First call estimate is now 12c for 3rd quarter. Some analysts have faith in Bay...
Pdt Transition, Competition Mean 3Q Shortfall For Bay
By Joelle Tessler
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--A slow ramp-up in getting its new Accelar routing switches to market and competition in the low-end workgroup switch business will cause Bay Networks Inc.'s (BAY) fiscal third-quarter earnings to fall short of expectations.
But several analysts said company-specific issues cannot account for the entire shortfall and maintained Bay's disappointing outlook signals that the entire networking industry faces sluggish demand and a competitive pricing environment right now.
"This is a product transition issue compounded by across-the-board weakness," said Adams Harkness & Hill Inc. analyst Peter Lieu.
Although growth rates in the networking industry were solid in 1997, they came in well below the robust levels seen in preceding years. And while many analysts believe business did begin to pick up in second half 1997, quite a few are now saying growth levels are not returning to the stellar rates of several years ago.
"We are seeing lower-than-expected industry demand," said Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. analyst Paul Sagawa.
Sagawa projects the entire data networking industry will show revenue growth of 20% in 1998, compared with 17% in 1997 and 48% in 1996.
As a result, said Nutmeg Securities Ltd. analyst Andy Schopick, "there just isn't good earnings visibility" in the networking industry right now. Bay Networks' disappointing outlook could be a sign of things to come, he added, noting preannouncements are coming earlier than usual this quarter.
After the market closed Tuesday, Bay said it expects revenue, operating earnings and gross margins for its third quarter ending in March to be below second-quarter levels.
The company said it expects third-quarter revenue to be about 10% below the second-quarter figure of $645 million, but "meaningfully higher" than the year-ago level of $513 million. In recent years, Bay said, third-quarter revenue has come in below second-quarter levels.
The company also said it will take a charge of 67 cents a share for in-process research and development related to recent acquisitions, but added that it still expects to be profitable on an operating basis for the period.
Bay earned 27 cents a share before items and reported gross margins of 51.5% in the second quarter. It earned 10 cents a share, excluding charges, in fiscal third quarter 1997.
Based on updates from 18 of the 27 analysts who follow Bay Networks, the third-quarter consensus earnings estimate has fallen to 12 cents a share from 28 cents, said First Call Corp. research director Chuck Hill.
Looking at the fourth quarter, which has historically been a strong one for the company, Bay said it is optimistic that revenue will be above second-quarter levels.
Consensus estimates have fallen to 21 cents a share from 32 cents for the fourth quarter, to 81 cents from $1.10 for the full fiscal 1998 year, and to $1.28 from $1.60 for fiscal 1999, according to Hill.
Excluding charges, Bay Networks earned 15 cents a share on $543 million in revenue for fourth quarter 1997 ended in June and 59 cents a share on $2.1 billion in revenue for the full year.
According to Credit Suisse First Boston Corp. analyst Peter Rubicam, Bay Networks' troubles are in large part the result of timing and product transition issues.
For one thing, said Lieu of Adams Harkness, Bay Networks had hoped that new products would help offset the weakness that typically occurs at this time of year.
But the company's new line of Accelar routing switches, which it began shipping late last year, did not ramp up quickly enough to offset weakness in older products like shared media hubs, Rubicam said.
The analyst said this was largely due to production constraints and because Bay shipped many products on an evaluation basis.
At the same time, Lieu said, industry giant Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO) has persuaded some customers to hold off on buying high-end gigabit Ethernet switches from Bay Networks by indicating that it plans to introduce its own products this summer.
Bay Networks has also found itself facing competition from Cisco and 3Com Corp. (COMS) in low-end workgroup switches, a market that Bay had to itself until recently, Lieu said.
Cisco and 3Com are both introducing products that compete with Bay's BayStack 350 Ethernet switches, which has put pricing pressure on this product line.
Bay Networks has responded to this competition by introducing a high-density product, which is just beginning to ramp, Lieu said.
But this has prompted Bay to cut prices on older BayStack 350 products to move them through the channel and to protect dealers as the company introduces the new BayStack 350T-HD.
Despite the difficulties facing Bay Networks, Rubicam believes "the long-term story is still intact" since the company has a strong product cycle and the opportunity for margin expansion ahead.
Lieu stressed that he still believes in the company's credibility, its product efficacy and ability to recover from its current troubles. He said he believes Bay's revenue should grow by more than 20% in the second half of fiscal 1999.
Several analysts maintained that Bay Networks' disappointing fiscal third-quarter earnings outlook contains warnings for the broader networking industry.
For one thing, Lieu of Adams Harkness pointed out that since Bay overlaps with Cisco and 3Com in some product categories, the same issues of competition are bound to affect those companies.
Sagawa of Sanford Bernstein believes the entire industry is facing "lower-than-expected demand" due perhaps to a slowdown after a strong December and pressure on information technology budgets - particularly in the enterprise market.
He added that spending to fix the Year 2000 problem also could divert resources from networking capital expenditures.
In addition, Lieu said, slowing PC sales and capital spending - issues that were highlighted when Compaq Computer Corp. (CPQ) and Intel Corp. (INTC) both released their own disappointing earnings outlooks about two weeks ago - could have a spillover effect on the networking business.
"We are seeing shifting technology trends and growing competitive pressures exacerbated by a slowdown in the industry," said Schopick of Nutmeg Securities, who believes earnings estimates on many in the networking group are too high.
And, of course, "the ripple effects of what's happening in Asia are just catching up with these companies," Schopick added.
Despite these concerns, most networking stocks are not down too much on Bay's outlook.
Bay Network's shares closed at 26 3/4 on the NYSE on Tuesday. Bay's shares fell to 24 in after-hours trading but gained back 2 1/4, or 9.4%, at 26 1/4 Wednesday afternoon on volume of 10 million, compared with average daily volume of 3.3 million.
Cisco's shares were recently down 1, or 1.5%, at 63 9/16 on Nasdaq volume of nearly 7.9 million, compared with average daily volume of 11.3 million.
3Com was down 11/16, or 2%, at 33 5/16.
Cabletron Systems Inc. (CS), which itself recently warned that its fiscal fourth-quarter results would fall short of expectations, is bucking the trend. The NYSE-listed stock was up 1 1/8, or 8.1%, at 15 1/16. - Joelle Tessler; 201-938-5285 |