Broadcom Plans $66.5 Mln IPO for Internet Access Technology Irvine, California, April 16 (Bloomberg) -- Broadcom Corp.'s shares are expected to soar after the developer of semiconductors for high-speed data transmission and Internet access completes an initial public offering later today. The expected price range for the shares was raised last week to $18 to $20 from $10 to $12, a sign of keen interest in the company. Morgan Stanley Dean Witter is leading securities firms handling the sale. The Irvine, California-based company plans to sell 3.5 million shares in an IPO that will give investors the chance to bet on Broadcom's technology for greatly increasing Internet access speeds over ordinary telephone and cable television lines. ''It is going to be sizzling, no question about it,'' said Manish Shah, publisher of IPO Maven. ''I definitely think that the stock could trade as high as $60 in the next two months, considering what has happened in the last three months with Internet IPOs such as Exodus and ISS Group.'' Shares of Exodus Communications Inc., a manager of Internet systems for business clients, rose 84 percent in their first day of trading on March 19. ISS Group Inc., a network security company, also rose 84 percent when it started trading March 24. Internet stocks have soared since last week, when Yahoo! Inc. beat analysts' earnings expectations. However, ''people should not forget that many other expected leaders have also fizzled,'' Shah said. ''Six months from now (Broadcom) could be back at around 10. The possibility is definitely there.'' Broadcom develops products that allow high speed digital data transmission over lines which were not intended for digital data transmission. Many Uses The company has developed circuits for use with cable set- top boxes, cable modems, high-speed networking, satellite and earth-based broadcasts and telephone lines, among others. ''What investors are looking for is some way to expedite or make broadband communications more efficient, and Broadcom is expected to play a key role in that process,'' said Shah. Broadband refers to data transmission at speeds greater than 1.5 million bits per second. ''The real key is that their technology is not only applicable to cable broadband but also to xDSL technology, which is basically where the bottleneck is right now in the telecommunications area.'' The xDSL technology he referred to permits high-speed data transmission over existing copper twisted pair wiring used in local telephone lines. The technology could allow high-speed Internet access, among other things. ''People are also looking for a company that can create standardization in the broadband area, and . . . are hoping that Broadcom may be one of those companies'' that do so. Demand for high-speed access to Internet and cable and data networks has increased dramatically in recent years, stimulated by the growth of desirable content as well as lower prices for personal computers and set-top boxes. Broadcom's revenue grew to 73 percent in 1997 to $37 million and has increased six-fold since 1995. The company lost $1.2 million last year after earning $3 million in 1996. Competitors Broadcom's competitors include Rockwell International Corp., Royal Philips Electronics NV, LSI Logic Corp., and VLSI Technology Inc., among others. Customers currently shipping broadband communications incorporating Broadcom's products include General Instrument Corp., 3Com Corp., Bay Networks Inc., Cisco Systems Inc., Motorola Inc. and Scientific-Atlanta Inc.. Sales last year to General Instrument and 3Com (including sales to their respective manufacturing subcontractors) accounted for about 32 percent and 15 percent, respectively, of Broadcom's revenue. Sales to the company's five largest customers accounted for approximately 61.7 percent of Broadcom's total revenue in 1997. General Instrument, Scientific-Atlanta and Intel Corp., each own between 5.6 percent and 3.8 percent of the company, and are not selling any of their shares as part of today's sale. Broadcom plans to sell 2.75 million Class A shares, and selling shareholders to sell 750,000 such shares. The company will also sell 500,000 Class A shares directly to Cisco Systems Inc., a major supplier of data networking products. Class A shares have one-tenth the voting power of the company's Class B shares, which are not publicly traded. Henry T. Nicholas III and Henry Samueli, co-founders of Broadcom in 1991, controlled 57 percent of the company's voting shares before the sale, and 56 percent after today's sale. Founders Retain Control Dr. Nicholas was formerly Director of Microelectronics for PairGain Technologies Inc. Dr. Samueli was one of the founders of PairGain. PairGain, based in Tustin, California, makes communications systems that let network service providers send high-speed data, video, and voice services more efficiently over copper telephone lines. Broadcom will use proceeds from the sale to pay off $2.5 million of bank loans and for general corporate purposes, including working capital and purchases of capital equipment needed for growth. Broadcom will trade on the Nasdaq Stock Market under the symbol ''BRCM.'' BT Alex. Brown Inc., Deutsche Morgan Grenfell Inc. and Hambrecht & Quist LLC helped Morgan Stanley handle the sale. o~~~ O |