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Technology Stocks : FORE Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sam who wrote (9494)10/22/1998 12:25:00 PM
From: John Finley  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12559
 
LU said something in the CC?
JF



To: sam who wrote (9494)10/22/1998 12:42:00 PM
From: jach  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12559
 
yes, FORE up more than2+$. Isnt' that much more than something?



To: sam who wrote (9494)10/22/1998 3:59:00 PM
From: Elmer Flugum  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12559
 


Here is whats happening..Barron's Article

October 21, 1998



Is Fore Ready to Switch Into High Gear?

By Carolyn Whelan

Few stocks have slid down a more slippery slope than FORE Systems.

The Pennsylvania-based manufacturer of switches, cards and other gear for high-speed
networks was one of Wall Street's favorite technology stocks not so long ago. In
October 1996, its share price peaked just north of 40 as investors cheered the growth
prospects for FORE's switches with asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) technology.

ATM uses cells to send digital traffic more efficiently than through
regular phone lines. FORE's ATM products are found in both wide-
and local-area networks, and it sells its switches to various
telecommunications companies. Though the technology is gaining
wide acceptance, competition is stiff: It ranges from Bay Networks
to Newbridge Networks to the formidable Cisco Systems.

As a result, FORE has had to slash prices to keep and gain market share. That has
squeezed margins and occasionally caused it to report weaker earnings than analysts
expected. Throw in the Asian economic crisis, some operational problems and the costly
acquisition of privately held Berkeley Networks back in August, and you have a recipe
for a swooning stock. After an earnings warning on October 1st, the share price
plummeted to as low as 9.

But at current prices, some analysts say FORE is looking attractive again. Despite the
disappointing fiscal second-quarter earnings report, the company has strong new
products, better cost controls, an impressive book-to-bill ratio -- in short, solid business
prospects. In the first six months of the fiscal year ending March 1999, FORE posted
revenue growth of 39%, which tailed off to 29% in the second quarter largely because of
a product transition to a new switch that should produce strong sales later this year and
next.

After FORE's earnings warning, several analysts downgraded the stock. But when the
shares dropped, CIBC Oppenheimer upgraded its rating to Buy from Hold, and Needham
& Co. started coverage of FORE with a Strong Buy recommendation. Since the company
actually reported earnings of eight cents a share for the second quarter, the stock has
rebounded nicely from its lows. FORE closed Wednesday at 13 1/4.

FORE's business prospects still look strong. The company said that total orders were up
30 percent, and that orders from alternative carriers -- which had been expected to
decline -- remained steady. Analyst Peter Lieu of Needham foresees "awfully good"
revenue growth for next year, as much as 30 percent.

Better operating margins also appear likely as
new products come on stream. More
profitable ASX 4000 switches are hitting the
market while older models are phased out.
The eagerly-awaited DC Power Supply switch
is now available, too. Also, some powerful
Ethernet switches from Berkeley Networks --
used in networks where all lines are
connected in a single link -- will ship early
next year. Both promise higher prices than
Fore's current LAN switch portfolio, says
Peter Lieu. And since Berkeley's products
work closely with the fast-growing Windows
NT operating system for servers, they could
make FORE a stronger competitor against
industry leader Cisco in the medium-sized business market.

Indeed, BancBoston Robertson Stephens called accelerating demand for ATM gear the
biggest driver of FORE's growth. "ATM is currently the only technology that can
seamlessly carry any kind of digital traffic -- voice, video and data," a recent report by
analyst Paul Johnson says. He calls the ATM market one of the "fastest growing
subsegments in the networking industry." ATM products account for 61 percent of
FORE's revenues, and that percentage is growing.

The strength of that business should help FORE get back on track. First Call's
consensus of Wall Street analysts expects FORE to earn 46 cents a share in the fiscal
year ended March 1999 and 72 cents in fiscal 2000. At current prices, it's trading at
around 28 times fiscal 1999's estimated earnings.

That's a slight discount to both the 31 percent projected earnings gain this year and to
First Call's long-term growth rate of 30 percent. But it's much lower than the 56.5%
earnings gain analysts are looking for in fiscal 2000. The shares are also trading at
somewhat more than twice sales and twice book value -- a pittance for a tech stock.

"I'm very optimistic about FORE," concludes Michael Duran, an analyst at Lazard Freres.
He believes that FORE has good product offerings for several growing markets, and that
the company has addressed some execution and product-transition problems. With
those issues behind it, he says, the stock could hit 23 within 18 months.

Meanwhile, rumors have been swirling around the industry about FORE as a takeover
candidate -- possibly by Lucent Technologies. October 1st marked the end of
restrictions on the AT&T spin-off from swallowing companies of a certain size.

Spokespeople at both FORE and Lucent would not confirm that any substantive
discussions had taken place between the companies. Of course, FORE is not the only
possible suitor for Lucent -- nearly everyone has been mentioned. And Lucent already
has ATM technology and a strong presence in the U.S., so FORE might not make the
best fit.

But FORE's attractive portfolio and relatively cheap stock price might still make it ripe for
the picking. Industry analysts Tom Nolle of CIMI and John Morency of Renaissance
think FORE would be a good prize for foreign telecom equipment manufacturers like
Alcatel, Siemens and L.M. Ericsson, who would benefit from its installed base of U.S.
customers and its ATM technology, which those companies lack.

Betting on takeovers is always a very dicey proposition. But at current prices, FORE
Systems looks attractive enough on its own.

Carolyn Whelan covers telecommunications for Electronic News, a trade weekly.