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To: Sonny McWilliams who wrote (22416)1/13/1999 6:21:00 PM
From: Sonki  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 27012
 
LU and sunw target 132, intc 2yr trget $225. all the nuts will always be nutty. and i love it.
biz.yahoo.com

AOL, Baby Bell In High-Speed Internet Plan
dailynews.yahoo.com
so much for retirement and going to spelling bee class.
... cleared my margin on monday and back again on margin.




To: Sonny McWilliams who wrote (22416)1/13/1999 10:22:00 PM
From: William Hunt  Respond to of 27012
 
Sonny ---From briefing.com LUCENT TECHNOLOGIES INC. (LU) 104 15/16 -2 15/16. The much anticipated acquisition of Ascend
Communications (ASND 79 15/16 +5) was announced earlier today. And while the final outcome seemed anti-climatic and
already factored into the stock of Ascend, Lucent surprised everyone by offering a much richer premium than had been
anticipated. Prior to this morning's announcement, most of Wall Street had assumed that Lucent would not pay more than
$84-$85 a share given that a much higher price would have a dilutive impact on earnings. However, the offer of $20 billion
(based on last night's closing price) or roughly $89 a share was about $4 billion more than had been projected, creating
some buyer remorse for Lucent shareholders. At the current offering price, the deal is expected to be neutral to Lucent's
1999 earnings as the acquisition is not expected to be completed until the middle of this year, and accretive in 2000.
Regardless, this deal was announced just when the Brazilian markets were unraveling, placing additional downward pressure
on the stock. Lucent shares have rebounded from an intraday low of $96 and, given the strategic position and portfolio that
Ascend provides Lucent with, it is only a matter of time before Lucent begins to trade again with its usual swagger. After all,
the purchase of Ascend creates a much more formidable opponent for Cisco Systems (CSCO 99 -1/8) in the battle for
Internet connectivity and backbone supremacy. With Ascend, Lucent should be able to better compete head-to-head with
Cisco in this very fast moving and lucrative market. The resources and products these two companies bring to the table will
re-shape the Internet landscape and place everyone else on notice.

This seems to say it best ---part of the reason I bought back in + the cheaper price I paid today . I think it bodes well for LU in 1999

BEST WISHES
BILL



To: Sonny McWilliams who wrote (22416)1/13/1999 10:33:00 PM
From: William Hunt  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 27012
 
Sonny ---Gives a broader perspective of the deal especially the overseas part---Lucent Technologies Inc.
Dow Jones Newswires -- January 13, 1999
Lucent Chrmn Sees Ascend Deal Adding 2% To 4% To
2000 EPS

By Shawn Young

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Having finally feasted at the megamerger banquet by signing a $20
billion agreement to buy Ascend Communications Inc. (ASND), Lucent Technologies Inc. (LU) is
confident it chose a rich meal.

Buying the Alameda, Calif., data-networking company isn't expected to dilute Lucent's fiscal 1999
earnings and it should add 2% to 4% to Lucent's anticipated bottom line for fiscal 2000, said
Chairman and Chief Executive Richard McGinn.

"It's amazing how few big technology deals get done without dilution," McGinn told Dow Jones. He
said he is comfortable with the prevailing range of earnings estimates for 1999 and 2000.

The consensus of analysts surveyed by First Call Inc. is that Lucent, Murray Hill, N.J., will earn
$2.16 in fiscal 1999 and $2.62 in fiscal 2000.

Lucent, of Murray Hill, N.J., had revenue of $30.1 billion in fiscal 1998. Ascend, which is on a
calendar year, had revenue of $1 billion in the first nine months of 1998.

The combined company should see revenue growth accelerate as it makes a joint attack on the
expanding market for telecommunications and data equipment, company officials said.

In particular, Ascend gets 30% to 35% of its revenue from overseas, where Lucent has been looking
to expand.

The combined company will be a strong competitor to data-networking giant Cisco Systems Inc.
(CSCO) and will continue to fight its largest telecommunications equipment-making rival, Northern
Telecom Ltd. (NT) of Canada.

But it will not base its competitive strategy on price, said Dan Stanzione, Lucent's chief operating
officer and president of Bell Labs.

"We're in a very price competitive industry," Stanzione said, but he said Lucent's main emphasis will
continue to be on quality, reliability and overall value rather than just price.

Stanzione will be the head of a new broadband networks Group Lucent is forming in conjunction with
the merger.

Talks between Lucent and Ascend began in earnest last fall, said McGinn of Lucent. He said he had
met Ascend President and Chief Executive Mory Ejabat last summer and the two found they had
much in common.

Beyond that, Ejabat said, much of the impetus for the union came from customers.

"It was a no-brainer," he said.

Ejabat will stay with the combined company through the transition. After that, he said: "I'll go to the
beach for a while."

The topic of price wasn't broached until December, said Donald Peterson, Lucent's chief financial
officer. Rumors that the companies clashed over price early on aren't true, he said.

In the end, Lucent paid a premium to Ascend's pre-deal market value of about $17 billion.

"This is a premium price for a premium product," Peterson said.

Company officials said the deal will result in cost savings for the combined company as duplicate
functions like order-taking, treasury offices and investor relations are combined and streamlined.

However, McGinn said, cost savings aren't the underpinning of the deal.

"That's not the issue, the issue is growth," McGinn said. "The deal stands on its merits."

Lucent will continue to look for compelling deals and is likely to keeping adding to its list of strategic
acquisitions.

Lucent has penned 11 buyouts in the data networking arena so far. Ascend is its first true
megamerger.

"You'll continue to see us invest organically and acquire," McGinn said. Lucent is likely to concentrate
its investments and purchases in the data networking, software, wireless and fiber-optic networking
segments of its market, which are the fastest-growing areas.

While the company will pursue deals, its larger efforts will be "gated" by the management issues
involved in large deals, Peterson said. The company won't take on more than it can integrate at one
time, he said.

Most of its acquisitions to date have been small and medium-size, so careful integration doesn't mean
Lucent isn't on the lookout for desirable acquisitions.

"I'm sure there will be some in 1999," Peterson said.

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