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Technology Stocks : Ascend Communications (ASND) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sector Investor who wrote (43526)4/9/1998 9:26:00 PM
From: FUZFO  Respond to of 61433
 
from CBS marketwatch:

"Bullish earnings
Ascend Communications (ASND) may give computer-networking stocks
a lift after the company posted a net income of 26 cents a share, a penny
ahead of estimates.
Analysts had been concerned weakness in the company's remote access
business and intensifying competition from Cisco (CSCO) would derail
profits. However, Ascend remains bullish about fiscal 1998, saying it sees
strong demand for its network backbone systems and expects growth in
its consumer business.
"Their Cascade business has been strong, so it offset weakness
elsewhere," said Frank Laplaca, networking analyst at Volpe, Brown
Whelan. Ascend closed down 7/8 at 39 7/8."
Fuz



To: Sector Investor who wrote (43526)4/9/1998 9:36:00 PM
From: djane  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 61433
 
News.com. Ascend bucks earnings trend
By Ben Heskett
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
April 9, 1998, 5:30 p.m. PT
URL: news.com

news analysis The most recent quarter hasn't been pretty for Cabletron Systems (CS), 3Com
(COMS), or Bay Networks (BAY). What makes Ascend Communications (ASND) so special?

The remote access and wide area switching specialists announced earnings that just barely
exceeded expectations, but in light of the hemorrhaging at other companies, that news may serve
as a message that Ascend's own travails are largely in the past.

A certain portion of Ascend's problems in recent quarters stem from the view that the firm had a
hard time digesting the $3.7 billion merger with Cascade Communications, completed last year.
Also, the remote access market--once the primary driver of Ascend's revenue--has recently been
glutted by a bevy of start-ups offering unique features, as well as the increasing presence of
stalwart Cisco Systems.

"They sign a sweet deal with GTE, make or beat the consensus numbers by a penny, are rated a
strong or moderate buy by most financial firms, and yet people still dog them with questions about
the Cascade acquisition," noted Fred McClimans, CEO of market watcher Current Analysis.

Ascend has targeted wide area dial-up and switching equipment as a solid niche. It does not have
to reckon with the pricing pressures of low-end switches or the unpredictability of shifts to
higher-speed local technology, unlike some of its competitors. The key to Ascend's continued
growth, however, is its bread-and-butter access equipment business, which is under fire on several
fronts.

"They are in fairly good shape at this point. It has taken them longer than anticipated to complete
the integration [with Cascade], but the real challenge for them now is to maintain their competitive
edge in the access space," added McClimans.

Ascend noted strong demand for its equipment in North America and quarterly revenue increases
in two currently volatile geographies: Europe and Asia.

Ascend's CEO, Mory Ejabat, seems to believe his company is out of the woods. "We continue to
see strong demand for capacity in the network backbone, with ATM clearly emerging as the
network architecture of choice. We also expect that growth from the consumer segment, driven by
both new subscribers and increasing connect times, will drive demand for access ports," he said in
a statement.

"We believe that the market opportunities are significant, that Ascend is well positioned within
those markets, and that our strategy is sound."

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To: Sector Investor who wrote (43526)4/9/1998 9:36:00 PM
From: B.REVERE  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 61433
 
Sector-- Your guess is gte/Orckit, I believe. Does Asnd have a partnership
with Fujitsu to provide the switches or am I way off base here?