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


To: Tim Luke who wrote (21798)2/3/1999 12:09:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 77400
 
Top Financial News
Wed, 03 Feb 1999, 12:06am EST

Cisco Systems 2nd-Quarter Profit Rises 33% on Surging Equipment Sales

Cisco's 2nd-Qtr Profit Rises 33% on Surging Sales (Update4)
(Adds CEO's comments in 6th to 8th, 12th paragraphs.)

San Jose, California, Feb. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Cisco Systems
Inc., the No. 1 computer-networking company, said fiscal second-
quarter profit rose 33 percent as revenue from Internet providers
offset slowing corporate sales.

Profit before charges for the quarter ended Jan. 23 rose to
$606 million, or 36 cents a share, from net income of $457.3
million, or 29 cents, in the year-earlier period. Cisco was
expected to earn 35 cents, the average estimate of analysts
polled by First Call Corp. Revenue surged 40 percent, more than
analysts expected, to $2.83 billion from $2.02 billion.

Cisco's extensive product line and sophisticated software
let it charge more and make a higher profit than rivals for the
equipment it sells to large companies. As corporate sales slow,
Cisco is boosting sales to telecommunications carriers that want
high-speed Internet gear to handle growing data traffic.
''The carrier business is where the growth is,'' said Paul
Weinstein, an analyst at CS First Boston, who rates Cisco
''strong buy.''

Weinstein estimated that telecommunication sales make up
about a third of Cisco's revenue. The company doesn't break out
revenue by markets.

Cisco Chief Executive John Chambers said in an interview
that the company's telecommunications revenue rose more than 50
percent in all geographic areas from a year ago.

Corporate sales rose about 30 percent, while the growth of
sales to small and medium-sized businesses was ''in between those
two'' growth rates, Chambers said.

Rivals Unite

Cisco will face increased competition in the market for
Internet gear sold to phone companies when No. 1 phone-equipment
maker Lucent Technologies Inc. purchases No. 3 networking company
Ascend Communications Inc.

Last month, Lucent agreed to buy Ascend for $20.7 billion to
acquire its powerful computer switches, known as ATM switches,
that let phone companies route data traffic on their networks.
The acquisition is expected to be completed in June.

Cisco's ability to roll out new products for the carrier
market will be key to its success in 1999, Weinstein and other
analysts said.
''Cisco needs to get their next-generation ATM switch out on
time,'' said Craig Johnson, principal analyst with market
researcher Pita Group in Portland, Oregon.

Chambers said the company expects to begin trials of the new
equipment ''later this year.'' Cisco has said it expects to begin
selling its new ATM switch in the fiscal third or fourth quarter.

Strong Revenue Growth

Cisco's revenue growth rate of 40 percent was its best in
seven quarters. Last month, Lucent reported revenue of
$9.2 billion for its first quarter ended in December, 5.5 percent
higher than a year earlier.
''Cisco's top-line growth rate is better than everyone
expected,'' said William Becklean, an analyst at Tucker Anthony
Inc., who rates Cisco ''buy.''

The company's gross margin, or the percentage of sales
remaining after subtracting production costs, was unchanged from
a year ago at 65 percent.

The quarter ''was the company's best ever in terms of new
products,'' Chambers said.

Cisco shares fell 2 39/64 to 112 25/64 in trading of 31.7
million. The San Jose, California-based company, whose stock has
risen more than 20 percent this year, reported results after the
close of regular U.S. trading.

The stock traded as low as 108 1/2 after markets closed, as
some investors were disappointed that Cisco didn't declare a
stock split, analysts said.
''A lot of folks were hoping for that,'' Pita Group's
Johnson said.

The per-share earnings figure from the year-earlier period
is adjusted for a 3-for-2 stock split in September 1998.

In the most recent quarter, Cisco had charges of $318
million, or 19 cents a share, related to four acquisitions.
Including these items, the company had net income of $288
million, or 17 cents a share. There were no gains or charges in
the year-earlier period.

©1999 Bloomberg, LP. All rights reserved. Terms of Service and Trademarks.



To: Tim Luke who wrote (21798)2/3/1999 7:03:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 77400
 
Posted at 10:15 p.m. PST Tuesday, February 2, 1999

Cisco system produces a
'virtual close'

BY JONATHAN RABINOVITZ
Mercury News Staff Writer

There were a few days left before Larry R. Carter was to present
Cisco Systems Inc.'s quarterly earnings report to about 800 financial
analysts, but the chief financial officer was not scurrying to crunch the
final numbers.

Last Friday night, Carter's only rush was to leave the office in time for
a 6:30 dinner party.

''No way would it have been like this a few years ago,'' said Carter,
as he logged off his computer. ''And I wouldn't have been crazy just
the last three days, it would have been the last two weeks.''

Carter's improved social life is one of the smaller changes that
networking technology has made to Cisco's financial management, as
the world's largest maker of computer networking equipment has
moved toward what its executives call a ''virtual close.'' The San
Jose-based company has pioneered the use of its own networking
equipment to reduce the time and effort behind producing its quarterly
reports.

Although Wall Street has never paid much attention to how quickly
such numbers can be released, Cisco officials insist that a quick close
gives them a competitive advantage. As part of the process, the
company learns earlier about potential problems and potential
windfalls, while also freeing up financial managers for projects besides
closing the books.

Cisco reported after the stock markets closed Tuesday that its profits
of $606 million increased by 33 percent from the same quarter last
year, not counting charges. Its earnings per diluted share of 36 cents
came in a penny higher than analysts had projected, according to First
Call Corp., which surveys analysts' expectations.

The quarter ended Saturday, Jan. 23, and within three business days
-- by the end of last Wednesday -- the numbers were ready, Carter
said, noting that was seven days faster than it took a few years ago.
The company reviewed the figures Thursday and waited until Tuesday
to release them, to gain more market attention than executives believe
they would get on a Friday or Monday.

By 2000, the goal is to have the earnings results the day the quarter
ends, Carter said.

''Cisco is on the forefront of using the net to close their books,'' said
Jeff Henley, chief financial officer at Oracle Corp, which supplies
Cisco with its database software. ''It's a trend that many in business
are talking about, but I rarely run into people actually doing it.''

To be sure, some people dismiss the closing time as largely irrelevant.

Cisco's competitor, Lucent Technologies, ended its last quarter Dec.
31 and released the numbers 14 working days later. ''I don't know if
it makes any difference at all,'' said Gary Bonham, a Lucent
spokesman. ''Does it make them any better in the marketplace?''

Brett Trueman, an accounting professor at the Walter A. Haas School
of Business at the University of California at Berkeley, said corporate
electronic closes would not directly impact the financial markets.
''The market only cares that you announce when you say you'll
announce,'' he said.

Still, several executives from Cisco and other companies said a
quicker close can cut down on uncertainty and rumors in the market
as analysts wait for the figures to be released. It also reduces the
period during which information can be leaked or insiders can profit
from illegal trading, Trueman noted.

''In terms of transactions the quicker you can close and get it out to
the market, the better it is for all involved,'' said John Chambers,
Cisco's chief executive. He added, however, that a more important
aspect of the quick closing is that it means the company is on top of
the financial information about its activities.

''If a company doesn't know what's going on until three weeks after
closing, that's when you can get surprised,'' he said.

At Cisco, orders and sales closings are entered directly into the
network every day so that top executives get a daily report on
revenues, discounts and product margins. About 73 percent of all
Cisco sales transactions are done by electronic commerce so this
makes it easier to have such information available.

The virtual closing is part of Cisco's larger effort to get as much of its
business into the network and away from paper.

On Friday night, as he finished the day, Carter looked for purchase
requisitions that needed approval, finding online a request for a
$855,000 construction project. After seeing who had signed off on it,
Carter approved the deal.

Next, for the benefit of a visitor, he demonstrated how he could
''drill'' into the booking information. He went from the global
numbers, to the national numbers, then to the southern region, then to
the Gulf Coast and finally to Austin, where he had a list of all the
salespeople. He pointed out one who had a large ''debooking.''

''On a given day, I might call the guy and ask what's going on,'' he
said.

Similarly, all travel arrangements and workforce and benefit statistics
are available through the company's networks.

''Cisco's not just a big seller of the technology but is also one of the
most efficient users,'' said Bill Rabin, an analyst who covers
networking stocks at JP Morgan. ''It's important because it shows
that they drink their own Kool-Aid.''

AMAZIN'