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


To: djane who wrote (51064)7/31/1998 9:30:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 61433
 
WSJ article. [Mentions LU rumors]

Shares of Ascend Move Lower As Takeover Talk Nags Street

interactive.wsj.com

Dow Jones Newswires

Shares of Ascend Communications Inc. lost 14% in a blizzard of sell
orders Friday as talk heated up that the networking company may acquire
Stratus Computer Inc.

Some analysts and investment bankers groaned at the idea of such a deal,
saying the two companies didn't fit. But talk on Wall Street persisted that
there was indeed an imminent agreement. On Friday, the San Jose
Mercury News reported that Ascend would buy Stratus for about $800
million next week. Neither company would comment about the possibility
of a deal.

Shares of Ascend, which itself has been considered a prime takeover
candidate, plunged $7.03125 to $44.46875 on the Nasdaq Stock Market
and was the most-active issue. Shares of Stratus, meanwhile rose 75 cents
to $28.75 on the New York Stock Exchange.

With Alcatel-Alsthom SA gobbling up DSC Communications Corp. and
Tellabs Inc. recently announcing a deal to buy Ciena Corp., analysts say
small- and mid-sized makers of telecommunications and networking
equipment will have a difficult time remaining independent. The two
converging sectors have long been dominated by giants such as Lucent
Technologies Inc., Canada's Northern Telecom Ltd., Sweden's L.M.
Ericsson and Cisco Systems Inc.

Indeed, rumors have swirled around Ascend, a leader in the sizzling
market for remote-access servers, which allow users to dial into company
networks and Internet services. Ascend has recovered from last year's
dumps, when software problems caused product malfunctions and its
merger with Cascade Communications Corp. sapped management
resources.

Earlier this week, Ascend was one of three companies rumored to be
interest in Stratus. Also, analysts recently downplayed rumors that Ascend
is interested in acquiring Advanced Fibre Communications Inc., a
developer of equipment that boosts the capacity of telephone networks.

Looming over the networking-equipment sector is the specter of October,
when Lucent will be freed from the shackles that have kept it from making
a big acquisition.

When Lucent was spun off from AT&T Corp. in September 1996, the
deal was tax-free -- good for shareholders, but bad in that it kept Lucent
from using an accounting method known as "pooling" to make deals.
Acquisitive companies like pooling because it lets them use their stock as
currency and avoid accounting charges that would decrease future
earnings. But if a company pools within two years of being spun off, it risks
losing its tax-free status as a spinoff.

Lucent has stated its intent to become one of the top two data-networkers,
leading analysts to expect the company to make deals left and right as
soon as it can. But since Lucent's rivals also know October is looming,
pre-emptive deals are always a possibility.

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