several
weeks ago, was to shed $2.5 billion of debt from Lucent onto Agere’s balance
sheet directly, while moving another $2.6 billion off Lucent’s books via a
super-confusing “exchange offer.” Under its terms, the Lucent debt would be
converted into Agere equity in such a way that all of the benefit would flow to
Lucent and none would go to Agere.

In preparation for this finagle, Morgan Stanley—the underwriters in the
deal—began loading up on Lucent commercial paper, until a total of more than
$1.6 billion of it was sitting on Morgan’s balance sheet. As part of the I.P.O.,
Morgan was supposed to exchange this debt for an equivalent amount of Agere
stock from Lucent, then sell the shares in the I.P.O., thereby making itself whole
(plus fees, natch!) while the debt itself simply disappeared.

But so many investors apparently balked at the ploy that the exchange transaction
has been axed from the deal. This now leaves Morgan sitting with some $1.6
billion of Lucent commercial paper. Since commercial paper is, by definition, very
short-term debt, it will be no time at all before the whole $1.6 billion of it will wind
up back in Lucent’s lap when the company has to pay it off. And you can be sure
Morgan won’t be in the market to buy any roll-over paper to replace it. After all,
Morgan never wanted the stuff in the first place, and only acquired it as part of the
exchange offer that has now collapsed.

Since Lucent won’t be able to shed the debt by converting it into Agere equity, it
may have to pay off the paper by drawing down at least $1.6 billion of a $4 billion
credit line that it badgered out of some clearly reluctant banks just last month. This
means that if the I.P.O. actually takes place, only $2.5 billion of Lucent debt will
be moved off its balance sheet, instead of the more than $5 billion that it had
originally anticipated.

But $7.1 billion of assets will also be moved from Lucent to Agere, and will thus
disappear from Lucent’s balance sheet as well—meaning, by my calculations, that
Lucent’s tangible net worth will drop to a mere $2.35 or so a share. Is it any
wonder that the Standard & Poor’s credit-rating company now says Lucent runs
the risk of seeing its more than $8 billion of debt, both long- and short-term, be
downgraded to junk status if the company monkeys around with the I.P.O. any
more or delays it any further than the end of the month?

Even so, it would seem that among those who didn’t get the word was Lucent’s
own vice chairman, Bernardus (“Ben,” they call him at Lucent) Verwaayen, who
told reporters in Europe on March 21 that the company might actually scrap the
whole idea of the I.P.O., and that no decision would be made one way or another
until the coming week.

The next day, a Lucent spokeswoman in Murray Hill popped up to declare that the
company in fact plans to go ahead with the offering “irrespective of market
conditions,” on the assertion that Agere’s “business potential” will be “best served”
as a separate company. Maybe you can figure out how those positions can be
synthesized, because I can’t, and I’ve listened to Lucent brass on the matter plenty
already.

The oddest explanation of all: that because he was in Europe, the vice chairman
was somehow out of the loop and not privy to the fast-changing situation—to
which I say, if things are changing so fast that the No. 2 guy at the company
doesn’t know what’s going on, maybe the situation is a little too unsettled.

Be that as it may, we can certainly say that not a lot is going on over in Murray
Hill, N.J., at the moment to inspire confidence among investors that either Lucent
Technologies or its Agere Systems I.P.O. is a good place to park one’s money.
Over the long term, both could turn out to be great investments. It’s just that,
short-term … well, let’s simply end it by saying that our offer regarding Macy’s
window remains on the table.

observer.com



To: Andrew N. Cothran who wrote (1)5/25/2001 4:44:14 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Respond to of 72
 
A Terrifying Tale: Lucent Technologies Spawns Its Monster

by Christopher Byron
Bloomberg News

In the dark of night, when fog and foreboding envelop the
moors, one can hear the faint creaking of a coffin lid. It is the
ghost of bull markets past, emerging anew to stalk the land.
From Wall Street’s tales of the crypt comes this week’s
bloodcurdling yarn … the beast from the undead that neither
garlic nor daylight could banish for long: The I.P.O. lives!

This week we look at Agere Systems Inc., the telecom-chip
outfit that is being ripped from the loins of Lucent
Technologies Inc. by Morgan Stanley & Company for as
much as $7.4 billion in gross proceeds.

There’s been a fair amount of excitement about this deal
lately—mostly flowing from the usual sell-side cheerleaders
for such things. In the main, the rah-rah boils down to
assertions that the sheer size of the offering is what really
matters … meaning that if the market can somehow choke
down $7 billion of I.P.O. equity hitting the Street all at once,
investors will have cause to rejoice.

We view things differently. We see this deal as being not
terribly different from the sort of bad-bet secondary offerings that Wall Street
investment banks have been bringing to market since the memory of man.

In this case, the deal boils down to a plan created by Morgan Stanley to help
Lucent’s existing shareholders escape further misery from a stock that has fallen by
nearly 81 percent in price in the last 14 months.

This isn’t an I.P.O. designed to create value for Agere’s investors at all. No, this is
an attempt to pull the bulk of Lucent’s long-term debt load—which is rapidly
collapsing toward junk status—back out of the market and stick it, in the form of
diluted equity, on the shoulders of a whole new set of chumps: the future
shareholders of Agere Systems.

We’ll explain how this three-card monte game is intended to work in a minute. But
first, some thoughts on how Lucent Technologies got into this sorry state in the
first place, and what now lies ahead for everyone in this deal.

Lucent Technologies, from which Agere Systems is emerging via the Wall Street
version of a C-section, is itself the result of some earlier obstetrical work by
Morgan Stanley, which yanked it from the womb of AT&T as an I.P.O. back in
the spring of 1996.

Since Lucent was, in effect, the crown jewel of the company, supplying AT&T
with the majority of its manufacturing and research capability, it is not surprising
that Lucent thereafter soared 981 percent in the runaway bull market in tech stocks
that ended last spring, whereas AT&T did not even double.

But a huge share of Lucent’s business came from selling switches and other
telecom gear to small, undercapitalized start-up companies in the so-called
service-provider arena—and actually lending them the money to buy the
equipment. It is an arrangement that has now placed the company on the hook, as
of Sept. 30, for $1.4 billion worth of guarantees on customer borrowings, and $1.3
billion of loans by the company to the customers themselves.

It is almost impossible to ferret out from the company’s financial reports just how
much trouble this has gotten Lucent into. But in a conference call with Wall Street
analysts on Jan. 26, the company’s chief financial officer, Deborah Hopkins, gave
a pretty clear hint.

Ms. Hopkins said that sales to large customers were actually up 7 percent in the
fourth quarter, whereas overall revenue to the company collapsed by 40 percent
during the same period. The obvious conclusion: The backbone of Lucent’s
business is small companies that are no longer able to buy equipment in the current
economic downturn.

And that’s not Lucent’s only problem these days. On Feb. 9, the company
announced that the Securities and Exchange Commission was investigating the
circumstances surrounding the company’s decision to book—and then later to
exclude—some $679 million in year 2000 sales revenue in its financial reports for
the year. S.E.C. inquiries into such matters often lead to the development of fraud
cases by the commission’s Enforcement Division, but no allegations of wrongdoing
have so far been made in the present matter.

Be that as it may, Lucent is now in the process of firing 10,000 of its workers, with
another 6,000 scheduled for the old heave-ho down the road. The company is also
planning to close a bunch of manufacturing facilities and to write off $1.2 billion in
assets. Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley has stepped up to the plate with an I.P.O.
solution to dress up the financials even more … by spinning off Lucent’s prized
microelectronics division—Agere Systems—which provided 11 percent of Lucent’s
year 2000 revenues and all of its operating cash flow.

If this deal were being put together as a straight-ahead offering, it might be worth
buying. As presented in the registration statement, Agere Systems shows revenues
of $4.7 billion and a 45 percent gross profit margin of $2.1 billion. The business
shows a net loss for the year ended Sept. 30, but that’s only because of $446
million in acquisition write-offs. Take them out of the picture and the company
would have reported $370 million of net income, or a respectable 8 percent net
profit margin.

What’s more, an amended registration statement filed on Feb. 7 with the S.E.C.
suggests an offering price in the range of $15 to $20 per share, implying gross
proceeds of as much as $7.4 billion, which would make Agere Systems, coming
out of the gate, one of the most capitalized companies in America.

But that’s not what’s happening. What is happening instead is that roughly 40
percent of the proceeds will never reach Agere at all, but will be spent instead by
Morgan Stanley to pay down debt on the Lucent balance sheet—and in a way that
seems designed to make it as hard as possible for Agere investors to see what is
really happening.

If this offering were set up so as to enable investors to see what was actually going
on, no one would invest in the I.P.O. at all. The pro forma balance sheet would
show cash from the I.P.O. of $3.75 billion (assuming an offering price of $17.50
per share) and various other assets of $7.2 billion, for a total of just under $11
billion. But against that would be set not only $3.9 billion in liabilities for things like
pension obligations, accounts payable and whatnot; in addition, the balance-sheet
liabilities column would show $2.5 billion or so of long-term debt that had been
moved over from Lucent’s own balance sheet.

This would net out to balance-sheet book value of no more than about $4.6 billion,
instead of the $7.1 billion that shows on the pro forma balance sheet being
presented by Morgan Stanley in the I.P.O. registration statement. What’s more, the
company would begin life as a leveraged operation, with long-term debt
approaching the total book value in the balance sheet. Nor would that book value
be worth very much either when you consider that most of it would be represented
by goodwill and intangibles.

And there’s more. Not only would some $750 million of that debt be coming due
on July 15, but the company would be burdened thereafter with roughly $350
million in annual interest payments for many, many years into the future. These
payments would put the company into the red on an income basis for years, as
well as cut its cash flow in half. Who would want to invest in something like that?

So here’s how the boys at Morgan Stanley have gotten around the problem.
Instead of having Agere issue just 222.6 million shares and keep the proceeds while
picking up Lucent’s debt directly, Morgan will itself acquire—in effect for
free—147.65 million additional shares of Agere stock, then sell them in the I.P.O.
and use the proceeds to buy up Lucent’s outstanding debt in the public market.

For Lucent, the net effect is the same: It sheds its debt—which was the real point
of the I.P.O. from the start. For Morgan Stanley, there’s the bonanza of additional
fees for all the folderol involved. And for anyone dumb enough to invest in Agere
itself? Well, it is they who will pay the price, as 40 percent of the per-share book
value in their investment will be wiped out by the manner in which the I.P.O. will
convert Lucent’s debt into Agere’s equity without providing any benefit
whatsoever to Agere itself.

Aren’t games like that great? Don’t you just love it when white-shoe deal machines
like Morgan Stanley collect nine-digit fees for dreaming them up? Morgan Stanley:
the firm that brought you Women.com, Ask Jeeves, WebMD and a dozen more
I.P.O. calamities just like them. To its ghoulish parade of I.P.O. horribles we now
may add yet another fiasco in the making: Agere Systems … and if I’m wrong
about that one, well, as we say in New York, I’ll kiss your ass in Macy’s window.

observer.com



To: Andrew N. Cothran who wrote (1)5/29/2001 12:30:20 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 72
 
telecomvisions.com How Iaxis got it''s start-Kevin Maxwell investment.