Ciena news from WSJ comments
----------------------------------------- September 15, 1998
By NICK WINGFIELD THE WALL STREET JOURNAL INTERACTIVE EDITION
SAN FRANCISCO -- Now that their proposed marriage has crumbled after a month of turmoil, where do Tellabs and Ciena go from here?
On Tuesday, shares of Tellabs rebounded slightly, while Ciena was flat, after both were hammered Monday. Shares of Tellabs rose 3 9/16, or 6%, to 41 1/4 on heavy Nasdaq Stock Market trading, after dropping 16% Monday. Ciena slipped 3/16 to 13 on Nasdaq, after falling 17% the previous session.
Meanwhile, the Nasdaq Composite Index added 12.42 to 1678.11, while Morgan Stanley's high-tech 35 index rose 3.22 to 557.52.
The big drops in Ciena and Tellabs' shares came after the two telecommunications-equipment firms called off their merger deal, which would have had Tellabs acquire the smaller company for about $3.98 billion in stock. The deal started to come unhinged last month after Ciena warned of disappointing third-quarter results and said that AT&T, a major customer, wouldn't give it a key contract. A precipitous decline in Ciena's stock forced the companies in late August to revise Tellabs' earlier $6.9 billion bid for the company.
As the deal fell apart Monday, Tellabs also warned that its third-quarter earnings would be flat with second-quarter results, while Ciena warned that its fourth-quarter revenue would be "materially below" third-quarter levels.
Although the deal's demise was a major embarrassment for both parties, Wall Street analysts don't believe it will squelch other acquisitions or mergers for very long. Both companies are at the center of a rapid convergence between voice and data networking technologies that is leading to a flurry of dealmaking.
Tellabs, a maker of gear that helps phone companies manage traffic on their networks, had hoped to use Ciena, a maker of "mulitplexing" hardware that boosts the capacity of fiber-optic networks, to offer a more complete set of products to customers -- part of a general consolidation that shows no signs of abating.
In Tellabs' case, though, analysts believe the company will let the dust settle before making a major move again.
"I would be absolutely shocked to see any major acquisitions announced before the end of the year," said Michael Neiberg, an analyst ING Barings Furman Selz. "The lesson that came out of this [failed deal] is they tried to take a big bite. My read is they feel a little bit burned," he said.
Steven D. Levy, an analyst at Lehman Brothers, said he believes Tellabs will remain acquisitive, but agrees that the company will have other priorities in the near term. "If anything, they need to go in and repair their relationships with major shareholders who have not enjoyed this rollercoaster ride," said Mr. Levy. "I know that I did not find it particularly entertaining," he said.
On Tuesday, Mr. Levy revised his 12-month price target for Tellabs' stock to $75 from $100 because of the deal's demise and the broader turmoil in the stock market.
Analysts said Tellabs could potentially partner or acquire a number of firms to bolster its product lineup. Jim Kedersha, an analyst at SG Cowen Securities, said the Lisle, Ill., company could look to do a deal with a maker of high-speed asynchronous transfer mode, or ATM, switching equipment, such as Ascend Communications, Fore Systems or Newbridge Networks, or a maker of telecommunications access equipment like Advanced Fiber Communications. Tellabs could also choose to consider another pure-play multiplexing company, such as closely held Canadian firm Cambrian Systems, analysts said.
"Tellabs had put out this idea they wanted to be a top-three player" in the networking arena, said Mr. Kedersha. "If they're going to do that, they need to play in other areas."
For Ciena, the need to find a partner may be even more urgent. Published reports have already suggested the Ciena could be a takeover target for Ascend. "They can't make it on their own," said Greg Mesniaeff, an analyst at Robinson-Humphrey Co. "They don't have the critical mass in terms of size and the talent pool of people who can do software development and systems-integration work." ............. <===========================================================>
IMO, totally out-of-line and indicates very little knowledge of networking technology as well as what it holds for future; TLAB is in the field of TDM based digital cross conenct systems that are and will be quickly obsoleted; in corporate networking world it had already happened to NWK and NN; this will follow into the telecom aena and TLAB without CIEN, FORE or other new age networking companies, imo, will exponentially go down in revenue; imo, tlab will be less than half the price of today 2 yrs from now w/o any acquisitions;
and it said that CIEN lacks critical mass; in reality CIEN revenue is half of TLAB but the number of employees are only 1/4 of TLAB. And, "no critical mass for software talent pool", the person wrote this must be out-of-reality in software development or knows nothing of what software development really means, likely never ever wrote a single line of code; in booming silicon valley tons of talented software engs are working in companies much smaller than CIENA.
This is what happened when half-baked stuffs are then quickly digested by no-clue analysts and investors; hyped-up stocks being chased and real-value stocks being dumped
CIEN, within six months, imo, should triple current price IMO, bandwidth demand alone can do it as bandwidth needs are doubling every nine months; others such as products with CSCO will be extra; IP/ATM directly over DWDM will be a tremendously large market; this is where the TLAB and all the telecom companies TDM, Sonet/SDH based switches will be pushed aside for the new generation IP/ATM over wave division routing; look at it this way; CSCO 12000 GSR will be able to switch and route directly with another 12000 using direct WDM. It cuts all the overheads of SDH and Sonet and the price/performance will beat the hell out of the telecom switches
now is the time to get Ciena when all these no-clue analysts are so scare to get in; they'll flock back in by droves at 35$ |