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Deutsche Bank Markets Research North America United States TMT Wireless Equipment Periodical Signals to Noise (S2N) MWC 2014: It is an LTE world S2N #491 - LIE proliferation and cheaper handsets push data demand The buzz returned this year to Mobile World Congress and we contributed as best we could, running between meetings, downing café con leches and snacking on jamon sandwiches. What was different was the focus of the buzz, which if last year was centered on smartphone growth and LIE unit volumes, then this year it was infrastructure. Almost every network equipment vendor we met with sounded optimistic about operator spending in the year ahead, especially with regard to LIE. State of the Baseband - number two still undecided As most of our readers know, we suggested a few months ago that Qualcomm would see little competition in 2014. In short, Mobile World Congress only reinforced this viewpoint. We met with most of the merchant baseband players and a number of industry contacts across the handset foodchain, and what is increasingly clear to us, is that this year the fight will be for a foothold, in hopes to make a play for meaningful volume, and the second spot, behind Qualcomm in 2015. While we have argued that Mediatek was the clear number two behind Qualcomm (they remain so in unit volumes and profits), this point has been muddied a bit by the mixed progress in LTE of a few others. Bottom line - all of QCOM's competitors have their challenges, which we detail inside. Smartphones high end struggles to differentiate, while Firefox redefines cheap It is strikingly obvious that differentiating on the high-end with hardware is limited. Every major handset OEM at the show had shiny new handsets (and tablets), as well as a wearable to go along with it. The good news for many across the globe is that smartphones are only getting cheaper. Firefox (Mozilla) took this one step further, introducing a $25 smartphone at the show. The front-end end game Last year we suggested that there would be consolidation in the frontend space, engineered by the active players - a result of Qualcomm's then announcement of RF 360. Before the show, RFMD announced a bid for Triquint. We do not feel like this is the end of the match-making, possibly with Triquint, and certainly outside of this deal, with other players attempting to redefine their own positions. Bottom line, the front end active players are merging with the front-end passive players (and other active players) in an attempt to develop fully integrated FEM's to compete with Qualcomm. EFTA01462408 Infrastructure poised for growth: Almost every network equipment vendor we met with sounded optimistic about operator spending in the year ahead. With LIE rollouts continuing around the globe, and beginning in earnest in places like Europe, China, Africa and CALA, we believe this will be a solid year for infrastructure spend. Stock implications We left MWC feeling incrementally positive on ()COM (limited LIE competition), FFIV (telco wins raising price target to $130), COMM (LTE builds), and MVNR (VoLTE builds), constructive on CIEN (see our separate preview note), neutral but constructive on RKUS (cable traction), CAVM (small cells), PSMI (CMOS PA performance) ADNC (Motion Q), slightly more cautious on CSCO (SP execution) BBRY (increasing security competition) and XXIA (testing virtualization) Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Deutsche Bank does and seeks to do business with companies covered in its research reports. Thus, investors should be aware that the firm may have a conflict of interest that could affect the objectivity of this report. Investors should consider this report as only a single factor in making their investment decision. DISCLOSURES AND ANALYST CERTIFICATIONS ARE LOCATED IN APPENDIX 1. MICA(P) 054/04/2013. Date 2 March 2014 Industry Update Brian Modoff Research Anal st Vijay Bhagavath, Ph.D Research Analyst Kip Clifton, CFA Research Associate Key Changes Company FFIV.OQ Source: Deutsche Bank Target Price 120.00 to Rating EFTA01462409 130.00(USD) EFTA01462410 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) Signals to Investors Portfolio Manager's Summary: LTE proliferation and cheaper handsets push data demand around the globe, creating a buzz for infrastructure players The buzz returned this year to Mobile World Congress and we contributed as best we could, running between meetings, downing café con leches and snacking on jamon sandwiches. What was different was the focus of the buzz, which if last year was centered on smartphone growth and LTE unit volumes, then this year it was infrastructure. Almost every network equipment vendor we met with sounded optimistic about operator spending in the year ahead. In terms of an overarching theme, OTT (Over The Top) took the spotlight as Facebook announced that Whatsapp would be launching voice services. Remember two years ago when carriers tried to launch RCS? Well this Facebook announcement was salt on the old wounds of that struggling attempt to compete with fast moving OTT vendors. Nevertheless, what the announcement does highlight in a positive sense is that carriers will likely be pushed to offer better coverage and capacity as we move forward. There were other themes, which, while not as overt as OTT, will likely have ramifications for players around the industry. Specifically: a continued race in the baseband space - there is still no clear number two behind Qualcomm here, the frontend industry consolidation, LTE deployment acceleration, Firefox redefining the cheap smartphone and the struggle to differentiate in high end handsets. Our key takeaways: T.. State of the Baseband — number two still undecided: As most of our readers know, we suggested a few months ago that Qualcomm would see little competition in 2014. In short, Mobile World Congress only reinforced this viewpoint. In Barcelona we met with most of the merchant baseband players and a number of industry contacts across the handset foodchain, and what is increasingly clear to us, is that this year the fight will be for a foothold, in hopes to make a play for meaningful volume, and the second spot, behind Qualcomm in 2015. While we have argued that Mediatek was the clear number two behind Qualcomm (they remain so in unit volumes and profits), this point has been muddied a bit by the mixed progress in LTE of a few others and what we feel are challenges in LTE for Mediatek. Smartphones — high end struggles to differentiate, while Firefox redefines cheap: It is strikingly obvious that differentiating on the high-end with EFTA01462411 hardware is limited. Every major handset OEM at the show had shiny new handsets (and tablets), as well as a wearable to go along with it. The good news for many across the globe is that smartphones are only getting cheaper. Firefox (Mozilla) took this one step further, introducing a $25 smartphone at the show. The phone runs on a 1 Ghz application processor, and has a Spreadtrum 2G GSM/Edge baseband and WiFi connectivity. We were able to demo the device, which we felt was a large improvement on the year before, when they had the OS running on a more expensive 800 mhz processor. Ubuntu also was demonstrating an interesting multimedia OS which was improved from last year and eliminates any physical buttons on the screen. Page 2 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. EFTA01462412 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) gg.. The front-end end game: Last year we suggested that there would be consolidation in the frontend space, engineered by the active players — a result of Qualcomm's then announcement of RF 360, a completely integrated frontend solution on CMOS. Before the show, RFMD announced a bid for Triquint, attempting to grab one of the two main players in passive, frontend BAW filters (Avago being the other). We do not feel like this is the end of the match-making, possibly with Triquint, and certainly outside of this deal, with other players attempting to redefine their own positions. Bottom line, the front end active players are merging with the front-end passive players (and other active players) in an attempt to develop fully integrated FEM's to compete with Qualcomm. Infrastructure poised for growth: Almost every network equipment vendor we met with sounded optimistic about operator spending in the year ahead. With LTE rollouts continuing around the globe, and beginning in earnest in places like Europe, China, Africa and CALA, we believe this will be a solid year for infrastructure spend. Our checks indicate that spending will be significant across many operators in a number of geographies, as many understand the operational advantages of the all-IP architecture of LTE and feel confident enough about the macro environment to make the improvements. A few also noted decent recent 3G spending trends as developing markets increase spending in this more cost reduced (especially in handsets) technology. We also have updates on the following companies and provide more detail in the body of the note: Qualcomm: On the baseband side, Qualcomm continued to press its lead, with others making announcements but few showing signs that they would make real progress in terms of volumes this year. The company issued a bevy of press releases, one of which was the release of their Snapdragon 600 series, which we believe underscores Qualcomm's strategy to waterfall their technology, bringing LTE modem capabilities further down market and increasing the hurdle for other merchant vendors looking to make an inroad into the market. They also announced a frontend win with ZTE. The solution integrates the power amplifier, antenna switch and high band amplifier on one platform. While Qualcomm announced a design win, other frontend players were busy both making deals and displaying their wares. EFTA01462413 Peregrine: Peregrine demoed their CMOS PA, and the results were impressive — the company was able to achieve 44% efficiency in LTE used alongside Nuijira's envelope tracking solution — being at least as good, if not better than the best GaAs competitor. With WCMDA, the solution achieves 48% efficiency without envelope tracking, in line with the best GaAs competitor. Many hardware vendors had been impressed with the demo results, and while RFMD has made inroads into Peregrine's territory recently, we believe that Peregrine should be able to secure design wins with this PA solution given its efficiency and size. Audience: In our meeting with management, they sounded constructive about growth with Chinese-based OEMs and their traction in adjacent markets. They also sounded encouraged about their recent announcement around motion technology, called Motion Q technology, which enables activity navigation and gesture interpretation while consuming low energy (less than 5mW). The company feels that there are a number of use cases around the technology and while we tend to agree, we note that the technology is still in its early stages. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 3 EFTA01462414 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) Blackberry: Blackberry likely won for most press releases during Mobile World Congress. In the bevy of statements, we found their clarification of MDM pricing with EZPass to be the most resonant of all of them. The new pricing scheme breaks down their MDM solution into two, clear levels, which make it simple for any customer to understand. Overall, we think management continues to make smart decisions about the way forward. It is difficult not to think about what could have been had these decisions been implemented years ago. However, in spite of management's attempts at a turnaround, our belief is it could be too late, at least to justify the current market cap size of the company. Infrastructure Cisco: Our conversations with Cisco's mobile networking sales and business leaders at MWC — and with our industry contacts — suggest that Cisco's service provider business overall is still in "transition" mode. While Cisco pre-announced the CRS-X core router in 2013, the company is yet to ship the CRS-X to the telcos or ISPs in their production networks. Further, while Cisco's higher-end edge router ASR 9k (suited for metro core versus for lower-end metro access edge use cases) is seeing double-digit order bookings trends, we continue to note an air-gap in Cisco's low and mid-range access edge router portfolio — with the company's legacy 7600 routers etc seeing growing competition from Juniper's MX and Alcatel Lucent's 7k series at the US telcos — e.g. at AT&T, etc, and from Huawei at the Tier-1 telcos in Europe, China, and in Latin America. F5 Networks: We are raising our Price Target on F5, from $120 to $130; reflecting our improved conviction on F5's next-phase growth opportunities in Telco and in Next-Gen Security following our MWC and RSA conference meetings. Our key insight on F5 is our higher conviction on the company's next-phase growth opportunities in Telco Network Intelligence and Next-Gen Security use cases. Field color from our MWC industry meetings correlate well with our recent round of IT channel EFTA01462415 conversations — which note that F5's +2 years of R&D and sales cycle investment at the major telcos (e.g. Verizon, AT&T, Vodafone, Telefonica, etc) on Layer 4/7 network intelligence initiatives is starting to positively impact F5's telco sales pipeline. While the company noted recent set of LIE signaling and mobile data traffic management related design wins at OI in Latin America and at carriers in the EMEA and APAC — our research suggests the company has secured design wins at the large US telcos during 2014 (Verizon and AT&T Domain 2.0). CommScope: Out of all of our companies, CommScope sounded the most positive. Their Wireless business is keeping pace, helped by LTE and 3G infrastructure coverage/capacity projects in Europe, CALA, Africa and Asia and capacity improvements here in North America. The company's DAS business has done well, as enterprises continue to look for easily deployable, multi-vendor solutions. To build on this, the company announced the Ion-E, a new DAS solution which is frequency agnostic (380 Mhz to 2700 MHz; multimode and allows the possibility to add WiFi) and with access points that can be powered over Ethernet (POE). The company continues to innovate in areas where they have the scale to bring specific products to markets. We reiterate our Buy here, as we feel the year should be a strong one for the company. Ciena: Our MWC conversations with Ciena's CTO gave us insight on management's view on Alcatel Lucent selected recently as the second source supplier at Verizon, on 100G and OTN switching upgrade opportunities this calendar year, etc. We get the read from our conversations with management that Verizon is likely to follow an 80/20 rule for its optical network sourcing — i.e. appx 80% of long haul and metro optical networking upgrades using Ciena's platforms and the remainder likely allocated to the second-source supplier. Further, we note that a meaningful runway for Ciena's Carrier Ethernet (Packet Networking) switches for aggregating traffic from 4G macro cells (and Page 4 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. EFTA01462416 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) ongoing 4G small cell rollouts) at the major US and rest of world telcos — with Ciena noting that appx 50% of cell towers are lit by fiber — suggesting to us that there is appx a +30% runway remaining for "fiberization" of the radio access and metro aggregation network. We provide our preview of Ciena's upcoming quarterly results in a separate note. Mavenir: Our MWC conversations with Mavenir senior management noted a positive view on Voice over LTE network services rollouts in 2014+ at the company's US and European telco customers — i.e. at T-Mobile US, Deutsche Telecom, France Telecom, Vodafone, etc. We get the read that Mavenir's US telco customers are likely to rollout VoLTE and RCS services sooner versus their European telco counterparts this calendar year. We also noted 11 new carrier customer wins for Mavenir's voice network solutions in Europe — with potential for VoLTE, RCS, and messaging services rollouts in these customer wins later this year. Cavium: Our MWC conversations with senior management suggests that Cavium's Fusion chip shipments (likely a $20-30 part) into 3G and 4G small cells rollouts is still in early stage at the present — likely a 2H14+ revenue opportunity for Cavium in our view. The Fusion chip likely to ship into OEM platforms (NSN, Huawei, Samsung) at around 14 telcos for the initial phase of 3G/4G small cells rollouts —followed by +15 carriers in the subsequent phases. While we are constructive on Cavium's CY15+ rev growth opportunities for the new chips — Octeon3, Fusion, Neuron, etc — we remain with our neutral near-term view and our Hold-rating on the stock — noting balanced risk/reward at current levels — i.e. the stock trading at appx 24x P/E for —19% First Call consensus rev growth expectation. Ixia: Our MWC conversations with the network testing solutions vendors is another set of datapoints supporting our near-term caution on Ixia — a key vendor in enterprise and carrier network test and network visibility solutions. While 40GE datacenter switch testing and LTE voice and data network equipment and network services testing are EFTA01462417 multi quarter opportunities for Ixia — we note lumpiness in LIE network testing orders (at telcos such as AT&T, etc), 40GE datacenter switch testing still in early stages and virtualization of testing applications moderating demand for incremental box capacity. Ruckus: At the show management appeared confident, likely fed by continued cable provider traction. One point which struck us as positive was management's warm reception to LTE-over-unlicensed (LTE-u). They suggested LTE-u could be a positive development for some of their MSO customers, helping them to possibly put together a mobile strategy (e.g. Republic Wireless). Despite the cable provider wins and the acceptance of LTE-u, we remain on the sidelines here, as we would like to see them gain traction in the mobile operator space, an area where we believe if won, would begin to justify their P/E multiple. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 5 EFTA01462418 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) Sine of the Times State of the baseband — the fight continues for number two As most of our readers know, we suggested last August, that Qualcomm would see little LTE baseband competition in 2014. In short, Mobile World Congress only reinforced this viewpoint. In Barcelona, we met with most of the merchant baseband players and a number of industry contacts across the mobile device landscape, and what is increasingly clear to us, is that this year the fight will be for a foothold, in hopes to make a play for meaningful LTE volume, and the second spot in LTE, behind Qualcomm in 2015. While we once argued that Mediatek was the clear number two behind Qualcomm (they remain the strong #2 in overall mobile modem unit volumes and profitability), in LTE this point has been muddied a bit by the progress of a few others and what we feel are challenges for Mediatek (though we do continue to believe that in 2015, Mediatek will likely be the #2 unit leader in low-end LTE, behind QCOM). For their part, Qualcomm issued a bevy of press releases at the show. The company was demoing a Category 6 baseband, the 9x35, and also announced the Samsung S5 win, with their Snapdragon 801 SOC Our checks indicate that Qualcomm will gain market-share in Samsung's top model (—50% of the S4 by our estimates, going to —7080% of the S5). The company also announced the Snapdragon 600 series, with a 64- bit octa-core processor running on ARMv8 architecture. The 600 series will integrate Qualcomm's third generation baseband, with Cat 4 LTE capabilities. The announcement underscores Qualcomm's strategy to waterfall their technology, bringing LTE modem capabilities further down market, increasing the hurdle for other merchant vendors looking to make an inroad into the market. There was also announcement on the front end, but we discuss this later with the assessment of the industry moves being made here. On the LTE baseband side, Qualcomm continued to press its lead, with others making announcements but few showing signs that they would make real progress in terms of EFTA01462419 LTE unit volumes this year. Mediatek, which we still considered Qualcomm's greatest threat, made their LTE announcement weeks ago. At the show, they announced a win with Alcatel for their dual chip, LTE solution. We feel volumes will likely be light for this model given Alcatel's position in handsets. And despite the announcement a few weeks ago of Mediatek's integrated LTE solution, our checks indicate that this chipset would only be shipping in handsets from Chinese-based OEMs in late 2014; developed world LTE volumes would only come in 2015. And LTE with carrier aggregation (LTEAdvanced) is a ways-off — 2015 is a best-case scenario. While there is potential that Mediatek could see decent LTE volume in developing markets exiting CY 2014 — the company highlighted their target market, the "Super-Mid" ($79 - $399), in a new marketing campaign — Qualcomm and others will be busy challenging them here as well. In short, while we do not discount Mediatek in the least, we do think they are further away than their recent press releases would have most believe. Another major player, one that has been knocking on the door for some time, is Intel. Our checks indicate that the company did win an LTE SKU with the S5 (remember that in the S5, as in the S4, they will also be in the 3G only version as the modem with the Exynos AP, but 3G volumes in the S5 will be lower than they were with the S4). It is our understanding that this will be dual-chip solution, with separate Cat-6 LTE chip and 3G/2G modem, and will only be available in a limited market, which we understand to be with a carrier in Germany. We believe winning a slot in the S5 is encouraging, as it is Page 6 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. EFTA01462420 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) first meaningful win for that until the company is able to design see them gaining meaningful share. Th likely be expensive and inefficient, two discrete elements. Intel is supporting this design win funding. As it stands, we believe that efforts to complete a going as well as some had hoped, and that there are still be meaningful challenges to overcome as the company struggles to integrate disparate technology acquisitions. Some of the more encouraging words from our checks were reserved for Broadcom. Heading into the Renasas (Nokia) solution the show floor, many that Broadcom would be future (possibly LTE Cat-6). If the company is able follow believe they could find small, but relatively meaningful volumes for BRCM, in the mid- to possibly higher-end, exiting the end of the year. Remember, this is the former very competent Nokia modem design team that has their own fully integrated multimode protocol stack (EMP) and BRCM (Nokia) possess their own fully integrated The protocol stack is the operating system of the modem fully integrated solution has advantages few outside appreciate. Other players have what one of our "Frankenstien" protocol stacks suppliers). And as wireless like the monster, become advanced technology implementation and release dates. its single mode LIE chipset; however, we would warn an efficient, multi-mode solution, we do not e current, two-chip solution in the S5 SKU will as it uses two ARM licenses and implemented with with co-marketing multimode solution are not show, the company already had an LTE design win with their in the Samsung Ace 3. And while we did not see the model on indicated that the multi-mode solution was working well and announcing an upgraded version of their modem in the near- through on this, we (2G-LTE). Only ()COM, Ericsson 2G-LTE protocol stack. and having a seamless, the modem design world can contacts referred to as (having licensed protocol stacks from four different stack technology advances, these Frankenstien protocol stacks, increasingly difficult to control and manage, impacting EFTA01462421 Others were mostly left out of the conversation with LTE, given the apparent lack of resources and resulting lack of clout with handset vendors. In other areas, like 2G and 3G, we feel that pricing will continue to be pressured, as handset price points hit new levels of affordability (e.g. $25 smartphones with 1GHz processors, GSM/Edge and wifi) In short, while we continue to believe Mediatek to be Qualcomm's most credible overall competitor, we think the shift to LTE creates an opportunity for perhaps one other vendor. While we will not venture to guess who this might be, we note that Qualcomm is not standing still and possess massive volume economies of scale much larger than everyone else combined. The company continues to press ahead not just with modem technology, but other areas of the handset BOM, small cell, as well as building out platforms in order to leverage the overarching theme of mobility and the internet of things in general. We reiterate our Buy rating on QCOM. Smartphones — High-end commoditizes; Firefox redefines cheap; new technologies to drive data growth; augmented reality and personal encryption buzzes It is strikingly obvious that differentiating on the high-end is difficult. Every major handset OEM at the show had shiny new handsets (and tablets), as well as a wearable to go along with it. Last year we suggested that most should attempt to differentiate on software, by tweaking Android. The results of this have been mixed at best. Samsung's health and security enhancements have made it no more sticky, just as Sony's content offerings offer little draw to the hardware, which otherwise looked the most impressive at the show. Nokia attempted to go further down market with its first Android handset Deutsche Bank Securities Inc Page 7 EFTA01462422 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) ever (strictly Android open source code with no integration into Google), but the strategic questions of this maneuver overshadowed any attributes that the device may have had. What was most worrisome, was that a cursory look around hall 7, where many of the Chinese-based OEMs resided, revealed smartphones that were at least as feature rich as any the major OEM design houses were carrying. Many even had wearables to go alongside them. All of this points to a market that is continually being commoditized, at least on the hardware side — a suggestion that has been made years before, but a theme that is now so palpable at the show it is hard to ignore. The good news for many across the globe is that smartphones are only getting cheaper. Firefox took this one step further, introducing a $25 smartphone at the show. The phone runs on a 1 Ghz application processor and has a Spreadtrum Edge baseband and WiFi connectivity. We were able to demo the device, which we felt was a large improvement on the year before, when they had the OS (which is based on HTML-5) running on a more expensive 800 mhz processor. Overall, we feel as though Firefox is moving in the right direction with this OS, towards the masses with the hope to migrate these initial customers to more expensive devices in the future. Just in terms of buzz, the Firefox booth was constantly packed with people and had moved from the hinterlands of hall 8 up to hall 3, where many of the bigger companies were located. It appears the thirst for anything non-Android or non-i0S is significant, and as long as Firefox continues to refine its solution, and target the low-end, we feel there should be an encouraging reception there. Ubuntu was also there as an alternative to Android or iOS. Last year, the company appeared to have the most complete OS offering of any of the three main alternatives — Tizen being the third. During the past year, the company has been able to sign up a number of both operators and hardware vendors, and while the OS is aimed more at the mid- to high-end than Firefox or Tizen, the OS is also the most unique. The buzz was comparable to last year, which was to say it was decent and relatively less EFTA01462423 notable than Firefox. Regardless, we believe it could have legs given that so many in the entire mobile ecosystem would like to see more players. The show was lacking in terms of "wow" factors from the handset side. However, there were a few mobile applications that caught our attention. Metaio, a company which has an augmented reality solution, was showing off some very interesting use cases; one from Ikea was demonstrating pulling items like furniture from a physical catalog, onto a 3D imaging sensor attached to a smartphone or tablet and placing the item into your home (viewed through the tablet screen) so you can see what it would look like in your home; another, using 3D glasses, used 3D images to augment the physical world to walk a repairman through the steps they needed to perform to repair an air conditioner. The company has been in existence for almost ten years - the technology was originally formed at Volkswagen. The idea of the technology is becoming more mainstream and Metaio could be one of the key beneficiaries given how advanced the solution appears. The other player in this space is Qualcomm, which for some time now has promoted its augmented reality platform Vuforia. The difference between the two is that Metaio has a solution and is adapting it to customer use cases, whereas Qualcomm has a platform and is looking for app developers to do the consumer facing. In either case, the technology in general is very interesting and we think it could easily be adopted by consumers in significant fashion, all the while increasing demand for data across the network. We expect augmented reality to be one of the major themes in next years MWC as a major handset vendor could launch a smartphone and/or tablet with an integrated 3D image sensor in front of the show. Handset hardware appeared more iterative from our standpoint. One company we met with, Skycross, has developed an antenna solution for 4X4 MIMO, a seemingly simple Page 8 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. EFTA01462424 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) idea which is actually very challenging to implement in a small form factor. To date, only 2X2 MIMO has been achieved on the handset, which makes their 4X4 solution all the more compelling Personal encryption and privacy was a new theme and garnered a lot of interest at the show. The Blackphone booth (not to be confused with Blackberry), run by SPG Technologies, was constantly packed, with many questions about availability and how the solution actually worked. The solution secures data at the application level, and while not yet ready to prevent NSA and hacker snoops, the attempts at trying to restore personal privacy garnered that attention of many at the show. At the same time Boeing lobbed in announcement from afar, suggesting they would have a fully encrypted handset by the end of the year, but not made available to the general public. Given the excitement around both solutions, our sense is that this budding area could grow into something significant given most people's wariness of big brother issues in both the States and elsewhere. In terms of how it affects the industry, we believe it could be a potential risk for Blackberry (or opportunity), with end-to-end encryption being a key advantage of their platform. Blackberry clears up muddied MDM strategy; launches new devices Blackberry likely won for the most press releases during Mobile World Congress. In the bevy of statements, we found their clarification of MDM pricing with EZPass to be the most resonant of all of them. The new pricing scheme breaks down their MDM solution into two, clear levels, which make it simple for any customer to understand. Before now, with the strategy implemented by the previous CEO, BES 10 had a "buffet- style" approach to pricing, which was both unclear and at odds with previous Blackberry pricing schemes. The new, simpler approach corrects these. The company also launched a couple handsets, one for the Indonesian market and one that returns to the company's roots of keyboards and trackballs. While the new handset design complements their end-to-end approach, we believe any hopes of traction in the EFTA01462425 consumer market will likely be muted by the ongoing increasing competition in smartphones in general and Blackberry's inability to gain application momentum with BES 10 specifically. Overall, we think management continues to make smart decisions about the way forward. It is difficult not to think about what could have been had these decision been implemented years ago. In spite of management's attempts at a turnaround however, our belief is it is too late, at least to justify the current market cap size of the company We believe that they could be successful as a much smaller company with a smaller market cap. As a result, we maintain our Hold here. The front endgame Last year, we suggested that there would be consolidation in the frontend space, engineered by the active players — a result of Qualcomm's then announcement of RF 360, a completely integrated frontend solution on CMOS (eventually). While the complete solution is still a goal Qualcomm has yet to achieve using their internal elements alone, they do feel as though they will have a very competitive, complete solution within three years (not five as we suggest). At the show the company announced a win with ZTE for their latest front-end solutions, the QFE2320 and QFE2340. The solution integrates QCOM's version of envelope tracking, the power amplifier, antenna switch and high band amplifier on one platform. While Qualcomm announced a design win, other front-end players were busy both making deals and displaying their wares. Before the show, RFMD announced a bid for Triquint, attempting to grab one of the two main players in BAW filters (Avago being the other). We do not feel like this is the Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 9 EFTA01462426 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) end of the match-making, possibly with Triquint, and certainly outside of this deal, with other players attempting to redefine their own positions. It will be interesting to watch Skyworks, which has a healthy handset business in the active elements, but is doing well growing their business in other areas, outside of the handset market. There is a lot at stake in the front-end, we estimate the total 3G/LTE FEM addressable market to be a $7.6 to $11.5 billion annual opportunity in FY15. And while we did not hear much interest out of the merchant baseband vendors not-named-Qualcomm (they are likely focused on launching LTE before they attempt integration elsewhere), many front-end players were likely looking around at possibilities to strengthen their position or sell while the selling is good. Some have made great strides in recent years — we met with Ethertronics, who continues to do well and is making similar moves to integrate front-end elements into their antennaes. I/O Semiconductor is another player with whom we met and is sounding encouraged by recent design wins. Altogether, there appear to be a number of players receiving decent amounts of business. Our thesis though remains the same — consolidation will continue and many will be best served to find a dance partner sooner rather than later. Peregrine — PA catches attention of many At the show, Peregrine demoed their CMOS PA, and the results were impressive — the company was able achieve 44% efficiency in LTE used alongside Nuijira's envelope tracking solution — being at least as good, if not better than the best GaAs competitor. With WCMDA, the solution achieves 48% efficiency without envelope tracking, in line with the best GaAs competitor. Many hardware vendors are impressed with the demo results, and while RFMD has made inroads into Peregrine's territory recently, we believe that Peregrine should be able to secure design wins with this PA solution given its efficiency and size. While the existing switch business continues to bump along with Samsung being their main customer, adding PA revenues could be hugely EFTA01462427 helpful not just to the top-line, but also to the company's appeal as a target for others. Meanwhile the high performance business segment continues to perform well, with automotive and set-top players both helping to drive profitable growth for the business. Overall, management sounded encouraged about the results of their PA. We believe this is certainly a step in the right direction but our excitement is tempered by the view that something may need to be done, possibly inorganically, in order to expedite their roadmap to a fully integrated solution for the front end. Audience — sensing more In our meeting with management, they sounded constructive about growth with Chinese-based OEMs and their traction in adjacent markets. They also sounded upbeat about their recent announcement around motion technology, called Motion Q technology, which enables activity navigation and gesture interpretation while consuming low energy (less than 5mW). The company feels that there are a number of use cases around the technology and while we tend to agree, we also wonder how quickly Qualcomm would be able to integrate such a technology into their own chipset. Nonetheless, the technology on its own was interesting, but is still in its early stages. Management appeared positive, encouraged by recent, more constructive discussions with Apple than in years past; however nothing was announced, nor did they expect it to be any time soon. Management simply made the point to suggest that relations were no longer at a standstill. To us this means taking the value of zero opportunities with one of the largest handset OEMs in the world to a chance, incorporating a small option value to the name. We would counter any positive notions about this, with the point that the company could find it challenging to backfill the waning Apple royalty stream with profitable sales as we move throughout the year. As a result, we maintain our Hold. Page 10 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc EFTA01462428 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) LIE infrastructure poised for growth; small cells could play a bigger role towards the backhalf of '14 Almost every network equipment vendor we met with sounded optimistic about operator spending in the year ahead. With LIE rollouts continuing around the globe, and beginning in earnest in places like Europe, China, Africa and CALA, we believe this will be a solid year for LTE infrastructure spend (with 3G also getting a lift in emerging markets as a lower cost alternative, especially on the handset side). Until now, LIE spending has been limited to developed Asia and North America. As we have suggested in past notes, many operators have made commitments to LTE this year. What was not known however, was the significance of that spend and if some operators would choose to roll-out in an iterative process, or do so more quickly. Our checks indicate that it will be significant across many operators in a number of geographies, as many understand the operational advantages of the all-IP architecture of LIE and feel more confident about the overall macro environment to make those improvements. And increasingly for those that have already rolled out LTE coverage, densification and newer technologies continue to make headway into their everyday vernacular. Small cells have ridden the hype cycle in past years but from what our checks say, we believe they could see initial, meaningful deployments in the back-half of 2014 and in earnest in 2015. Over the years we have mentioned Spidercloud as a key player in the small cell space — even hosting them on one of our tech talks last year. The company continues to grow quickly, deploying their solution in the UK (and elsewhere) as part of Vodafone's densification/in-building coverage effort. Spidercloud's solution, while still a single operator solution, has a total cost of ownership that is less than typical DAS and the set-up time is also greatly shortened by comparison. After discussions with management, we believe the year is setting up nicely for the company, and with multiple operators trialing or deploying their solution and work being done on a multioperator EFTA01462429 solution, we believe the future remains bright. Cisco — More work to be done Our conversations with Cisco's mobile networking sales and business leaders at MWC — and with our industry contacts — suggest that Cisco's service provider business overall is still in "transition" mode. While Cisco pre-announced the CRS-X core router in 2013, the company is yet to ship the CRS-X to the telcos or ISPs in their production networks. Further, while Cisco's higher-end edge router ASR 9k (suited for metro core versus for lower-end metro access edge use cases) is seeing double-digit order bookings trends, we continue to note an air-gap in Cisco's low and mid-range access edge router portfolio — with the company's legacy 7600 routers etc seeing growing competition from Juniper's MX and Alcatel Lucent's 7k series at the US telcos — e.g. at AT&T, etc, and from Huawei at the Tier-1 telcos in Europe, China, and in Latin America. On the mobile networking side, a key insight from our MWC conversations with Cisco management was the focus on readying the company's mobile packet core, small cells, and SON (Self Organizing Network) SW solutions portfolio for upcoming Telco NFV and Mobile Cloud opportunities [refer to our recent FITT report on Big Data Networking in which we discuss the Mobile Cloud topic and SW themes around mobile services orchestration, service creation on the fly, etc]. We get the sense that Cisco is buying time on the NFV front — by noting at their MWC Q&A and keynote sessions that NFV rollouts are still an "early stage" architectural transformation at the Tier-1 telcos in the US, telcos in Western and Northern Europe, etc. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc Page 11 EFTA01462430 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) Our view is that while Cisco is in the process of launching their APIC SON Controller SW to be a Cloud services orchestration, Cloud IT automation, and virtual overlay framework for their Nexus 9k datacenter switches — the company is yet to launch a telco-focused service orchestration framework and SW tools specifically meant for automating mobile network services creation, virtual overlays based on BGP/- MPLS etc for telco NFV use cases etc (similar to Juniper's Contrail SW). Further, we note that Cisco's Virtualized Evolved Packet Core solution — with performance metrics comparable to their current ASR 5k HW and SW platform - is likely in the product development phase versus in carrier production network readiness stage — another reason for why we hear comments around NFV timing being still relatively early stage at the major telcos from Cisco. That said, we do note a well thought-out go to market strategy from Cisco on the NFV front — with management noting that service providers — especially mobile operators — are likely to deploy a combination of HW platforms (e.g. for higher-end edge and core routers), virtualized appliances (for radio access network SW, EPC, firewalls, etc), and Cloud based services — versus an all virtual network of layer 2/7 feature- functions. On the SON front — i.e. SW tools for automating the planning, configuration, management, and optimization of 4G LTE and Carrier WiFi based mobile networks — the company is seeing a higher number of field trials of Cisco's SON SW and the Intucell Small Cells solution - with the Tier-1 mobile operators (versus in 2013) — indicative of a higher interest level from the major mobile operators for Cisco's LTE and Carrier WiFi HW and SW solutions — with potential for pull-through for the ASR 5k EPC platform, the ASR 9k edge router, etc. In summary, while the company is making some progress in its wireless initiatives, we remain with our near-term caution on the growth prospects of Cisco's service provider business. Cisco, in our view, needs to launch a best in class competitive lower-end and mid-range edge routing portfolio and the CRS-X core router, earliest this year — so as EFTA01462431 to stabilize recent share loss trends we (and industry data trackers: Infonetics, etc) have noted in the company's routing portfolio. We also see the need for Cisco to launch a competitive virtual EPC solution and NFV focused virtual overlay and Mobile Cloud service orchestration solutions (competitive with Juniper's Contrail, etc) in this calendar year — so as to be a meaningful player in upcoming telco NFV rollouts of SW centric layer 2/7 networking solutions. F5 — Winning in the Telco Space We are raising our Price Target on F5, from $120 to $130; reflecting our improved conviction on F5's next-phase growth opportunities in Telco and in Next-Gen Security - following our recent MWC and RSA conference meetings. While we leave our FY14/15 estimates unchanged, we maintain a positive bias to our estimates — which we plan on updating post the Mar Q report. At our $130 PT, the stock would trade at appx 18x P/E on an FY15 First Call consensus EPS est basis (ex cash) — which is in line with our data networking peer group multiple of 18-19x [details in our valuation and risks section]. Page 12 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. EFTA01462432 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) Our key insight on F5 is our higher conviction on the company's next-phase growth opportunities in Telco Network Intelligence and Next-Gen Security use cases, as we highlight below: Telco Network Intelligence: Field color from our MWC industry meetings correlate well with our recent round of IT channel conversations — which note that F5's +2 years of R&D and sales cycle investment at the major telcos (e.g. Verizon, AT&T, Vodafone, Telefonica, etc) on Layer 4/7 network intelligence initiatives is starting to positively impact F5's telco sales pipeline. While the company noted recent set of LTE signaling and mobile data traffic management related design wins at OI in Latin America and at carriers in the EMEA and APAC — our research suggests likely design wins at the large US telcos during 2014 (e.g. at Verizon, AT&T Domain 2.0, etc) — for LTE Diameter Signaling, LTE Roaming, mobile web traffic steering, enforcing BW caps for mobile data plans, mobile network firewalls, etc. The telco design wins involve a multi-Q sales pipeline for F5's HW platforms such as the higher-end BIG-IP 7k/10k series and Viprion, SW modules such as Traffix Diameter Signaling, CG-NAT, Local and Global Traffic Management, Policy Enforcement, Application and Network Firewalls, Access Policy Management, etc, and pre/- post-sales telco solutions integration + consulting opportunities. F5 has "crossed the chasm" in our view — in terms of being a viable carrier- grade SW and HW platform solution for the large telcos — for enabling the mobile operators in particular to effectively monetize their LTE data services subscribers — using sophisticated usage based charging schemes - and pricing methods for specific consumer and business demographics — such as teen-rate plans, corporate plans, etc [refer to our recent FITT on Big Data Networking for the SW use cases in network intelligence]. Driving the demand for F5's layer 4/7 and application-aware service provider network intelligence solutions is the carrier industry's imperative around Network Functions EFTA01462433 Virtualization [NFV] and "Network Consolidation". We plan on a deep-dive follow-on note on the Telco NFV and Network Consolidation themes. In the context of this note, it is noteworthy to highlight that F5 is seeing opportunities to sell its Layer 4/7 network intelligence solutions at the large mobile operators — primarily due to the window of opportunity that has opened up for F5 in: 1. Telco NFV: which involves deploying SW and virtual appliances for Control Plane use cases such as LIE Diameter Signaling Routing, LTE Roaming, Usage-Based Mobile Data Plans, Web Traffic Steering, etc; 2 Network Consolidation: Mobile operators, keen on meaningfully improving the EBITDA profitability of their LTE mobile data service offerings are looking to consolidate multiple legacy network elements (security, policy servers, DPI/analytics, charging servers, IPv4/v6 address translation, etc) in the Gi and SGi network — i.e. the network segment between the mobile packet core (GGSN/S-GW, etc) and the IP edge router — using newer technology platforms such as F5's multi Gigabit BIG IP or Viprion ADC platforms running multiple SW modules — so as to structurally lower their network cost basis and also leverage new application- and web traffic aware network intelligence features to implement new usage and traffic based mobile rate plans, etc. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 13 EFTA01462434 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) Next-Gen Security: On the security use cases, our MWC and RSA conference conversations suggest that the "best" solutions bundle — involving F5's BIG IP or Viprion ADC running the Traffic Management, Access Policy Management, and Web Application Security + Network Firewalling Modules — is currently seeing the most sales traction — versus the "good" or the "better" solutions bundle (which do not include the security SW modules). Higher than anticipated IT customer demand for the "best" solutions module — which includes F5's ADC feature-functions and at least 1 security related SW module — suggests to us that interest in F5's Next-Gen Security solutions is clearly on the uptick — the key demand driver, in our view, is Datacenter IT customer's preference for highperformance DDOS mitigation systems (which require 100's of Gbps of traffic processing throughput (offered by F5) — versus peers mostly selling lOs of Gbps capable DDOS mitigation appliances). A related demand driver for F5's Application + Network Firewall solutions is the differentiated value proposition of F5's "Full Proxy" architecture — which, in our view, has higher security efficacy (in terms of threat mitigation efficiency, application aware security policies, etc) versus conventional stateful inspection firewalls (which mostly look at ports and protocols versus examine application layer events). Our MWC and RSA conference meetings suggest to us that F5 is likely to introduce a range of subscription services oriented security services — for DDOS mitigation, etc — which could help improve the visibility of the quarterly revenue flow — given inherent lumpiness in box oriented purchases. There are 2 positive catalysts for F5's security business heading into CY15, in our view: 1. Outbound Firewalls: While F5 is adding limited outbound security features to its inbound firewall solution this year, the company is likely to launch a new Outbound Firewall SW module in CY15, complementing the Inbound Firewall solution. We therefore see F5 competing more effectively versus CSCO, PANW, CHKP, etc for both inbound and outbound security use cases, heading into CY15 — helping to expand F5's EFTA01462435 share of wallet to the full $86 a year security market [Infonetics data]. We estimate F5's current wallet share in security around $2B/year. 2. APT Defense: We see F5 targeting APT Defense opportunities in CY15 — a market segment in which FireEye is currently the market leader. APT complements F5's NextGen Firewall in our view — adding more depth to F5's security skill sets. In summary, we remain positive with our Buy rating on F5 — noting Security + Telco as next-phase growth opportunities. F5: Valuation and risks We raise our Price Target, from $120 to $130; reflecting our improved conviction on F5's next-phase growth opportunities in Telco and in Next-Gen Security - following our recent MWC and RSA conference meetings. While we leave our FY14/15 estimates unchanged, we maintain a positive bias to our estimates — which we plan on updating post the Mar 0 report. At our $130 PT, the stock would trade at appx 18x P/E on an FY15 First Call consensus EPS est basis (ex cash) — which is in line with our data networking peer group multiple of 18-19x. We have established our $130 Price Target using discounted cash flow (DCF) analysis. For our DCF, we assume a discount rate of 11.5% and a 5% growth rate. Our discount rate is derived on a weighted average cost of capital basis using a risk- free rate of 5.5%, Page 14 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. EFTA01462436 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) beta of 1.4, and an equity risk premium of 5%. Our growth rate is based on a long-term estimate of industry growth, consistent with F5's specialty communications equipment peer group. Key downside risks to our price target are around unanticipated shifts in enterprise and carrier IT spending, technology disruptions in the ADC space, and F5's competitors (e.g. Citrix, Radware, A10, etc) taking share in key ADC use cases such as Web 2.0 and Cloud providers, telco and cable, and in next-gen security. CommScope — LIE, 3G optimization and desification all provide tailwind Out of all of our companies, CommScope sounded the most positive. Their Wireless business is keeping pace, helped by infrastructure coverage projects in developing countries and capacity improvements here in North America. The company's DAS business has done well, as enterprises continue to look for easily deployable, multivendor solutions. To build on this, the company announced the Ion-E, a new DAS solution which is frequency agnostic (380 Mhz to 2700 MHz; multimode and allows the possibility to add WiFi) and with access points that can be powered over Ethernet (POE). We met with several operators who were excited by the flexibility the solution allowed. And with the point-and-click usability, it allows the enterprise IT manager to push into the active space, essentially becoming RF engineers. After four years of development, the project is commercially available now and will be shipping in the second half of this year, first into Europe, and later in the US and elsewhere. In terms of visibility, the company appeared confident about their view, both the quarter and the year, and suggested that many investors wrongly assumed that the slowdown in a few coverage projects in North America would put them at risk. But management believes that the pickup in LIE in Europe and elsewhere, 3G modernization projects in the South East Asia, Africa and Russia and continued capacity adds in North America will help them to maintain growth through the rest of the year in Wireless. We believe that management is likely being conservative with their EFTA01462437 guide, and feel confident that the diversity in end-markets and in their product portfolio, position them well for a solid year. In terms of the Enterprise side, DAS will also help here, especially in the second-half as Ion-E begins shipping in volume. A recent Enterprise-specific development is the company's announcement of a modular data center, which can be drop-shipped to any customer. The solution can help customers add capacity quickly and management expects these solutions to add incrementally in the second half of 2014. With Broadband, management expects it to be profitable in the near-term, otherwise they could take measures if it is not. They did note that Broadband brings them significant cross-segment sales, and believe that they should be able to realize more cost synergies going forward. Altogether we believe CommScope should benefit from what will be a strong year in infrastructure spending. Furthermore, the company continues to innovate in areas where they have the scale to bring specific products to markets. We reiterate our Buy here, as we feel the year should be a strong one for the company. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 15 EFTA01462438 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) Ciena — Benefitting from the shift to LIE We sum up comments on our quarter preview and our thoughts on optical network upgrade opportunities in FY14+, in our Quarter Preview - published alongside this MWC note. Our MWC conversations with Ciena's CTO gave us insight on management's view on Alcatel Lucent selected recently as the second source supplier at Verizon, on 100G and OTN switching upgrade opportunities this calendar year, etc. We get the read from our conversations with management that Verizon is likely to follow an 80/20 rule for its optical network sourcing — i.e. appx 80% of long haul and metro optical networking upgrades using Ciena's platforms and the remainder likely allocated to the second-source supplier. Further, we note that a meaningful runway for Ciena's Carrier Ethernet (Packet Networking) switches for aggregating traffic from 4G macro cells (and ongoing 4G small cell rollouts) at the major US and rest of world telcos — with Ciena noting that appx 50% of cell towers are lit by fiber — suggesting to us that there is appx a +30% runway remaining for "fiberization" of the radio access and metro aggregation network. AT&T's $14B over the next 2-3 years Project Velocity IP capex spend for utilizing IP based fiber networks for access traffic aggregation, etc - is a case in point. Ciena also noted potential for 1G to 10G access network upgrades in telco networks — as an out quarter refresh cycle opportunity for the company's Packet Networking portfolio. Ciena management also noted that they see around a 10% OTN switching attach rate in their 6500 series 100G packet/optical networking platform this year — suggesting to us that Ciena could manage to gradually improve the gross margin profile of their 100G platform, based on sales of mid 40s margin OTN switching line cards embedded in their 6500 series platform. Management remains positive on strength in the 100G optical transport upgrade cycle — in both the long haul and metro networks — at the large telcos and in Cloud EFTA01462439 datacenters, ISPs, etc — noting that appx 20-25% of their quarterly revenues are from non telcos — i.e. from datacenter interconnect use cases, etc. Ciena does not see 200G being a meaningful optical network upgrade cycle this calendar year — noting that 100G is still in "year two" of a multi-year refresh cycle. As a case in point, we note that AT&T is yet to commence 100G optical network upgrades at any level of scale and Verizon is still in eval stages of upgrading their metro core networks to 100G — according to our mosaic field research view. In summary, we remain with our positive outlook and our Buy rating on Ciena, noting favorable risk/reward at current levels — and noting Ciena as a market leader in technology and in carrier customer mind-share in 100G coherent, OTN switching, control plane SW tools, etc. The recent Ciena — Ericsson partnership is likely to be favorable for sales of Ciena's optical networking gear and control plane automation SW in Telco NFV architectural upgrades — given our view that a high degree of network and services level automation is a key requirement from the large carriers — given the telcos' opex efficiency imperative. Page 16 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. EFTA01462440 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) Mavenir — VoLTE the Key Our MWC conversations with Mavenir senior management noted a positive view on Voice over LIE network services rollouts in 2014+ at the company's US and European telco customers — i.e. at T-Mobile US, Deutsche Telecom, France Telecom, Vodafone, etc. We get the read that Mavenir's US telco customers are likely to rollout VoLTE and RCS services sooner versus their European telco counterparts this calendar year. We also noted 11 new carrier customer wins for Mavenir's voice network solutions in Europe — with potential for VoLTE, RCS, and messaging services rollouts in these customer wins later this year. Carrier commitment for VoLTE hovered in the 90% range; and in the 50% range for RCS — based on results of a recent carrier customer survey discussed by management during our MWC meeting. Management further noted improving carrier customer demand (with an assist from Oracle) and order booking trends for their in-house SBC solution — noting that in prior years the company mostly re-sold third-party SBC solutions to the telcos. We also note Mavenir starting to engage at Verizon in IP based voice networking use cases and also at AT&T for Rich Communication Services etc (a step up, in our view, from sales of 3G voice, video, and text messaging solutions to the carrier). The company feels convicted on their improving sales win/loss ratio — noting technologically and price/performance differentiated VoLTE, IMS control plane, and RCS solutions versus alternatives from the Tier-1 vendors — e.g. Nokia Solutions Networks, Huawei, Alcatel Lucent, etc. We remain with our positive outlook and our Buy rating on Mavenir — noting Voice over LIE, RCS, and SBC as among the key product cycle drivers for revenue growth in CY14/15. Cavium — Small Cells, but not Femto's Our MWC conversation with senior management suggests that Cavium's Fusion chip shipments (likely a $20-30 part) into 3G and 4G small cells rollouts is still in early stage at the present — likely a 2H14+ revenue opportunity for Cavium in our view. The Fusion chip likely to ship into OEM platforms (NSN, Huawei, Samsung) at EFTA01462441 around 14 telcos for the initial phase of 3G/4G small cells rollouts —followed by +15 carriers in the subsequent phases. Sales of the Neuron chip into TCAM use cases is pointing to a CY15+ event, with Neuron chip revs likely to be less than 10% of CY15 revs by the company's estimate. Management also noted that sales of their Liquid I/O chipset is likely to be significant for this calendar year — an incremental growth driver, in the company's view, to sales of their core products — i.e. 0cteon2, Nitrox3, etc. Cavium management remains convicted on their Project Thunder initiative noting potential for ARM SOC chip sales into 64 bit ARM servers in Cloud-scale datacenters. While 0cteon3 is likely to be an incremental revenue growth driver for Cavium in CY15 (early revs for 0cteon3 starting Q4 CY14), we think that the ARM SOC solutions sale is Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 17 EFTA01462442 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) likely a CY16+ opportunity for the company — and mostly an out quarter growth story opportunity for management to share with investors, at the present. In summary, while we are constructive on Cavium's CY15+ rev growth opportunities for the new chips — 0cteon3, Fusion, Neuron, etc — we remain with our neutral near-term view and our Hold-rating on the stock — noting balanced risk/reward at current levels — i.e. the stock trading at appx 24x P/E for —19% First Call consensus rev growth expectation. Ixia — Virtualization moderating growth Our MWC conversations with the network testing solutions vendors is another set of datapoints supporting our near-term caution on Ixia — a key vendor in enterprise and carrier network test and network visibility solutions. While 40GE datacenter switch testing and LIE voice and data network equipment and network services testing are multi quarter opportunities for Ixia — we note lumpiness in LIE network testing orders (at telcos such as AT&T, etc) and 40GE datacenter switch testing still in early stages and virtualization of testing applications moderating demand for incremental box capacity (that is, customers run virtual instances of testing scripts which reduce the need to purchase incremental physical capacity, lowering the overall industry revenue growth rate. That said, we remain constructive on Ixia's Anue Network Monitoring and Network Visibility test solutions business, while being cautious on muted growth trends in the near-term for Ixia's core network testing business. We remain with our Hold rating on Ixia. Ruckus — helped by cable providers; in search of mobile We met with Ruckus management at the show, who felt encouraged by continued traction by cable providers. One point which struck us as positive was management's warm reception to LTE-over-unlicensed (LTE-u). They suggested LTE-u could be helpful for some of their MSO customers, possibly pushing them to stitch together a mobile strategy (e.g. Republic Wireless). In addition, offering up an AP with integrated LTE-u to EFTA01462443 enterprises puts their enterprise customers at the negotiating table for operators. They noted that integrating LTE into their access points was relatively easy and would be part of their roadmap if demand trends moved in a positive direction. The one Mobile World Congress announcement for Ruckus covered their new partnership with Global Reach, a major VAR in the UK. The agreement is example of how Ruckus is using the gateway solution in areas outside of the traditional service provider vertical. The company will likely see more deals like this, as VARs look to increase the recurring/management piece of their respective revenue bases. In terms of 802.11ac, the company said it is shipping product and believes this will contribute to a better year. They also said that they will be on time with Wave 2 of 802.11ac. The offering will undoubtedly help their competitive position, as we believe it has been a hindrance until now; however, with just a 10 to 15% price premium we believe it simply keeps ASPs stable and will not necessarily drive a new wave of demand. Overall management struck a positive tone, likely helped by the growing cable provider business. While we believe this to be a source of continued growth, we remain on the sidelines here, as we would like to see them gain traction in the mobile operator space, an area where we believe if won, would begin to justify their price multiple. We maintain our Hold rating. Page 18 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. EFTA01462444 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) Networking Sector Valuation and Risks Stocks in our data networking peer group trade at a forward P/E in the 18-19x CY15 consensus EPS estimates range — a modest premium to the market multiple; given the above market growth prospects of the networking universe. Key risks (on the downside and upside) are from unanticipated shifts in enterprise and telco IT spending, share shifts from competitive new product launches, and from technology disruptions — creating new market entry opportunities. Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 19 EFTA01462445 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) Industry Metrics Figure 1: Universal stock price performance 3/2/2014 Alcatel Lucent Sa Cisco Systems Inc Hewlett-packard Co International Business Machines Corp Ericsson Motorola Solutions Inc Nokia Oyj Zte Corp Networking majors Brocade Communications Systems Inc Emc Corp Extreme Networks Inc Juniper Networks Inc Netapp Inc Dell Inc Other Networking Htc Corp Samsung Electronics Co Ltd Blackberry Ltd Apple Inc Smartphones Acme Packet Inc Aruba Networks Inc Audiocodes Ltd Vmware Inc F5 Networks Inc Riverbed Technology Inc Sonus Networks Inc Next-gen networking Powerwave Technologies Inc Telestone Technologies Corp China Grentech Corp Ltd Adtran Inc Comba Telecom Systems Holdings Ltd Sub-systems Infosonics Corp Tessco Technologies Inc Distributors Qualcomm Inc Texas Instruments Inc Broadcom Corp Infineon Technologies Ag Stmicroelectronics Nv Marvell Technology Group Ltd Mediatek Inc EFTA01462446 Basebands Anadigics Inc Avago Technologies Ltd Cavium Inc Immersion Corp Interdigital Inc Omnivision Technologies Inc Rf Micro Devices Inc Silicon Laboratories Inc Skyworks Solutions Inc Emulex Corp Qlogic Corp Triquint Semiconductor Inc Components Garmin Ltd Tomtom Nv Trimble Navigation Ltd GPS/Navigation Netgear Inc Universal Electronics Inc Tivo Inc Entropic Communications Inc Echostar Corp Home Networking Ciena Corp Finisar Corp Jds Uniphase Corp Opnext Inc Oclaro Inc Optical Glu Mobile Inc Gameloft Se Artificial Life Inc Mobile Content Total Universe Mean Median High Low Market cap weighted Wtd. Avg Source: Deutsche Bank, Bloomberg Finance LP -1.5% 7.0% 2.6% 43.2% -34.5% 29.6% 124.6% -0.4% -2.6% -16.5% -3.3% 53.3% 2.8% 1.7% EFTA01462447 32.6% -16.5% 14.9% 4.6% 150.0% 0.5% -1.3% 132.9% 19.2% 54.1% 80.5% 384.4% 187.7% 45.1% 4.1% 27.6% -1.7% 425.9% -85.8% 4.7% Weekly Return YTD Return Y/Y Return 3-year return 0.4% -1.5% -2.8% 0.3% 1.3% 2.2% 1.8% 1.6% 1.0% 0.9% 0.4% 3.4% 6.8% -3.0% 211.8% 4.7% 5.1% -13.1% 17.6% 48.3% -30.8% -1.3% -8.7% 13.3% 5.5% 0.3% -1.9% 6.7% 64.4% -6.5% 111.1% 6.8% 0.4% 51.0% -0.7% 8.0% 4.9% -4.7% -17.9% -4.3% 18.5% 1.3% 0.0% -12.4% 28.8% -44.8% 69.4% 50.0% EFTA01462448 13.4% -3.6% 63.7% 50.4% 30.5% -38.9% -1.8% 19.0% -23.0% 0.0% -0.6% 1.9% 32.5% 3.8% 2.6% 1.4% 9.4% 0.2% 3.4% NA -24.6% NA -1.0% 14.6% 6.3% 23.8% 23.6% 23.2% -18.0% 120.8% -3.5% -51.4% -87.0% -1.7% -12.6% 46.2% 34.4% -6.2% 22.2% 46.4% 5.7% -16.6% NA -20.0% NA -34.1% 28.7% -0.4% 7.1% 30.6% 12.7% 1.9% 6.1% -0.8% 18.4% 2.0% 11.5% NA 18.5% 42.2% -8.2% 31.8% NA -92.4% NA -3.8% 150.0% NA NA NA NA -0.2% -3.0% -1.1% -3.0% 1.6% 44.0% EFTA01462449 -2.2% 99.3% 3.6% 0.7% 2.4% 3.8% NA -84.0% NA NA -37.5% 425.9% NA NA -97.0% NA NA 23.9% -44.5% 2.4% -64.9% -68.8% 224.5% -5.6% 70.4% 218.4% 46.9% 248.1% 221.4% -0.4% 1.4% 13.6% 28.0% 1.8% 12.9% 0.3% 16.7% 22.1% 13.0% 21.9% 3.9% 8.4% 32.6% 3.4% 0.4% 30.2% 23.0% -3.4% 0.2% -12.3% -29.6% 4.6% 8.7% NA NA 2.1% 1.6% 31.5% 30.7% -3.7% -1.1% 5.4% 4.7% 3.9% 22.6% 1.1% -13.7% EFTA01462450 -1.5% 15.1% 0.8% 37.2% 20.0% 24.2% -65.2% 83.1% 87.0% 14.3% -4.9% 83.6% 70.7% -31.8% 31.7% 2.7% 14.7% -30.9% -2.0% 6.3% 48.9% -16.1% NA 20.0% -1.8% 47.1% -48.1% 52.9% -6.5% -1.0% -11.9% -85.4% -35.6% 26.9% -48.4% 58.0% -1.7% 26.5% 14.5% 71.3% 0.1% -0.5% 1.7% 12.7% -34.1% 1.1% 163.8% -14.8% 7.2% 15.2% 3.3% 2.1% NA 16.2% 41.2% -5.7% 52.7% 56.9% -9.3% 48.3% -25.5% -0.7% 9.9% 28.3% 51.1% NA NA 9.7% 2.9% 109.2% 8.1% NA 1.6% 5.6% 43.1% 27.5% -0.1% 3.8% 1.3% 3.6% 4.2% 6.1% 3.1% 7.2% 4.1% EFTA01462451 6.1% NA 49.3% 42.9% -6.8% -1.6% -52.9% 0.2% 32.2% 37.2% 1.9% 29.8% 16.0% -3.6% 2.7% 65.7% -14.4% -3.4% -0.9% 2.7% NA NA 66.0% -43.7% -2.0% -45.2% NA -3.5% -0.3% -36.1% 46.8% 224.5% -9.3% -92.4% -97.0% 18.7% 21.3% Page 20 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. EFTA01462452 Signals to Noise (S2N) Wireless Equipment 2 March 2014 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 21 Figure 2: Valuation metrics Intraday Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Forecasts $ 11.72 16.70 $ 9.58 ARUN-USJuly Hold $ 20.51 26.02 $ 13.07 BBRY-USFeb Hold $ 10.00 16.29 $ 5.75 BRCD-US Oct Hold $ 9.57 $ 9.71 5.25$ BSFT-US Dec Hold $ 30.01 37.47 $ 22.18 CAVM-USDec Hold $ 42.13 42.77 $ 29.60 $ 24.57 27.67 $ 14.32 $ 24.22 $ $ $ LIEN-US Oct Buy COMM-USDec Buy $ $ $ CSCO-USJuly Hold $ 21.80 26.38 $ 20.24 FFIV-US Sep Buy 112.34$ $ $ 114.51 68.02 $ $ $ JNPR-US Dec Hold $ 26.74 27.95 $ 15.69 MSI-US Dec Hold $ 66.20 67.50 $ 54.01 $ 15.45 NPTN-US Dec Hold $ 8.25 $ 9.45 4.79$ PSMI-US Dec Hold $ 6.68 12.02 $ 5.08 $ 75.29 76.44 $ 59.39 QCOM-USSep Buy RVBD-USDec Hold $ 22.28 22.28 $ 13.89 RKUS-USDec Hold $ 14.00 24.11 $ 10.68 UBNT-US Jun Hold $ 49.41 52.00 $ 12.84 XXIA-US Dec Hold $ 12.36 22.24 $ 12.01 $ $ $ $ $ $ Avg. Intraday Current ADNC-USDec Hold 11.72$ EFTA01462453 ARUN-USJuly Hold 20.51$ BBRY-USFeb Hold 10.00$ $ BRCD-USOct Hold 9.57 BSFT-USDec Hold 30.01$ CAVM-USDec Hold 42.13$ LIEN-US Oct Buy 24.57$ COMM-USDec Buy 24.22$ CSCO-USJuly Hold 21.80$ FFIV-US Sep Buy 112.34$ JNPR-USDec Hold 26.74$ MSI-US Dec Hold 66.20$ MVNR-USDec Buy 15.45$ NPTN-USDec Hold 8.25 $ $ PSMI-US Dec Hold 6.68 QCOM-USSep Buy 75.29$ RVBD-USDec Hold 22.28$ RKUS-USDec Hold 14.00$ UBNT-USJun Hold 49.41$ XXIA-US Dec Hold 12.36$ Average 258 1.2 2,484 4.8 5,257 0.2 4,404 1.9 845 5.6 2,265 8.2 2,544 1.9 3,853 2.0 118,374 1.9 8,743 6.2 13,520 2.6 17,291 2.0 275 6.1 254 1.1 218 1.9 129,649 6.0 3,667 5.0 1,327 9.9 4,430 14.7 959 2.9 4.31 EV 59 0.6 0.8 0.7 0.8 3.8 3.5 3.0 0.3 0.4 0.8 1.8 1.8 1.8 4.7 4.4 3.9 EFTA01462454 9.1 7.0 5.9 1.8 1.5 1.4 2.0 1.9 1.9 1.8 1.8 1.8 5.3 4.9 4.3 2.7 2.5 2.3 1.9 1.9 1.9 4.1 3.0 2.5 0.9 0.8 0.8 1.0 1.0 1.4 4.8 3.8 3.6 4.4 3.5 3.3 5.5 4.5 3.7 13.0 9.3 6.7 2.2 1.9 1.8 0.7 11.2 1.8 10.2 Valuation Metrics At Current Price 6.4 10.8 NM NM 18.6 2.6 25.1 18.0 21.6 18.6 15.7 33.0 1.5 3.3 21.6 18.0 20.6 15.1 10.6 24.4 1.3 NM NM NM NM 2.0 8.5 8.1 9.1 9.4 17.6 13.3 28.3 14.3 20.8 5.0 39.6 NM 35.7 23.1 17.5 38.4 101.9 7.4 6.7 6.5 6.6 6.4 12.9 29.0 NM NM 2.6 1.9 35.2 25.5 22.4 2.4 2.0 25.3 20.4 14.1 2.0 1.7 41.4 32.5 25.4 1.7 4.6 Price Market EV/Rev EV/Rev EV/Rev EV/Rev EV/Rev EV/EBIT EV/EBIT EV/EBIT EV/- EBIT EV/EBIT P/E P/E P/E P/E P/E PE/GR PE/GR PE/GR PE/GR PE/GR 52-week Book Symbol FYE Rating 03/02/14 Cap. (Mils) CY2011 CY2012 CY2013E CY2014E CY2015E CY2011 CY2012 CY2013E CY2014E CY2015E CY2011 CY2012 CY2013E CY2014E CY2015E CY2011 CY2012 CY2013E CY2014E CY2015E Low Value 2.5 1.8 2.0 1.7 1.9 1.5 % above Price/ Price/ Cash Value 4.1 NM NM 22% 1.61 1.6 57% 8.33 1.3 NM 63.4 29.4 22.0 16.5 NM NM 46.1 26.3 17.5 NM NM 4.7 2.7 1.8 17.2 13.1 10.7 10.7 10.0 29.0 1.7 EFTA01462455 3.7 16.3 13.9 13.7 11.5 9.9 28.5 2.2 12.7 17.1 12.9 11.6 10.4 22.5 1.9 12.0 11.0 10.8 11.3 11.1 25.2 20.5 11.3 25.0 31.3 20.7 1.2 NM 15.4 75.4 NM 35.3 NM 22.7 3.3 15.0 12.8 12.2 9.5 8.7 22.4 3.0 17.1 16.5 15.1 14.2 12.3 24.8 3.1 NM 41.9 56.1 37.6 23.3 125.3 5.6 42.5 40.0 27.2 19.5 16.5 61.4 1.6 14.0 9.7 9.0 7.7 6.8 20.3 15.2 16.0 14.1 8.0 5.7 10.7 10.6 10.0 6.8 5.9 24.1 21.0 18.5 2.3 2.0 20.8 18.8 17.3 3.3 4.6 63.9 NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM 74% 1.95 11.9 12.5 12.9 NM NM NM NM NM 82% 6.66 1.1 35% 7.51 1.1 42% 13.18 1.8 72% 3.9 NM 4.2 4.4 5.6 5.6 1.9 1.7 3.1 2.8 1.85 7.64 2.54 11.36 12.53 17.73 NM (3.43) NM (1.43) 5.2 8% 3.79 1.5 65% 9.40 2.6 70% 4.31 14.0 17.8 16.2 31.9 26.1 17.6 22.5 20.4 23% 7.93 2.0 NM NM NM NM 23.2 NM NM NM NM 58.7 NM NM NM NM 2.2 NM 0.7 NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM 72% 1.50 91.1 NM 43.5 NM NM NM NM NM 31% 1.77 1.0 27% 4.28 1.4 60% 18.8 22.4 26.0 52.3 17.2 EFTA01462456 16.7 14.4 12.9 1.8 1.5 22.0 20.9 18.2 1.9 1.7 83.3 72.3 44.1 5.7 1.2 33.5 24.6 21.5 1.9 1.6 15.4 13.6 12.2 2.0 1.7 1.3 1.1 1.6 1.6 3.8 3.3 1.0 0.8 1.5 1.3 3.70 7.08 7.32 22.57 NM (10.86) 8.29 13.28 4.10 2.0 31% 7.78 0.7 285% 18.85 1.2 3% 2.64 3.59 3.01 2.68 2.40 17.55 19.54 22.12 15.22 14.33 31.64 30.05 31.51 22.33 5.30 4.44 3.80 3.76 3.18 Valuation Metrics At Our Price Target ARUN-USJuly Hold $ 17.00 BBRY-USFeb Hold $ 6.00 BRCD-USOct Hold $ 6.00 BSFT-USDec Hold $ 26.00 CAVM-USDec Hold $ 35.00 $ 26.00 $ 22.00 1,734 3.8 1,086 0.1 2,374 1.1 665 4.8 LIEN-US Oct Buy COMM-USDec Buy 1,754 6.8 3,432 2.0 6,202 1.9 CSCO-USJuly Hold $ 25.00 103,775 2.3 FFIV-US Sep Buy 120.00$ JNPR-USDec Hold $ 26.00 MSI-US Dec Hold $ 55.00 $ 14.00 MVNR-USDec Buy NPTN-USDec Hold $ 5.00 PSMI-US Dec Hold $ 6.00 QCOM-USSep Buy RVBD-USDec Hold $ 16.00 RKUS-USDec Hold $ 14.00 23.15 EFTA01462457 UBNT-USJun Hold $ 42.00 XXIA-US Dec Hold $ 16.00 Average 8,103 6.7 11,299 2.5 13,600 1.7 275 5.5 123 0.6 180 1.7 $ 78.00 102,706 6.3 2,626 3.6 1,188 9.9 3,534 12.4 1,189 3.8 3.91 Source: Deutsche Bank, company data 0.4 0.4 0.4 3.1 2.8 2.4 0.1 0.1 0.3 1.1 1.1 1.1 4.0 3.8 3.3 7.4 5.8 4.9 1.8 1.6 1.5 1.9 1.8 1.8 2.2 2.2 2.2 5.7 5.3 4.6 2.6 2.4 2.3 1.6 1.6 1.6 3.7 2.7 2.3 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.9 0.9 1.2 5.0 4.0 3.8 3.1 2.5 2.3 5.5 4.5 3.7 10.9 7.8 5.6 2.9 2.5 2.4 0.3 5.6 3.2 5.3 NM NM 14.3 2.1 20.1 14.5 17.4 14.9 12.6 27.3 0.5 1.1 10.2 23.5 22.3 NM NM 2.0 1.5 29.2 21.1 18.6 2.0 1.7 NM 521.17 9.50 19.10 17.99 % below Price Dif Share EFTA01462458 Target at Price EV/Rev EV/Rev EV/Rev EV/Rev EV/Rev EV/EBIT EV/EBIT EV/EBIT EV/EBIT EV/EBIT P/E P/E P/E P/E P/E PE/GR PE/GR PE/GR PE/GR PE/GR 52-week Cur vs Gain Symbol FYE Rating Price Tgt (Mils) CY2011 CY2012 CY2013E CY2014E CY2015E CY2011 CY2012 CY2013E CY2014E CY2015E CY2011 CY2012 CY2013E CY2014E CY2015E CY2011 CY2012 CY2013E CY2014E CY2015E High Target ADNC-USDec Hold $ 9.00 3.2 NM NM -30% (2.72) $ $ 2.1 1.5 0.5 NM NM NM NM 1.2 6.0 5.0 4.8 5.4 5.5 11.0 2.8 18.5 15.4 17.6 12.9 9.0 21.1 4.1 32.5 NM 29.3 19.0 14.3 31.9 8 9 8.0 7.9 7.9 7.7 14.8 9.0 18.0 84.7 4.0 17.6 15.0 14.8 12.5 10.7 30.5 2.1 12.3 16.6 12.5 11.2 10.1 21.8 1.5 9.9 9.0 8.9 9.3 9.2 21.0 18.7 13.0 26.7 30.4 17.2 21.9 17 7 12.2 1.7 1.5 34.4 27 0 21.1 1.4 3.8 1.8 1.4 1.5 1.2 1.3 -21% (3.51) $ 1.0 -20% (4.01) $ 0.9 1.4 NM 66.3 30.7 23.0 17.2 NM NM 48.8 27.9 18.5 NM NM 5.0 2.8 1.7 16.3 12.4 10.1 10.1 9.4 26.3 2.1 13.8 14.5 12.8 7.2 5.1 12.3 12.1 11.4 7.8 6.8 25.7 22.5 19.8 2.5 2.1 20.2 18.2 16.9 3.2 4.5 3.8 4.0 6.5 6.4 2.1 1.8 3.0 2.7 EFTA01462459 -1% (7.13) $ (2.22) 1.6 2.5 11.6 14.8 13.4 26.5 21.7 14.7 18.7 16.9 1.1 NM 13.7 67.1 NM 31.4 NM 20.4 3.5 15.7 13.4 12.7 9.9 9.1 23.2 2.2 12.3 11.9 10.8 10.2 8.8 17.8 3.1 NM 41.9 56.1 37.6 23.3 125.3 4.8 35.7 33.7 22.9 16.4 13.9 52.2 2.2 18.3 12.8 11.9 10.2 9.0 26.3 3.23 2.71 2.40 2 13 15.35 18.30 20.05 14.04 13.09 29.1 -2% 7.66 $ 6.0 -17% 3.20 $ -4% (0.74) $ 1.8 NM NM NM NM 21.2 NM NM NM NM 53.2 NM NM NM NM 2.0 #VALUE! $ 19.5 16.1 26.0 44.5 22.2 25.8 17.3 14.9 13.4 1.8 1.5 15.8 15.0 13.1 1.3 1.2 83.3 72.3 44.1 5.7 1.2 28.5 20.9 18.3 1.6 1.4 19.9 17.6 15.8 2.6 2.2 29.1 21.6 20.6 4.8 4.0 1.4 1.2 1.2 1.1 3.8 3.3 0.9 0.7 2.0 1.7 3.5 3.5 1.0 1.0 -2% (11 20) (1.45) 0.4 NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM -13% (3.25) $ -2% 2.71 $ 2.0 -42% - $ 0.6 81.9 NM 39.1 NM NM NM NM NM -44% (0.68) $ EFTA01462460 $ 0% (6.28) $ -5% (7.41) $ 1.6 -44% 3.64 2.9 38.3 NM NM NM NM NM NM NM NM -39% (4.0) $ 1.9 -11% 1.43 3.5 #VALUE! $ $ 7.5 7.9 8.1 NM NM NM NM NM -1% (3.57) $ (Loss) -23.2% -17.1% -40.0% -37.3% -13.4% -16.9% 5.8% -9.2% 14.7% 6.8% -2.8% -16.9% -9.4% -39.4% -10.2% 3.6% -28.2% 0.0% -15.0% 29.4% MVNR-USDec Buy 22.0 121.1 460.2 28.2 53.8 7.0% 56.8% 12.9% 13.9% 73.2% 21.3% 98 144 161 157 176 10.5 18.6 11.0 (12.6) (8.3) $0.63 $0.88 $0.40 ($0.40) Price 52-Week 52-Week Out Sh Fwd 3 yr CY 12 CY 12 CY2011 CY2012 CY2013E CY2014E CY2015E CY2011 CY2012 CY2013E CY2014E CY2015E CY2011 CY2012 CY2013E CY2014E CY2015E Value/ EFTA01462461 454 103.5 159.1 5,430.0 77.8 505.6 261.2 17.8 30.8 32.7 1,722.0 164.6 94.8 89.7 77.6 12.3% 83.0% 26.1% 22.3% 62.6% 6.4% 9.8% 41.3% 2.8% 138 259 561 624 724 829 86.1 119.7 165 176 198 234 35.9 235 304 361 431 53.9 43.1 15.1 Tgble Bk Net Cash/ Net cash (debt) Value/ Symbol FYE Rating 03/02/14 High Low .(Mils) Rv Gw Rt PF GM PF OM Revs Revs Revs Revs Revs PF EBIT PF EBIT PF EBIT PF EBIT PF EBIT PF EPS PF EPS PF EPS PF EPS PF EPS Share Share ADNC-USDec Hold ($0.23) $7.26 99.9 116.2 137.9 $0.62 $0.72 $0.58 $0.80 $0.91 $2.46 $5.12 525.7 -43.6% 30.2% -11.0% 19,343 12,094 8,000 3,758 2,175 2,411.3 (1,330.0) (3,144.9) (1,432.2) (805.3) $5.02 $0.16 ($1.36) ($2.47) ($1.61) -0.5% 64.8% 20.9% 2,157 2,256 2,197 2,187 2,223 395.7 471.6 493.1 439.6 429.0 $0.54 $0.67 $0.80 $0.76 $0.74 $1.44 37.7 51.4 73.5 $1.23 $1.44 $1.19 $1.47 $2.12 $3.99 59.8 92.4 122.3 $1.10 $0.41 $1.02 $1.30 $1.66 $3.20 1,731 1,858 2,133 2,286 2,460 18.2 51.8 111.7 149.2 199.5 ($0.16) ($0.05) $0.53 $0.93 $1.40 ($2.59) 3.6% 31.9% 15.1% 3,275 3,322 3,452 3,532 3,697 380.5 501.1 615.2 614.0 656.8 $0.84 $1.18 $1.59 $1.52 $1.71 ($14.27) $1.69 $1.93 $2.03 $2.06 $2.19 $5.76 1.9% 62.5% 27.5% 44,471 47,062 48,140 47,592 49,799 11,684.0 12,936.3 13,218.9 13,089.3 13,444.6 $6.34 $2.68 $3.93 EFTA01462462 $0.84 $2.39 $2.38 ($7.15) ($16.99) 12.4% 84.1% 38.0% 1,205 1,420 1,522 1,763 2,019 459.5 540.1 548.1 650.5 759.0 $3.94 $4.49 $4.67 $5.34 $6.07 $11.95 $15.87 6.8% 64.3% 15.6% 4,449 4,365 4,669 4,971 5,314 917.3 681.4 906.2 1,006.9 1,120.2 $1.19 $0.85 $1.29 $1.43 $1.54 $6.21 0.8% 50.4% 17.3% 8,203 8,698 8,696 8,761 8,906 1,373.0 1,503.0 1,528.0 1,463.9 1,483.6 $2.62 $3.20 $4.74 $3.71 $4.10 $8.35 (5.4) 1.2 13.0 ($1.24) ($0.89) ($0.57) ($0.14) $0.26 ($6.10) (8.1) ($0.40) ($0.16) ($0.53) ($0.59) ($0.35) $3.65 $2.93 26.7% 58.8% -19.0% 8.7% 27.0% -2.9% -7.5% 39.4% 6.4% 13.4% 78.5% 26.4% 21.9% 65.4% 13.2% 32.1% 42.3% 32.5% 10.2% 80.3% 22.5% 50 201 108 726 120 286 311 74 101 120 150 (19.2) 245 279 293 315 (10.1) (14.0) (7.2) 204 202 145 162 (6.1) 13.1 215 263 322 388 9.3 413 474 506 553 64.9 28.4 (17.8) (15.4) $5.52 2.7 (10.1) 5.7 ($0.26) $0.29 $0.07 ($0.26) $0.15 $3.78 21.2 31.6 51.0 $0.11 $0.54 $0.17 $0.19 $0.32 $1.80 323 453 625 744 98.8 104.9 154.1 215.0 254.0 $0.81 $0.94 $1.47 $2.01 $2.29 $2.62 93.0 100.2 117.0 132.5 $0.61 $0.72 $0.80 $0.91 $1.02 $4.69 140 325 2,068 388 67 128 EFTA01462463 (741) (2,703) $5.89 31,975 1,235 1,847 766 ($1.42) $1.00 $0.50 $1.47 $2.59 $0.69 (25) 31 16 12.8% 64.5% 37.5% 16,290 20,458 25,469 26,957 29,352 6,539.0 7,677.0 8,056.0 10,330.7 11,227 $3.36 $4.00 $4.51 $5.22 $5.83 $17.61 $18.36 31,610 837 1,041 1,126 1,219 214.3 221.3 243.1 257.4 298.1 $0.90 $0.99 $1.01 $1.07 $1.23 ($1.70) $0.04 7 140 232 53 EFTA01462464 Signals to Noise (S2N) Wireless Equipment 2 March 2014 Page 22 Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Figure 3: Global Handset Model Handset Shipments By Region (in thousands) Handset Unit Shipments Western Europe Eastern Europe Asia Developed Asia China India Indonesia Developing Asia North America Latin America (Ex. Brazil) Brazil Africa/Middle East Total Unit Shipments y/y growth By Technology (in thousands) Handset Unit Shipments GSM # GSM # GPRS # EDGE WCDMA #WCDMA #HSDPA CDMA # CDMA # CDMA2000 1xRTT # CDMA450 # CDMA2000 1xEV-DO LTE TD-SCDMA WiMax TDMA iDEN AMPS/Other Total Unit Shipments y/y growth 2004 130,722 81,594 247,343 EFTA01462465 71,959 107,201 20,128 12,105 35,950 124,733 31,283 20,540 40,947 677,163 19.5% 2005 205,001 99,511 322,071 76,961 132,197 31,533 19,270 62,111 128,347 73,909 38,610 78,320 2006 205,057 118,750 456,136 86,283 216,802 39,423 28,762 84,866 138,673 77,728 36,265 94,084 19.1% 2007 219,582 103,570 596,558 95,323 229,444 123,882 37,444 110,465 146,352 83,452 44,226 144,894 EFTA01462466 18.8% 2008 233,219 104,349 690,182 110,050 255,777 155,537 49,594 119,225 152,698 87,055 56,680 203,592 14.1% 2009 166,798 98,562 795,716 87,769 288,148 257,939 40,244 121,616 127,187 116,776 61,298 177,750 1.1% 2010 177,645 122,350 294,103 345,647 64,382 131,152 147,141 124,607 71,413 277,533 19.6% 2011 183,814 145,173 97,428 385,661 365,374 85,845 213,500 168,676 145,519 EFTA01462467 114,737 318,026 20.4% 2012 203,458 169,271 107,518 546,758 281,761 102,207 234,036 2013E 207,364 175,153 116,381 555,130 322,824 104,553 248,308 2014E 212,647 177,362 121,218 572,765 345,330 112,126 260,592 2015E 220,989 178,650 186,888 153,198 113,028 331,463 9.3% 187,634 165,775 104,592 359,485 4.8% 189,074 168,490 105,673 404,572 4.8% 137,705 589,180 356,200 115,703 264,941 196,822 EFTA01462468 177,271 110,453 435,495 2016E 230,834 181,688 926,456 1,147,808 1,272,281 1,347,197 1,412,031 1,463,728 1,529,444 91,173 143,245 607,213 385,282 116,896 276,808 211,143 175,440 106,079 444,724 945,768 1,126,692 1,338,634 1,527,776 1,544,086 1,847,144 2,223,756 2,429,587 2,547,201 2,669,848 2,783,408 2,879,353 39.7% 4.3% 3.4% 2004 474,552 257,367 200,932 16,253 18,029 18,029 151,212 3,698 136,491 11,023 12,125 6,626 14,620 677,163 19.5% 2005 677,204 302,838 296,260 78,105 60,891 60,890 1 EFTA01462469 177,709 0 153,915 23,794 13,868 6,710 9,386 2006 804,774 351,302 325,257 128,215 97,824 91,978 5,846 205,885 158,886 47,000 6,648 6,238 5,323 19.1% 2007 2008 342,840 397,687 305,920 2009 305,024 404,966 301,764 2010 263,292 145,663 117,629 211,744 106,654 105,090 2,273 EFTA01462470 6,179 2,913 18.8% 4,500 1,793 14.1% 300,821 116,706 184,116 217,873 5,852 100,423 111,599 9,901 920 2,255 560 1.1% 215,208 140,907 74,301 233,885 474,399 427,108 441,018 153,083 287,935 244,416 15,808 94,005 134,604 21,841 1,026 2,183 1,269 19.6% 2011 EFTA01462471 221,422 555,190 559,187 462,576 2012 187,115 519,060 588,064 2013E 161,074 548,028 532,826 2014E 92,739 2015E 940,158 1,046,447 1,011,754 1,135,392 1,335,799 1,294,239 1,163,571 1,078,589 374,072 374,009 192,077 171,903 136,433 35,470 510,467 560,365 556,500 93,925 247,067 15,783 47,452 59 183,773 30,849 43,806 5,946 2,458 1,330 20.4% 682,281 118,650 563,631 237,082 47,835 58 189,188 107,645 100,189 5,375 1,241,928 EFTA01462472 1,555 1,221 9.3% 765,600 142,448 623,152 201,328 41,851 55 159,423 249,389 81,658 5,216 932 1,150 4.8% 823,270 165,720 657,550 198,931 39,026 54 159,851 371,180 105,227 5,986 361 1,322 4.8% 37,576 55 167,721 514,508 93,210 4,486 392 1,504 4.3% 116,239 339,387 622,963 885,367 189,687 695,679 205,352 EFTA01462473 2016E 930,452 97,932 293,707 538,813 938,805 216,311 722,494 207,956 39,443 55 168,458 711,887 85,916 3,975 362 945,768 1,126,692 1,338,634 1,527,776 1,544,086 1,847,144 2,429,587 2,547,201 2,669,848 2,783,408 2,879,353 39.7% 3.4% Source: Deutsche Bank, company data 2,223,756 EFTA01462474 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) Appendix 1 Important Disclosures Additional information available upon request For disclosures pertaining to recommendations or estimates made on securities other than the primary subject of this research, please see the most recently published company report or visit our global disclosure look-up page on our website at http://gm.db.com/ger/disclosure/DisclosureDirectory.eqsr Analyst Certification The views expressed in this report accurately reflect the personal views of the undersigned lead analyst about the subject issuers and the securities of those issuers. In addition, the undersigned lead analyst has not and will not receive any compensation for providing a specific recommendation or view in this report. Brian Modoff Equity rating key Equity rating dispersion and banking relationships Buy: Based on a current 12- month view of total share-holder return (TSR = percentage change in share price from current price to projected target price plus pro-jected dividend yield ) , we recommend that investors buy the stock. Sell: Based on a current 12-month view of total shareholder return, we recommend that investors sell the stock Hold: We take a neutral view on the stock 12-months out and, based on this time horizon, do not recommend either a Buy or Sell. Notes: 1. Newly issued research recommendations and target prices always supersede previously published research. 2. Ratings definitions prior to 27 January, 2007 were: Buy: Expected total return (including dividends) of 10% or more over a 12-month period Hold: Expected total dividends) between -10% and 10% over a 12month period Sell: Expected total return (including dividends) of -10% or worse over a 12-month period Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 23 return (including 100 200 300 400 500 EFTA01462475 600 0 Buy Hold Sell Companies Covered Cos. w/ Banking Relationship North American Universe 48 % 54 % 50 % 40 % 3 %24 % EFTA01462476 2 March 2014 Wireless Equipment Signals to Noise (S2N) Regulatory Disclosures 1. Important Additional Conflict Disclosures Aside from within this report, important conflict disclosures can also be found at https://gm.db.com/equities under the "Disclosures Lookup" and "Legal" tabs. Investors are strongly encouraged to review this information before investing. 2. 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