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


To: Zoltan! who wrote (20346)1/5/1999 3:18:00 PM
From: Howard Feinstein  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 77400
 
Hey Zolt, how do you get rid of the feeling that IT'S NOT supposed to be so easy to make alot of money!! Why do I feel this run-up in tech prices is not real? Are we being set up for a fall? Exactly what do the charts say? Pe's out of site!!! LOVE IT!!! but don't want to fall hard!!!

Howie




To: Zoltan! who wrote (20346)1/6/1999 1:35:00 AM
From: jach  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 77400
 
Tougher times ahead for CSCO in LAN switching and GBit ?
see related post below from Network World
Drastic price cuts and intense competitions from big boys like LU and INTC will have tremendous marhgin pressure on CSCO. As said before, margin will drop and tougher times ahead for CSCO and will be very difficult to keep the 30% margin. all imo.
---------------------

LAN switching: It's all about money

Network World, 01/04/99

Switching at Layer 2 is no
longer a mysterious
science that only a few
companies have
mastered. Wire-speed
LAN switches are
commonplace, and they
are getting less expensive
all the time.

Vendors often will deny that switches have become
commodities because vendors want to keep their
margins on the switches high for as long as they can.
But it's hard to argue with market dynamics.

Part of the change has to do with the dominance of
Ethernet technologies. The power struggle that once
raged among the different types of LAN connections
has all but vanished. ATM, FDDI, token-ring and
other LAN transmission technologies account for just
5% of the LAN hub and switch ports being sold
today, with Ethernet accounting for the rest, according
to The Dell'Oro Group, a research firm in Portola
Valley, Calif.

Because Ethernet is such a known quantity, vendors
can now put most of the functions of Ethernet and
Fast Ethernet switching into Application Specific
Integrated Circuits. Hardwired code ensures the
switches are as fast as possible and inexpensive to
produce.

This means the vast majority of vendors selling LAN
gear can direct their energies into making Ethernet,
Fast Ethernet and Gigabit Ethernet as efficient as
possible. The more Ethernet they sell, the less it costs.

As a result, users can find stackable 10/100M bit/sec
Ethernet switches for less than $150 per port, with
their chassis counterparts coming in for less than $200
per port. At well under $100, the price of network
interface cards for 10/100M bit/sec Ethernet is the
same as the cost of a 10M bit/sec-only card.

The emergence of high-volume, low-priced LAN
switches from a new bread of vendors is putting even
more price pressure on traditional network hardware
makers. Hewlett-Packard, Intel and Samsung are
getting into the game. These vendors plan to apply
their expertise in producing and selling commodities,
such as PCs and monitors.

Of course, traditional LAN players aren't sitting idly
by watching these encroachments. 3Com is reacting
by tightening its supply chain and by beefing up
product reliability, while keeping in step with price
drops. And Bay will capitalize on the size and
economies of scale it gains through its new parent,
Nortel Networks.

Other vendors are likely to take the same approach,
and users will benefit as falling Fast Ethernet prices
put pressure on Gigabit Ethernet prices. As Gigabit
Ethernet emerges over the next few years, users will
have a clear upgrade path based on familiar
technology.

Predictions: Vendors such as Intel and HP will
become larger players in the LAN switching arena,
offering better price/performance than some of the
larger players. Fast Ethernet products will proliferate
and help to drop Gigabit Ethernet prices. LAN
switches will continue to get less expensive as they
become commodities, giving users plentiful bandwidth
at low prices.

More news from
Network World

nwfusion.com