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To: Chuzzlewit who wrote (120396)4/24/1999 1:58:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 176387
 
Bought COMS yesterday after reading about it on .......he buyout rumors resurfaced again today after a published report by the California
Technology Stock Letter, which speculated that Ericsson executives have recently met
with 3Com executives on a potential buyout.

"The talk is all over the Valley that several companies have
met with 3Com and the most recent one down there is
Ericsson," said Michael Murphy, editor of the investment
newsletter.

Ericsson and four other telephone equipment
makers--Siemens, Alcatel, Lucent, and Nokia--are among
3Com's potential suitors that need the firm's data networking
equipment as they scurry to build new telecom technology
that merges voice and data, Murphy said.

"The situation is that 3Com is the second largest data
communications equipment maker behind Cisco. And the
third largest one--Bay Networks--was already bought by
Nortel," Murphy said. "So you've got one big guy left that has
a broad suite of products. There's one target and five
companies that need to buy them. One of these companies
will bite the bullet."

Alcatel may be the least likely to take a chance on 3Com.
The company has already spent more $2.5 billion on three data-oriented networking
companies in recent months.

3Com has struggled financially as prices and sales of networking cards and modems have
dropped. Its stock price has plunged from the high 40s in January to the low 20s this
month.

Yet 3Com executives have said they plan to move away from the slow-growing analog
modem and networking card market to focus on emerging opportunities, including cable
and DSL modems. The company also plans to dedicate more resources to its home
networking and IP telephony, as well as to its successful PalmPilot line of handheld PCs.

Gruntal analyst David Takata said a 3Com buyout is possible. "3Com is a good networking
company. They have good brand status. And the Siemens, Alcatels and Ericssons are too
voice-centric right now. They need to build a data portfolio."

But Ericsson is in the midst of a management transition, Takata said, "so it makes you
wonder if they would do a takeover at a time like this, but they haven't made a move in
terms of data yet, so they have to respond."

Davies, however, said Siemens is a perfect fit since the two companies have recently
partnered to build telephony products for local corporate networks.

Murphy, of the California Technology Stock Letter, said Lucent might still be interested in
buying 3Com, despite its recent purchase of Ascend. Such a move would allow Lucent to
compete head-to-head with Cisco, he said.

Murphy speculates the next 60 days is the perfect time to close a deal, as 3Com's fiscal
year closes at the end of May.

"3Com will have audited numbers, so the buyer doesn't have to do another audit," he said.
"If someone bought them, they would have an entire fiscal year to contribute to it. It would
make a lot of sense."



To: Chuzzlewit who wrote (120396)4/24/1999 12:55:00 PM
From: TREND1  Respond to of 176387
 
Chuzz
You are 100% correct.
In the past after taxes HAL is still beaten !
But looking into the future there is RISK.
(1) HAL does not ignore RISK.
(2) BUY and HOLD ignores RISK.

With computer prices dropping from $3,500 to $1,300 to ???
(My personal computer cost data)

I must stay will HAL's RISK PROFILE.

But it is your money ! It is your call !

Larry Dudash