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 : Cisco Systems, Inc. (CSCO) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jach who wrote (19054)11/6/1998 2:49:00 PM
From: jach  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 77400
 
Interesting to see when competitions were announcing large contracts left and right, CSCO is doing the marketing hype of partnering with other companies. The Singapore Telecom deal involves LU, ASND and Ericsson. Yesterday was Ocean, today Singapore. More and more mkt share were being taken away from CSCO.
IMO, CSCO next year will be really tough as orders and backlog dries up.



To: jach who wrote (19054)11/6/1998 3:27:00 PM
From: jach  Respond to of 77400
 
CNET News.com
November 6, 1998, 12:05 p.m. PT

SAN FRANCISCO--Executives from data
networking leader Cisco Systems remain hopeful
that they can maintain a sales model that relies on
huge margins as the company moves into new
markets and faces increased competition from
unexpected corners.

The company, hosting an
annual update for
financial and industry
analysts here this week,
was unexpectedly
forthright in divulging its
business plans going
forward.

Chief executive John
Chambers and others
among Cisco's executive
team said they did not
feel the compunction to
discount their technology in markets where others
are low-balling them, and will maintain margins of
50 to 60 percent going forward.

The expectations are significant due to Cisco's
newfound thrust to compete in the market to
provide next-generation equipment to support
voice on networks, a sprawling sector that includes
huge foes such as Lucent Technologies, Nortel
Networks, Siemens, and Alcatel, among others.
Given this emphasis to replace older circuit-based
equipment, which Chambers has referred to as a
"dinosaur infrastructure," the company may face
market conditions it has yet to be exposed to,
according to some observers.

On the flip side, this slew of
telecommunications-oriented equipment providers
want a piece of the data pie dominated by
Cisco--potentially at any cost--in a bid to reap the
financial rewards of the convergence trend. They
also want to be a part of any converged network
shift, even if it means evolving from their roots in
providing circuit equipment, long a cash cow.

Cisco estimates that competitors who dominate the
circuit-based world sustain themselves on 30 to 40
percent margins, which could shrink, according to
Cisco, due to technology evolutions brought on by
the new demands of carriers and service providers
for voice and data support within the equipment
they purchase.

Cisco has hyped convergence as a huge
opportunity, in part, because it sees the expected
move from classic circuit-based equipment to
data-based devices as a shift that caters to its
classic specialty--providing the infrastructure for the
Net.

"I believe we're the only company in the industry
that truly controls our destiny," said a bullish
Chambers, who noted that the networking sector is
in "the early innings" of growth.

Some believe Cisco's focus on the next-generation
carrier equipment market is an outgrowth of its
current position. "Cisco doesn't have the telecom
partner so they have to be talking about this big
time," said Mike McConnell, an analyst with
industry researcher Infonetics.

Cisco has made overtures in the past to companies
in the voice world, but decided to go it alone due to
increasing product overlaps with the likes of Lucent
and Nortel. Those discussions are currently under
regulatory scrutiny.

But the company remains convinced that what it
calls the "conversion" to a data-based infrastructure
for voice feeds right into its hand.

"We're trying to change the nature of the telecom
industry," said Kevin Kennedy, senior vice
president for Cisco's service provider line of
business.

"We just have to try and continue to grow up,"
Kennedy continued, "We've been an evolutionary
company for a decade. The greatness is we aren't
shackled by a legacy, but we have to execute."

Separately, in response to a question concerning
the bevy of new competitors Cisco faces as it trains
it sights on the voice equipment market, Chambers
made it clear it may represent an increasingly
antagonistic era for the company.

==========

"remain hopeful
that they can maintain a sales model that relies on
huge margins"

see this quote, it is going to be really tough!, imo.



To: jach who wrote (19054)11/7/1998 2:01:00 AM
From: gilbert Kuhn  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 77400
 
jach, let's not forget that the government of Singapore has also been known to beat young boys. Does that make you happy also? Please share.