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


To: gbh who wrote (47931)6/3/1998 7:51:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 61433
 
INTERVIEW-Ascend mulls Asian manufacturing

Reuters Story - June 03, 1998 06:42
%SG %US %DPR %TEL %ELC %CN %TW %KR %AU %ID %IN %TH %PH %MY ASND V%REUTER P%RTR

By Josephine Ng
SINGAPORE, June 3 (Reuters) - U.S.-based Ascend
Communications Inc is studying the possibility of manufacturing
in Asia, a senior official said on Wednesday.
"We are examining China, Taiwan and Korea for
manufacturing," Tony Wise, Ascend's Asia Pacific vice president
and general manager, told Reuters in an interview.
Wise, in Singapore for a communications technology
conference, said there was no critical timetable for the
company's Asian plans.
But, if they went ahead, manufacturing would be outsourced
to a third party which was likely to have an existing plant.
Ascend would then set up its own testing facility to control
quality, he said.
Ascend, the fourth largest vendor of computing-networking
gear, makes software and electronic devices for large networks
and is one of the biggest suppliers of equipment to Internet
Service Providers (ISPs) and telecoms carriers.
Wise said Taiwan and Korea were being considered because of
their advanced manufacturing capabilities and China for cost
benefits and for the sheer size of its market.
"We're looking at exports to Asian markets and some products
for the whole world," he said.
It was likely to make digital modem products or Integrated
Services Digital Network (ISDN) equipment, he said.
Wise said he expected the company to chalk up 40 percent
growth in sales in the Asia Pacific region excluding Japan in
1998 compared to 1997, despite the economic rout.
Growth was being driven by China, Taiwan and Australia, he
said.
Although sales in the first quarter were flat against the
previous, the current quarter was expected to be the best Ascend
had ever had in the region, Wise said.
The region contributes some five to six percent of Ascend's
global sales, he said.
But Southeast Asia itself could see a flat performance in
1998, he said.
Half of its Asian business comes from telecoms carriers, 40
percent from ISPs, and 10 percent from enterprises, Wise said.
He said the crisis had hit the enterprise segment the
hardest and Ascend was somewhat insulated as it dealt mainly
with ISPs and telecoms carriers.
In markets like China, the demand for access products was
rising rapidly where Asynchronous Transmission Mode (ATM) and
frame relay networks were being deployed, he said.
The Internet boom was also lifting business for Ascend in
the region, he said.
But business in Indonesia had ground to a halt after the
rioting and political changes, he said.
Wise said he expected consolidation among ISPs as
deregulation took place in more Asian countries. But Ascend
would benefit because it catered to the big ISPs.
-- Singapore Newsroom (65) 870-3080; Fax (65) 776-8112
-- Email: singapore.newsroomreuters.com