SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : EDS - Recent pullback a buy opportunity??? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Daniel G. DeBusschere who wrote (1372)2/11/1999 12:44:00 PM
From: Anthony Wong  Respond to of 1841
 
Daniel, here's a fairly detailed article from the Canadian Globe and Mail:

EDS poised to buy Systemhouse
Deal, reported to be worth $1.6-billion, marks second time in less than four years the firm has been sold

Thursday, February 11, 1999
MARK EVANS
Technology Reporter

Electronic Data Systems Corp. is poised
to buy SHL Systemhouse Inc. for a
reported $1.6-billion (U.S.), the second
time in less than four years that the
Canadian computer services and consulting
firm has been sold.

The deal has been anticipated for several
months as analysts and investors tried to
determine what WorldCom Inc. would do
after it purchased MCI Communications
Inc. -- Systemhouse's parent -- last year for
$47-billion.

The value of the deal hasn't been disclosed,
but MCI acquired Ottawa-based
Systemhouse in 1995 for $1-billion to
combine MCI's corporate and consumer
communications business with the Canadian
firm's service expertise. During MCI's
ownership, Systemhouse's revenue has
jumped 50 per cent to $1.8-billion in 1998
from $1.2-billion in 1994.

EDS of Plano, Tex., would not comment
on the rumoured deal, except for a press
release that said the firm will announce the
acquisition today of "another major
information technology services company."
Systemhouse was not available for
comment.

"They're buying SHL Systemhouse, you
can take my word on it," said Keith Ellis,
an analyst with IDC (Canada) Ltd.

The deal makes sense, Mr. Ellis said,
because it would combine EDS's strength in
computer outsourcing with Systemhouse's
large presence in the systems integration
and design market. Both these businesses
are growing rapidly as more companies
seek specialists to operate and maintain
their computer systems.

The Wall Street Journal reports today that
the acquisition is worth $1.6-billion and is
part of a larger agreement to swap assets
worth about $17-billion. Besides the
Systemhouse transaction, MCI will shift
software development and computer
operations to EDS under a deal valued
between $5-billion and $7-billion through
2010. EDS will turn over its networking
operations and staff to MCI under a deal
valued at $6-billion to $8.5-billion.

The speculation about Systemhouse's
future heightened in December after it was
reported that MCI Worldcom of Jackson,
Miss., was talking with several companies
about its sale.

The list of possible suitors included Bell
Atlantic Corp. and SBC Communications
Inc. but EDS was seen as the most logical
buyer.

Bernard Ebbers, MCI WorldCom's
Canadian-born chief executive officer, has
set aggressive profit and revenue targets for
the company and Systemhouse didn't
appear to fit into his high-growth strategy.
The Ottawa company was also considered
to be too small to handle the wide range of
services that MCI WorldCom wants to
offer corporate customers.

The acquisition of Systemhouse would be
the first big move made by Richard Brown,
who took over as EDS's CEO last month.
While CEO with Cable & Wireless PLC he
made the company the second-largest
telecommunications carrier in Britain.

In Canada, the transaction would create an
entity with annual revenue of more than
$1.3-billion (Canadian). Only IBM Canada
Ltd., which has service revenue of about
$2-billion a year, would be larger in the
area.

Systemhouse, which employs 9,000 people,
has done particularly well in Canada. Mr.
Ellis said service revenue jumped 29 per
cent last year to $756-million, while
equipment sales were about $400-million.
EDS Canada's revenue rose 13 per cent to
$570-million, he said.

EDS, which was spun off by General
Motors Corp. in 1996, posted revenue last
year of $16.9-billion (U.S.), an 11-per-cent
increase from $15.2-billion in 1997.

EDS, which employs 110,000 people in 47
countries including Canada, has been losing
market share to rivals such as International
Business Machines Corp., and analysts
expected Mr. Brown, a noted deal maker,
to use acquisitions to spur growth.

theglobeandmail.com



To: Daniel G. DeBusschere who wrote (1372)2/11/1999 2:01:00 PM
From: Anthony Wong  Respond to of 1841
 
02/11 13:32 MCI WorldCom posts strong profits, forges EDS pact

(Recasts; adds details on EDS pact, stock prices, byline) By Jessica
Hall

NEW YORK, Feb 11 (Reuters) - MCI WorldCom Inc. on Thursday
reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter earnings and announced
a long-awaited, $17 billion deal to swap assets and services with
Electronic Data Systems Corp.

The news sent shares of MCI WorldCom, the No. 2 U.S.
long-distance company, up $4, or about 5 percent, to $80.25 in heavy
trading on the Nasdaq market. Shares of EDS, the world's No. 2
computer services company, gained $2.25 to $48.125 on the New
York Stock Exchange.

Jackson, Miss.-based MCI WorldCom said quarterly earnings,
excluding its investment in Brazilian long-distance carrier Embratel,
were $428 million, or 23 cents a share, compared with a loss of $313
million or 18 cents a share a year ago.

The results slightly exceeded Wall Street's expectations of 22 cents a
share, according to First Call Corp., which tracks analysts' estimates.

The company's revenues rose 14 percent to $8.0 billion from $7.0
billion a year ago, outpacing the revenue growth of its rivals. AT&T
Corp., the No. 1 U.S. long-distance company, said its fourth-quarter
revenues grew 4.8 percent to $13.53 billion. Sprint, the No. 3
long-distance provider, grew its revenues 7.6 percent to $4.1 billion.

MCI WorldCom's fourth-quarter results assumed that the acquisitions
of MCI Communications Inc., CompuServe Network Services and
ANS Communications had occurred at the beginning of the year.
They did not include the MCI Internet business, which was sold late
last year.

The results were driven by strong growth in voice and data revenues
and benefits from the acquisitions, analysts said. International
revenues jumped 55 percent to $328 million, but were slightly less
than some analysts had expected.

Voice revenues, on a proforma basis, rose 8 percent to $5.0 billion.
Data revenues surged 29 percent to $1.6 billion, and Internet
revenues increased 61 percent to $658 million. Traffic volume, or
minutes of use on its network, increased 13 percent year-over-year.

The company told analysts in a conference call it was comfortable it
would meet Wall Street's consensus earnings expectations of $1.97 a
share in 1999 and $2.84 a share in 2000, analysts said.

The agreement with EDS will allow MCI WorldCom to shed its
lackluster "Systemhouse" unit, which provides computer integration
and consulting services for large businesses, and focus on its core
telecommunications business.

Under the deal, EDS will buy the Systemhouse unit for $1.65 billion.
The two companies will swap 13,000 employees and provide about
$15.5 billion in services to each other.

Plano, Texas-based EDS will handle MCI WorldCom's computer
applications development and maintenance services and virtually all
of its infrastructure services. In return, MCI WorldCom will handle the
bulk of EDS' voice and data communications services.

The agreement will help both companies save money and increase
profits as they focus on their main areas of strength, MCI WorldCom
Vice Chairman John Sidgmore said in a conference call.

"This makes a lot of sense for MCI and EDS ... This allows them to
focus on their core strengths and not be distracted learning other
businesses," said Jeffrey Kagan, an independent
telecommunications analyst.

MCI WorldCom-EDS agreement mirrors a similar pact forged in
December between AT&T and International Business Machines
Corp., the world's largest computer services company.

MCI Communications Corp., before its acquisition by WorldCom Inc.,
acquired Ottawa-based Systemhouse in 1995 for $1 billion but the
unit never flourished. MCI WorldCom's information technology
revenues fell 13 percent to $1.7 billion in 1998.

MCI WorldCom said Systemhouse was too small to bid for many
contracts at once and too small to compete against its much larger
rivals, including EDS, IBM and Computer Sciences Corp.

Analysts said the unit will be more fruitful under EDS, which will be
able to quickly mesh Systemhouse with its existing business.


Acquiring Systemhouse will reduce EDS' dependence on business
from General Motors Corp., its former parent and its largest
customer, analysts said.

The deal is the first move by EDS' new chairman and chief executive,
Dick Brown, the former chief executive of British telecommunications
company Cable & Wireless Plc, who joined EDS last month.

MCI WorldCom, which provides local, long-distance, data and Internet
services, was created through a series of 50 acquisitions over the
past decade, with the largest being the $40 billion purchase of MCI
last fall.



To: Daniel G. DeBusschere who wrote (1372)2/11/1999 9:37:00 PM
From: Anthony Wong  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1841
 
Analysts Say EDS's Earnings Will Benefit From MCI WorldCom Pact
February 11, 1999 4:21 PM

NEW YORK -(Dow Jones)- Electronic Data Systems Corp.'s plan to buy
a computer services unit from MCI WorldCom Inc. isn't expected to
immediately shake up competition in the services industry, but it could
give a nice jolt to the computer service company's profits, analysts said
Thursday.

In Thursday trading, EDS shares (EDS) advanced $2.375, or 5.2%, to
settle at $48.25.

EDS has agreed to acquire MCI WorldCom's Systemhouse unit for $1.65
billion in cash, as well as to sign broader alliance and services
outsourcing contracts - worth up to $7 billion for EDS - with MCI
WorldCom (WCOM). In 1998, Systemhouse had revenue of $1.7 billion.
As part of the deal, EDS will provide services to maintain MCI's software
systems and manage its computer operations.

Merrill Lynch analyst Stephen McClellan estimated the Systemhouse
acquisition and its outsourcing contract with MCI WorldCom might add
up to 10 cents a share to EDS' 2000 earnings and possibly boost
earnings this year. The mean estimate of analysts surveyed by First Call,
before the announcement, was for earnings of $1.88 a share in 1999 and
$2.16 a share in 2000. For fiscal 1998, EDS reported earnings of $1.70,
excluding items.

EDS has been struggling to jump-start its earnings since 1996 - the last
time it reported year-over-year profit growth. But under the leadership of
Chairman Dick Brown, who officially joined the company last month,
analysts have high hopes that he will get the bottom line moving up
again.

Brown, who has a reputation for taking bold steps to revitalize
companies, last was chief executive of Cable & Wireless PLC (CWP). At
EDS, he is anticipated to try to turn around the company through steps
including cost cutting, acquisitions and alliances. Sources say the EDS
held talks with MCI before Brown's arrival, but the chairman put his
imprint on the deal.

MCI Systemhouse was a sluggish grower and therefore not viewed as
near-term threat to other EDS competitors, such as Computer Sciences
Corp. (CSC). But EDS's broader deal with MCI WorldCom gives it an
edge in certain services contracts, said ING Baring Furman Selz analyst
Brian Maimone.

EDS and MCI plan to market each other's services in outsourcing
contract bids. EDS would provide systems integration and other services
while MCI could furnish customers with communications and network
services. Both firms plan to market each other's services, but the
relationship isn't exclusive.

The agreement shows that telecom companies no longer think of
themselves as one-stop shops that can provide unlimited technology
services, said Pascal Aguirre, a principal in the business strategy group
of Renaissance Worldwide Inc. Telecom companies are realizing that
they should focus on their core-communication network skills, while
delegating computer technology services to companies specialized in
those areaa, Aguirre said.

Brown is expected to provide more financial details on the company's
deals with MCI, as well as his strategy for revitalizing the company April
29 - the day slated for EDS' Wall Street analyst meeting in New York.

By acquiring Systemhouse, EDS continues to shift its business away
from its troubled contract with major customer General Motors Corp.
(GM), McClellan said. The addition of the unit could lower GM's
contribution to EDS' revenue to 19% this year, down from a previously
estimate 21%, he said.

EDS, which spun out of GM in 1996, has been struggling with its GM
contract. GM has been reducing its spending on the contract at the
same time that EDS has been trimming contract costs to improve
profitability. The contract's margins are said to have stabilized last
quarter. The GM contract accounted for 24.8% of EDS' $16.9 billion in
1998 revenue.

EDS expects its acquisition of MCI Systemhouse and the outsourcing
contract and alliance with MCI to be finalized by May. Under the terms of
its agreement with EDS, MCI is transferring 12,000 of its employees to
EDS.

While EDS has partnered with telecom companies before, its MCI
relationship is more strategic, according to the company. EDS hopes to
leverage MCI's leadership as the provider of the largest Internet backbone
network into opportunities to sell electronic commerce services.

As part of its agreement, EDS awarded MCI a 10-year contract worth $6
billion to $8.5 billion for MCI to run EDS' global network. The network
handled EDS' data, voice and video communication needs and was used
to support the computer services company's outsourcing business.

EDS didn't disclose by how much it will cut its costs by outsourcing its
network's operations to MCI. In typical outsourcing contracts, companies
expect to save 15% to 20%, Maimone said.

Copyright (c) 1999 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

All Rights Reserved.