Cabletron jumps on earnings, IPO plans
Shares of Cabletron (NYSE: CS), which has been busy transforming itself into a holding company, jumped Thursday after the company gave Wall Street what it wanted -- clear IPO and revenue projections for its four baby Cabletrons.
In afternoon trading, shares of Cabletron were up 2 7/16 to 24 15/16.
Analysts gushed after Cabletron's first quarter earnings topped estimates. SG Cowen gave Cabletron a "buy" rating and FAC Equities upped the company to "buy" from "neutral."
In February, Cabletron announced plans to transform itself, sell lagging businesses and focus four subsidiaries on going public. Investors cheered as they began dreaming of spinoffs and initial public offerings. And why not? By owning Cabletron shares you could have shares of four fast-growing companies.
Shares began to soar after the initial announcement, but quickly went south (chart). Part of the problem was a market downturn, but a lot of it was Cabletron's silence about its IPO plans.
Cabletron is planning IPOs for two of its subsidiaries this year, with the remaining two going public in 2001 if the market cooperates. Cabletron officials said they plan IPOs to be followed by share distributions to shareholders. "Each shareholder will get shares of each company," said CEO Piyush Patel. "All four are ready to go now."
Here's the a look at the units in line to be spun off:
Riverstone reported a 2000 loss of $11.5 million to $12.5 million and will continue to lose money. Losses will narrow in 2001, and the company will break even in mid-2002, officials said.
In the first quarter, Riverstone reported sales of $15.8 million, up 24 percent sequentially.
Bottom line: Riverstone could be a no-brainer IPO if Cabletron gets it on the market in time. Riverstone is selecting underwriters now and plans to begin the IPO process within 30 days. Expect an IPO in the fourth calendar quarter. Looking at the optical networking IPOs of New Focus (Nasdaq: NUFO) and ONI Systems (Nasdaq: ONIS), Riverstone should be a hit. Ciena (Nasdaq: CIEN) and Sycamore (Nasdaq: SCMR) aren't exactly laggards either.
Craig Johnson, an independent analyst with the PITA Group, said Riverstone is a bit of a stretch as a metropolitan networking play. It won't matter -- many IPO investors think holding a stock three months is long term.
Ahead of the Cabletron earnings conference call, analysts had expected Aprisma to be the first to go public. Officials said nothing was wrong with Aprisma, but the market seems better suited to a Riverstone IPO.
Bottom line: Aprisma is probably a lock to be the second IPO filed from the Cabletron stable. Cabletron may be waiting for better sequential growth figures. Aprisma is also rounding out its management team. Could be a good buyout target.
GlobalNetwork, a network consulting company, said it's confident it can post revenue growth in "excess of 80 percent" year-over-year. Profitability is projected in the first quarter of 2002.
Bottom line: With strong growth and robust demand, GlobalNetwork could go public before Aprisma depending on market conditions. It's in a hot sector.
Bottom line: It's hard to get excited about Enterasys because the competition is tough. Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO) owns this space, and the rest of the industry is essentially road kill. Just ask the retooled 3Com (Nasdaq: COMS) and a host of others.
And now for the dreaded caveat about Cabletron and its future IPO darlings. Three of the four IPO candidates also have small revenue totals. Cisco's daily sales easily top the revenue totals for Cabletron's kids.
Johnson also notes that there are still a few missing details. How many shares will be floated with these IPOs? How will shares be distributed? And how will these companies fare three years from now?
Johnson, who is usually ahead of the curve, will be one of the few analysts actually wondering about these questions. Most analysts will play nice as Cabletron picks its IPO underwriters. "I have no doubts that there will be successful IPOs," said Johnson, referring to Cabletron's kids. "How will these do as stand-alone businesses? The jury is still out."