Infrastructure: Lucent wields check book to plug data gaps
totaltele.com By Joanne Taaffe
01 February 1999 Lucent went on a spending spree in January to resolve its ailing data and billing strategies. But not all vendors see large acquisistions as the remedy.
At a recent conference in Paris, Serge Tchuruk, Alcatel's chief executive, suggested that Ascend Communications Inc., for which Lucent paid about $20 billion in shares last month, was overpriced.
By Tchuruk's calculation, Lucent paid about $15 million per engineer, as opposed to the average $3 million to $4 million per-engineer price tag on a good datacoms start-up, making it a risky undertaking.
But of course Lucent did not just buy engineers. The Murray Hill, New Jersey company is also getting well-established, market-leading ATM and remote access products for carriers, Ascend's customer base, and technology that will enable it to cater for the demands of new types of carriers, said Neil Rickard, an analyst with Stamford, Connecticut-based consultancy The Gartner Group Inc.
Lucent has acquired the expertise that will help it to build data networks, and a number of Lucent's products, such as its access servers, are likely to be subsumed into Ascend's equipment or discontinued, according to a Lucent product manager. The Ascend purchase could also sound the death knell for equipment gained from Yurie Systems Inc., bought in May 1998 for $1 billion, Rickard added.
But such product overlap is relatively unimportant, he argued, as the acquisition is a much-needed and sensible move for Lucent.
So where are the gaps in Lucent's armory? Two glaring ones are its incomplete international reach and lack of equipment, such as routers and switches, for large corporates. Lucent has been "basically a U.S. company with the odd off-shore office," according to Rickard.
Lucent's executive vice president and chief operating officer, Ben Verwaayen, said Lucent has now managed to increase its international sales to about 30% of revenues by the end of the last quarter.
A confirmation that Lucent needs to win market share abroad came when it bought a 12.2% stake in Spanish equipment manufacturer, Amper SA, from Telefonica SA on the same day it snapped up Ascend. Lucent is now the Spanish operator's "preferred equipment supplier."
With a combination of the Telefonica deal, sales to ISPs and the addition of Ascend's customer base, Verwaayen insists that Lucent is on track internationally, describing his company's strategy as "multi-local" - at home in any place - and pointing out that it has established eight Bell lab facilities in Europe.
Although Rickard agrees that Ascend's more balanced share of sales between Europe, Asia and the United States will help Lucent, he still sees distribution in Europe as "patchy at best."
Even if Lucent can redress its U.S. bias and bump up sales outside its home market, it has yet to clearly spell out how it will attack the corporate market.
Unlike its competitor Nortel Networks, which got enterprise data equipment through its purchase of Bay Networks, Lucent has acquired a narrower set of goods for the carrier market from Ascend. Lucent has yet to pull together a product line that rivals competitors Cisco Systems Inc., Nortel Networks, and the 3Com/Siemens/Newbridge Networks alliance, Rickard believes. This could mean further acquisitions, Verwaayen acknowledged.
Another Lucent strategy, in line with its rivals, is to win customers by offering value-add software, such as network management and now, with its purchase of Kenan Systems Corp., billing and customer care software: Lucent has described Kenan as an important part of its globalization plans.
Buy or ally? How major vendors are tackling the data market
Europe's major switch manufacturers know they need to add data expertise to be globally competitive, but are adopting a variety of approaches.
While Munich-based Siemens AG has chosen a development and distribution alliance with 3Com Corp. and Newbridge Networks Corp., Alcatel and L.M. Ericsson AB are concentrating on buying small U.S. companies.
Ericsson claims it wouldn't do it any other way. The Swedish company last year restructured its datacoms division to form five units, and is adding to each unit through acquisition as the opportunity arises, said Mike Thurke, Ericsson's vice president and general manager of datacoms and IP services.
Rather than buying a large datacoms company, where there may be product overlap as well as outdated products to support, Ericsson is seeking out complementary "leading-edge" datacoms companies, said Thurke.
This led to the purchase of Santa Barbara, California-based remote access company ACC and a stake in high-speed router company Juniper Networks Inc. Such an acquisition strategy, however, fails to give Ericsson a huge injection of customers and significant distribution channels into the United States, where it is trying to improve its market share, said a chief executive of a U.S. datacoms company, who wished to remain anonymous.
Alcatel's steps to provide its customers with datacoms equipment include a development and distribution deal with Ascend and distribution OEM agreements with Cisco Systems Inc. and Xylan Corp. Alcatel looks unlikely to continue its relationship with Ascend, but said it has "taken steps to protect technologies we're working on with them, particularly software."
Otherwise, like Ericsson, Alcatel has been acquiring small and medium-sized datacoms companies for their corporate and carrier product lines, including gigabit router specialist Packet Engines Inc. and access vendor DSC Communications Corp.
Despite their different approach, both companies agree with Lucent on the importance of software and services. "Competitive strength is often at the higher level ... IP services, network management, ease of operation," said Thurke.
Lucent Acquisition Briefs: January 1999
11 January 1999: Lucent acquires privately held billing software company Kenan Systems Corp., of Cambridge, Massachusetts, for $1.48 billion. In doing so, Lucent not only buys into a growing market, it also furthers its European reach via Kenan's existing customers. Lucent will fold Kenan into its Communications Software Group, which will be headed by Kenan's founder and chief executive Kenan Sahin.
13 January 1999: Lucent buys remote access, frame relay and ATM vendor Ascend Communications Inc., of Alameda, California, for $20 billion in stock. Ascend had 1998 net sales of $1.479 billion and net income, excluding acquisition charges, of $247.3 million. Ascend will join Lucent's Broadband Networks Group, headed by chief operating officer Dan Stanzione.
13 January 1999: Lucent buys into the Spanish and Latin American market by paying Telefonica SA $47.4 million for a 12.2% stake in Spain's largest manufacturer of telecoms equipment and systems, Amper SA. Lucent will become Telefonica's preferred supplier, and has first call on Telefonica's remaining share of Amper, which the Spanish carrier plans to sell during the next three years.
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