Cisco heads home with Linksys buy By John G. Spooner and Richard Shim Staff Writer, CNET News.com March 20, 2003, 11:02 AM PT http://news.com.com/2100-1035-993457.html Networking giant Cisco Systems on Wednesday said it would buy Linksys, a manufacturer of networking gear for consumers, in a stock deal valued at $500 million.

The deal will facilitate Cisco's entry into the consumer networking
market, the company said in a statement. Following the close of the
acquisition, Cisco will operate Linksys as a division and will
continue to sell its products under the Linksys brand name.

"This acquisition supports our vision to drive innovations into the
consumer market and create next-generation home networking
solutions," Charles Giancarlo, senior vice president and general
manager for product development at Cisco, said in a statement.

Linksys manufactures about 70 wired and wireless products for homes
and small offices, selling them mainly at retail. The Irvine, Calif.,
company has about 300 employees.

Cisco will issue common stock worth about $500 million to acquire
Linksys, and it expects the deal to close in the fourth quarter of
its fiscal year 2003, which ends in July. Cisco also expects charges
for the acquisition to subtract no more than 1 cent per share from
its fiscal 2004 profit. After charges, the company said it would add
about 1 cent to 2004 earnings per share.

The acquisition has been approved by the board of directors of each
company, but will be subject to closing conditions, including a
waiting period, under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements
Act of 1976, Cisco said.

While the acquisition isn't expected to add significantly to the
networking giant's revenue, it will give Cisco a solid position in
one of the few bright spots in the market. Linksys is one of the
market share leaders in home networking gear with a 39 percent share
of the consumer, small-office and home-office retail market in North
America.


"Home networking growth is being driven by the wide spread growth of residential broadband access which is projected to increase worldwide by 35 percent annually," Giancarlo said in a conference call.

Linksys will have access to Cisco's sales channels to address
international markets, something it is just starting to do as it
looks to increase its revenue. As a result of the acquisition, Cisco
will broaden its reach into the consumer market and Linksys will
broaden its reach into the international market, Giancarlo added.

"Home networking is the only part of the networking market that is
growing quickly," said William Bao Bean, an equity research analyst
with Deutsche Bank Securities. "Getting into this market is table
stakes for any players that want to cash in on the trend towards
convergence of broadband voice, data, video and multimedia."

Home networks allow consumers and small offices to share resources,
such as high-speed Internet access and printers, as well as content,
such as digital music, photos and gaming, over wired or wireless
local area networks.

Going after consumers is a departure from Cisco's traditional
business audience, which may explain why the company is going to take
a hands-off role in the running of Linksys.

Bean said Cisco sees the small-office and home-office networking
market as a $3.7 billion industry that is growing.

Linksys CEO Victor Tsai said in an interview with CNET News.com in
late January that despite the entry of big names, such as Microsoft
and Sony, into the home networking market, Linksys could survive as a
standalone company, but as the market matured there would be
consolidation.

Bean expects two players to drop out of the home networking market
this year, following two from last year.

Hooked on Wi-Fi
Cisco is looking to be more of an active player in the development of
the wireless networking market, which Linksys--through its access
points and PC Cards--has a significant role in. In late February,
Cisco announced it would license software designed to improve the
security and range of wireless networks that use Wi-Fi technology to
help drive the use of wireless networks within corporations.
Businesses have been slow to adopt the new technology out of security
concerns.

Consumers, however, have not been gun-shy on wireless networking, and
the market may be may be maturing faster than many expected, as
shipments of Wi-Fi gear triple and average selling prices drop
quickly.

The Linksys acquisition may add another wrinkle to Cisco's
relationship with Dell Computer. The PC maker sells a wide range of
Linksys networking gear, alongside its own line of Dell TrueMobile
wireless networking cards and base stations.

Cisco dropped a partnership with Dell, which sold Cisco networking
equipment, and later called Dell a competitor. Cisco made that move
about a year after Dell entered the network switch market with its
own line of PowerConnect switches.

The acquisition is Cisco's third so far this year. The company, based
in San Jose, Calif., went on an acquisition tear in the late 1990s as
the Internet boomed. It bought 18 companies in 1999, and 23 in 2000,
according to its Web site. But challenged by economic and networking
market slowdowns, it purchased just three companies in 2001 and five
companies last year.
Investment bank Merrill Lynch said in a research note that the deal
was a net negative, citing margin pressure, a poor track record in
the consumer market, no synergies between distribution channels and
the perception that the acquisition signals further weakness in
Cisco's core enterprise networking business. However, given Linksys'
relative size compared to Cisco the impact should be small.



On Wednesday, Cisco announced it would buy SignalWorks, a Mountain
View, Calif., developer of software for Internet telephony, in a
stock deal worth $13.5 million.


Related News * Cisco to acquire Net telephony firm March 19, 2003 http://news.com.com/2100-1035-993235.html

*       Cisco to buy network security firm  January 24, 2003
http://news.com.com/2100-1033-981994.html

*       Cisco sees Dell as a rival  September 18, 2002
http://news.com.com/2100-1033-958490.html

*       Get this story's "Big Picture"
http://news.com.com/2104-1035-993457.html





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