Filed
Pursuant to Rule 425
Filing
Person: CommScope, Inc.
Subject
Company: Andrew Corporation
Commission
File Number: 333-145398
CommScope,
Inc.
12/5/2007
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11:00 AM PT
Speaker
ID 22
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Marcus
Kupferschmidt:
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Good
morning. I'm Marcus Kupferschmidt, and I follow the emerging
communications technology group here at Lehman Brothers. I'm
really glad
you could join us today.
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This
morning, we have CommScope presenting. I followed CommScope for
the past
about three and a half years now, and we watched CommScope emerge
from a
company solely focused on cable coax to buying a big piece of
Avaya,
focusing on enterprise and carrier. And now we're seeing a new
chapter in
the story, going to acquire Andrew, which yet again will double
the
revenue base of the Company. We think it creates a lot of interesting
opportunities for the synergies of the two companies and positions
them
pretty well in what we think is the growing demand for bandwidth.
So, with
that, I want to turn it over to CEO, Frank Drendel, and CFO,
Jearld
Leonhardt, and we’ll have a breakout room after
this.
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Frank
Drendel:
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I
appreciate it. Good morning, everybody in San Francisco; good
afternoon to
everybody on the Webcast. What I'll try and do is go through
this
presentation, which you have a copy in front of you, fairly rapidly,
so we
can open it up for questions and answers. There are a couple
key slides
that I'd like to show you. Some of you have seen this presentation
before,
I'm sure.
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These
are all the things that we have to say - that anything we say
up here
won't be correct in a week.
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We'll
do a quick overview, fourth quarter outlook, the Andrew acquisition,
and
then open it up to questions and
answers.
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Basically,
CommScope is-- tries to position itself as the leader in the
last mile of
broadband technology. And, if you look at the Company, its total
sales for
trailing 12 months would be about $1 billion or $900 million.
Basically, a
North American-based operation.
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Sales
by product. Our enterprise business is today our largest business.
Our
broadband business, which Jearld and I started the Company 31
years ago,
and then the carrier business, which has been very, very successful
for us
in serving AT&T in their wireless connectivity and also their
LightSpeed to connect broadband to the home - the basic part
of CommScope
that's the easiest part to understand. If you believe in the
expansion of
bandwidth, the requirement for additional bandwidth, in all the
networks,
then CommScope's the story for the last mile. We have uniquely
positioned
ourselves to supply connectivity to the last mile. You look at
what's
happened in both the internet growth and wireless mobility -
all of that
takes additional bandwidth-- is what we
supply.
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I'll
start with the enterprise segment. We were in the enterprise
business as a
very small player in supplying coax cable and twisted pair as
a component
to enterprise prior to the Avaya acquisition. When we acquired
Avaya, we
acquired what used to be the Western Electric/AT&T connective
solutions group, which supplied PBXs and connective solutions
to major
enterprise businesses. As AT&T and Western Electric exited that
business, they left it to the enterprise owner to put in their
own
telephony system, their own enterprise data networking systems.
And Avaya
had the worldwide leading position in that
connectivity.
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So
what happens today is that, when a new facility is being built,
a data
center or high-rise building, our sales force goes in and sells
the
enterprise owner, the building owner, the connectivity. And we
supply
everything in that building to connect high-speed connectivity.
We supply
the fiber optic cable that goes up the riser. That's the technology
we got
from OFS in our acquisition of the Lucent fiber optic business.
And then
we have the horizontal, or the connectivity to the office, to
the desktop,
in the copper product.
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The
key element in enterprise-- for our success in enterprise was
the fact
that we invented and patented a 10G solution, which is basically
fiber
optic speeds at the desktop over copper cable. This has been
a very strong
and growing business for us. As you can see, when we acquired
it, it was a
very successful sales business with very poor profit performance.
So it
went from sales of $601 million in 2004 to $867 million, something
13% or
14% growth, but 6X in profit growth. And what has happened is,
as you move
up the food chain, it becomes more and more difficult for competitors
to
be in this same value-added chain as CommScope is. So we have
selected the
more profit oriented, bottom line, shareholder oriented than
sales growth
oriented. The team that's done this-- Brian and our team has
done a
fantastic job of bringing this business and merging our enterprise
business with Avaya.
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If
you look at the enterprise upgrade cycle, the last time a major
upgrade
took place in supplying connectivity to the office happened in
1999 or
1998. Everybody was worried about Y2K. The systems were going
to crash.
They were going to fail. Everybody spent tons of money upgrading
their
enterprise networks. And I want for a moment to go back to 1999.
How many
of you ever saw a video clip on any of your computers or even
thought
about video in 1999? Hardly anyone. Today, think about any application
that hasn't got a tagalong video clip with it. For instance,
anything you
look at on eBay has a picture. Every time you add any video application
it
tears up bandwidth in the enterprise network. So what happens
is all of
these networks were operating at 100 megabits or 1 gigabit. Now,
the new
systems are going to 10 gigabit and 100 gigabit. So we see a
transition
across the network to higher speeds and higher
bandwidth.
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We
were at a conference about a week ago, and one of the participants
made an
interesting point. YouTube, which is about a year and half or
two years
old as a business, acquired by Google, used more bandwidth this
year than
the entire internet used in 2001. That's the amount of bandwidth
that
video takes. If you look at what's going to happen in the wireless
market
when you go to the 4G, LTE, Wi-Max, or whatever network you want
to call
it - the 700 megahertz options that are coming up - all of that
will be
predicated on a broadband connectivity. So you'll be looking
at high
definition in each of your units.
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Of
all the slides today, please concentrate on this slide. This
is the one
that got everybody so concerned about our fourth quarter guidance
and then
our re-leveled guidance yesterday. This is the cycle that the
enterprise
business goes through every year. You start out at the beginning
of the
year in 2005. You have the sales growth. And then, in the fourth
quarter,
you have the sales tail off as everybody works through their
inventory
that's at the supply chain [inaudible] that's out there. Everybody's
resetting their budgets for next year. Our sales force is working
on new
project orientation. And then, in the first quarter, it takes
off again
and goes up. That unusually strong area out there was when we
could not
supply-- We were caught in a supply crunch when we were transferring
two
of our plants. So we had unusually large backlog at that point,
which is
not our tradition. And then the sales obviously came down in
the fourth
quarter of '06. Same thing in '07 - second, third, fourth. And
then we
gave guidance as what we saw at the end of the fourth quarter.
What has
happened is every one of the businesses we're in is not seeing
this
economic recession that everybody's talking about. We've been
over it with
all of our key managers, our key customers. There is no question
it's a
scary environment. But every one of our businesses is faced with
immense
competition, and they have to maintain their bandwidth and their
position
to maintain their businesses. So this is sort of the enterprise
story.
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If
you look at our original business, the business Jearld and I
started in
1976-- To put this in perspective, in 1976, the average cable
system had
12 channels. I think cable TV, like Ted Turner and I talked about
before,
cable TV was great. Today, that same cable TV system backed up
with a
fiber optic HFC network has thousands of channels of capacity.
These
[inaudible] digital switch mode. So we are the world's largest
supplier of
fiber optic network, HFC coaxial and fiber optic networks for
the cable TV
industry.
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And
this is sort of the broadband business [inaudible]. It's not
going to be
an explosive business. It's not going to blow off the doors and
double
next year. But when you pass 120 million homes in the United
States and
250 million homes in the rest of the world added in with the
United
States, the maintenance requirements, just on every street move,
hurricanes, storms, it is a business that's forever. It's just
the
requirement to maintain that [inaudible]. If you do the math,
if you do
$617 million in sales, you only have to have about $4 per subscriber
per
year on a cable TV worldwide subscriber base to get that number.
And the
average maintenance on cable TV is about $140 a year. Again,
we returned
the business to profitability by doing a lot of work on cost
and pricing,
and it's a good business. It's very, very positive cash
flow.
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The
carrier segment inside CommScope is the 50 ohm cable business
that we have
that competes with Andrew. And the surprise business, of course,
was the
cabinet business that is a 50-year-old business within AT&T/Western
Electric. This cabinet was designed by Western Electric in the
late '50s
and '60s as a secure vault in the emergence of electronics that
were field
deployed. This is covered by all kinds of patents. It ended up
in Avaya
for a strange reason, because Avaya needed the plant that that
was made in
when they spun out of AT&T. And, long story short, we got it in the
acquisition. When we got it, it was losing $30 million. I was
for selling
this business. Brian Garrett, my long-time partner, said, let's
give it a
chance, and let's see where it goes. Low and behold, it exploded.
It lost
$46 million in '04, $7 million in '05, and then AT&T picked it as
their preference for light speed.
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So
what happens now, if you think about it, ladies and gentlemen,
for every
single subscriber in light speed-- for a single subscriber, number
one,
you need cabinet number one. Now, this cabinet vault will supply
up to 250
customers. But you can't start the network without deploying
cabinet A. So
we are the leading indicator of what's happening with the light
speed
deployment at AT&T. So it's been a tremendously great success
operating story.
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I
can't tell you what's going to happen in the next six months
or a year. I
can only tell you that CommScope's operated for 31 years with
an
eight-week backlog. The reason we like that is because our position,
the
market-leading position, with all these customers tells you that
customers
trust us so much they don't have to give us a backlog. The cable
industry
would be out of business in eight weeks if it wasn't for our
supply chain.
We can supply coax cable to any cable operator in the United
States in 24
hours from our warehouses and our supply chain. We know that
there's going
to be ongoing competition between telcos and MSOs. We know there's
going
to be ongoing wireless infrastructure investment. The 700 megahertz
investment alone will require a complete upgrade and rebuild
of another
wireless network.
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So
far, everything that we have seen has allowed us to raise our
guidance for
the rest of this year. Our enterprise business remains strong.
Our
broadband business is okay. Our carrier business is looking like
AT&T
will accelerate their business and their build next year. And
that's the
reason prior to this meeting, to help Marcus out, we raised the
guidance.
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All
right. Let's talk about Andrew. This is not a new opportunity
for us. We
tried to acquire Andrew in 1997. We were unsuccessful because
of a whole
bunch of reasons. But we didn't get it done. We've watched and
competed
with Andrew for over ten years. We have a technology in CommScope
that is
low cost, plastic foaming extrusion, which is very, very important
to high
frequency cables. So we're able to use less plastic and more
air, for all
intensive purposes, to make a cable that has the same electrical
characteristics and uses an aluminum outer conductor as compared
to
Andrew's copper conductor. Andrew has the worldwide leading position
in
the 50 ohm cable and antenna business for wireless. Combining
the two
companies, it's our belief that we can bring significant synergies
that we
did also in the Avaya transaction to bring to bring a very strong
profitability to these businesses. We intend on keeping the Andrew
name,
as we did the SYSTIMAX name. There's 50 years of goodwill in
Andrew. We
will have the largest field sales force in the world, we'll have
the
largest R&D position in the world, and we will have the largest patent
portfolio in the world. With the completion of the Andrew transaction,
CommScope collectively will have some 3,000-plus patents, most
of them
Bell Lab patents that we acquired from OFS, Lucent, Avaya, and
now
Andrew's patents and our patents in these
products.
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So
when you think about CommScope as an investment, we're not a
startup.
We're not ever going to be a YouTube or a Google or anything
like that.
But you can't easily replace the infrastructure that this Company
has
worldwide. The people who survived the 2000 burn down in telcom,
as we
did, and laying off 6,000 people was the toughest thing I've
ever had to
do-- Once you have survived that, the suppliers of choice today
in the new
telcom build will not be backdrop
startups.
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What
do we expect? Well, we expect to take the other $2 billion company,
integrate it into CommScope. And, remember, their largest business
is the
same business that we founded the Company on, which is making
high
frequency, sophisticated cables and antennas for the cable TV
industry and
wireless. So, if you look at their business, it's 64% of the
same thing we
do every day. We don't make light of integration difficulties.
We had a
lot of integration difficulties in Avaya, but we made it very
profitable
and got through it. So we know that there are some challenges
here. But
the most important thing is we are really diversified now as
a worldwide
supplier. This will take CommScope's total sales to approximately
a 50/50
international and domestic split.
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What
are we going to do? Well, we expect to make this a very strong,
diversified company. We've got 50 transition teams that have
been working
on this acquisition since we announced it in the middle of the
summer. The
advantage of having this delayed by the Justice Department has
given us a
lot of time to look at this and understand these transitions.
We expect
significant synergies - in the $50 to $60 million in year one,
$90 million
to $100 million in year two.
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And
let me give you one point that we have already looked at very--
pretty
strong belief in this one. We will be the largest user of sophisticated,
specialty plastics for high frequency cables in the world. No
one will
even come close to using the pounds that we use. And we're not
talking
insignificant pounds. We're talking 60 to 70 millions pounds.
These plants
run 24 hours a day around the clock, 7 days a week, year round.
We buy $2
billion worth of material and products out of our combined $4
billion
revenue. 1% improvement in procurement, and procurement reports
directly
to Brian Garrett and I-- 1% in procurement is $20 million. So,
if you
start to look at the scale synergies and opportunity we have
to bring home
these synergies, I think that they're
attainable.
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Once
you look at the recapitalized company, wireless and antenna business
will
be the largest business in the Company. The enterprise business
will be
the next-largest, along with carrier. I'm sorry. Carrier and
solutions
would be next. And broadband, the business we started, will be
the
smallest. I know some of the MSOs are giving presentations today
at
another conference. And most of them are announcing they're going
to
accelerate their capital expenditures for next year as they try
to compete
with FiOS, which announced last week that they're upgrading their
fiber
network to 20 megabits upstream and 20 megabits downstream. As
long as the
competition continues to spend this kind of money, CommScope's
on the
intersection of all four of these companies. We're supplying
material to
all of these companies.
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In
the end, I think we will be a very successful company. We have
positive
fundamentals. Obviously, we're not immune to any business cycle
and
recession. But we probably have the best position to survive
it, given
that these companies must spend to have bandwidth in order to
protect
their customers. We've got a long-term management team that's
been
together for over 30 years. We've got a team coming up underneath
Jearld
and I who are young, bright, aggressive-- build great businesses.
The two
people that will take over and run Andrew, reporting to Brian
and I, have
long-term wireless experience. Eddie Edwards will take over the
electronics part of Andrew. He ran RFS for Alcatel. RFS is Andrew's
largest competitor worldwide. And Ted Hally came from Motorola
and will
take over the antennas and coaxial cable business, the carrier
business. He came from multiple years at Motorola. So we have a
management team in place. We don't believe in mergers of equals.
We're
acquiring Andrew, just like we acquired Avaya. And so it's our
management
team, it's our discipline. It's our belief that you don't have
to do it in
price. You have to do it in margin. You have to do it at bottom
line. So
we're going to bring these companies back to where they
belong.
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And,
with that, I'll open it up to questions and answers to try to
keep you on
schedule. Marcus, do you want to start out? You have any--?
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Audience
Question:
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Just
a quick one, I'm sure, on everybody's mind. Obviously, you're
mix has
shifted quite a bit towards enterprise over the last couple of
years with
the success of-- rebuild of a number of data center projects.
With the
macro uncertainty that's lingering, obviously, you've reinforced
your
position with your positive pre-announcement. But any concerns
or updates
on what you're seeing/feeling from your enterprise segment
now?
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Frank
Drendel:
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I
think that's an excellent question. If the audience didn't hear
it, it
was-- The real strength in enterprise has been the data center
initial
start. Every data center adds to longevity in build in enterprise.
Obviously, we were concerned with the financial meltdown that
happened in
Wall Street and all the things that are going on - what's going
to happen
to the financial vertical? So let's back into that
question.
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First
of all, we're serving a worldwide market - financial institutions
worldwide. So there's absolutely no slowing down in Dubai. All
those data
centers are flat out. And you couldn't stop it if you
tried. There's no slowdown in Europe in the data centers.
Everything that's going in over there is on target and will continue
to be
built. As we work our way into the United States, at best, the
financial
vertical in the United States represents less than 6% of enterprise's
sales. When we talk to the TOs, the technical officers-- All
the
professionals at all of these companies-- Their view is as follows.
One,
you can't start and stop these data centers on a dime. Once you
start, you
have to at least fulfill that first phase of the data center,
so you can
transfer the old data center to a new data
center.
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Number
two, even though we may lay off 6,000 people, what changes in
the amount
of transactions we do every day to protect our investors, protect
the
data, protect the information, and add security to it. One of
the driving
factors behind data centers has nothing to do with the capacity
in the
data center; it has everything to do with security. As Sarbanes-Oxley
worked its way through all of us as CEOs and we had to sign off
that we
know everything that's going on in our company and we're protecting
every
piece of data that happens to you, ladies and gentlemen, think
about what
happens in the distributed data network. You can't promise as
a CEO of a
major bank that you've got control when you have 140 distributed
data
centers. It's impossible. Someone can get in there and grab that
data. By
consolidating 140 down to 3 or 4 or 5 major data centers, you
gain more
physical security, more electronic security, and more encryption
into
those data centers. So some of this is over and above just a
normal budget
cycle. The real test of what happens with the data center will
be a year
from now when they reload for the next phase. But those projects
that are
underway now generally will go forward. So all the worksheets
that we see,
all the print charts that we have on these projects suggest at
this moment
that they're not under jeopardy. So that's
safe.
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Now,
could the next phase be under jeopardy? I would agree that that's
something we have to consider and share with you when we know
it. But,
right now, even if it all shut down in the United States, it
isn't a
striking death blow to CommScope. It would hurt, but it doesn't
affect the
rest of the world. So I believe the data center business is driven
by more
than just new technology. It has a security and a preference
that CEOs are
required for protecting your data. That's a big issue. None of
us want to
sign that piece of paper and look down at the Securities and
Exchange
Commission that we're not doing everything we can to take care
of
that.
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Audience
Question:
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It
would be helpful to overview why CommScope’s acquisition of Andrew is
accretive in 2008 and where you're looking for
synergies?
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Frank
Drendel:
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The
question was - why we think the Andrew deal is accretive in 2008.
Well,
first of all, Andrew on its own has taken care of two of the
major problem
areas in the Andrew situation. They've agreed to divest of the
satellite
business. That business-- Correct me, Jearld, but it was a $15
to $20
million loss range.
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Jearld
Leonhardt:
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That's
right.
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Frank
Drendel:
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So
that helps. I mean that out of the box helps us. The other one,
as you
know if you followed the Andrew-- They did a transaction with
Nokia where
they're supplying Nokia filters and engineering support, but
Nokia's
basically taking over their private OEM filter business for Nokia.
And
that business was probably another $15 to $20 million loss. So,
out of the
box, you're eliminating two major problem areas that Andrew--
And their
management did a fine job of taking care of
them.
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You
add on top of that the integration of the synergies on procurement
that we
will have. Obviously, we've got some cash costs in doing this
transaction,
but when we stand back and evaluate worldwide where our coaxial
cable
plants are, where our manufacturing facilities are, and the consolidation
and merging together of those facilities, we should have a footprint
that
is better than anyone in the world. We'll be the largest in the
world in
these products and be able to bring down costs because of the
consolidation of facilities and people, just like we did in
Avaya.
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Jearld
Leonhardt:
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I
would add that the financing cost is very attractive today. We
have our
financing commitments. We've committed that at least 90% of this
transaction will be in all cash. We have commitments at attractive
rates
relative to today's market. So we think that is also conducive
to having
an accretive transaction.
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Frank
Drendel:
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We
probably were the last car out of New York City with the
deal.
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Audience
Question:
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Questions
- if anyone else in the audience has any questions? All right.
Well, why
don't we just move on to the breakout room
and--
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Frank
Drendel:
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At
least I got you back on schedule.
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Marcus
Kupferschmidt:
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Yeah.
Thank you.
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Frank
Drendel:
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Thank
you very much, ladies and
gentlemen.
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