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Stock
Plummets But Hopes Remain High at Tech Firm Issue
by Hans Ibold
2/19/01
After
a tremendous run, shares of Calabasas technology innovator Ixia
came crashing back to earth last week in a broad sell-off precipitated
by gloomy financial reports from its most important customers.
Despite
the substantial downtick – Ixia shares plunged from $35 a share
on Feb. 8 to $25.31 a share on Feb. 14, a drop of nearly 30 percent
– technology analysts remain bullish on a company they say is uncommonly
well positioned to weather a financial downturn.
“Ixia
has been insulated from slowdowns and inventory problems that many
of its customers are facing because the company is focused on testing
next-generation technologies,” said Tom Coler, an analyst with Dain
Rauscher Inc. “That means that Ixia is dependent on its customers’
R&D spending, which hasn’t slowed down.”
The
most significant of those customers are Cisco Systems Inc. and Juniper
Networks, both of which recently posted dismal earnings and warnings
of revenue shortfalls.
Shareholders
may be feeling skittish, but the loss of value is not a true reflection
of the Ixia’s prospects in a slowing economy but rather the result
of investors out to make a quick buck, Coler and others said.
“They’ve
had a great run. The weakness of the stock is profit taking,” Coler
said.
In
fact, despite its recent woes, Ixia’s stock as of last week was
still selling at nearly twice its $13 initial offering price.
The
company, which makes equipment that tests and analyzes high-speed
networking technology, went public in one of the tech sector’s darkest
months, October 2000. Nevertheless, it has posted profits for 10
consecutive quarters, reporting net income of $4.1 million (7 cents
per share) for the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31, compared to net
income of $1.6 million (3 cents a share) in the like year-earlier
quarter.
‘Must-have
product’
“The
company provides excellent simulation equipment and modeling for
how networks will work on the outside,” said Rohit Shukla, CEO of
the L.A. Regional Technology Alliance. “It’s a must-have product.”
The
product is actually an array of systems that generate and analyze
data traffic. The networks that Ixia’s systems analyze include optical
networks and Ethernet network cabling and signaling networks, which
carry data traffic over optical fiber as well as electrical cable.
Ixia
has proven itself as a testing ground for these hot, new communications
technologies, and some of the Net’s biggest players are lining up
at Ixia’s door, slowdown or not. Besides Cisco and Juniper, the
company’s customers include network equipment manufacturers Extreme
Networks and Nortel Networks; network service providers like AT&T
Corp.; chip manufacturer Broadcom Corp.; and network users like
Bank of America Corp. and Lockheed Martin Corp.
Consider
Cisco, which accounts for 30 percent of Ixia’s sales. While the
maker of routers, switches, hubs and other equipment that powers
the Internet posted disappointing earnings on Feb. 9 and is sitting
on months of inventory, it still has to spend on R&D to stay ahead
of competitors like Juniper and Nortel.
“Companies
like Cisco need to spend money on new products, because new products
are their lifeblood,” said Credit Suisse First Boston Corp. analyst
Lissa Bogaty. “Ixia is not leveraged to unit volumes, so if unit
volumes go down for switches and routers, Ixia will be somewhat
buffered.”
Still,
if this downturn persists and revenues continue to stagnate at companies
like Cisco, then Ixia will eventually be affected like everyone
else, acknowledged Ixia CEO Errol Ginsberg. For now, though, “Cisco
is still spending,” Ginsberg said.
And
analysts don’t foresee a slowdown on spending for data communications
equipment and network testing anytime soon.
“They’re
playing in the right market,” Coler said. “As long as companies
continue to try to build faster Ethernet switches, cable modems
and optical networks, Ixia should be immune to any downturn.”
Testing
new technologies
Not
surprisingly, Ginsberg shares that view and believes that Ixia will
grow as the demand among the masses for faster connections to the
Internet grows.
“Once
we have universal availability of DSL and cable modems, you’re going
to see a whole new range of applications that will clog the Internet
backbone,” he said. “That backbone will have to be upgraded, and
that’s what the Junipers and the Ciscos are working on. They see
what’s down the road.”
Prior
to starting Ixia, which launched in 1997, Ginsberg was on the other
side of the networking business as a vice president of engineering
at neighboring Tekelec, which develops telecommunications equipment.
While at Tekelec, Ginsberg worked closely with Tekelec founder and
Chairman Jean Claude Asscher, who provided the seed capital to start
Ixia. Asscher remains chairman of both companies.
Ginsberg
said he saw “a serious need” for companies to test new networking
products. It’s a space that is still being filled by only a few
other players, including Agilent Technologies and Spirent PLC.
Ginsberg
has high hopes for Calabasas and the tech hub developing there and
along the Ventura (101) Freeway.
“It
has always been my ideal that this area starts to look more like
Silicon Valley, and it’s starting to happen,” he said. “Every couple
of weeks, there’s a new startup and more talent coming.”
Indeed,
Ixia is joined by nearby Troika Networks Inc., Internet Machines
Corp., Malibu Networks and others.
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