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To: The Phoenix who wrote (11578)1/14/1998 6:39:00 PM
From: JRH  Respond to of 77400
 
Here is an article that I found on the Yuri thread:

Will '98 Be Slow Or Upbeat? -- Cisco one of the few steady
financial achievers; Yurie Systems holds niche

John T. Mulqueen

The internetworking market may be entering one of its most sluggish years of
growth in this decade, according to securities analysts and some executives.

Indeed, lackluster financial results reported by companies such as 3Com and
Cabletron point to an industrywide slowdown affecting a number of vendors,
according to Craig Johnson, an analyst at Dataquest Inc.

"The overall market has slowed down," said Johnson. He said he expects
1998 to be a difficult year for all vendors because of adverse worldwide
economic conditions.

Eric Benhamou, 3Com's chairman, and Chris Paisley, 3Com's chief financial
officer, also painted a less than optimistic scenario for the overall industry
when they discussed the company's second-quarter financial results Dec. 18.

In 1998, the rate of market growth should be 5 percent to 7 percent higher
than it was in 1997, the two executives said. But because the second half of
1997 was so slow, that rate will be well below the growth of the early '90s.

Paul Weinstein, a securities analyst at PaineWebber Inc., estimated the
growth rate of internetworking equipment sales in 1997 to be in the low 20
percent range. If Benhamou's and Paisley's predictions are correct, Weinstein
said, then 1998 should bring a growth rate in the higher 20 percent range for
internetworking equipment sales.

That kind of forecast has made analysts optimistic, especially when they look
at companies like router and switch maker Cisco, which so far has never
failed to turn in solid financial results.

But even Cisco can feel the effects of investors who are jittery about
technology stocks. Cisco's shares dropped sharply in December after reports
about a $40 million increase in one part of the company's inventory. Still,
analysts said that amount is not significant for a $6 billion company.

"I am very bullish on Cisco," said analyst Chris Stix of Cowen & Co. He
cited Cisco's strong position in WAN switching and routing, as well as the
company's voice-over-data technology, its fast Ethernet switches and its
StrataCom ATM switches.

"There will be a lot of tariffing of T1 ATM services in 1998," said Stix, who
also expects Yurie Systems Inc. to hold its own in the market. "Yurie will do
well selling access ATM switches to the carriers" through its partnership with
Bay Networks.

Market researchers agree access ATM will be a hot technology this year and
next. In a recent study of the ATM market, Dataquest analyst George Hunt
estimated the ATM access concentrator arena will nearly double to $375
million in 1998, up from about $205 million in 1997. By 2001, the market will
grow to $1.28 billion, he projected.

The low-speed (less than 2-Mbps) concentrator market is expected to climb
to $221.2 million in 2001, from $32 million in 1997. High-speed (greater than
2-Mbps) concentrator sales will grow 57.3 percent per year to $1.1 billion in
2001, Hunt said.

Yurie held the No. 1 market position at the end of 1996, according to the
Dataquest study.

The backbone ATM switch market will grow to $4.7 million in 2001 from
$1.4 billion in 1997, Hunt said. Dataquest expects Cisco to introduce a
higher-end customer premise device based on its 3800 series and a
higher-end concentrator based on technology from Ardent Communications
Corp., which was acquired by Cisco in 1997.

Johnson said one of Cisco's strengths is its partnership with major equipment
manufacturers such as Alcatel and integrators such as Hewlett-Packard.

A partnership with Tellabs Inc., specifically, would benefit Cisco, Johnson
said.

Tellabs is a leading supplier of digital cross-connect transmission systems to
carriers in the United States and of wireless access systems around the world.

Steve Levy, an analyst at Salomon Brothers, said Tellabs has "the No. 1
position in the sweet spot of the transmission market. It has new products that
are generating real sales in the wireless local loop."

Copyright (c) 1998 CMP Media Inc.