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Technology Stocks : Compaq -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Skipper who wrote (16969)2/7/1998 10:43:00 AM
From: Roads End  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 97611
 
The following appears in the Feb. 9, 1998 Barrons "Up and Down Wallstreet" by Alan Abelson.

The Compaq deal is particularly intriguing. For it greatly expands the
company's horizons, extending them to realms that were previously the
exclusive domain of IBM, Sun Microsystems and Hewlett-Packard. For
Digital, despite its travails and flounderings, still boasts some noteworthy
attributes. It has, for example, a very good, very large and very lucrative
service and support business, whose margins are appreciably higher than
Compaq's. More important, perhaps, DEC's Unix-based server products will
provide entry for Compaq to the lush and growing high-end corporate and
government markets.

The combo will boast revenues north of $37 billion, not quite up to IBM ($79
billion) or Hewlett-Packard ($43 billion) but more than Intel's $25 billion and
nearly triple Microsoft's $13 billion. Strictly heavyweight-class.

DEC won't be an easy swallow, obviously. It has over 50,000 employees,
dwarfing Compaq's existing 33,000 head count. Reinvigorating that vast and
somewhat dispirited corps shapes up as no piece of cake. There'll be the usual
culture shock, to say nothing of the formidable task of melding operations and
structures. Odds are, it's going to be a messy meshing period.

And, needless to say, there's no guarantee that even if and when Compaq gets
everything in gear, the payoff will be as significant as the company and its
legion of fans in Wall Street expect.

While in a caveating mood, we also might raise the remote possibility -- just for
comic relief -- that the PC boom might lose some of its steam or, heaven
forfend, peter out for a spell.

Still, there's no denying (and there's no reason to) Compaq is a heck of a
competitor. (Don't take our word for it, just ask IBM.) Moreover, even a
cursory glance at the deal raises the suspicion that Compaq is buying DEC
very much on the cheap. As one analyst, Charles Wolf at Credit Suisse First
Boston, gleefully put it: "In its acquisition of Digital Equipment, Compaq raises
theft to a new level."

What makes DEC such a "steal" for Compaq is its flush balance sheet. Under
the terms of the acquisition, Compaq will shell out around $9.5 billion for
Digital, of which $4.5 billion will be in cash. However, as part of its dowry,
DEC brings a neat $1.3 billion in cash to the union.

Moreover, sale of the company's semiconductor and networking businesses
should further swell that cache of cash. And, for all its wounds, DEC has been
throwing off something like $1 billion a year in cash flow.

Analyst Wolf, plainly bullish over the prospect of a DEC-enriched Compaq,
figures that Compaq can cut DEC's component costs by 10%; shrink its
payroll by 10,000; make manifest use of DEC's $1.2 billion tax-loss
carryforward; sharply reduce the days outstanding of DEC's accounts
receivable, while increasing the length of days outstanding of its payables; and
more than double DEC's inventory turnover ratio.

He calculates, breathing rather heavily, that with all the aforegoing and after
"liberating the cash sloshing around in DEC's balance sheet," the cost of the
acquisition will be slashed from the aforementioned $9.5 billion to a piddly $3.5
billion. Which would be, he reckons, something less than four times DEC's
cash flow next year.

If so -- and the operative word is "if" -- who can quarrel? The deal really is a
steal.