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Technology Stocks : Ascend Communications (ASND) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: dykerted who wrote (59895)2/10/1999 3:30:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 61433
 
Williams speeds up network buildout [Good news for ASND/LU]

news.com

By Corey Grice
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
February 10, 1999, 11:50 a.m. PT

Williams Communications plans to finish building its
new 32,000-mile high-speed network a year ahead of
schedule and will spend an additional $2 billion to get
the job done.

Williams, the telecommunications unit of natural gas
distributor Williams Companies, said it will spend $4.7
billion, up from an initial $2.7 commitment, to finish the fiber
optic network in 2000. The company said increasing demand
for its network services--following its recent deal with SBC
Communications--is behind the stepped-up construction
efforts.


The network, currently spanning 19,000 miles, is expected to
total 26,000 miles by the end of the year. When it is
completed in 2000, Williams' network will link 125 cities in
the United States.

SBC, which owns several regional phone companies,
including Pacific Bell and Southwestern Bell, will invest
about $500 million in Williams in exchange for access to its
network.

Analysts said the company's new partnership has no doubt
pushed up the completion date.

"SBC wants it done soon, it's pretty simple," said Philip
Wohl, a telecommunications
analyst with financial publisher
S&P Equity Group. "There
seems to be an urgency that
wasn't there before. [The SBC
alliance] gives them a plan; I
think you'll see that relationship
grow over time."

Williams is among a handful of
new telecommunications
carriers in the process of
building packet-switched
networks designed to carry
data as well as voice.

Williams' business model calls
for selling capacity to other
carriers and large corporations.
Williams' customers include US West, Concentric Network,
and WinStar Communications.

SBC, like the other Baby Bells, is anxious to get into the
lucrative long distance voice market--but didn't have the
nationwide network to do so previously.

Analysts, however, don't expect the Baby Bells to get into
long distance service in earnest before the end of the year.
Wohl predicts BellSouth will also align with a new networking
company like Williams.

"[Williams is] in the same boat as Qwest and the others.
They want to be attractive to the Baby Bells...because they
really can't survive by themselves," Wohl said.

Other analysts' have echoed Wohl's concerns. New-age
carriers, like Qwest Communications International, Level 3
Communications, IXC Communications, and Frontier, have
been viewed as attractive takeover targets as their network
buildouts continue.

Qwest has completed 13,000 miles of its planned
18,500-mile network. The company expects to finish
construction by mid-year 1999. IXC has finished 9,300 miles
to date and expects to have 16,500 miles of fiber in the
ground by the end of the year.

Williams also is planning to spin off its telecommunications
unit in an initial public offering worth an estimated $750
million.

The company completed the Midwestern portion of its
network last month.



To: dykerted who wrote (59895)2/10/1999 3:41:00 PM
From: Mighty Mizzou  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 61433
 
The market is going to pop tomorrow. Clinton trial ending will be a big positive on top of these last two days. Good time to get in. GO ASND!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!