The Road Ahead: Networkers Confront a Mountain of Inventory
Those nasty inventories.
| Wednesday's Coverage |
| The Road Ahead: Networkers Confront a Mountain of Inventory |
| Previously |
| Getting a Handle on the Wireless-Handset Slowdown |
| Why This Earnings Season Has Been So Brutal |
| Earnings Burned Investors, but the Tech Fire Remains |
| With No Catalyst, Stocks Rumbling and Stumbling Through February |
Rubbernecking
Cisco's inventory totals illustrate the extent of the pileup. Over the past year, Cisco's inventory jumped 261% to $2.5 billion at the end of last month, from $700 million at the end of January 2000. Revenue growth for the same period lagged far behind, at 60%. Nortel was also caught in the buildup, though not quite as severely, with a 63% rise in inventory more modestly outstripping a 42% revenue gain.| Piling it on Cisco's numbers (figures in billions of dollars) | |||
| Accounting item | 2001* | 2000* | % change |
| Inventory | $2.53 | $0.7 | 261% |
| Accounts receivable | 3.51 | 1.7 | 106% |
| Revenue | 23.8 | 14.9 | 60% |
| Source: Cisco. *Fiscal years ended in January. | |||
| Warehousing the Goods Nortel's numbers (figures in billions of dollars) | |||
| Accounting item | 2000 | 1999 | % change |
| Inventory | $4.3 | $2.6 | 63% |
| Accounts receivables | 8.2 | 5.8 | 41% |
| Revenue | 30.3 | 21.3 | 42% |
| Source: The company | |||
Fram Oil Filters
Over the past year, Cisco also showed alarming growth in accounts receivable, which doubled to $3.5 billion. This means Cisco isn't getting paid in a timely fashion for goods it ships. This only makes matters worse by combining slower payments with already slower sales. That hasn't been an issue at Nortel, where accounts receivable grew apace with revenue. Having lowered the bar a bit in forecasting that revenue will be flat to slightly lower this quarter, Cisco could stage a comeback even in a slow economy. And if the economy regains its feet, those inventories will surely start to decline by the end of the year, as the company has repeatedly said it expects a second-half bounceback in demand. But comments from any number of tech companies in recent weeks have suggested that, in truth, no one really has any idea of how the rest of the year is going to look. If Cisco can pull through the economic slowdown and the attendant inventory pileup, management will finally deserve the high praise it has received, Robertson Stephens analyst Paul Johnson said Monday during the Robertson Stephens Technology 2001 Conference. But if the company's results continue to suffer and measures like inventory and accounts receivable continue to grow, some doubters will see evidence that Cisco's success was merely a good run in a very favorable economy.- Loading Comments...
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