JDS, Corning Bet on Truck Parts, Paint as Phone Business Fades (Published in Bloomberg Markets magazine.)
Corning, New York, Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Ken Bradley, chief procurement officer at Nortel Networks Corp., used to spend days at a time pestering Bill Morris at Corning Inc. for more fiber- optic components. It was 2000, the height of the telecommunications boom. Bradley wanted amplifiers and filters to build equipment for phone companies like WorldCom Inc., which were racing to keep pace with Internet traffic. ``Our customers were beating us up because they wanted to be first to deploy their networks,'' says Bradley, 55, who retired in April. ``In the same way, we were beating up Corning.'' Today, telecom companies and equipment makers are fighting for survival rather than for parts: Brampton, Ontario-based Nortel, once the largest builder of fiber-optic gear, lost $31 billion from 2001 through the third quarter of 2002. In July, WorldCom, the No. 2 long-distance company, filed for the biggest bankruptcy in U.S. history. Phone and cable company spending dropped 29 percent from its 2000 peak to $215 billion in 2002. Spending won't reach $215 billion again until 2006, according to South San Francisco, California-based researcher RHK Inc. Shares of Nortel, Corning and No. 1 fiber-optic parts maker JDS Uniphase Corp. have tumbled 97 percent or more from their highs. All told, the market value of the industry's top 10 suppliers has plunged by almost $1 trillion. The industry's worst slump is forcing Corning, JDS and Lucent Technologies Inc. spinoff Agere Systems Inc. to dust off products they'd relegated to the backseat during the telecommunications heyday.
New Job
For Corning's Morris, the end of the boom means a new job. Instead of doling out optical parts as a Corning supply manager, he's pitching Caterpillar Inc., Cummins Inc. and Ford Motor Co. on the company's ceramic compounds that reduce pollutants emitted by the diesel engines in heavy-duty trucks. Some investors say initiatives like Corning's make sense. ``Anything these companies can do to generate sales and cash flow would be a positive,'' says Daniel Morgan, who helps manage $100 million at Noble Financial Group Inc., which owns Nortel and Corning convertible bonds. Others question whether secondary businesses can make a difference. ``I'm not sure it's all that relevant,'' says Walter Casey, an analyst at Banc One Investment Advisors, which oversees $155 billion and owns JDS and Corning shares. Corning shares closed at $3.11 yesterday, down 97 percent from a September 2000 high. Across the U.S. from Corning, New York, JDS's Joseph Zils is on the lookout for new customers. JDS is depending on Zils's Santa Rosa, California, Thin Film Products division after losing $56.1 billion in fiscal 2001 -- the most lost by any U.S. company in a single year.
Front Burner
Zils's unit makes a hodgepodge of nontelecom products: coatings for lenses in projection TVs, lasers for industrial printing presses and pigments that deter the counterfeiting of $20 bills. The division will contribute almost half of JDS's $150 million to $160 million fiscal second-quarter revenue, says Chief Financial Officer Anthony Muller -- more than double the percentage a year earlier. ``If we hadn't seen the decline in telecom, we may never have heard about much of this activity,'' says Peter Conrad, an analyst at Kopp Investment Advisors, which manages almost $2 billion and owns JDS shares. ``You'll see some instance
Few Options
Smaller companies like New Focus Inc. have few options except change. In 1997, the San Jose, California, company developed its first telecommunications product: a laser used in machines that test networking equipment. It made two acquisitions, sold shares to the public, built a 243,000-square-foot factory in Shenzhen, China, and waited for orders to roll in from Alcatel SA and Corvis Corp., says CFO William Potts. The orders never came. In March, New Focus closed the plant. Two months later, it sold its telecommunications assets to Intel Corp. and Finisar Corp. for about $62 million. Now it's developing parts for medical testing equipment and machines that measure the depth of rivers. Along the way, it's shed 86 percent of its 2,100 workers and 97 percent of its market value, trading yesterday at $3.70.
Fresh Start
The odds of making a fresh start are slim. As much as 90 percent of the hundreds of small telecom suppliers won't survive, says Ajit Shah, general partner at venture-capital firm Worldview Technology Partners in Palo Alto, California, which backed phone equipment startups Tellium Inc. and Corvis. Companies that funded nontelecommunications products in the 1990s or developed chips, lasers or materials that translate into new markets have a better chance of survival, Shah says. Many investors are skeptical that suppliers can change direction. With sales falling, corporations may be hard-pressed to spend enough on tuning up businesses they viewed as afterthoughts. Corning, for one, cut its research budget to $375 million in the first nine months of 2002 from $484 million a year earlier. ``Where do you get the capital to reinvent the company?'' asks James Lyon, a money manager at Oakwood Capital Management LLC, which has $340 million in assets and had sold most of its communications equipment stocks by July 2001. ``You're not getting it from current cash flows, and no one is going to pony up capital in the private or public market unless they feel there's a turnaround story.''
Turnaround Ahead?
The equipment industry's top executives -- Nortel Chief Executive Frank Dunn, Corning CEO James Houghton and Lucent CEO Patricia Russo -- predict a turnaround. They say phone company spending will pick up or at least stop falling. ``It's in the doldrums now for sure, but I don't look upon this as being a business that has eclipsed,'' says Houghton, 66, from a 23rd-floor conference room in Corning's office in Manhattan's General Motors building. ``It's going to come back strong,'' says Houghton, who returned as chairman in June 2001 and added the CEO post in April 2002 after retiring from both jobs in 1996. Houghton is acting on his bet. As of Dec. 1, he, six Corning directors and several executives had bought a total of 3.4 million Corning shares during 2002, according to the Washington Service, which tracks insider buying and selling. Until the hoped-for revival, companies are weighing methods of funding the research and capital needs of secondary divisions without gutting phone-related businesses that may again become moneymakers. It's a tough balancing act.
Watching Every Dollar
``The process this year is far more critical than in years past,'' says Mark Bieberich, senior analyst at researcher Yankee Group. ``Every dollar they spend has to be justified.'' JDS is figuring out what to do with $40 billion of acquisitions after sales plunged by two-thirds to $1.1 billion in fiscal 2002, ended in June, from $3.23 billion a year earlier. JDS shares tumbled to $2.45 yesterday from a high of $153.42 in March 2000. When telecommunications companies were surging, Thin Film President Zils had 450 workers building filters that direct data through optical networks. ``We have about 40 people focused on that activity now,'' says Zils, who joined JDS with its February 2000 purchase of Optical Coating Laboratory Inc. Zils, 48, says he expects sales of his division's films, industrial lasers and lenses to rise 5 percent to 10 percent a year. In the quarter ended Sept. 30, his unit had an operating profit of $9.1 million on $84 million in sales, or 44 percent of JDS's revenue. JDS's communications products division, which houses its fiber-optic components and testing equipment businesses, lost $85.1 million during the same period.
`Monument to Telecom'
Since early 2001, Zils has added 300 engineers and staff even as JDS has slashed more than two-thirds of its 28,677-strong workforce. To get to their jobs on the 75-acre campus nestled in California's wine country, employees walk past a vacant, 150,000- square-foot plant built last year to manufacture filters for Lucent and Nortel equipment. ``A monument to telecom,'' says Zils, smiling behind his mustache. Half of Zils's 14 plants run 24 hours a day. Several produce the unit's trademark thin films -- coatings that reduce glare on computer monitors or that block extraneous electrical signals in automated teller machines. The same plants produce a veneer that gets ground into a powder to create inks and paints that appear to change colors in everything from euro and Chinese renminbi bills to writing pens.
Consumer Favorite
Michael Cohen, director of research at Pacific American Securities LLC, is betting color-shifting paint will become a consumer favorite. Volkswagen AG has rolled out two color-changing options for select 2003 Beetles: green to silver and cyan to purple. By the end of November, the German automaker had sold 201 of the 400 special Bugs, charging $2,400 extra for the package that includes the changeable paint, spokesman Steve Keyes says. The paint job on Zils's Ford Taurus shifts to turquoise from amethyst depending on how the light is reflected. Cohen, who owns 3,500 JDS shares, says he believes people will snap up gadgets like color-changing CD players. He says Zils's collection of films and lenses will generate gradual sales and profit growth, thereby buying JDS time to wait for a telecommunications recovery. For other companies, migrating from one market to another won't be easy, especially if executives ignored smaller units in more robust days, says Joseph Bower, Harvard Business School's Donald Kirk David Professor of Business Administration. ``When you're struggling to fix your main business line, the obvious thing is to throw everything you've got into it,'' Bower says. ``Diversifying into a new business is one of the hardest things for a company to do, particularly when people are distracted.''
$100 Billion Business
Lucent found out firsthand how hard setting up a new company can be. In early 2000, analysts and investors were predicting that Lucent's plan to spin off its microelectronics division would be a sure success. The unit boasted one of the most advanced lines of components for fiber-optic equipment, says Jeremey Donovan, chief analyst at Dataquest Inc., a market researcher. And the business benefited from the cachet of Bell Labs, Lucent's research arm, which had invented the laser and a way to transmit information digitally -- discoveries that make fiber-optic networks possible. At the time, analyst Greg Geiling, then at J.P. Morgan Securities Inc., valued the microelectronics division -- later called Agere Systems -- at almost $100 billion. Tony Grewe, a director of strategic marketing at Agere, says analysts urged Lucent to scrap everything but optical parts before taking Agere public. ``If we had done that, we would have been in dire straits,'' Grewe says.
`Not Much Upside'
By the time Agere was ready to sell shares, demand for fiber- optic equipment had tumbled. Starting in January 2001, underwriter Morgan Stanley dropped the initial public offering price three times. When the stock made its debut on March 27, 2001, Agere was worth $9.8 billion -- about one-tenth of the most bullish projections. Agere struggled with its optical parts business until October 2002, when it agreed to sell most of the division to TriQuint Semiconductor Inc. for $40 million in cash. Today, Agere's biggest business makes chips for disk drives, handheld computers and video game consoles. ``The market is quite competitive,'' says Dataquest's Donovan. ``There may not be much upside.'' At Corning, Morris, 44, says he's applying what he's learned in 22 years at the fiber and optical components divisions to his new job working with diesel engines. For investors, the bigger question is whether Corning and its peers will be successful in making the same leap. |