SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Ascend Communications (ASND) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: The Phoenix who wrote (54688)9/25/1998 2:47:00 AM
From: djane  Respond to of 61433
 
BusinessWeek. TWO SUITORS FOR 3COM? [LU or INTC]

Shares of 3Com (COMS) have been hot lately--in spite of the market slump.
From a low of 23 on Aug. 31, the stock of the No.2 maker of
computer-networking equipment has leaped--to 32 3/8 on Sept. 22. What's
going on?

Investor optimism that an earnings turnaround is at hand is buoying the stock, to
be sure. 3Com posted better-than-expected earnings for its first quarter, ended
Aug. 28, following solid fiscal fourth-quarter results. The stock is worth

37 to 40 a share based on its earnings growth alone, figures money manager Tom
Galvin at Forstmann-Leff Associates, a New York investment firm.

But bulls are buying for another reason: There is speculation 3Com may soon be
acquired. For some weeks, rumors have swirled that both chipmaker Intel and
telecom-gear giant Lucent Technologies are interested in 3Com, which produces
modems, remote-access products, adapters, hubs, and switches for Ethernet and
other high-speed networks. A New York hedge-fund manager who is
accumulating 3Com thinks that either Intel or Lucent will acquire 3Com this
year--and then will sell the parts it doesn't need.

He figures that 3Com, with a current market cap of $11 billion, is worth 50 a
share, or $17.8 billion, in a buyout. This pro notes that Intel is on the prowl for an
acquisition to get a bigger share of the PC market, possibly by providing devices
that would enable users to do computer networking at home. To do that, he says,
Intel needs to increase its role in network adapters, or network interface cards
that allow desktop computers to connect to local area networks. Some analysts
argue, however, that Intel may face antitrust issues if it goes after 3Com. That
hasn't stopped certain hedge funds from buying 3Com shares on the prospects of
a takeover.

3Com is the world's top supplier of Ethernet adapters, with 59% of the market
for fast-Ethernet adapters. 3Com and Intel have been ''battling in a price war to
gain share in this segment,'' notes industry analyst Aydin Tuncer.

Lucent is also said to be looking for an acquisition to help it compete with rival
Cisco Systems, the dominant router supplier, in the enterprise, or corporate and
small-business, market.

''Lucent needs 3Com's line to fill the gap in its enterprise networking,'' says the
New York investment manager. 3Com spokesman Bob Ingols said the
company's strategy is to grow its markets, and it isn't looking to be acquired.
''We do a lot of business with both Intel and Lucent,'' he adds. Lucent
spokes-man Jeff Baum and Intel's Robert Manetta said they don't comment on
takeover rumors as a matter of policy.

BY GENE G. MARCIAL

RELATED ITEMS

CHART: Somebody Is Buying Lately

Return to top of story

Updated Sept. 24, 1998 by bwwebmaster
Copyright 1998, by The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved.
Terms of Use