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To: Anthony Wong who wrote (3547)12/9/1998 8:47:00 AM
From: Anthony Wong  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 11568
 
MCI WorldCom growth to outstrip AT&T
By John Borland
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
December 8, 1998, 4:55 p.m. PT

For a few heady moments on Wall Street today, the market value of
MCI WorldCom passed up that of the godfather of telephone
companies, AT&T.

Although AT&T pulled back into the lead on the strength of today's $5 billion deal with
IBM, MCI WorldCom's temporary place at the top underscores a feeling that the
company may be growing at a greater pace than its venerable rival, according to
analysts.

A series of converging factors have made MCI WorldCom an "institutional favorite," as one investment house said. The merger between MCI and WorldCom, capping a string of 68 acquisitions, gives the company an end-to-end system of local, long distance, and data networks that stretches across the globe.

"MCI is more of a world company with its own seamless integrated network," said Ted Levy, a telecommunications analyst with McDonald Investments. Levy said that cost savings and economies of scale stemming from the MCI WorldCom merger also help put the company on a path towards a steeper short-term growth rate than its rival.

AT&T has also made strides into the local services market, striking a $11 billion
merger agreement with local service company Teleport Communications last summer,
followed by the still-pending $48 billion merger with cable company
Tele-Communications Incorporated. Its international strategy has been boosted by a
partnership with British Telecommunications.

These ventures will be of considerable value to AT&T, but
still trail MCI WorldCom's local and overseas proprietary
networks, Levy said. "They don't own an international
footprint. It's not the same as owning your own network."

Analysts said that MCI WorldCom also has benefited
from the Internet fever that has periodically swept through
the markets, driving stocks such as Amazon.com and
eBay to unprecedented heights.

MCI WorldCom has made a string of Internet and data
services announcements in recent months, capping the
series last month with news that it will roll out
high-bandwidth digital subscriber line (DSL) service
across the nation by the end of the year, with 600 points of
access planned by next March.

AT&T has pushed its own WorldNet arm by striking deals with Internet portal
companies and aggressively marketing to its own long distance subscribers.

Today's deal with IBM, in which AT&T will take over Big Blue's Global Network
business, will give the telco about 35,000 new corporate Internet customers and a
global network with points of presence in 59 countries.

That deal could help level the Internet playing field between AT&T and MCI
WorldCom, analysts said.