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To: SecularBull who wrote (39976)6/20/2001 12:15:03 PM
From: Luce Wildebeest  Respond to of 50167
 
Railroad Shakeout A Precedent For Telecom Companies?

By Paul Shread (mailto:pshread@internet.com)

June 20, 2001 - The crisis in the telecom sector is drawing comparisons to
everything from the savings and loan crisis of the 1980s to the post-Civil
War railroad boom.

More than $90 billion in fiber has been laid in the last four years, and
Merrill Lynch estimates that only 2.6% of it is actually in use. With
broadband prices plummeting and cash and credit drying up, the shakeout
that has begun to hit carriers and service providers has already spread to
telecom equipment companies, and could soon spread to the financial
companies that funded the fiber boom. With telecom companies sitting on
$650 billion in debt, and $14 billion in telecom bonds already defaulted
on so far this year, some are worried that the telecom cleanup will rival
the savings and loan crisis of the 1980s.

The fiber glut has begun to draw comparisons to the great railroad
buildout after the Civil War, most recently in the New York Times and Wall
Street Journal on Monday. That era led to two spectacular cycles of boom
and bust, capped by economic depressions in 1873 and 1893.

The comparison is probably a fair one, at least in terms of the shakeout
that investors can expect among telecom companies. With more than 400
CLECs, long-distance carriers and service providers, the telecom shakeout
could be dramatic and long-lasting. It will most definitely dwarf what the
dot-coms have experienced over the last 15 months. The big question mark
is how much it will affect the rest of the economy.

More than 30,000 miles of railroad tracks were laid in the years after the
Civil War, fueled by booming profits and cheap financing. But in 1873, the
collapse of the Northern Pacific Railroad and financier Jay Cooke led to a
market panic (which, interestingly, occurred during a Puetz crash window),
and coupled with other liquidity and financial crises, marked the start of
a depression that would last until 1878. During that time, 89 railroads
went bankrupt, and the railroad build out rate fell by 80%.

But railroad investment picked up again in the late 1870s, and 74,000
miles of track were laid in the 1880s. Railroad profits boomed again, and
their stocks soared. But another crisis in 1893, brought on by the
collapse of England's Baring Brothers house, a crisis in the gold
standard, an agricultural depression - and overinvesment in railroads -
led to another depression that would last until 1897. During that time,
192 railroad companies went into receivership. The collapse of the
railroads brought down with it the steel industry, the stock market and
the banking system.

But the interesting end to the tale is that in 1897, when Charles Dow
first compiled the averages that still bear his name, he created two
averages. One, called the Industrial Average, was made up of 12 stocks
representing all industries but one. That one industry - railroads -
received its own average, made up of 20 leading stocks of the day. After
32 years and two depressions, railroads remained the leading enterprise of
the time.

A hopeful ending, but the process of sorting out 20 leading telecom
companies will likely be a long and painful one.