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Cray Inc. Reports Fourth Quarter and Year End 2000 Results; Company Positions Itself for Leadership and Growth with Broadest Supercomputer Product Offerings.


Business Editors/High Tech Writers

SEATTLE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 5, 2000

Global supercomputer supercomputer, a state-of-the-art, extremely powerful computer capable of manipulating massive amounts of data in a relatively short time. Supercomputers are very expensive and are employed for specialized scientific and engineering applications that must handle very  leader Cray (Cray, Inc., Seattle, WA, www.cray.com) A supercomputer manufacturer founded in 1972 as Cray Research, Inc., by Seymour Cray, a leading designer of large-scale computers at Control Data. In 1976, it shipped its first computer to Los Alamos National Laboratory.  Inc. (NASDAQ NASDAQ
 in full National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations

U.S. market for over-the-counter securities. Established in 1971 by the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), NASDAQ is an automated quotation system that reports on
 NM: CRAY) today reported financial results for the company's fourth quarter and year end 2000. Cray will hold an investor teleconference at 1:30 p.m. PST/4:30 p.m. EST P.M. also p.m. or p.m.
abbr.
post meridiem

Usage Note: By definition, 12 a.m.
 today to discuss the results and the company's outlook (details are provided below).

For the fourth quarter ended December December: see month.  31, 2000, Cray Inc. reported revenues of $33.4 million, compared to revenues of $343,000 for the fourth quarter of 1999. As the company announced in early January 2001, fourth quarter results were impacted by a delay in the timing of orders, which resulted in some product revenue slipping into the first quarter 2001. The loss from operations in the fourth quarter 2000 was increased by one-time non-cash adjustments totaling $5.6 million, of which $3.1 million was added to the cost of product revenue and $2.5 million to research and development expenses. These adjustments were related to Cray SV1(TM) processor "end-of-life end-of-life Cardiac pacing noun The point at which a pacemaker signals need for replacement, as its battery is nearing depletion Medtalk adjective " inventory during the transition to the enhanced Cray SV1ex(TM) processor, and Cray MTA-1 gallium arsenide An alloy of gallium and arsenic compound (GaAs) that is used as the base material for chips. Several times faster than silicon, it is used in high frequency applications such as cellphones, DVD players and fiber optics.  inventory and equipment due to the successful testing of the all-CMOS components for the Cray MTA-2(TM). Exclusive of these adjustments and imputed interest Imputed Interest

A term used to describe interest considered to be paid, even through no interest payment has been made.

Notes:
Imputed interest is calculated based upon actual payments that are to be paid, but have not yet been paid.
 and amortization of expenses related to the acquisition of the Cray business unit assets, the company reported a net loss of $6.3 million, or ($0.19) per share. Including these adjustments and imputed interest and amortization expenses, the company's net loss for the fourth quarter was $13.9 million or ($0.41) per share.

For the year ending December 31, 2000, the company reported revenues of $118.1 million, compared to revenues of $1.8 million for the prior year. The company reported a net loss of $25.4 million, or ($0.78) per share for the year ended December 31, 2000, compared to a loss of $34.6, or ($1.74) per share in the prior year.

Product Offerings Position Cray for Strong Growth

"Cray has now laid the foundation for industry leadership and strong growth," said Jim Rottsolk, company president and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. . "We have recently taken dramatic steps to increase our revenue opportunities with the broadest range of product offerings in the industry. Our Alpha Linux-based Cray SuperCluster su·per·clus·ter  
n.
A group of neighboring clusters of galaxies.



supercluster  

A large group of neighboring clusters of galaxies, along with isolated galaxies scattered between them, the entire collection
(R) systems will offer industry-leading speed with increasingly powerful data center features and attractive price-performance. Our marketing agreement with NEC (NEC Corporation, Tokyo, www.nec.com, www.necus.com) An electronics conglomerate known in the U.S. for its monitors. In Japan, it had the lion's share of the PC market until the late 1990s (see PC 98).

NEC was founded in Tokyo in 1899 as Nippon Electric Company, Ltd.
 will fill an important gap in our vector supercomputer offerings with the high-end vector NEC SX-5 Series and its successors. We expect these products to contribute moderately to our results in the second half of 2001, followed by a strong ramp in 2002 and beyond. We expect that eventually each of these products will add up to $100 million of annual revenues to the company.

"We believe that other significant developments since the beginning of 2001 bode bode 1  
v. bod·ed, bod·ing, bodes

v.tr.
1. To be an omen of: heavy seas that boded trouble for small craft.

2.
 well for the future. The NEC agreement will also provide $25 million in cash at significantly above-market prices, and at the company's lowest cost of capital to date. We recently received an order for a 28-processor MTA-2, the first all CMOS configuration See CMOS setup.  of our revolutionary multi-threaded architecture and another major milestone in that product's move towards full commercialization."

"The year 2000 was truly one of remarkable transition for the company. Tera Computer exited its development stage, and began commercial operations as a dramatically new entity with the acquisition of the Cray Research See Cray.  assets. Now, less than a year after we formed the combined company, we have laid the foundation for an industry-leading company that will provide the world's best products, technology pipeline and support infrastructure. We have never been more excited about the company's prospects, and we will continue to build on that success in 2001 as we prepare for the expected strong growth years ahead," Rottsolk concluded.

Financial Guidance

The following statements are based on current expectations. These statements are forward-looking, and actual results may differ materially.

The company expects to report a profitable first quarter 2001, with total revenues in the range of $46-$48 million, assuming the successful completion of acceptance testing (programming) acceptance testing - Formal testing conducted to determine whether a system satisfies its acceptance criteria and thus whether the customer should accept the system.  of a $21 million T3E T3E Toxicomanie Europe Echanges Etudes  system by the Department of Defense--a 30-day test which is due to be completed in the second half of March. Gross product margins for the first quarter 2001 are expected to rebound rebound (rē´bownd),
n/v 1. a recovery from illness.
n 2. an outbreak of fresh reflex activity after withdrawal of a stimulus

rebound adjective
 to a range of 46 to 48 percent. Service margins are expected to be in the same range. The June 2001 quarter is expected to be down from these levels, with revenues expected in the range of $31 to $35 million. The second half of 2001 is expected to show renewed revenue strength as the Cray SV1ex, Cray SuperCluster(R) and Cray MTA-2 products come on line.

For the full year 2001, the company expects total revenues in the range of $170 to $185 million, depending on the successful introduction of new products and continued strength of legacy products. Service revenues are expected to be approximately $80 million, with product revenues making up the remainder. These revenue expectations do not include any contribution from the NEC agreement. Assuming the closing occurs as anticipated in the second quarter, the company would expect some slight revenue in the second half for the NEC SX-5 vector supercomputers, with more substantial revenues from NEC products in 2002 and beyond. Gross product margins are expected to decline somewhat over the year, as new products, such as the SuperCluster(R), carry lower margins. Service margins are expected to be slightly down from 2000 levels, given the expected lower revenues as the company de-installs older Cray vector systems. Total R&D expenditures are expected to decrease from the 2000 run rate, with planned expenses in the range of $50-54 million, with the highest levels anticipated in the first half of the year, as major prototyping and other non-recurring engineering Non-recurring engineering (NRE) refers to the one-time cost of researching, designing, and testing a new product. When budgeting for a project, NRE must be considered in order to analyze if a new product will be profitable.  expenses for the Cray SV1ex, Cray MTA-2 and Cray SV2(TM) are incurred. Sales and Marketing expenses are expected to be in the range of $16-18 million for the year, and General & Administrative expenses are anticipated to be in the range of $7-8 million. The company expects to report a net profit from operations and to be cash flow positive for the full year at these revenue and expense levels.

Investor Conference Call

Management will discuss the results and the company's outlook and hold a question and answer session for investors today, March 5, 2001, at 1:30 p.m. Pacific / 4:30 p.m. Eastern. To participate, call 212-231-6046 a few minutes ahead of time (no passcode required). If you are unable to participate, a replay will be available from 3:30 p.m. Pacific on March 5 for 48 hours. To access, please dial 1-800-633-8284, or 1-858-812-6440 (international), reservation number 18005759. In addition, the replay will be available for 90 days via the Internet Internet

Publicly accessible computer network connecting many smaller networks from around the world. It grew out of a U.S. Defense Department program called ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network), established in 1969 with connections between computers at the
 at www.streetevents.com.

About Cray Inc.

Cray Inc. designs, builds and sells high-performance MPP (Massively Parallel Processing or Massively Parallel Processor) A multiprocessing architecture that uses up to thousands of processors. Some might contend that a computer system with 64 or more CPUs is a massively parallel processor. , vector processor A computer with built-in instructions that perform multiple calculations on vectors (one-dimensional arrays) simultaneously. It is used to solve the same or similar problems as an array processor; however, a vector processor passes a vector to a functional unit, whereas an array processor  and general-purpose parallel computer systems. The company has leading edge technology, multiple product platforms, nearly 900 employees, a $2 billion installed base of approximately 600 computers worldwide, major manufacturing and service capabilities and extensive global customer relationships. Cray believes its Multithreaded multithreaded - multithreading  Architecture, Cray T3E The Cray T3E was Cray Research's second-generation massively parallel supercomputer architecture, launched in 1995. Like the previous Cray T3D It was a fully distributed memory machine using a 3D torus topology interconnection network. , Cray SuperCluster and Cray SV2 systems together represent the future of supercomputing. Go to www.cray.com for more information on the company.

Safe Harbor Safe Harbor

1. A legal provision to reduce or eliminate liability as long as good faith is demonstrated.

2. A form of shark repellent implemented by a target company acquiring a business that is so poorly regulated that the target itself is less attractive.
 Statement

This press release contains forward-looking statements forward-looking statement

A projected financial statement based on management expectations. A forward-looking statement involves risks with regard to the accuracy of assumptions underlying the projections.
. There are certain factors that could cause Cray's execution plans to differ materially from those anticipated by the statements above. Among such factors are the removal of the antidumping an·ti·dump·ing  
adj.
Intended to discourage importation and sale of foreign-made goods at prices substantially below domestic prices for the same items.
 order currently being applied to sales of Japanese supercomputers in the U.S., government support and funding for supercomputer systems Three firms have held, simultaneously, the name Supercomputer Systems or Supercomputing Systems.

The first was founded by Steve Chen, architect of the Cray X-MP and Cray Y-MP. The second was based in San Diego, California, USA.
, expected delivery and acceptance times, and timely availability of commercially acceptable components from third party suppliers. For a discussion of such risks, and other risks that could affect Cray's future performance, please see "Risk Factors" in Cray Inc.'s most recent SEC Form 10-Q Form 10-Q

See 10-Q.
.

Note to Editors: Cray and SuperCluster are registered trademarks, and Cray T3E, Cray SV1, Cray MTA (1) (Message Transfer Agent or Mail Transfer Agent) The store and forward part of a messaging system. See messaging system.

(2) See M Technology Association.

1. (messaging) MTA - Message Transfer Agent.
 and Cray SV2 are trademarks, of Cray Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.


                      CRAY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                            (In thousands)

                                December 31,  December 31,
                                   1999          2000
                            --------------  ----------------

ASSETS
   Cash and cash equivalents    $  11,201   $  5,387
   Accounts receivable                641     25,159
   Inventory, net                   4,513     23,637
   Spares inventory, net                      19,565
   Property and equipment, net      5,829     26,496
   Intangible assets, net             186     30,154
   Other assets                     1,040      5,102
                                  --------  --------
          TOTAL                 $  23,410   $135,500
                                  ========  ========

LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY

   Accounts payable                 4,366     15,953
   Accrued payroll and
     related expenses               2,147     11,829
   Deferred revenue                    68     17,666
   Current portion of
     warranty reserve                         17,517
   Investor notes payable                      7,553
   Other current liabilities        1,110     13,670
   Non-current liabilities          1,412     14,498
   Shareholders' equity            14,307     36,814
                                  --------  --------
          TOTAL                  $ 23,410   $135,500
                                  ========  ========



                      CRAY INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
                            (in thousands)

                       Three Months Ended         Twelve Months Ended
                           December 31,              December 31,
                        1999         2000         1999         2000
                     ---------    ---------    ---------    ----------
REVENUE:
  Product           $     300    $   9,521    $   1,671    $  46,617
  Service                  43       23,847          123       71,455
                     ---------    ---------    ---------    ----------
   Total
    revenue               343       33,368        1,794      118,072
                     ---------    ---------    ---------    ----------

OPERATING EXPENSES:
  Cost of product
   revenue                           8,246        1,505       32,505
  Cost of service
   revenue                 25       11,401           92       34,077
  Research and
    development         5,168       16,798       22,147       48,426
  Inventory
    obsolescense
    charge                148                     6,589
  Marketing and sales     728        5,480        2,517       14,365
  General and
    administrative      1,437        2,478        3,091        7,033
                     ---------    ---------    ---------    ----------
    Total operating
     expenses           7,506       44,403       35,941      136,406
                     ---------    ---------    ---------    ----------
    Loss from
     operations        (7,163)     (11,035)     (34,147)     (18,334)

OTHER INCOME
  (EXPENSE)                49         (902)        (384)        (447)

IMPUTED INTEREST
 EXPENSE                              (234)                   (1,437)

AMORTIZATION OF
 INTANGIBLE
  ASSETS                            (1,751)                   (5,217)
                     ---------    ---------    ---------    ----------
  Net loss             (7,114)     (13,922)     (34,531)     (25,435)

  Preferred  stock
   dividend                                        (115)
                     ---------    ---------    ---------    ----------
  Loss per
   common share   $    (7,114)  $  (13,922)   $ (34,646)  $  (25,435)
                     =========    =========    =========    ==========
  Loss per
  common share,
    Basic and
     diluted      $     (0.29)  $    (0.41)   $   (1.74)  $    (0.78)
                     =========    =========    =========    ==========
  Weighted average
    shares
    outstanding,
    Basic and
    diluted            24,304       34,197       19,906       32,699
                     =========    =========    =========    ==========
COPYRIGHT 2001 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 5, 2001
Words:1696
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