SUPERIOR TELECOM INC
S-1/A, 1996-09-12
DRAWING & INSULATING OF NONFERROUS WIRE
Previous: AMRESCO RESIDENTIAL SECURITIES CORP MORT LOAN TRUST 1996-4, 8-K, 1996-09-12
Next: METZLER GROUP INC, 424A, 1996-09-12



<PAGE>
   
   AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON SEPTEMBER 12, 1996
    
 
                                                      REGISTRATION NO. 333-09933
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
                           --------------------------
 
   
                                AMENDMENT NO. 1
                                       TO
    
                                    FORM S-1
                             REGISTRATION STATEMENT
                                     UNDER
                           THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
                            ------------------------
                             SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.
             (Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)
 
<TABLE>
<S>                              <C>                            <C>
           DELAWARE                          3357                  58-2248978
 (State or other jurisdiction    (Primary Standard Industrial   (I.R.S. Employer
              of                 Classification Code Number)     Identification
incorporation or organization)                                      Number)
</TABLE>
 
                                 1790 BROADWAY
                            NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10019
                                 (212) 757-3333
  (Address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code, of
                   registrant's principal executive offices)
 
                           STEWART H. WAHRSAGER, ESQ.
                                 1790 BROADWAY
                            NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10019
                                 (212) 757-3333
 (Name, address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code,
                             of agent for service)
                           --------------------------
 
                                   COPIES TO:
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                       <C>
         RONALD R. PAPA, Esq.                      MELVIN EPSTEIN, Esq.
Proskauer Rose Goetz & Mendelsohn LLP           Stroock & Stroock & Lavan
            1585 Broadway                            7 Hanover Square
    New York, New York 10036-8299             New York, New York 10004-2696
            (212) 969-3000                            (212) 806-5400
</TABLE>
    
 
                           --------------------------
 
        APPROXIMATE DATE OF COMMENCEMENT OF PROPOSED SALE TO THE PUBLIC:
 AS SOON AS PRACTICABLE AFTER THE EFFECTIVENESS OF THIS REGISTRATION STATEMENT.
                           --------------------------
 
    If  any of the securities being registered on this Form are to be offered on
a delayed or continuous basis pursuant to  Rule 415 under the Securities Act  of
1933, check the following box. / /
 
    If  this Form  is filed  to register  additional securities  for an offering
pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, please check the following box
and list  the  Securities  Act  registration statement  number  of  the  earlier
effective registration statement for the same offering. / /  _____________
    If  this Form  is a post-effective  amendment filed pursuant  to Rule 462(c)
under the Securities Act,  check the following box  and list the Securities  Act
registration number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same
offering. / /  _____________
    If  delivery of the prospectus is expected  to be made pursuant to Rule 434,
please check the following box. / /
                           --------------------------
 
                        CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        PROPOSED MAXIMUM
                                       AMOUNT TO      PROPOSED MAXIMUM     AGGREGATE         AMOUNT OF
      TITLE OF EACH CLASS OF               BE          OFFERING PRICE       OFFERING        REGISTRATION
   SECURITIES TO BE REGISTERED       REGISTERED (1)     PER UNIT (2)        PRICE(2)          FEE (3)
<S>                                 <C>               <C>               <C>               <C>
Common Stock, par value $.01 per
 share............................  6,900,000 shares       $17.00         $117,300,000        $40,448
</TABLE>
    
 
(1) Includes 900,000 shares  of Common  Stock, which the  Underwriters have  the
    option to purchase to cover over-allotments, if any.
(2) Estimated  solely  for  the  purpose  of  calculating  the  registration fee
    pursuant to Rule 457(o) under the Securities Act of 1933.
   
(3) Includes $38,069 previously paid.
    
                           --------------------------
 
    THE REGISTRANT HEREBY  AMENDS THIS  REGISTRATION STATEMENT ON  SUCH DATE  OR
DATES AS MAY BE NECESSARY TO DELAY ITS EFFECTIVE DATE UNTIL THE REGISTRANT SHALL
FILE  A  FURTHER  AMENDMENT  WHICH SPECIFICALLY  STATES  THAT  THIS REGISTRATION
STATEMENT SHALL THEREAFTER BECOME EFFECTIVE  IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 8(A)  OF
THE  SECURITIES ACT  OF 1933  OR UNTIL  THE REGISTRATION  STATEMENT SHALL BECOME
EFFECTIVE ON SUCH DATE AS THE COMMISSION, ACTING PURSUANT TO SAID SECTION  8(A),
MAY DETERMINE.
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
INFORMATION   CONTAINED  HEREIN  IS  SUBJECT   TO  COMPLETION  OR  AMENDMENT.  A
REGISTRATION STATEMENT  RELATING TO  THESE SECURITIES  HAS BEEN  FILED WITH  THE
SECURITIES  AND EXCHANGE  COMMISSION. THESE SECURITIES  MAY NOT BE  SOLD NOR MAY
OFFERS TO BUY BE ACCEPTED PRIOR  TO THE TIME THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT  BECOMES
EFFECTIVE.  THIS  PROSPECTUS  SHALL  NOT  CONSTITUTE AN  OFFER  TO  SELL  OR THE
SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER TO BUY NOR SHALL THERE BE ANY SALE OF THESE  SECURITIES
IN  ANY STATE IN WHICH SUCH OFFER,  SOLICITATION OR SALE WOULD BE UNLAWFUL PRIOR
TO REGISTRATION OR QUALIFICATION UNDER THE SECURITIES LAWS OF ANY SUCH STATE.
<PAGE>
   
                SUBJECT TO COMPLETION, DATED SEPTEMBER 12, 1996
    
PROSPECTUS
                                6,000,000 SHARES
 
                                     [LOGO]
                                  COMMON STOCK
                               ------------------
 
    All of  the  shares of  Common  Stock, $.01  par  value per  share  ("Common
Stock"),   of  Superior  TeleCom  Inc.  (the  "Company")  offered  hereby  (this
"Offering") are being sold by the Company.
 
   
    Prior to  this Offering,  there has  been no  public market  for the  Common
Stock. It is currently estimated that the initial offering price will be between
$15.00  and $17.00 per  share. For information relating  to the determination of
the initial public offering price, see "Underwriting."
    
 
   
    The Company expects to use the net proceeds of this Offering to complete the
Reorganization and to  reduce the  amount outstanding under  the Company's  Bank
Credit  Facility  (each  as  defined  in  "Prospectus  Summary").  See  "Use  of
Proceeds."
    
 
   
    The Company has  applied for listing  of the  Common Stock on  the New  York
Stock Exchange under the symbol "SUT."
    
                            ------------------------
 
   
    FOR A DISCUSSION OF CERTAIN FACTORS THAT SHOULD BE CONSIDERED BY PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS OF THE COMMON STOCK OFFERED HEREBY, SEE "RISK FACTORS," COMMENCING ON
PAGE 8.
    
                             ---------------------
 
THESE  SECURITIES HAVE NOT  BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED  BY THE SECURITIES AND
 EXCHANGE  COMMISSION  OR  ANY  STATE  SECURITIES  COMMISSION  NOR  HAS   THE
   SECURITIES  AND EXCHANGE  COMMISSION OR ANY  STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION
     PASSED  UPON  THE  ACCURACY  OR  ADEQUACY  OF  THIS  PROSPECTUS.  ANY
                REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           UNDERWRITING
                                        PRICE               DISCOUNTS            PROCEEDS TO
                                      TO PUBLIC        AND COMMISSIONS (1)       COMPANY (2)
<S>                              <C>                   <C>                   <C>
Per Share......................           $                     $                     $
Total (3)......................           $                     $                     $
</TABLE>
 
(1) The Company has agreed to indemnify the several Underwriters against certain
    liabilities,  including  liabilities under  the Securities  Act of  1933, as
    amended. See "Underwriting."
 
   
(2) Before deduction of expenses payable by the Company estimated at $700,000.
    
 
   
(3) The Company has granted to the  Underwriters a 30-day option to purchase  up
    to   900,000   additional   shares   of  Common   Stock   solely   to  cover
    over-allotments, if any.  If such  option is  exercised in  full, the  total
    Price  to  Public, Underwriting  Discounts and  Commissions and  Proceeds to
    Company will be $          , $           and $          , respectively.  See
    "Underwriting" and "Use of Proceeds."
    
 
    The  shares are being  offered by the  several Underwriters when,  as and if
delivered to and  accepted by  the Underwriters,  and subject  to various  prior
conditions,  including the  right to reject  orders in  whole or in  part. It is
expected that  delivery  of share  certificates  will be  made  against  payment
therefor  at the offices  of Furman Selz LLC  in New York, New  York on or about
            , 1996.
 
FURMAN SELZ
 
                OPPENHEIMER & CO., INC.
 
                                                       BT SECURITIES CORPORATION
                               ------------------
 
                The date of this Prospectus is           , 1996
<PAGE>
[The inside  front  cover page  contains  a diagram  of  the  telecommunications
infrastructure,  including the  connections between and  among telephone company
central offices, remote digital switches and private residences.]
 
                                [INSERT DIAGRAM]
 
   
    IN CONNECTION WITH THE OFFERING,  THE UNDERWRITERS MAY OVER-ALLOT OR  EFFECT
TRANSACTIONS  THAT STABILIZE OR MAINTAIN THE MARKET PRICE OF THE COMMON STOCK AT
A LEVEL  ABOVE THAT  WHICH MIGHT  OTHERWISE  PREVAIL IN  THE OPEN  MARKET.  SUCH
TRANSACTIONS   MAY  BE  EFFECTED  ON  THE   NEW  YORK  STOCK  EXCHANGE,  IN  THE
OVER-THE-COUNTER MARKET OR  OTHERWISE. SUCH  STABILIZING, IF  COMMENCED, MAY  BE
DISCONTINUED AT ANY TIME.
    
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
                               PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
 
   
    THE FOLLOWING SUMMARY IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY, AND SHOULD BE READ IN
CONJUNCTION  WITH, THE MORE  DETAILED INFORMATION AND  FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (AND
RELATED NOTES THERETO) INCLUDED ELSEWHERE IN THIS PROSPECTUS. THE COMPANY  MEANS
SUPERIOR  TELECOM INC. AND THE SUBSIDIARIES THAT IT  WILL OWN AS A RESULT OF THE
REORGANIZATION (AS DEFINED  BELOW) AND, UNLESS  THE CONTEXT OTHERWISE  REQUIRES,
SUCH  SUBSIDIARIES  ARE INCLUDED  IN THE  DESCRIPTION OF  THE COMPANY.  SEE "THE
COMPANY --  THE  REORGANIZATION  AND  RELATED  TRANSACTIONS."  UNLESS  OTHERWISE
INDICATED,  THE INFORMATION  IN THIS  PROSPECTUS ASSUMES  THE COMPLETION  OF THE
REORGANIZATION   AND   RELATED   TRANSACTIONS   AND   THAT   THE   UNDERWRITERS'
OVER-ALLOTMENT  OPTION IS NOT  EXERCISED. ALL REFERENCES  HEREIN TO FISCAL 1994,
FISCAL 1995 AND FISCAL 1996 MEAN THE YEARS ENDED MAY 1, APRIL 30 AND APRIL 28 OF
SUCH YEARS, RESPECTIVELY.
    
 
                                  THE COMPANY
 
   
    The Company is a leading manufacturer of copper wire and cable products  for
the  local loop segment of the  telecommunications network in the United States.
The local loop is  the segment of the  telecommunications network that  connects
the  customer's  premises to  the nearest  telephone  company switch  or central
office. Copper wire and cable is the most widely used medium for transmission in
the local  loop,  which  comprises approximately  160  million  residential  and
business  access  lines in  the  United States.  The  Company also  develops and
manufactures data  communications  and  other  electronic  equipment,  including
multiplexers,  for defense, government and  commercial applications. As a result
of acquisitions, as well  as internal growth through  expansion of its  customer
relationships  and  introductions  of  new  products,  the  Company's  net sales
increased from $164.5 million in fiscal  1995 to $410.4 million in fiscal  1996,
and  operating income increased from $9.6 million to $31.8 million over the same
period. The Company  believes it  is well-positioned  to take  advantage of  the
rapid  changes in the telecommunications industry  as the demand for voice, data
and  video  services  over  the  local  loop  increases  dramatically  and   new
technologies and products are developed to enable the local loop to satisfy that
demand.
    
 
   
    TELECOMMUNICATIONS  WIRE  AND  CABLE.    The  Company  conducts  its  copper
telecommunications wire  and cable  products  business through  its  subsidiary,
Superior  Telecommunications  Inc.  ("Superior"). Superior  manufactures  a wide
variety of copper telecommunications  wire and cable  products, ranging in  size
from  a single twisted pair  wire to a 4,200  pair cable, including hybrid cable
products such as coaxial/copper wire  and fiber optic/copper wire  combinations.
These  products,  referred  to as  distribution  wire and  cable,  are variously
configured for aerial and  underground use in the  local loop. The Company  also
has  developed  high speed  data communication  copper wire  products, including
unshielded twisted pair  ("UTP") wire  for on-premise applications,  such as  in
computer  networks. The  Company's products are  sold primarily  to the regional
Bell operating  companies  ("RBOCs") and  the  two major  independent  telephone
companies  under multi-year  supply arrangements.  Superior's net  sales for the
twelve months ended July 28, 1996 constituted 93.8% of the Company 's net  sales
for such period.
    
 
    The  Company has led a recent consolidation in the copper telecommunications
wire  and   cable  industry   by  acquiring   the  U.S.   and  Canadian   copper
telecommunications  wire  and  cable business  of  Alcatel  NA in  May  1995 and
substantially all of the  machinery, equipment and  inventory of the  Vancouver,
B.C. copper telecommunications wire and cable business of BICC Phillips, Inc. in
November  1995.  Through these  acquisitions, the  Company increased  its annual
production capacity from 28  billion conductor feet ("bcf")  in one plant to  an
aggregate  of 92 bcf in four geographically diverse plants. The Company believes
that it has  successfully integrated  its acquired  businesses, particularly  by
implementing  improved production techniques at each  of its plants and reducing
the cost structure of its operations.
 
   
    Due to further industry-wide consolidation, total industry capacity has been
reduced, the  number  of  manufacturers  has declined  and  the  size  of  those
remaining  has increased. As a result, the  Company has become a key supplier of
copper wire and cable to  six of the seven RBOCs  and the two major  independent
telephone  companies and believes  that it will  continue to be  able to compete
effectively as its  major customers consolidate  their vendor base  in order  to
stabilize their sources of supply and ensure timely
    
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
delivery  of quality products  on a consistent basis.  In addition, the industry
consolidation, increased demand for copper telecommunications wire and cable and
the resulting changes  in the  nature of customer  relationships have  led to  a
recent improvement in the pricing environment for the Company's products.
 
    The Company believes that copper will continue to be the transmission medium
of  choice in the local loop  and that demand for access  to the local loop will
continue to increase for the following reasons:
 
    -INSTALLED BASE.  The installed base of  copper wire and cable in the  local
     loop  represents an investment of over $150 billion that must be maintained
     by the RBOCs  and other  local telephone companies.  Although other  media,
     such  as  fiber  optic cable,  are  used  for trunk  lines  between central
     offices, substantially all  local loop lines  continue to be  copper-based.
     Local  loop  lines are  continually  maintained and  replaced,  providing a
     steady demand for copper wire and cable.
 
   
    -LOWER INSTALLATION COSTS AND EASE OF REPAIR.  The Company believes that  in
     the  local loop, copper  has significantly lower  installation costs and is
     easier to repair than other media primarily because it does not require  an
     additional  power source and other electronics. Installation of fiber optic
     cable is both  capital and labor  intensive and deployment  of fiber  optic
     cable  generally has been limited  to trunk and feeder  lines and wide area
     loop configurations. Therefore, the Company believes that new installations
     in the local loop will continue to be copper-based.
    
 
    -TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES.  Copper dominance in the local loop continues to be
     supported by technological advances  that expand the  use and bandwidth  of
     the  installed local loop copper network. These advances include integrated
     services digital  networks ("ISDN"),  and digital  subscriber line  ("DSL")
     technologies,  including high-bit-rate digital subscriber line ("HDSL") and
     asymmetric digital  subscriber  line ("ADSL").  These  technologies  permit
     telecommunication  carriers, private network  owners and end-user consumers
     to employ  the copper  wire and  cable infrastructure  for high  speed  and
     bandwidth-intensive applications.
 
    -DEMAND  FOR NEW SERVICES.   Technological advances, regulatory developments
     and increased competition have accelerated the demand for and  introduction
     of  new  bandwidth-intensive  telecommunications  services.  These services
     include integrated voice and data, broadcast and conference quality  video,
     Internet   and  on-line  data  services  access,  high  speed  LAN  to  LAN
     connectivity,  collaborative  network  processing  and  other  specialized,
     bandwidth-intensive applications.
 
   
    -DEMAND FOR MULTIPLE RESIDENTIAL ACCESS LINES.  An increasing number of U.S.
     households  are installing  additional access lines  for multiple telephone
     lines, facsimile machines, access to  the Internet, home offices and  other
     purposes.   Additional  access   lines  increase  the   demand  for  copper
     telecommunications wire and cable in the local loop.
    
 
   
    DATA COMMUNICATIONS AND  ELECTRONICS.  The  Company, through its  subsidiary
DNE Systems, Inc. ("DNE"), designs and fabricates data communications equipment,
integrated  access devices and  other electronic products. DNE  is a supplier to
the U.S. defense industry of data and voice multiplexers used in tactical secure
military applications. Multiplexers are  integrated access devices that  combine
several   information  carrying  channels  into  one  line,  thereby  permitting
simultaneous multiple voice and data communications over a single line. DNE also
produces military  avionic products,  including  switches, dimmers,  relays  and
other  electrical controllers, various sensors and refueling amplifiers. DNE has
reduced its dependence on the defense market in recent years, primarily  through
the  development of contract subsystem manufacturing services for commercial and
(non-defense) governmental  customers. DNE's  net sales  for the  twelve  months
ended July 28, 1996 constituted 6.2% of the Company's net sales for such period.
    
 
   
    BUSINESS  STRATEGY.  The Company's strategy is to (i) respond to the current
and changing requirements of its  customers' communications networks and  expand
its  business in the local loop by continuing to develop, manufacture and sell a
full line of copper telecommunications wire and cable products; (ii) expand  its
product  lines to include transmission media  such as data communications cable,
including UTP products, and hybrid wire products, including coaxial/copper  wire
and fiber optic/copper wire combinations; (iii) take
    
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
   
advantage  of strategic acquisition opportunities  in data communications cable,
the local loop and its other markets; and (iv) expand its international business
through increased  export  sales and  the  establishment of  joint  ventures  or
similar arrangements.
    
 
   
    THE REORGANIZATION.  The Alpine Group, Inc. ("Alpine") currently owns all of
the  outstanding capital stock  of the Company,  Superior and DNE.  Prior to the
consummation of this  Offering, Alpine will  cause Superior and  DNE to  declare
dividends  on their common stock in an  aggregate amount equal to the difference
between $205.0 million and the net amount of intercompany debt owed by  Superior
and DNE to Alpine (which net amount equaled $102.9 million as of July 28, 1996).
Superior  will also issue to Alpine 20,000 shares of its 6% Cumulative Preferred
Stock ("Superior Preferred Stock"). Alpine  will then contribute to the  Company
all  of the issued  and outstanding common  stock of Superior  and DNE (together
with the foregoing transactions, the "Reorganization"). See "The Company --  The
Reorganization and Related Transactions."
    
 
   
    Concurrently  with the  completion of  the Reorganization,  the Company will
enter into a five-year  revolving credit facility  (the "Bank Credit  Facility")
under  which  it will  borrow  $154.7 million  to repay  the  net amount  of the
intercompany debt owed to Alpine and to pay to Alpine a portion of the dividends
declared as part of the Reorganization.  The net proceeds of this Offering  will
be  used to pay the remainder of the declared dividends and to reduce the amount
outstanding  under  the  Bank   Credit  Facility.  See   "The  Company  --   The
Reorganization  and Related  Transactions -- Bank  Credit Facility"  and "Use of
Proceeds."
    
 
   
    Upon completion of this Offering, Alpine  will own 50.1% of the  outstanding
capital   stock  of  the  Company  (approximately  46.6%  if  the  Underwriters'
over-allotment option  is  exercised  in full).  If  the  over-allotment  option
granted  to the Underwriters by  the Company is exercised,  the Company will use
the proceeds  therefrom  to redeem,  at  its  liquidation value,  an  amount  of
Superior  Preferred Stock having  an aggregate liquidation  value equal to those
net proceeds. In that event, Alpine  intends to engage in open-market  purchases
of  Common Stock  to restore  its ownership of  the outstanding  Common Stock to
50.1%.   See   "Principal   Stockholders"   and   "Certain   Transactions    and
Relationships."
    
 
                                  THE OFFERING
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                           <C>
Common Stock offered hereby (1).............  6,000,000 (1)
Common Stock to be outstanding after this
 Offering...................................  12,024,048 (1)(2)
Use of proceeds.............................  The net proceeds of this Offering will be used
                                              to  pay  the unpaid  portion of  the dividends
                                               declared in connection with the
                                               Reorganization  and  to  reduce  the   amount
                                               outstanding  under the  Bank Credit Facility.
                                               See "Use of Proceeds."
Proposed New York Stock Exchange Symbol.....  SUT
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------
(1) Excludes up to 900,000 shares that may be sold pursuant to the Underwriters'
    over-allotment option.
 
(2) Excludes 1,000,000 shares of Common Stock issuable pursuant to options  that
    may  be granted pursuant to the  Company's Employee Stock Incentive Plan and
    250,000 shares issuable pursuant to options that may be granted pursuant  to
    the  Non-Employee Directors' Stock Option Plan. See "Management -- Executive
    Compensation -- Compensation Under Plans."
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
                             SUMMARY FINANCIAL DATA
   
    The financial data of the Company set forth below have been derived from the
combined financial statements  of Superior  and DNE  (to be  reorganized as  the
Company).  The combined financial data for the fiscal years ended 1994, 1995 and
1996, are derived  from the combined  financial statements of  the Company  that
have  been audited by Arthur Andersen LLP, as indicated in their report included
elsewhere in  this Prospectus.  The unaudited  combined financial  data for  the
three  months ended July 29,  1995 and July 28,  1996 are derived from unaudited
combined  financial  statements  included  elsewhere  in  this  Prospectus.  The
financial data are provided on (i) an historical basis for fiscal 1994, 1995 and
1996  and for the three months ended July 29, 1995 and July 28, 1996; and (ii) a
pro forma basis  for the  fiscal year  ended April 28,  1996 and  for the  three
months  ended July 28, 1996 after giving effect to the following transactions as
if they had occurred  as of May  1, 1995: (1) the  Alcatel acquisition, (2)  the
Reorganization and related transactions and (3) this Offering. The unaudited pro
forma  financial information is provided for  comparative purposes only and does
not purport  to be  indicative of  the  results that  actually would  have  been
obtained  if the events set forth had been effected on the dates indicated or of
those results  that  may be  obtained  in  the future.  The  historical  results
presented  below reflect  the operations  of Superior  since its  acquisition by
Alpine in November 1993 and the  operations of the Alcatel Business (as  defined
below  in "The Company  -- Background") since  its acquisition by  Alpine in May
1995.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        FISCAL YEAR ENDED                           THREE MONTHS ENDED
                                        --------------------------------------------------  -----------------------------------
                                                     HISTORICAL                 PRO FORMA         HISTORICAL         PRO FORMA
                                        -------------------------------------  -----------  ----------------------  -----------
                                                      APRIL 30,    APRIL 28,    APRIL 28,    JULY 29,    JULY 28,    JULY 28,
                                        MAY 1, 1994     1995         1996         1996         1995        1996        1996
                                        -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------
                                                                 (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)
<S>                                     <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>        <C>
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS DATA:
Net sales.............................   $  68,510    $ 164,485    $ 410,413    $ 417,934    $  99,324   $ 123,824   $ 123,824
Cost of goods sold....................      56,250      142,114      362,854      369,780       89,821     105,447     105,447
                                        -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------
  Gross profit........................      12,260       22,371       47,559       48,154        9,503      18,377      18,377
Selling, general and administrative
 expense..............................       8,884       11,632       14,223       16,256        3,299       3,888       4,388
Amortization of goodwill..............       2,186        1,124        1,556        1,570          374         432         432
                                        -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------
  Operating income....................       1,190        9,615       31,780       30,328        5,830      14,057      13,557
Interest expense, net.................      (1,742)      (3,700)     (17,006)     (10,931)      (3,733)     (4,258)     (2,728)
Preferred stock dividends of
 subsidiary (1).......................      --           --           --           (1,200)      --          --            (300)
Other income (expense), net...........         (61)         231           55           55           28         (53)        (53)
                                        -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------
  Income (loss) from continuing
   operations before income taxes.....        (613)       6,146       14,829       18,252        2,125       9,746      10,476
Provision for income taxes............        (521)      (2,240)      (6,722)      (7,781)        (451)     (3,778)     (4,310)
                                        -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------
  Income (loss) from continuing
   operations.........................      (1,134)       3,906        8,107       10,471        1,674       5,968       6,166
(Loss) from discontinued operations...        (287)        (176)      --           --           --          --          --
                                        -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------
  Income (loss) before extraordinary
   item...............................      (1,421)       3,730        8,107       10,471        1,674       5,968       6,166
Extraordinary (loss) on early
 extinguishment of debt (2)...........      --           --           (2,645)      --           (2,811)     --          --
                                        -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------
  Net income (loss)...................   $  (1,421)   $   3,730    $   5,462    $  10,471       (1,137)  $   5,968   $   6,166
                                        -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------
                                        -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------
Per share of common stock (3):
Income from continuing operations...............................
                                                                   $    0.67    $    0.87    $    0.14   $    0.50   $    0.51
Extraordinary (loss) on early extinguishment of debt (2)........
                                                                       (0.22 )     --            (0.23 )    --          --
                                                                  -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------
  Net income (loss).............................................
                                                                  $     0.45   $     0.87   $    (0.09 ) $    0.50  $     0.51
                                                                  -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------
                                                                  -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------  -----------
OTHER DATA:
EBITDA (4)......................................................  $   40,231   $   38,869   $    7,793   $  16,308  $   15,808
Depreciation and amortization...................................       8,451        8,541        1,963       2,251       2,251
Capital expenditures............................................       4,339        4,339        1,204       1,511       1,511
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                         AT JULY 28, 1996
                                                                                      -----------------------
                                                                                        ACTUAL     PRO FORMA
                                                                                      ----------  -----------
<S>                                                                                   <C>         <C>
BALANCE SHEET DATA:
Working capital.....................................................................  $   54,609   $  55,149
Total assets........................................................................     232,360     236,000
Total debt (5)......................................................................     114,753     131,839
Total stockholders' equity..........................................................      57,432      23,986
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------
(1) Represents dividends on Superior Preferred Stock issued to Alpine as part of
    the Reorganization and related transactions.
 
   
(2) Relates to the early  extinguishment of $140.0  million principal amount  of
    debt incurred by Superior in connection with the Alcatel acquisition, during
    the  first quarter of fiscal 1996 and  to the early extinguishment of a $2.5
    million subordinated note issued  to DNE's former  parent during the  second
    quarter  of fiscal 1996.  The debt was  substantially replaced by promissory
    notes payable to Alpine.
    
 
(3) Based upon 12,024,048 shares outstanding subsequent to this Offering.
 
   
(4) EBITDA represents operating income  plus depreciation and amortization,  and
    provision  for non-cash  compensation expense  (primarily stock  options and
    restricted stock grants). EBITDA is presented not as a measure of  operating
    results,  but  rather  to  provide  additional  information  related  to the
    Company's ability to  service debt. EBITDA  should not be  considered as  an
    alternative  to either  (i) operating  income determined  in accordance with
    generally  accepted  accounting  principles  ("GAAP")  as  an  indicator  of
    operating   performance  or  (ii)  cash   flows  from  operating  activities
    determined in accordance  with GAAP as  a measure of  liquidity. EBITDA  for
    fiscal  1994 and  1995 has  not been  presented as  it is  not considered by
    management to be  a meaningful  comparison due  to the  significance of  the
    Superior   and  Alcatel  acquisitions   in  November  1993   and  May  1995,
    respectively.
    
 
   
(5) Actual amount includes $102.9 million of intercompany debt owed to Alpine at
    July 28, 1996.
    
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
                                  RISK FACTORS
 
    PROSPECTIVE  INVESTORS  SHOULD  CONSIDER  CAREFULLY,  IN  ADDITION  TO OTHER
INFORMATION IN THIS PROSPECTUS, THE FOLLOWING CAUTIONARY STATEMENTS AND FACTORS.
 
DEPENDENCE ON SIGNIFICANT CUSTOMERS
 
   
    The telecommunications wire and cable business is dependent on the RBOCs and
other major independent telephone holding companies. For the twelve months ended
July 28, 1996, six RBOCs and two major independent telephone companies accounted
for 82.9%  of the  Company's net  sales.  Five of  these customers,  Bell  South
Corporation, North Supply Corporation (Sprint), GTE Corporation, SBC Corporation
and  NYNEX  Corporation  accounted for  19.1%,  16.0%, 15.3%,  12.7%  and 12.1%,
respectively, of  the  Company's net  sales  for that  period.  As a  result  of
announced  industry consolidations, it is expected that the number of RBOCs will
be reduced from  seven to five.  Continued consolidation among  the RBOCs  could
alter  these customers' purchasing patterns and affect the pricing in the copper
telecommunications wire  and cable  business. Adverse  conditions affecting  the
industries  in which the Company's customers are  engaged, or the loss of any of
its significant  customers,  could  materially adversely  affect  the  Company's
results of operations and financial condition.
    
 
RAPID TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE
 
    The  commercial  development of  fiber  optics has  had  and is  expected to
continue to have an effect on  the Company's copper telecommunications wire  and
cable  business.  Fiber  optic technology  has  had  a major  impact  on certain
components  of  the   telecommunications  network  where   its  utilization   is
cost-effective,  particularly in trunk lines and the long distance network. To a
lesser degree,  fiber optic  cable  has been  deployed in  certain  high-density
feeder  applications between telephone  central offices or  remote locations and
major distribution  points,  which has  further  reduced the  total  market  for
products  manufactured  by  the  Company.  In  the  local  loop  portion  of the
telecommunications network, however,  copper wire has  remained the most  widely
used  medium  for  transmission.  Telephone  companies  are  evaluating  (and in
isolated cases installing on a  test basis) alternative technologies,  including
coaxial  and fiber  optic cable for  providing video entertainment  or other new
services. The Company believes, however,  that the great majority of  businesses
and  homes in America will continue  to be connected with the telecommunications
infrastructure  via  a  copper-based  local  loop.  Nevertheless,  because   the
telecommunications  industry  is  undergoing  rapid  and  intense  technological
change, it  is not  possible  at this  time to  predict  the impact  that  these
developments  may have on the total demand for  copper wire in the local loop. A
relatively small decline in the level of purchases of copper  telecommunications
wire  and  cable  by  the  RBOCs and  other  telephone  companies  could  have a
disproportionately adverse  effect on  the  copper telecommunications  wire  and
cable industry, including the Company.
 
    Wireless technologies such as microwave, satellite and cellular transmission
have  had,  and  will continue  to  have, an  impact  on the  market  for copper
telecommunications wire  and  cable  products.  In addition,  there  can  be  no
assurance  that  other, newly-developed  technologies will  not have  an adverse
impact on the market for copper telecommunications wire and cable products.
 
COMPETITION
 
    The Company  operates in  industries  that are  highly competitive.  In  the
telecommunications wire and cable business, the Company has three major domestic
competitors:  Cable Systems  International, Inc.;  General Cable  Corporation, a
subsidiary of  Wassall,  plc; and  Essex  Group Incorporated,  a  subsidiary  of
BCP/Essex  Holding, Inc. The Company and other telecommunications wire and cable
producers increasingly compete on the basis  of service and quality, as well  as
price.  There  can be  no assurance  that the  Company will  be able  to compete
successfully or that such competition will not have a material adverse effect on
the Company's business or financial results.
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
RAW MATERIALS
 
    The principal raw materials used by Superior in the manufacture of its  wire
and   cable  products  are  copper,  aluminum,   bronze  and  plastics  such  as
polyethylene and  polyvinyl chloride.  These raw  materials are  available  from
several  sources and  Superior has  not experienced  any shortages  of these raw
materials in  the  recent  past.  These  raw  materials  are  subject  to  price
fluctuations.  The price of  copper has been  subject to considerable volatility
over the past several years. While fluctuations in the price of copper  directly
affect  the per unit prices of Superior's products, this volatility has not had,
nor is it expected to have, a material impact on Superior's profitability due to
Superior's contractual arrangements  with its principal  customers that  provide
for  the pass-through of changes in  copper costs. Nevertheless, sharp increases
in the price  of copper  may temporarily  reduce demand  if telephone  companies
decide  to defer  their purchases  of copper  telecommunications wire  and cable
products until copper prices decline. The resulting decrease in Superior's sales
would adversely affect the Company's  results of operations during the  relevant
period.
 
CHANGING REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
 
   
    The  U.S.  Congress recently  enacted the  Telecommunications Reform  Act of
1996,  which   mandated   fundamental  changes   in   the  regulation   of   the
telecommunications  industry. It  is not  possible at  this time  to predict the
impact that this legislation and the regulations implementing it may have on the
total demand for copper wire in the local loop.
    
 
CONTROL BY ALPINE
 
   
    Upon completion of this Offering, Alpine  will own 50.1% of the  outstanding
Common   Stock  of  the  Company   (approximately  46.6%  if  the  Underwriters'
over-allotment option  is  exercised  in full).  If  the  over-allotment  option
granted  to  the Underwriters  by the  Company is  exercised, Alpine  intends to
engage in open-market purchases of Common Stock to restore its ownership of  the
outstanding  Common Stock to  50.1%. See "Use  of Proceeds." Accordingly, Alpine
will have the  ability to elect  all of the  members of the  Company's Board  of
Directors  and  approve  other  actions  requiring  approval  by  a  majority of
stockholders, including  certain fundamental  corporate transactions  such as  a
merger  or sale of  all or substantially all  of the assets  of the Company, and
otherwise control the management and affairs of the Company. However, Alpine has
advised the Company that it will use its best efforts to ensure that,  following
completion of this Offering, a majority of the members of the Company's Board of
Directors   will  not  be  affiliates  of  Alpine.  Alpine  is  a  publicly-held
diversified industrial holding company. In  addition to the businesses  operated
by the Company, Alpine is engaged through another subsidiary, in the manufacture
and sale of specialty refractory products. Alpine's Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer,  Steven S. Elbaum, is also the  Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
the Company.
    
 
   
    Prior to or concurrently with the  completion of this Offering, Alpine  will
pledge  its shares of Common  Stock as collateral for  the benefit of holders of
certain indebtedness of Alpine. So long  as Alpine holds a controlling  interest
in  the Company, if Alpine  were to default on  such indebtedness and the pledge
were to be  foreclosed, control  of the Company  would change,  which change  of
control  would constitute  an event of  default under the  Bank Credit Facility.
Action by the  Bank Credit  Facility lenders  as a result  of such  an event  of
default could have a material adverse effect on the Company.
    
 
POTENTIAL CONFLICTS TO WHICH CERTAIN DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS MAY BE SUBJECT
 
    Upon  completion of  this Offering  certain of  the Company's  directors and
officers, including the  Chief Executive  Officer and  Chief Financial  Officer,
will  also be directors and/or officers of  Alpine and may be subject to various
conflicts of  interest  in connection  with,  for example,  the  negotiation  of
agreements  between  the two  companies for  the provision  of services  and the
performance by the two companies under their existing agreements. Each of  these
persons  will devote such time to the business  and affairs of the Company as is
appropriate under the circumstances. Each such person, however, has other duties
and responsibilities with  Alpine that may  conflict with the  time which  might
otherwise  be  devoted to  his  duties with  the  Company. See  "Management" and
"Certain Transactions and Relationships."
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
INTERCORPORATE RELATIONSHIPS WITH ALPINE
 
    The Company may be subject to  various conflicts of interest arising out  of
the  relationship between  it and Alpine.  The Audit Committee  of the Company's
Board of Directors (the  "Audit Committee"), which will  be comprised solely  of
directors who are not affiliated with Alpine, will be responsible for the review
and  approval of all future agreements  between the Company and its subsidiaries
and Alpine, including  amendments to a  transitional services agreement  between
Alpine and the Company (the "Services Agreement"). The Audit Committee will also
establish policies to ensure that the Company's purchase of services from Alpine
are commercially reasonable. See "Certain Transactions and Relationships."
 
   
    Pursuant  to the Services Agreement, Alpine  will provide, during the period
commencing with the completion of this Offering through April 30, 1998,  certain
services  to the Company, including, among  other things, assistance with public
company reporting,  certain  financial reporting  functions,  legal  compliance,
banking,  risk management and operational and  strategic matters. The terms upon
which these services will be provided to and by the Company and the compensation
therefor  were  not  determined  in  arms'  length  negotiations.  The  Services
Agreement  will provide for the payment by the Company to Alpine of $0.9 million
per year plus reimbursement of any third party expenses incurred by Alpine.  The
Company  believes that $0.9 million represents a reasonable estimate of the cost
of obtaining  the  services  described  above.  See  "Certain  Transactions  and
Relationships -- Services Agreement."
    
 
    Superior  and  DNE  are  currently included  in  the  consolidated  group of
domestic corporations of which  Alpine is the common  parent for federal  income
tax  and certain other purposes. Upon consummation of this Offering, the Company
will cease  to be  included in  the consolidated  group for  federal income  tax
purposes  of which Alpine is  the common parent. Alpine  has agreed to indemnify
the Company for any consolidated federal income tax liability (and certain state
and local tax  liabilities), including  any amounts determined  to be  due as  a
result  of redeterminations of the tax liability of Alpine arising from an audit
or  otherwise,  and  certain  other  liabilities   of  Alpine  or  any  of   its
subsidiaries,  that the  Company is  actually required  to pay  but only  to the
extent, if  any,  that such  liability  exceeds  the amount  of  such  liability
attributable  to Superior,  DNE or  the Company.  See "Certain  Transactions and
Relationships." The  value of  this indemnity  is dependent  upon the  financial
condition  of Alpine. Neither the Company nor  any of its affiliates is aware of
any potential federal income  tax liability of the  Company or its  subsidiaries
(other  than the  Company's own  tax liability) for  which the  Company would be
liable.
SUBSTANTIAL LEVERAGE
   
    The  Company   will   incur   substantial  indebtedness   to   finance   the
Reorganization and related transactions. In the ordinary course of business, the
Company will incur additional indebtedness to fund working capital requirements.
At  July 28, 1996, after giving effect  to this Offering, the Reorganization and
related transactions, the  Company's consolidated  debt would  have been  $131.8
million,  Superior Preferred Stock, at liquidation  value, would have been $20.0
million, its stockholders' equity  would have been $24.0  million (with its  net
tangible  book value being ($24.0) million) and  its ratio of debt plus Superior
Preferred Stock  to  stockholders'  equity  would have  been  6.3  to  1.0.  See
"Capitalization."  However, based  on pro  forma results  for the  twelve months
ended July 28, 1996, the ratio of  EBITDA to interest expense plus dividends  on
the  Superior Preferred Stock would  have been 3.9 to  1.0. The Company believes
that, based upon current levels of operations, it will be able to meet its  debt
service  obligations.  However, if  the  Company's business  operations  were to
deteriorate substantially, there can be no  assurance that the Company would  be
able to do so.
    
 
ENVIRONMENTAL MATTERS
 
    The  Company's operations are  subject to numerous  federal, state and local
laws and regulations relating to the storage, handling, emission, transportation
and discharge of hazardous materials and waste products. In the ordinary  course
of  its  business, the  Company uses  solvents  and similar  hazardous materials
 
                                       10
<PAGE>
in its manufacturing operations in  compliance with those laws and  regulations.
The Company does not believe that the impact of these laws, regulations and uses
has  had or will have  a material effect on  the Company's results of operations
and financial condition. See "Business -- Environmental Matters."
 
DIVIDEND POLICY
 
    Following the consummation of this  Offering, the Company intends to  retain
any  future earnings for use in its businesses and therefore does not anticipate
paying any cash  dividends on  the Common Stock  in the  foreseeable future.  In
addition,  the terms of the Bank Credit Facility provide certain limitations and
restrictions on the declaration and payment of dividends. See "Dividend Policy."
 
POTENTIAL EFFECTS OF ANTI-TAKEOVER PROVISIONS
 
    The Company's  Certificate of  Incorporation and  Bylaws contain  provisions
that may discourage or prevent certain types of transactions involving an actual
or  potential change in control of  the Company, including transactions in which
the stockholders might otherwise  receive a premium for  their shares over  then
current  market prices, and may limit the ability of the stockholders to approve
transactions that they may deem to be in their best interests. In addition,  the
Board of Directors has the authority to fix the rights and preferences of shares
of  the Company's Preferred Stock  and to issue such  shares, which may have the
effect of delaying  or preventing a  change in control  of the Company,  without
action  by the Company's stockholders. These factors may discourage bids for the
Common Stock at  a premium over  the market price  of the Common  Stock and  may
adversely  affect the market price of the  Common Stock and the voting and other
rights of the holders of Common Stock.
 
DILUTION
 
    Investors in this Offering will incur an immediate and substantial  dilution
in  net tangible book value per share  of Common Stock from the initial offering
price upon completion of the  Reorganization and related transactions.  Dilution
is  a  reduction in  book  value of  a  purchaser's investment  measured  by the
difference between the purchase price and the net tangible book value per  share
of Common Stock after this Offering. See "Dilution."
 
ABSENCE OF PRIOR PUBLIC MARKET; POSSIBLE VOLATILITY OF STOCK PRICE
 
    There has been no public market for the Common Stock prior to this Offering,
and  there can be no  assurance that a significant  public market for the Common
Stock will develop  or will  continue after  this Offering.  The initial  public
offering  price for the Common Stock  will be determined by negotiations between
the Company and  Furman Selz  LLC, Oppenheimer &  Co., Inc.,  and BT  Securities
Corporation,  as  representatives of  the Underwriters  (the "Representatives").
There can be no  assurance that the  market price of the  Common Stock will  not
decline  below the initial  public offering price.  The Company believes factors
such as  announcements  of new  products  or technological  innovations  by  the
Company  or third  parties, as  well as variations  in the  Company's results of
operations, market  conditions, analysts'  estimates and  the stock  market  may
cause  the  market price  of  the Common  Stock  to fluctuate  significantly. In
addition, future sales of Common Stock by Alpine following the completion of the
Reorganization and related transactions and the expiration of an agreed  180-day
lock-up  period could have an  adverse effect on the  market price of the Common
Stock. See "Shares Eligible for Future Sale" and "Underwriting."
 
SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE
 
    Upon  completion  of  this  Offering  and  the  Reorganization  and  related
transactions,  12,024,048 shares of Common Stock will be outstanding. The shares
of Common Stock sold in this Offering will be freely tradeable by persons  other
than  "affiliates" of the Company, without  restriction under the Securities Act
of 1933, as amended (the "Securities Act"). The remaining shares of Common Stock
outstanding will be "restricted securities" (the "Restricted Shares") within the
meaning of Rule 144  ("Rule 144") promulgated under  the Securities Act and  may
not  be sold in the  absence of registration under  the Securities Act unless an
exemption from registration is available, including the exemptions contained  in
Rule 144. The Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Commission") has proposed
to amend the holding period required by Rule 144
 
                                       11
<PAGE>
to  permit sales of restricted securities after one year rather than the current
two years (and two years rather than three years for "non-affiliates" who desire
to trade free of other Rule  144 restrictions). If such proposed amendment  were
enacted,  the Restricted  Shares held  by Alpine  would become  freely tradeable
(subject to  any applicable  contractual restrictions)  at earlier  dates.  Such
shares  will  also  be  subject  to  the  180-day  lock-up  agreement  with  the
Underwriters. All  of  the  Restricted  Shares  will  be  held  by  Alpine  upon
completion of this Offering and the completion of the Reorganization and related
transactions.  Alpine has no current intention  of seeking an early release from
the provisions of the lock-up agreement. See "Shares Eligible for Future Sale."
 
    THE CAUTIONARY STATEMENTS SET FORTH  ABOVE AND ELSEWHERE IN THIS  PROSPECTUS
SHOULD BE READ AS ACCOMPANYING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS INCLUDED UNDER "USE OF
PROCEEDS,"  "MANAGEMENT'S  DISCUSSION AND  ANALYSIS  OF FINANCIAL  CONDITION AND
RESULTS OF  OPERATIONS"  AND  ELSEWHERE  HEREIN. THE  RISKS  DESCRIBED  IN  SUCH
STATEMENTS  COULD CAUSE  THE COMPANY'S RESULTS  TO DIFFER  MATERIALLY FROM THOSE
EXPRESSED IN OR INDICATED BY SUCH FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS.
 
                                       12
<PAGE>
                                  THE COMPANY
 
GENERAL
    The Company  was  incorporated  in  Delaware in  July  1996.  The  Company's
principal offices are located at 1790 Broadway, New York, New York 10019 and its
telephone number is (212) 757-3333.
 
BACKGROUND
 
    Superior,  which has been in operation since 1954, was acquired by Alpine in
November 1993 as a  result of a merger  between Alpine and Superior's  corporate
parent.  In  May 1995,  Superior increased  its presence  in the  North American
telecommunications industry by acquiring the  U.S. and Canadian copper wire  and
cable  business (the "Alcatel  Business") of Alcatel NA  Cable Systems, Inc. and
Alcatel Canada  Wire,  Inc.  (collectively, "Alcatel  NA").  In  December  1995,
Superior acquired substantially all of the machinery, equipment and inventory of
the Vancouver, B.C. telecommunications wire and cable business of BICC Phillips,
Inc.  (the "BICC Transaction"). DNE, which has been in operation since 1951, was
acquired by Alpine in February 1992.
 
THE REORGANIZATION AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS
 
   
    THE REORGANIZATION.  Prior to the consummation of this Offering, Alpine will
cause Superior  and  DNE  to declare  dividends  on  their common  stock  in  an
aggregate  amount equal  to the  difference between  $205.0 million  and the net
amount of intercompany debt owed by Superior and DNE to Alpine (which net amount
equaled $102.9 million as of July 28, 1996). Superior will also issue to  Alpine
20,000  shares of Superior Preferred Stock,  which will have the terms described
below. Alpine  will  then  contribute to  the  Company  all of  the  issued  and
outstanding common stock of Superior and DNE.
    
 
   
    Concurrently  with the  completion of  the Reorganization,  the Company will
enter into the Bank Credit Facility under which it will borrow $154.7 million to
repay the net  amount of  the intercompany  debt owed to  Alpine and  to pay  to
Alpine  a portion of the  declared dividends. The net  proceeds of this Offering
will be used to pay  the remainder of the declared  dividends and to reduce  the
amount outstanding under the Bank Credit Facility. See "Use of Proceeds."
    
 
   
    Each share of Superior Preferred Stock has a liquidation value of $1,000 and
bears  an annual dividend  of $60.00, payable  quarterly. The Superior Preferred
Stock has  no voting  rights  and is  redeemable  in whole  or  in part  at  its
liquidation  value at Superior's option at any  time, and at the holder's option
in four  equal amounts  in  each of  the sixth  through  the ninth  years  after
issuance.
    
 
   
    THE  BANK CREDIT  FACILITY.   Prior to the  completion of  this Offering and
concurrently with  the Reorganization,  the  Company will  enter into  the  Bank
Credit Facility, under which up to $175.0 million will be available. The Company
has  received a commitment from Bankers  Trust Company, acting as administrative
agent, and Bank of Boston Connecticut,  acting as co-agent, to provide the  Bank
Credit  Facility. Obligations under the Bank  Credit Facility are expected to be
guaranteed by each of the Company's direct and indirect subsidiaries and secured
by all the common stock, equipment, property, inventory and accounts  receivable
of  each  such  subsidiary. The  Bank  Credit  Facility is  expected  to contain
customary performance and financial covenants.
    
 
   
    Concurrently  with  the  completion  of  this  Offering,  the  total  amount
available under the facility will be reduced to $150.0 million. The Company will
be  required to reduce the  total commitments under the  Bank Credit Facility by
$25.0 million on each of  the third and fourth  anniversaries of the closing  of
the facility. The Bank Credit Facility will have a five-year term. Interest will
be  payable quarterly based upon the prime rate plus 0.5% or the Eurodollar rate
plus 1.5%;  the variable  components  of these  rates  are subject  to  periodic
adjustment  after the first anniversary of the  closing of the facility based on
the Company's debt to EBITDA ratio on a trailing twelve month basis. The initial
rate of interest is expected to be approximately 7.5%.
    
 
                                       13
<PAGE>
                                USE OF PROCEEDS
 
   
    The  net  proceeds  of  this  Offering  (after  deducting  the  underwriting
discounts and commissions and estimated expenses of this Offering payable by the
Company)  are estimated to be approximately $88.6 million ($102.0 million if the
Underwriters' over-allotment option  is exercised  in full),  assuming a  public
offering price of $16.00 per share. All such net proceeds will be applied by the
Company as follows:
    
 
   
           (1) $53.4  million  in  payment  to  Alpine  of  the  balance  of the
               dividends declared by  Superior and  DNE in  connection with  the
       Reorganization; and
    
 
   
           (2) the  balance  to reduce  the  amount outstanding  under  the Bank
               Credit Facility and for working capital purposes.
    
 
    If the Underwriters' over-allotment option is exercised in part or in  full,
the Company will use the net proceeds therefrom to redeem, at liquidation value,
an  amount of  Superior Preferred  Stock having  an aggregate  liquidation value
equal to the net proceeds.
 
   
    The initial borrowings under the Bank Credit Facility, which are expected to
be approximately $154.7 million, will  be used to: (1)  repay to Alpine the  net
amount  of outstanding intercompany  debt (which was $102.9  million at July 28,
1996);  (ii)  pay  to  Alpine  approximately  $48.7  million  of  the  dividends
previously   declared;  and  (iii)  pay  all  expenses  of  the  financing.  The
intercompany debt being repaid consists of indebtedness evidenced by  promissory
notes  payable by Superior,  DNE and Superior's subsidiary  to Alpine or arising
under revolving credit facilities between Superior  and DNE on the one hand  and
Alpine on the other. The interest rates payable on such indebtedness, as of July
28, 1996, range from 8% to 14% and the maturity of such indebtedness ranges from
current  to 2003.  See "Certain  Transactions and  Relationships -- Intercompany
Debt."
    
 
   
    Interest on  amounts outstanding  under  the Bank  Credit Facility  will  be
payable  quarterly based upon  the prime rate  plus 0.5% or  the Eurodollar rate
plus 1.5%.  The variable  components  of these  rates  are subject  to  periodic
adjustment, after the first anniversary of the closing of the facility, based on
the Company's debt to EBITDA ratio on a trailing twelve month basis. The initial
rate  of interest is expected to be approximately 7.5%. The Bank Credit Facility
will have a five-year  term. The Company  will be required  to reduce the  total
commitments under the Bank Credit Facility by $25.0 million on each of the third
and fourth anniversaries of the closing of the facility.
    
 
                                DIVIDEND POLICY
 
    The  Company is newly-formed and has not paid dividends on the Common Stock.
Following  the  completion  of   this  Offering  and   the  completion  of   the
Reorganization  and  related transactions,  the  Company intends  to  retain any
future earnings for  use in  its businesses  and therefore  does not  anticipate
paying any dividends on the Common Stock in the foreseeable future. In addition,
the  Bank  Credit  Facility will  contain  restrictions on  the  declaration and
payment of dividends by the Company.
 
                                       14
<PAGE>
                                 CAPITALIZATION
 
   
    The following table sets forth the capitalization of Superior and DNE as  of
July  28, 1996 on an  actual basis and of  the Company on a  pro forma basis, as
adjusted to  reflect:  (i) the  completion  of the  Reorganization  and  related
transactions;  (ii) the sale  by the Company  of the 6,000,000  shares of Common
Stock offered hereby at  an assumed initial public  offering price per share  of
$16.00,  and the  application of the  net proceeds therefrom  as described under
"Use of Proceeds;" and (iii) initial borrowings under the Bank Credit Facility.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                 JULY 28, 1996
                                                                                            -----------------------
                                                                                              ACTUAL     PRO FORMA
                                                                                            ----------  -----------
                                                                                                (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                                         <C>         <C>
Debt:
Due to Alpine and affiliate...............................................................  $  102,914   $      --
Bank Credit Facility......................................................................      --         120,000
Other.....................................................................................      11,839      11,839
                                                                                            ----------  -----------
  Total debt..............................................................................     114,753     131,839
                                                                                            ----------  -----------
Preferred stock of subsidiary (1).........................................................      --          20,000
                                                                                            ----------  -----------
Stockholders' equity:
Common Stock, Superior, $0.01 par value per share, 10,000 shares authorized, 1,000 shares
 issued...................................................................................          --          --
Common Stock, DNE, $1.00 par value per share, 100,000 shares authorized, 750 shares
 issued...................................................................................           1          --
Common Stock, $0.01 par value per share, 25,000,000 shares authorized, 12,024,048 shares
 issued (2)...............................................................................          --         121
Additional paid-in capital................................................................      42,254      23,865
Retained earnings (3).....................................................................      15,177          --
                                                                                            ----------  -----------
  Total stockholders' equity..............................................................      57,432      23,986
                                                                                            ----------  -----------
    Total capitalization..................................................................  $  172,185   $ 175,825
                                                                                            ----------  -----------
                                                                                            ----------  -----------
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------
(1) Represents 20,000 shares of Superior Preferred Stock.
 
(2) Excludes 900,000  shares  of  Common  Stock  subject  to  the  Underwriters'
    over-allotment option.
 
   
(3) Includes a cumulative translation adjustment of ($406,000).
    
 
                                       15
<PAGE>
                                    DILUTION
 
   
    The  net tangible book value of the Company at July 28, 1996 prior to giving
effect to the Reorganization and this Offering was $60,240 or $0.01 per share of
Common Stock based upon 6,024,048 shares issued. The net tangible book value  of
the  Company  at  July  28,  1996, after  giving  effect  to  the Reorganization
(excluding the dividends declared by Superior and DNE), was $(10.4) million,  or
approximately $(1.73) per share. Net tangible book value per share is determined
by dividing the net tangible book value of the Company (tangible assets less all
liabilities)  by the  total number  of outstanding  shares of  Common Stock. New
investors purchasing shares in the  Offering will realize an immediate  dilution
of  $17.99 per share. The following table illustrates this per share dilution to
new investors:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Assumed initial public offering price per share (1).........................             $   16.00
<S>                                                                           <C>        <C>
  Net tangible book value per share after the Reorganization but before the
   dividend and this Offering...............................................      (1.73)
  Decrease per share attributable to the dividends and the sale of Common
   Stock offered hereby (2).................................................      (0.26)
                                                                              ---------
Pro forma net tangible book value per share after this Offering.............                 (1.99)
Dilution per share to new investors (3).....................................             $   17.99
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    The following table summarizes as of  July 28, 1996 the differences  between
the  number of  shares of  Common Stock  purchased from  the Company,  the total
consideration paid,  and  the average  price  per  share paid  by  the  existing
stockholder  and by the purchasers of Common Stock in the Offering at an assumed
initial public offering price of $16.00 per share.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        SHARES PURCHASED         TOTAL CONSIDERATION       AVERAGE
                                                     -----------------------  -------------------------   PRICE PER
                                                        NUMBER      PERCENT       AMOUNT       PERCENT      SHARE
                                                     ------------  ---------  --------------  ---------  -----------
<S>                                                  <C>           <C>        <C>             <C>        <C>
Existing stockholder (4)...........................     6,024,048      50.1%  $   42,255,000      30.6%   $    7.01
New investors......................................     6,000,000      49.9%      96,000,000      69.4%   $   16.00
                                                     ------------  ---------  --------------  ---------
        Total......................................    12,024,048       100%  $  138,255,000       100%
                                                     ------------  ---------  --------------  ---------
                                                     ------------  ---------  --------------  ---------
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------
(1) Before deduction of  underwriting discount and  estimated offering  expenses
    payable by the Company.
 
   
(2) After  deduction of  underwriting discount  and estimated  offering expenses
    payable by the Company.
    
 
   
(3) Dilution is determined by subtracting the  per share pro forma net  tangible
    book  value of the Common Stock after this Offering from the assumed initial
    public  offering  price   per  share.   In  the   event  the   Underwriters'
    over-allotment  option is  exercised in full,  the dilution  in net tangible
    book value per share to new investors would be approximately $16.81.
    
 
   
(4) Does not include 590,000 shares of  Common Stock that will be issuable  upon
    the  exercise of  stock options  that will  be granted  concurrently with or
    immediately following the completion of this Offering, with exercise  prices
    equal  to  the  initial public  offering  price  per share  pursuant  to the
    Company's 1996  Employee Stock  Incentive Plan  and Non-Employee  Directors'
    Stock Option Plan. See "Management -- Executive Compensation -- Compensation
    Under Plans."
    
 
                                       16
<PAGE>
               PRO FORMA CONDENSED COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
    For  financial  statement  presentation purposes,  the  historical financial
statements of  the Company  are  based upon  the combined  historical  financial
statements of Superior and DNE (to be reorganized as the Company).
 
    The following unaudited pro forma condensed combined financial statements of
the  Company  give  effect  to  the acquisition  of  the  Alcatel  Business, the
Reorganization  and  related   transactions  and  this   Offering  as  if   such
transactions  had occurred as of May 1,  1995. The unaudited pro forma financial
information is provided for comparative purposes only and does not purport to be
indicative of the results that actually  would have been obtained if the  events
set  forth above had  been effected on  the dates indicated  or of those results
that may be obtained in the future. See "Management's Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of Operations."
 
   
        UNAUDITED PRO FORMA CONDENSED COMBINED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
                        THREE MONTHS ENDED JULY 28, 1996
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                      REORGANIZATION
                                                                                       AND OFFERING     PRO FORMA
                                                                            ACTUAL      ADJUSTMENTS     COMBINED
                                                                          ----------  ---------------  -----------
<S>                                                                       <C>         <C>              <C>
                                                                           (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)
 
Net sales...............................................................  $  123,824                    $ 123,824
Cost of goods sold......................................................     105,447                      105,447
                                                                          ----------                   -----------
  Gross profit..........................................................      18,377                       18,377
Selling, general and administrative expense.............................       3,888   $     500(a)         4,388
Amortization of goodwill................................................         432          --              432
                                                                          ----------      ------       -----------
  Operating income......................................................      14,057        (500)          13,557
Interest expense, net...................................................      (4,258)      1,530(b)        (2,728)
Preferred stock dividends of subsidiary.................................          --        (300)(c)         (300)
Other income (expense), net.............................................         (53)         --              (53)
                                                                          ----------      ------       -----------
  Income before taxes...................................................       9,746         730           10,476
Provision for income taxes..............................................      (3,778)       (532)(d)       (4,310)
                                                                          ----------      ------       -----------
  Net income............................................................  $    5,968   $     198        $   6,166
                                                                          ----------                   -----------
                                                                          ----------      ------       -----------
                                                                                          ------
Per share of common stock (based upon 12,024,048 shares outstanding):
  Net income ...........................................................  $     0.50                    $    0.51
                                                                          ----------                   -----------
                                                                          ----------                   -----------
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       17
<PAGE>
        UNAUDITED PRO FORMA CONDENSED COMBINED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
              TWELVE MONTHS ENDED APRIL 28, 1996 (THE COMPANY) AND
          THE ELEVEN-DAY PERIOD ENDED MAY 11, 1995 (ALCATEL BUSINESS)
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          ALCATEL     PRO FORMA   REORGANIZATION
                                                        ACQUISITION  FOR ALCATEL   AND OFFERING     PRO FORMA
                                              ACTUAL    ADJUSTMENTS  ACQUISITION    ADJUSTMENTS     COMBINED
                                            ----------  -----------  -----------  ---------------  -----------
<S>                                         <C>         <C>          <C>          <C>              <C>
                                                          (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)
 
Net sales.................................  $  410,413   $   7,521(e)  $ 417,934                    $ 417,934
Cost of goods sold........................     362,854       7,018(e)    369,780                      369,780
                                                               (92)(f)
                                            ----------  -----------  -----------                   -----------
  Gross profit............................      47,559         595       48,154                        48,154
Selling, general and administrative
 expense..................................      14,223         336(e)     14,256   $   2,000(a)        16,256
                                                              (303)(g)
Amortization of goodwill..................       1,556          14(f)      1,570          --            1,570
                                            ----------  -----------  -----------      ------       -----------
  Operating income........................      31,780         548       32,328       (2,000)          30,328
Interest expense, net.....................     (17,006)         --      (17,006)       6,075(b)       (10,931)
Preferred stock dividends of subsidiary...          --          --           --       (1,200)(c)       (1,200)
Other income, net.........................          55          --           55           --               55
                                            ----------  -----------  -----------      ------       -----------
  Income before taxes.....................      14,829         548       15,377        2,875           18,252
Provision for income taxes................      (6,722)         --       (6,722)      (1,059)(d)       (7,781)
                                            ----------  -----------  -----------      ------       -----------
  Income before extraordinary item........       8,107         548        8,655        1,816           10,471
Extraordinary (loss) on early
 extinguishment of debt...................      (2,645)         --       (2,645)       2,645               --
                                            ----------  -----------  -----------      ------       -----------
  Net income..............................  $    5,462   $     548    $   6,010    $   4,461        $  10,471
                                            ----------  -----------  -----------                   -----------
                                            ----------  -----------  -----------      ------       -----------
                                                                                      ------
Per share of common stock (based upon
 12,024,048 shares outstanding):
Income before extraordinary item..........  $     0.67                                              $    0.87
Extraordinary (loss) on early
 extinguishment of debt...................       (0.22)                                                    --
                                            ----------                                             -----------
  Net income..............................  $     0.45                                              $    0.87
                                            ----------                                             -----------
                                            ----------                                             -----------
</TABLE>
    
 
   See accompanying Notes to Unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Combined Financial
                                  Statements.
 
                                       18
<PAGE>
   
              UNAUDITED PRO FORMA CONDENSED COMBINED BALANCE SHEET
                              AS OF JULY 28, 1996
                                     ASSETS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       PRO FORMA        PRO FORMA
                                                                         ACTUAL       ADJUSTMENTS       COMBINED
                                                                       ----------  ------------------  -----------
                                                                                     (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                    <C>         <C>                 <C>
Current assets:
  Cash...............................................................  $      139  $            60(h)   $     679
                                                                                            88,580(i)
                                                                                           120,000(j)
                                                                                            (3,100)(j)
                                                                                          (205,000)(k)
  Accounts receivable, net...........................................      53,223                          53,223
  Inventories........................................................      47,737                          47,737
  Other current assets...............................................       5,999                           5,999
                                                                       ----------  ------------------  -----------
    Total current assets.............................................     107,098              540        107,638
Property, plant and equipment, net...................................      76,143                          76,143
Goodwill, net........................................................      47,897                          47,897
Long-term investments and other assets...............................       1,222            3,100(j)       4,322
                                                                       ----------  ------------------  -----------
    Total assets.....................................................  $  232,360  $         3,640      $ 236,000
                                                                       ----------                      -----------
                                                                       ----------  ------------------  -----------
                                                                                   ------------------
 
                                       LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
  Current portion of long-term debt..................................  $      364                       $     364
  Accounts payable...................................................      39,348                          39,348
  Accrued expenses...................................................      12,777                          12,777
                                                                       ----------                      -----------
    Total current liabilities........................................      52,489                          52,489
Long-term debt, less current portion.................................      11,475  $       120,000(j)     131,475
Due to Alpine and affiliate..........................................     102,914         (102,914)(k)         --
Other long-term obligations..........................................       8,050                           8,050
Preferred stock of subsidiary........................................          --           20,000(l)      20,000
Stockholders' equity:
  Common stock $.01 par value; authorized 25,000,000 shares; issued
   12,024,048 pro forma as of the offering...........................           1               60(h)         121
                                                                                                60(i)
  Capital in excess of par value.....................................      42,254           88,520(i)      23,865
                                                                                           (86,909)(k)
                                                                                           (20,000)(l)
  Retained earnings..................................................      15,177          (15,177)(k)         --
                                                                       ----------  ------------------  -----------
Total stockholders' equity...........................................      57,432          (33,446)        23,986
                                                                       ----------  ------------------  -----------
    Total liabilities and stockholders' equity.......................  $  232,360  $         3,640      $ 236,000
                                                                       ----------                      -----------
                                                                       ----------  ------------------  -----------
                                                                                   ------------------
</TABLE>
    
 
   See accompanying Notes to Unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Combined Financial
                                   Statements
 
                                       19
<PAGE>
      NOTES TO UNAUDITED PRO FORMA CONDENSED COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
   
(a) Represents   management's   estimate   of   the   additional   general   and
    administrative  expenses associated with the  Company's status as a separate
    public company, of which  $0.2 million for the  three months ended July  28,
    1996  and $0.9  million for  the year ended  April 28,  1996, represents the
    amount that the  Company would  have paid  to Alpine  for services  rendered
    under    the   Services    Agreement.   See    "Certain   Transactions   and
    Relationships--Services Agreement."
    
 
   
(b) Represents the net  adjustment to  net interest expense  resulting from  the
    difference  between the interest expense on the debt incurred by the Company
    in connection  with  the Reorganization  and  related transactions  and  the
    historical  interest expense on the  intercompany debt repaid, determined as
    follows:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                      JULY 28,     APRIL 28,
                                                                        1996         1996
                                                                      ---------  -------------
<S>                                                                   <C>        <C>
Interest on Bank Credit Facility (assuming a 7.5% interest rate)....  $   2,250   $     9,000
Amortization of deferred financing costs............................        155           620
Less: historical interest on debt being repaid......................     (3,935)      (15,695)
                                                                      ---------  -------------
    Total adjustment................................................  $  (1,530)  $    (6,075)
                                                                      ---------  -------------
                                                                      ---------  -------------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    The  adjustment  to  interest  expense  assumes  that  the  average   amount
    outstanding  under the Bank Credit Facility  was $120.0 million. An increase
    or decrease in the interest rate on loans by the Bank Credit Facility of one
    percent (1.0%) will increase or decrease interest expense by $1.2 million.
    
 
   
(c) Reflects dividends  on  Superior  Preferred  Stock  issued  by  Superior,  a
    subsidiary of the Company, under the Reorganization. See "The Company -- The
    Reorganization and Related Transactions." The Superior Preferred Stock bears
    an  annual dividend per share of $60 and  is redeemable at the option of the
    holder in four equal  amounts in each  of the sixth  through ninth years  of
    issuance.
    
 
   
(d) Adjusted  to reflect an  effective tax rate  of 40%, which  is the Company's
    estimate of  the effective  tax rate  inclusive of  both state  and  federal
    income  taxes.  The  effective rate  is  applied to  income  from continuing
    operations before income taxes, excluding minority interest.
    
 
   
(e) Reflects the results of  operations of the Alcatel  Business for the  11-day
    period ended May 11, 1995, the date of acquisition.
    
 
   
(f) Reflects the changes in historical depreciation expense and the amortization
    of goodwill resulting from the Alcatel acquisition.
    
 
   
(g) Reflects  the  elimination of  selling,  general and  administrative expense
    incurred by  the  Alcatel  Business  in the  historical  periods  offset  by
    additional  selling, general  and administrative  expense which  the Company
    estimates was incurred  subsequent to  the Alcatel  acquisition and  related
    directly to the ongoing operations of the Alcatel Business.
    
 
   
(h) Reflects  the initial subscription  of 6,024,048 shares  of Common Stock and
    the related proceeds.
    
 
   
(i) Reflects the issuance of 6,000,000 shares  of Common Stock pursuant to  this
    Offering  and the estimated net proceeds  of $88.6 million. On completion of
    this Offering there will  be 12,024,048 shares  of Common Stock  outstanding
    consisting  of the 6,024,048  shares issued on  initial subscription and the
    6,000,000 shares issued pursuant to this Offering.
    
 
   
(j) Reflects $120.0  million  of  borrowings  under  the  Bank  Credit  Facility
    outstanding  after this Offering (assuming a public offering price of $16.00
    per share) and $3.1 million in related deferred financing costs.
    
 
   
(k) Reflects the payment by Superior and DNE to Alpine of an aggregate of $205.0
    million, consisting of the repayment  of existing intercompany debt owed  to
    Alpine  and  the  payment of  that  portion  of the  dividend  that  is paid
    concurrently with the Reorganization. See "Use of Proceeds."
    
 
   
(l) Reflects the issuance of Superior Preferred Stock.
    
 
                                       20
<PAGE>
           SELECTED HISTORICAL COMBINED FINANCIAL DATA OF THE COMPANY
 
   
    Set  forth below are certain selected  historical combined financial data of
the Company. These financial data include the combined results of operations  of
DNE  and  Superior on  a  prospective basis  from  the date  such  entities were
acquired by Alpine. With respect to  DNE, such acquisition occurred in  February
1992;  thus, the results  of DNE are included  for the 2  1/2 month period ended
April 30, 1992, and for the four-year period ended April 28, 1996. With  respect
to  Superior, such acquisition occurred in  November 1993; thus, the results for
Superior are included for the six-month period ended May 1, 1994, for the  years
ended April 30, 1995 and April 28, 1996 and for the quarterly periods ended July
29,  1995 and July 28, 1996. In  addition, the results of operations of Superior
for the year ended April 28, 1996  and for the quarterly periods ended July  29,
1995  and July 28, 1996 include the operations of the Alcatel Business which was
acquired by  Superior  on May  11,  1995. This  information  should be  read  in
conjunction  with  the combined  financial statements  of  DNE and  Superior and
related notes  included  in this  Prospectus  and "Management's  Discussion  and
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations."
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     2 1/2 MONTHS
                                                        ENDED                   FISCAL YEAR ENDED                  QUARTER ENDED
                                                     ------------   ------------------------------------------   ------------------
                                                      APRIL 30,     APRIL 30,   MAY 1,   APRIL 30,   APRIL 28,   JULY 29,  JULY 28,
                                                         1992         1993       1994      1995        1996        1995      1996
                                                     ------------   ---------   -------  ---------   ---------   --------  --------
                                                                         (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)
<S>                                                  <C>            <C>         <C>      <C>         <C>         <C>       <C>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS DATA:
Net sales..........................................     $4,590       $ 27,897   $68,510  $ 164,485   $ 410,413   $ 99,324  $123,824
Cost of sales......................................      3,054         15,915    56,250    142,114     362,854     89,821   105,447
                                                        ------      ---------   -------  ---------   ---------   --------  --------
  Gross profit.....................................      1,536         11,982    12,260     22,371      47,559      9,503    18,377
Selling, general & administrative expense..........      1,209          9,068     8,884     11,632      14,223      3,299     3,888
Amortization of goodwill...........................     --                267     2,186      1,124       1,556        374       432
                                                        ------      ---------   -------  ---------   ---------   --------  --------
  Operating income.................................        327          2,647     1,190      9,615      31,780      5,830    14,057
Interest expense, net..............................       (140)          (600)   (1,742)    (3,700)    (17,006)    (3,733)   (4,258)
Other income (expense).............................          2             70       (61)       231          55         28       (53)
                                                        ------      ---------   -------  ---------   ---------   --------  --------
  Income (loss) from continuing operations before
   taxes...........................................        189          2,117      (613)     6,146      14,829      2,125     9,746
Provision for income taxes.........................     --               (462)     (521)    (2,240)     (6,722)      (451)   (3,778)
                                                        ------      ---------   -------  ---------   ---------   --------  --------
  Income (loss) from continuing operations.........        189          1,655    (1,134)     3,906       8,107      1,674     5,968
(Loss) from discontinued operations................     --             --          (287)      (176)     --          --        --
                                                        ------      ---------   -------  ---------   ---------   --------  --------
  Income (loss) before extraordinary item..........        189          1,655    (1,421)     3,730       8,107      1,674     5,968
Extraordinary (loss) on early extinguishment of
 debt..............................................     --             --         --        --          (2,645)    (2,811)    --
                                                        ------      ---------   -------  ---------   ---------   --------  --------
  Net income (loss)................................     $  189       $  1,655   $(1,421) $   3,730   $   5,462   $ (1,137) $  5,968
                                                        ------      ---------   -------  ---------   ---------   --------  --------
                                                        ------      ---------   -------  ---------   ---------   --------  --------
Per share of common stock (based upon 12,024,048
 shares outstanding subsequent to this Offering):
Income from continuing operations.................................................................   $    0.67   $   0.14  $   0.50
Extraordinary (loss) on early extinguishment of debt..............................................       (0.22)     (0.23)    --
                                                                                                     ---------   --------  --------
  Net income (loss)...............................................................................   $    0.45   $  (0.09) $   0.50
                                                                                                     ---------   --------  --------
                                                                                                     ---------   --------  --------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   APRIL      APRIL                            APRIL
                                                                    30,        30,       MAY 1,   APRIL 30,     28,      JULY 28,
                                                                    1992       1993       1994      1995        1996       1996
                                                                  --------   --------   --------  ---------   --------   --------
                                                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                               <C>        <C>        <C>       <C>         <C>        <C>
BALANCE SHEET DATA (AT END OF PERIOD):
Working capital.................................................  $  5,773    $ 7,346   $ 23,558  $  22,750   $ 58,726   $ 54,609
Total assets....................................................    12,918     18,500    115,338    120,127    244,065    232,360
Total debt, including intercompany..............................     8,412      8,342     39,095     37,067    125,760    114,753
Total stockholders' equity......................................     1,807      4,916     48,123     49,854     51,656     57,432
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       21
<PAGE>
                    MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF
                 FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
GENERAL
    The  Company, through its two subsidiaries,  Superior and DNE, is engaged in
the manufacture and  sale of copper  wire and cable  for the  telecommunications
industry  and data communication  and other electronic  products and systems for
defense, governmental and commercial applications.
 
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
 
    To facilitate  a meaningful  comparison between  periods, this  Management's
Discussion  and  Analysis  focuses  on pro  forma  information  for  the periods
covered, which  management  believes  provides  comparability  among  historical
periods.  Period-to-period  comparisons  of the  Company's  historical financial
information are less  relevant to  an understanding of  the Company  due to  the
significance  of the Superior  acquisition on November 11,  1993 and the Alcatel
acquisition on  May 11,  1995.  Accordingly, the  information in  the  following
tables  and the period-to-period comparisons in this Management's Discussion and
Analysis are based on pro forma data  which reflects the impact of the  Superior
acquisition  and the Alcatel acquisition as if both occurred at the beginning of
the periods presented.
 
   
    The pro forma  data included  in the following  table for  the three  months
ended  July 28, 1996 and  for fiscal year ended April  28, 1996 are derived from
Pro Forma Condensed Combined Statements of Operations included elsewhere herein.
The pro forma data included  in the following table  for the three months  ended
July  29, 1995  and for  fiscal 1995  and 1994  have been  prepared in  a manner
substantially consistent with  the aforementioned Pro  Forma Condensed  Combined
Statements  of  Operations except  for the  assumption  that this  Offering, the
Reorganization and  related  transactions,  the  Superior  acquisition  and  the
Alcatel  acquisition occurred on May 1, 1993.  Such pro forma data for the three
months ended July 29, 1995 and for  fiscal 1995 and 1994 include the  historical
results  of operations  of the  Company, the  historical results  of the Alcatel
Business and Superior prior to their respective acquisition by the Company,  and
certain  pro  forma  adjustments  as  more  fully  described  in  the  footnotes
accompanying the Combined  Supplemental Unaudited Pro  Forma Operating Data  set
forth  in the table below. The pro  forma data are not necessarily indicative of
the results  that  would  have  been achieved  had  such  acquisitions  actually
occurred  on May 1, 1993,  nor are they necessarily  indicative of the Company's
future results.
    
   
    For the twelve  months ended July  28, 1996, 88.2%  of Superior's net  sales
were  made  to the  RBOCs  and the  two  major independent  telephone companies.
Superior's sales to these customers are generally pursuant to multi-year  supply
agreements  under which the customer agrees  to have Superior provide certain of
the customer's wire or cable needs as a primary supplier during the term of  the
agreement.  Prior  to awarding  a contract,  customers typically  forecast their
needs, and manufacturers  such as  Superior bid and  quote prices  based on  the
forecasted  order amount -- although customers are not obligated to purchase the
forecasted amount  or,  in  most  cases,  any  minimum  amount.  The  agreements
establish   prices,  subject  to  adjustment,   in  certain  circumstances,  for
fluctuations in copper prices and other raw materials costs. The terms of  these
agreements  vary  from one  to  seven years,  and  are terminable  under certain
circumstances prior  to the  expiration of  their terms.  Superior was  recently
awarded  contracts by two RBOCs, including one  with which it did not previously
do business.  The  Company  believes  that  these  contracts  will  continue  to
contribute  a  significant  amount  of  incremental  sales  to  its  results  of
operations in fiscal 1997 and beyond. The Company believes that these  contracts
are  part of a recent trend of the  RBOCs to enter into longer term arrangements
with a  fewer  number of  suppliers,  and that  this  trend will  continue.  See
"Business -- Telecommunications Wire and Cable -- Marketing and Distribution."
    
 
    Price increases instituted during fiscal 1996 related to both wire and cable
products  reflected a reversal of a trend  of lower market prices experienced in
fiscal 1994 and early  fiscal 1995. During  such period, industry-wide  capacity
exceeded  demand, resulting in a very competitive market environment. Since such
time, reductions  in  manufacturing  capacity coupled  with  increasing  product
demand, as well as the resulting
 
                                       22
<PAGE>
   
changes  in  customer  relationships, have  resulted  in an  increase  in market
prices. The  price increases  instituted  throughout fiscal  1996  significantly
impacted  profitability  during the  second half  of fiscal  1996 and  the first
quarter of fiscal 1997.
    
 
   
    The Alcatel  Business, which  was  acquired in  May 1995,  was  particularly
impacted  in fiscal 1995 by the cycle of lower market prices in fiscal 1995, due
to the  timing of  its  contract expirations  and  the resulting  rebidding  and
obtaining  of new contract  awards during a period  of very competitive pricing.
The Company has subsequently renegotiated  substantially all of these  contracts
on  improved pricing terms. These contracts  generally have terms and provisions
similar to Superior's other customer contracts described above.
    
 
    The cost of copper has been subject to considerable volatility over the past
several years. While fluctuations in the price of copper directly affect the per
unit prices  of Superior's  products, this  volatility has  not had,  nor is  it
expected  to  have, a  material impact  on Superior's  profitability due  to the
copper price pass-through  arrangements contained in  the contracts under  which
Superior's  telecommunications wire and cable  products are sold. Generally, the
copper price component passed through in each contract for a particular  quarter
is based on the average COMEX copper price over the three-month period ending at
or  before the beginning of that quarter.  Each month, the Company estimates its
product deliveries  several  months  into  the  future  and  enters  into  price
commitments  with  its  suppliers for  a  portion  of its  estimated  copper rod
requirements for delivery  on a forward  basis. The Company  uses these  forward
purchase commitments to minimize the differences between its raw material copper
costs  charged to  cost of  sales and  the pass-through  pricing charged  to its
customers.
 
                                       23
<PAGE>
          COMBINED SUPPLEMENTAL UNAUDITED PRO FORMA OPERATING DATA (1)
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                               FISCAL YEARS ENDED
                                                                               -------------------     QUARTERS ENDED
                                                                                         APRIL APRIL ------------------
                                                                                MAY 1,   30,   28,   JULY 29,  JULY 28,
                                                                                 1994    1995  1996    1995      1996
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
                                                                               (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE
                                                                                                DATA)
<S>                                                                            <C>       <C>   <C>   <C>       <C>
Net sales
  Telecommunications wire and cable..........................................  $311,904  $340,756 $391,758 $101,580 $117,969
  Data communications and electronics........................................    21,653  27,907 26,176    5,265    5,855
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
    Combined net sales.......................................................   333,557  368,663 417,934  106,845  123,824
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
Gross profit (2)(3)
  Telecommunications wire and cable..........................................  $ 34,091  $28,433 $40,267 $  8,505 $ 16,859
  Data communications and electronics........................................     8,252  8,221 7,887    1,593     1,518
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
    Combined gross profit....................................................    42,343  36,654 48,154   10,098   18,377
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
Selling, general and administrative expense (4)
  Telecommunications wire and cable..........................................  $  5,249  $6,170 $8,408 $  1,749 $  2,322
  Data communications and electronics........................................     6,574  6,511 5,848    1,583     1,566
  Corporate (5)..............................................................     2,000  2,000 2,000      500       500
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
    Combined selling, general and administrative expense.....................    13,823  14,681 16,256    3,832    4,388
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
Amortization of goodwill (6)
  Telecommunications wire and cable..........................................  $  1,570  $1,570 $1,570 $    388 $    432
  Data communications and electronics (7)....................................     1,753  --    --       --        --
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
    Combined amortization of goodwill........................................     3,323  1,570 1,570      388       432
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
Operating income
  Telecommunications wire and cable..........................................  $ 27,272  $20,693 $30,289 $  6,368 $ 14,105
  Data communications and electronics........................................       (75) 1,710 2,039       10       (48)
  Corporate..................................................................    (2,000) (2,000) (2,000)     (500)     (500)
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
    Combined operating income................................................    25,197  20,403 30,328    5,878   13,557
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
 
Operating income.............................................................  $ 25,197  $20,403 $30,328 $  5,878 $ 13,557
Interest expense (8).........................................................   (10,931) (10,931) (10,931)   (2,728)   (2,728)
Preferred stock dividends of subsidiary (9)..................................    (1,200) (1,200) (1,200)     (300)     (300)
Other income (expense).......................................................       (61) 231    55         28       (53)
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
  Income from continuing operations before income taxes......................    13,005  8,503 18,252    2,878   10,476
Provision for income taxes (10)..............................................    (5,682) (3,881) (7,781)   (1,271)   (4,310)
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
  Income from continuing operations..........................................  $  7,323  $4,622 $10,471 $  1,607 $  6,166
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
Income per share of common stock from continuing operations (based upon
 12,024,048 shares outstanding)..............................................  $   0.61  $0.38 $0.87 $   0.13  $   0.51
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
                                                                               --------  ---   ---   --------  --------
 
                                                                                     AS A PERCENTAGE OF NET SALES
                                                                               ----------------------------------------
Gross margin
  Telecommunications wire and cable..........................................      10.9% 8.3%  10.3%      8.4%     14.3%
  Data communications and electronics........................................      38.1  29.5  30.1      30.3      25.9
    Combined gross margin....................................................      12.7  9.9   11.5       9.5      14.8
Operating income margin
  Telecommunications wire and cable..........................................       8.7% 6.1%  7.7%       6.3%     12.0%
  Data communications and electronics........................................      (0.3) 6.1   7.8        0.2      (0.8)
    Combined operating income margin.........................................       7.6  5.5   7.3        5.5      11.0
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       24
<PAGE>
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                    AS A PERCENTAGE OF NET SALES
                                                                   ---------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                             FISCAL YEAR ENDED                 QUARTER ENDED
                                                                   -------------------------------------  ------------------------
                                                                     MAY 1,      APRIL 30,    APRIL 28,    JULY 29,     JULY 28,
                                                                      1994         1995         1996         1995         1996
                                                                   -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                                                <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Net sales........................................................       100.0%       100.0%       100.0%       100.0%       100.0%
Cost of sales....................................................        87.3         90.1         88.5         90.5         85.2
                                                                        -----        -----        -----        -----        -----
  Gross profit...................................................        12.7          9.9         11.5          9.5         14.8
Selling, general and administrative expense......................         4.1          4.0          3.9          3.6          3.5
Amortization of goodwill.........................................         1.0          0.4          0.3          0.4          0.3
                                                                        -----        -----        -----        -----        -----
  Operating income...............................................         7.6          5.5          7.3          5.5         11.0
Interest expense, net............................................         3.3          2.9          2.6          2.5          2.2
Preferred stock dividends of subsidiary..........................         0.4          0.3          0.3          0.3          0.2
Other income (expense), net......................................         0.0          0.0          0.0          0.0          0.1
                                                                        -----        -----        -----        -----        -----
  Income from continuing operations before income taxes..........         3.9          2.3          4.4          2.7          8.5
Provision for income taxes.......................................         1.7          1.1          1.9          1.2          3.5
                                                                        -----        -----        -----        -----        -----
  Income from continuing operations..............................         2.2          1.2          2.5          1.5          5.0
                                                                        -----        -----        -----        -----        -----
                                                                        -----        -----        -----        -----        -----
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------
(1) The Combined Supplemental Unaudited Pro Forma Operating Data give effect  to
    the following transactions as if such transactions occurred on May 1, 1993:
 
    (a) this Offering;
 
    (b) the Reorganization and related transactions;
 
    (c) the acquisition of Superior; and
 
    (d) the acquisition of the Alcatel Business.
 
(2) Reduced  by $250,000  in fiscal 1994  and 1995 to  reflect reduced operating
    expenses resulting from the Alcatel acquisition.
 
(3) Adjusted to  reflect  reductions  to  the  historical  depreciation  expense
    resulting  from the  Alcatel and  Superior acquisitions.  The adjustments to
    depreciation expense amounted to $3.0  million, $2.9 million and $92,000  in
    fiscal 1994, 1995 and 1996, respectively.
 
   
(4) Adjusted  to reduce historical selling,  general and administrative expenses
    incurred by  the Alcatel  Business of  $11.6 million  and $10.3  million  in
    fiscal  1994 and 1995 and $0.3 million in the quarter ended July 29, 1995 by
    $10.4 million and $9.1  million in fiscal 1994  and 1995, respectively,  and
    $0.3  million in the quarter ended  July 29, 1995. The reduction represented
    management fees, allocated administrative  fees and employee costs  incurred
    by  the  Alcatel  Business  to  the  extent  such  charges  were  eliminated
    subsequent to the Alcatel acquisition.
    
 
   
(5) Reflects estimated additional general and administrative expenses associated
    with the Company's status as  an independent public company, including  $0.2
    million  for the quarter ended  July 28, 1996 and  $0.9 million for the year
    ended April 28, 1996 which would have been payable pursuant to the  Services
    Agreement.
    
 
   
(6) Adjusted  to reflect incremental amortization resulting from the Alcatel and
    Superior acquisitions of $1.1 million and $446,000 in fiscal 1994 and  1995,
    respectively and $14,000 in the quarter ended July 29, 1995.
    
 
(7) Reflects  a $1.5  million write-off of  goodwill related  to a non-strategic
    product line at DNE.
 
   
(8) Adjusted to reflect the capital structure that will exist upon completion of
    the Reorganization and related transactions and is based on certain existing
    debt and $120.0 million of debt  outstanding under the Bank Credit  Facility
    during  fiscal 1994,  1995 and  1996 and during  the quarter  ended July 28,
    1996.
    
 
                                       25
<PAGE>
(9) Reflects dividends on Superior Preferred Stock issued to Alpine prior to the
    Reorganization.
 
(10)Adjusted to reflect  an effective tax  rate of 40%,  which is the  Company's
    estimate  of  the effective  tax rate  inclusive of  both state  and federal
    income taxes.  The  effective rate  is  applied to  income  from  continuing
    operations before income taxes, excluding minority interest.
 
   
PRO FORMA QUARTERLY RESULTS
    
 
   
    The following table presents selected pro forma quarterly condensed combined
financial  information for each of the nine quarters through July 28, 1996. This
information is  unaudited,  but in  the  opinion of  the  Company's  management,
reflects  all adjustments (consisting only of normal recurring adjustments) that
the Company considers necessary for a  fair presentation of this information  in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Such quarterly results
are  not necessarily indicative  of future results  of operations. The Company's
net sales in the winter months are generally lower than during the summer months
due  to  reduced  construction  activities  by  the  RBOCs  and  the  two  major
independent  telephone  companies. This  seasonality  is generally  reflected in
lower net sales for the third fiscal quarter.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                               FISCAL QUARTER ENDED
                                               ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                JULY     OCT.     JAN.     APRIL      JULY      OCT.     JAN.     APRIL      JULY
                                                1994     1994     1995      1995      1995      1995     1996      1996      1996
                                               -------  -------  -------  --------  --------  --------  -------  --------  --------
                                                                      (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)
<S>                                            <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>      <C>       <C>
Net sales....................................  $92,056  $82,558  $93,577  $100,472  $106,845  $109,076  $91,185  $110,828  $123,824
Cost of sales................................   80,801   74,824   84,920    91,464    96,747    98,036   80,284    94,713   105,447
                                               -------  -------  -------  --------  --------  --------  -------  --------  --------
  Gross profit...............................   11,255    7,734    8,657     9,008    10,098    11,040   10,901    16,115    18,377
Selling, general and administrative
 expense.....................................    3,591    3,802    3,561     3,727     3,832     3,888    3,984     4,552     4,388
Amortization of goodwill.....................      391      392      393       394       388       390      397       395       432
                                               -------  -------  -------  --------  --------  --------  -------  --------  --------
  Operating Income...........................    7,273    3,540    4,703     4,887     5,878     6,762    6,520    11,168    13,557
Interest expense.............................   (2,733)  (2,733)  (2,733)   (2,733)   (2,733)   (2,733)  (2,733)   (2,733)   (2,728)
Preferred stock dividends of subsidiary......     (300)    (300)    (300)     (300)     (300)     (300)    (300)     (300)     (300)
Other income (expense), net..................       38       39       33       121        28        (4)      (7)       38       (53)
                                               -------  -------  -------  --------  --------  --------  -------  --------  --------
  Income from continuing operations before
   income taxes..............................    4,278      546    1,703     1,975     2,873     3,725    3,480     8,173    10,476
Provision for income taxes...................   (1,831)    (339)    (801)     (910)   (1,269)   (1,610)  (1,512)   (3,389)   (4,310)
                                               -------  -------  -------  --------  --------  --------  -------  --------  --------
  Income from continuing operations..........  $ 2,447  $   207  $   902  $  1,065  $  1,604  $  2,115  $ 1,968  $  4,784  $  6,166
                                               -------  -------  -------  --------  --------  --------  -------  --------  --------
                                               -------  -------  -------  --------  --------  --------  -------  --------  --------
Income per share from continuing operations
 (based upon 12,024,048 shares
 outstanding)................................  $  0.20  $  0.02  $  0.07  $   0.09  $   0.13  $   0.18  $  0.16  $   0.40  $   0.51
                                               -------  -------  -------  --------  --------  --------  -------  --------  --------
                                               -------  -------  -------  --------  --------  --------  -------  --------  --------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 PRO FORMA QUARTER ENDED JULY 29, 1995 COMPARED TO PRO FORMA QUARTER ENDED JULY
                                    28, 1996
    
 
   
NET SALES
    
 
   
    Combined net sales  for the  three months ended  July 28,  1996 were  $123.8
million,  representing an increase of $17.0 million, or 15.9%, over combined net
sales of $106.8 million for the same period in fiscal 1996.
    
 
   
    Superior's net sales of $118.0 million  for the three months ended July  28,
1996, were $16.4 million, or 16.1%, greater than net sales of $101.6 million for
the same period in fiscal 1996. After adjusting for the contractual pass-through
of  lower copper prices,  in the form  of reduced selling  prices resulting from
lower copper costs  during the  fiscal quarter ended  July 29,  1996, net  sales
would  have increased by approximately $21.4 million or 21.1% as compared to the
July 28,  1995  fiscal quarter.  Approximately  $16.5 million  of  the  adjusted
increase  in  net  sales resulted  from  sales  volume of  both  wire  and cable
products. This increase was  attributable to additional  sales volume under  the
new    multi-year    supply    agreements   referred    to    above    as   well
    
 
                                       26
<PAGE>
   
as to the continued increase in demand for copper wire and cable products in the
local loop. The remaining $4.9 million  increase in sales in the fiscal  quarter
ended  July 28, 1996  resulted from non-copper  based price increases instituted
during  the  latter  half  of  fiscal  1996  under  the  new  multi-year  supply
agreements.
    
 
   
    DNE's  net sales for the three months ended July 28, 1996 were $5.9 million,
representing an increase of $0.6 million, or 11.2%, as compared to net sales  of
$5.3  million  for the  same  period in  fiscal  1996. Sales  in  DNE's contract
manufacturing service operations increased in the current fiscal quarter by $1.4
million, offset somewhat by a decline in sales of military avionic products.
    
 
   
GROSS PROFIT
    
 
   
    Combined gross profit  for the three  months ended July  28, 1996 was  $18.4
million, representing an increase of $8.3 million, or 82.0%, over combined gross
profit of $10.1 million for the same period in fiscal 1996.
    
 
   
    Superior's  gross  profit  increased by  $8.4  million, or  98.3%,  to $16.9
million for the three months  ended July 28, 1996,  as compared to $8.5  million
for  the same period in fiscal 1996.  Superior's gross margin increased to 14.3%
(13.7%, if adjusted  to reflect  the contractual  pass through  of lower  copper
prices)  for the three months  ended July 28, 1996, as  compared to 8.4% for the
same period in fiscal 1996. Superior's gross margins in the fiscal quarter ended
July 28, 1996 reflected  a continuing trend of  steadily improving margins  that
began  early in fiscal 1996. Over the last four fiscal quarters Superior's gross
margin (as adjusted to  reflect the contractual pass-through  of a COMEX  copper
price  of $1.10  per pound),  has improved  from 9.6%  in the  second quarter of
fiscal 1996 to 11.3% and 13.8% in the third and fourth quarters of fiscal  1996,
respectively,  and  to 14.7%  in the  fiscal  quarter ended  July 28,  1996. The
continuing  increase   in   gross   margins  resulted   principally   from   the
aforementioned  fiscal 1996 increase in selling  prices instituted pursuant to a
majority of  Superior's  multi-year supply  agreements,  as well  as  production
efficiencies  caused by higher production levels  and the impact of cost savings
from the aforementioned completion  of the integration  of the Alcatel  business
operations.
    
 
   
    DNE's  gross profit  was $1.5  million for the  three months  ended July 28,
1996, representing  a decline  of $0.1  million, or  4.7%, as  compared to  $1.6
million  for the same period  in fiscal 1996. DNE's  gross margin decreased from
30.3% to 25.9% due to the  trend toward contract manufacturing operations  which
have a lower gross margin than DNE's other operations.
    
 
   
SELLING, GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSE ("SG&A EXPENSE")
    
 
   
    Combined  SG&A expense  for the  three months ended  July 28,  1996 was $4.4
million, representing an increase of $0.6 million, or 14.5% over SG&A expense of
$3.8 million for the same period in fiscal 1996.
    
 
   
    Superior's SG&A expense for  the three months ended  July 28, 1996 was  $2.3
million, an increase of $0.6 million, or 32.8% over SG&A expense of $1.7 million
for  the same  period in  fiscal 1996. This  increase in  SG&A expense reflected
among other  factors, the  incremental  sales and  marketing staff  required  to
support  the increased  level of  sales and  the expansion  of international and
other marketing activities associated  with new product  lines and entering  new
geographic markets.
    
 
   
    DNE's SG&A expense for the three months ended July 28, 1996 was $1.6 million
which is the same as the corresponding period of fiscal 1996.
    
 
   
OPERATING INCOME
    
   
    Combined operating income for the three months ended July 28, 1996 was $13.6
million,  representing an  increase of $7.7  million, or 130.6%,  as compared to
combined operating income of  $5.9 million for the  same period in fiscal  1996.
The  increase in operating income was attributable  to the increase in net sales
at Superior, coupled with an increase in gross margins, as more fully  discussed
above.
    
 
                                       27
<PAGE>
   
INCOME FROM CONTINUING OPERATIONS
    
   
    Combined  income from continuing operations for  the three months ended July
28, 1996 was $6.2 million, representing an increase of $4.6 million, or  283.7%,
as  compared to combined  income from continuing operations  of $1.6 million for
the same  period in  fiscal 1996.  The  increase was  attributable to  the  same
factors impacting operating income, as described above.
    
 
            PRO FORMA FISCAL 1996 COMPARED TO PRO FORMA FISCAL 1995
 
NET SALES
 
    Fiscal 1996 combined net sales were $417.9 million, representing an increase
of  $49.3  million, or  13.4%, over  fiscal  1995 combined  net sales  of $368.7
million.
 
    Superior's fiscal 1996 net sales of $391.8 million increased $51.0  million,
or  15.0%, over  fiscal 1995  net sales  of $340.8  million. Approximately $18.0
million of the increase  in net sales was  attributable to the contractual  pass
through,  in the  form of  increased selling prices,  of higher  copper costs in
fiscal 1996. Of the remaining $33.0 million increase in net sales, approximately
$6.0 million resulted  from non-copper based  price increases instituted  during
fiscal  1996 under multi-year  customer supply agreements  with the remainder of
the increase (approximately $27.0 million) being the result of higher unit sales
volumes.
 
    Higher unit sales volumes in fiscal  1996 occurred across all of  Superior's
product  lines.  The  increase  in  unit sales  volume  was  attributable  to an
expansion of multi-year contractual arrangements under new contract awards  with
several RBOCs and a major independent telephone holding company, as well as to a
general  increased  level  of  demand  for  telecommunications  wire  and  cable
products.
 
    DNE's net  sales in  fiscal 1996  were $26.2  million, which  represented  a
decline of $1.7 million, or 6.2%, as compared to fiscal 1995. Increased sales in
the  Company's  contract  manufacturing services  operations  and  military data
communications and avionics operations were offset by completion in fiscal  1995
of a major contract with NASA for the manufacture of hardware interface modules.
 
GROSS PROFIT
 
    Combined  gross profit  in fiscal  1996 was  $48.2 million,  representing an
increase of $11.5 million, or 31.4%,  over fiscal 1995 combined gross profit  of
$36.7 million. The combined gross margin in fiscal 1996 was 11.5% as compared to
9.9% in fiscal 1995.
 
   
    Superior's  gross  profit increased  by $11.8  million,  or 41.6%,  to $40.3
million in fiscal 1996. Superior's fiscal  1996 gross margin increased to  10.3%
(10.8% if adjusted to reflect increases in copper prices) as compared to 8.3% in
fiscal  1995. The  improvement in  Superior's gross  margin was  reflective of a
positive trend  which began  in the  second fiscal  quarter of  fiscal 1996  and
continued  through the  end of the  fiscal year. During  fiscal 1996, Superior's
gross margin (as  adjusted to reflect  the contractual pass-through  of a  COMEX
copper  price of $1.10 per  pound) was 8.3% in  the first quarter, increasing to
9.6%, 11.3% and 13.8% for the  second, third and fourth quarters,  respectively.
The  continued improvement in gross margin during fiscal 1996 resulted from: (i)
the aforementioned price  increases instituted during  fiscal 1996, the  primary
impact  of which was  reflected in the  third and fourth  quarters of the fiscal
year; (ii)  non-copper raw  material cost  reductions, impacting  primarily  the
fourth  quarter of fiscal 1996; (iii) improved production efficiencies caused by
higher production levels; and (iv) cost savings resulting from the completion of
the integration of the Alcatel Business operations during the latter half of the
fiscal year.
    
 
    DNE's gross profit for fiscal 1996 was $7.9 million, representing a  decline
of  $0.3 million, or  4.1%, as compared  to fiscal 1995.  The reduction in DNE's
fiscal 1996 gross  profit was  attributable to lower  net sales,  the effect  of
which  was partially offset by a slight increase in DNE's gross margin in fiscal
1996 compared to fiscal 1995.
 
   
SELLING, GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSE
    
 
   
    Combined SG&A expense in fiscal 1996 was $16.3 million, an increase of  $1.6
million, or 10.7%, as compared to fiscal 1995.
    
 
                                       28
<PAGE>
   
    Superior's  SG&A expense  in fiscal  1996 was  $8.4 million,  an increase of
36.3%, as compared to fiscal 1995  SG&A expenses of $6.2 million. This  increase
was attributable to a number of factors including duplicative transitionary data
processing  charges  associated  with  the  Alcatel  acquisition,  expansion  of
international and other marketing activities  associated with new product  lines
and  entering new geographic  markets, increase in sales  and marketing staff to
support the overall  increase in  sales demand, and  higher expenses  associated
with the development and support of data processing systems upgrades.
    
 
    DNE's  SG&A expense declined  by $0.7 million  or 10.2%, to  $5.8 million in
fiscal 1996. This reduction was due primarily to a reorganization of DNE's sales
and marketing efforts and the elimination of overhead associated with activities
in non-strategic product lines and markets.
 
OPERATING INCOME
    Combined operating income was $30.3 million  in fiscal 1996, an increase  of
$9.9  million, or 48.6%, as  compared to fiscal 1995.  The increase in operating
income was attributable to the factors discussed above including an increase  in
Superior's  net  sales volume  and  in its  gross  margins resulting  from price
increases and cost reductions.
 
INCOME FROM CONTINUING OPERATIONS
   
    Combined income from continuing operations for fiscal 1996 of $10.5  million
represented  an increase of  $5.8 million, or 126.5%,  over fiscal 1995 combined
income  from  continuing   operations  of  $4.6   million.  This  increase   was
attributable  to the  same factors  that gave rise  to the  increase in combined
operating income.
    
 
            PRO FORMA FISCAL 1995 COMPARED TO PRO FORMA FISCAL 1994
 
NET SALES
    Fiscal 1995 combined net sales were $368.7 million, representing an increase
of $35.1  million, or  10.5%, over  fiscal  1994 combined  net sales  of  $333.6
million.
 
    Superior's  net sales for fiscal 1995 of $340.8 million, were $28.9 million,
or 9.3%  greater  than fiscal  1994  net sales  of  $311.9 million.  However,  a
majority  of the fiscal 1995 sales  increase ($27.0 million) was attributable to
the pass-through of higher copper costs during fiscal 1995. Excluding the impact
of such higher copper  costs, Superior's fiscal 1995  net sales were  relatively
constant compared to fiscal 1994 net sales.
 
   
    During  fiscal 1995,  Superior's stand-alone  historic operations (excluding
the pro forma  impact of  the Alcatel Business)  reflected a  $29.6 million,  or
27.6%,  increase in net sales (of which approximately $9.0 million, or 6.5%, was
attributable to the impact of higher  copper costs). This increase in net  sales
from  Superior's  stand-alone  historic  operations  included  a  $15.6  million
increase in sales of  wire products, which increase  included the impact of  two
new  multi-year supply agreements  for distribution wire  products and increased
sales of premise wire products (including UTP). Sales growth in fiscal 1995 from
Superior's historical  operations  also  included a  $5.0  million  increase  in
distribution  cable product  sales, again  resulting from  new multi-year supply
agreement awards.
    
 
    The stand-alone historical operations of the Alcatel Business in fiscal 1995
reflected  a  decline  in  net  sales  of  $0.7  million  ($18.0  million  after
eliminating  the impact of the pass-through of higher copper costs). The decline
of $18.0  million resulted  from a  decrease in  both sales  volume and  selling
prices. The decrease in sales volume, estimated at $10.0 million, was the result
of  the loss of  two major RBOC contracts  in the latter part  of fiscal 1994 (a
portion of which was  awarded to Superior),  and reflected a  trend in the  RBOC
market towards the concentration of supplier relationships. Partially offsetting
the  reduction in sales  volume from the aforementioned  RBOC contracts, was the
impact of higher sales in the spot  market and the impact of two new  multi-year
supply  agreements entered  into by  the Alcatel Business  in the  first half of
fiscal 1995. The lower selling prices were the result of weak market  conditions
that affected the Alcatel Business during that period.
 
                                       29
<PAGE>
    DNE's net sales in fiscal 1995 increased by $6.3 million, or 28.9%, to $27.9
million.  This  increase was  attributable to  the aforementioned  NASA contract
which accounted  for  $7.0  million  in  fiscal  1995  revenues.  Net  sales  of
datacommunications and avionics products to the military declined in fiscal 1995
to  $15.9 million as  compared to $18.6  million in fiscal  1994. The decline in
military product sales was offset by growth in commercial contract manufacturing
revenues of approximately $3.5 million in fiscal 1995.
 
GROSS PROFIT
 
    Combined gross profit for fiscal 1995 as compared to fiscal 1994 declined by
13.4%, or $5.7  million, to $36.7  million. The combined  gross margin for  this
period declined from 12.7% in fiscal 1994 to 9.9% in fiscal 1995.
 
    Superior's  gross profit in fiscal 1995 of $28.4 million reflected a decline
of $5.7 million as compared to fiscal  1994. During this same period, the  gross
margin  declined from 10.9% in fiscal 1994  to 8.3% (9.1% if adjusted to reflect
increases  in  copper  costs)  in  fiscal  1995.  In  fiscal  1995,   Superior's
stand-alone  historical operations reflected an increase in gross profit of $4.3
million (a 44.0% increase over fiscal 1994). During this same period, the  gross
margin from Superior's historic operations increased to 10.4% (11.0% if adjusted
to  reflect increases in copper costs) in  fiscal 1995 from 9.2% in fiscal 1994.
The improvement in gross margin from Superior's historical operations in  fiscal
1995  was the result of: (i) the increase in, and the higher proportion of sales
of distribution wire and premise wire which typically generate higher percentage
margins than sales of distribution cable;  (ii) the increase in overall  product
demand  in the  latter half  of fiscal 1995  and the  reduction in industry-wide
capacity resulting  in higher  pricing  on products  not subject  to  multi-year
supply  agreements; and (iii) improved  production efficiencies caused by higher
production levels.
 
    The fiscal 1995 gross  profit for the historical  operations of the  Alcatel
Business  declined by $9.9 million as compared  to fiscal 1994. The gross margin
for this same period declined  from 10.4% to 5.5%  (7.5% if adjusted to  exclude
the  impact of the  pass-through of higher  copper costs). The  reduction in the
Alcatel Business's historical gross profit  and gross margin during fiscal  1995
was  the result of  the replacement of  lost contract business  with spot market
sales and business  under new  supply agreements in  the latter  half of  fiscal
1994, which was during a period of extremely competitive market pricing.
 
    During fiscal 1995, DNE's gross profit remained relatively unchanged at $8.2
million.  During this  same period,  DNE's gross  margin declined  from 38.1% in
fiscal 1994 to 29.5% in fiscal 1995. A trend in product mix toward lower  margin
commercial and government contract manufacturing services caused this decline.
 
SELLING, GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSE
 
   
    Fiscal  1995  combined  SG&A  expense  was  $14.7  million,  representing an
increase of $0.9  million, or 6.2%,  over fiscal 1994  combined SG&A expense  of
$13.8 million.
    
 
   
    Superior's SG&A expense in fiscal 1995 was $6.2 million, an increase of $0.9
million  over fiscal 1994 SG&A expense. This increase reflected higher marketing
and engineering  expense associated  with the  expansion of  Superior's  product
lines  into the premise  wire markets and  the growth in  revenues in Superior's
traditional wire and cable products and markets.
    
 
   
    DNE's SG&A expense in fiscal 1995 as compared to fiscal 1994 was constant at
$6.5 million.
    
 
OPERATING INCOME
    In fiscal 1995, combined operating income was $20.4 million, representing  a
decline  of  $4.8 million  as  compared to  fiscal  1994. Such  decline  was due
primarily to  the  lower comparative  gross  profit  in fiscal  1995  which  was
attributable  to  lower  sales  volumes  and  gross  margins  in  the historical
operations of the Alcatel Business during such period.
 
INCOME FROM CONTINUING OPERATIONS
   
    Combined income from continuing operations  for fiscal 1995 of $4.6  million
represented  a decline of  $2.7 million compared to  fiscal 1994 combined income
from continuing operations of $7.3 million. This decline was attributable to the
same factors that gave rise to the decline in combined operating income.
    
 
                                       30
<PAGE>
           SUPPLEMENTAL COMMENTS ON HISTORICAL RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
 
    During  fiscal  1994  and 1996,  the  Company completed  the  acquisition of
Superior (November 10,  1993) and  the Alcatel  Business (May  11, 1995).  These
acquisitions  significantly increased  the Company's net  sales and  had a major
impact on its operating results and  its financial condition and liquidity.  The
operations  of each entity  are included in the  historical operating results of
the Company from the respective acquisition dates.
 
NET SALES
    Fiscal 1996 combined net sales were $410.4 million, representing an increase
of $245.9 million, or 149.5%, as compared  to fiscal 1995 combined net sales  of
$164.5  million. This increase is primarily attributable to the inclusion of the
net sales of the Alcatel Business acquired on May 11, 1995.
 
    Superior's net sales for fiscal 1996 increased by $247.7 million, or  181.3%
to  $384.2 million  compared to  fiscal 1995 net  sales of  $136.6 million. This
increase is primarily  attributable to  the Alcatel  acquisition. However,  also
contributing  to the increase  in Superior's net sales  was the contractual pass
through, in the  form of  increased selling prices,  of higher  copper costs  in
fiscal  1996,  price increases  on  multi-year contracts  negotiated  during the
period and strong overall demand for  copper wire and cable products.  Partially
offsetting  the increase in fiscal 1996 net  sales was a $1.7 million decline in
DNE revenues. During  fiscal 1996, DNE  continued its transition  away from  its
dependence  on  defense  and  government markets  by  increasing  its commercial
contract manufacturing services sales.
 
    The increase in  the Company's fiscal  1995 net sales  of $96.0 million,  or
140.1%,  as compared to fiscal 1994  was primarily attributable to the inclusion
of Superior's net sales for the full fiscal year as opposed to five and one-half
months in fiscal 1994.
 
GROSS PROFIT
    Combined gross profit  increased by $25.2  million in fiscal  1996 to  $47.6
million compared to combined gross profit of $22.4 million in fiscal 1995, while
the  combined gross margin declined from 13.6% in fiscal 1995 to 11.6% in fiscal
1996. The increase in gross profit as well as the decline in the gross margin is
primarily attributable  to the  increasing  contribution of  Superior.  Superior
operates  in a lower gross margin industry  than that in which DNE operates and,
therefore, as  Superior's gross  profit becomes  a greater  proportion of  total
gross  profit, the gross margin percentage declines. On a separate entity basis,
Superior's gross  profit increased  in fiscal  1996 by  $25.5 million  to  $39.7
million,  while gross margin remained constant  at 10.4%. DNE's gross profit for
fiscal 1996 declined from $8.2 million in fiscal 1995 to $7.9 million, resulting
from a decrease in net sales, while gross margins remained constant at 30.0%.
 
    Combined gross profit  increased in fiscal  1995 by $10.1  million to  $22.4
million, while combined gross margin declined from 17.9% in fiscal 1994 to 13.6%
in  fiscal 1995. The increase in combined  gross profit and decrease in combined
gross margin were primarily the result of the inclusion of Superior's operations
for the full fiscal year. The decline in DNE's gross margin from 38.1% in fiscal
1995 to 29.5% in fiscal 1996,  caused primarily by the aforementioned change  in
product  mix  from  high  margin  government  sales  to  lower  margin  contract
manufacturing services, contributed  to the  decline in  the Company's  combined
gross margin.
 
SELLING, GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSE
   
    Combined  SG&A expense increased in fiscal  1996 to $14.2 million from $11.6
million in fiscal  1995. SG&A  expense as a  percentage of  net sales,  however,
declined  from 7.1% in fiscal 1995 to 3.5%  in fiscal 1996. The increase in SG&A
expense is primarily attributable to an increase of $3.4 million in SG&A expense
at Superior resulting from  the acquisition of the  Alcatel Business, which  was
partially  offset  by a  decline  of $0.7  million  in DNE's  SG&A  expense. The
reduction in DNE's SG&A expense resulted from the reorganization of DNE's  sales
and  marketing efforts,  and the termination  of overheads  associated with non-
strategic product lines and markets. The decline in SG&A expense as a percentage
of net sales is principally  the result of the  increase in net sales  resulting
from  the acquisition of the Alcatel Business without a corresponding percentage
increase in  SG&A expense.  The percentage  of  SG&A expense  to net  sales  for
Superior  on  a standalone  basis was  3.7% and  2.2% in  fiscal 1995  and 1996,
respectively.
    
 
                                       31
<PAGE>
    The increase in  fiscal 1995  SG&A expense of  $2.7 million  as compared  to
fiscal  1994 resulted from the addition  of Superior's results of operations for
the full fiscal year.
 
INTEREST EXPENSE
    Combined interest expense  increased to  $17.4 million in  fiscal 1996  from
$3.7  million  in  fiscal 1995,  an  increase  of $13.7  million.  This increase
resulted primarily  from  the  debt  incurred in  connection  with  the  Alcatel
acquisition. Similarly the increase in combined interest expense of $1.8 million
in  fiscal  1995 as  compared  to fiscal  1994  resulted from  debt  incurred in
connection with the Superior acquisition.
 
                        LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
 
   
    For the three months ended July 28, 1996, the historical combined  statement
of  cash flows  of Superior  and DNE included  cash flows  provided by operating
activities of $12.3 million, which included $4.1 million in cash flows generated
from reductions  in working  capital accounts  consisting primarily  of a  $10.0
million  decrease in inventories, offset by  a $6.9 million decrease in accounts
payable due  to  seasonal  working  capital adjustments.  Cash  flows  used  for
investing  activities amounted to $1.6  million, consisting primarily of capital
expenditures. Cash  flows  used  for  financing  activities  amounted  to  $11.1
million,  of which $11.0 million represented  a reduction of amounts outstanding
on intercompany loans.
    
 
    For the year ended April 28, 1996, the historical combined statement of cash
flows for Superior and DNE included cash flows provided by operating  activities
of  $27.2 million,  which included  $10.3 million  in cash  flows generated from
reductions in working capital accounts  consisting primarily of a $11.2  million
increase  in  accounts payable  offset by  a $2.7  million increase  in accounts
receivable. For  this  same  period  cash flows  used  by  investing  activities
amounted to $111.8 million, which included $103.4 million related to the Alcatel
acquisition,  $5.4 million related  to the BICC Transaction  and $4.3 million in
recurring capital  expenditures. Cash  flows  provided by  financing  activities
amounted  to $84.6 million for the year  ended April 28, 1996. The components of
cash flows provided by financing activities included $140.0 million in  proceeds
from  notes issued  by Superior  (the "Superior  Notes") to  finance the initial
Alcatel acquisition  along with  $112.6 million  in proceeds  from  intercompany
loans (net of repayments) which were used to repay the Superior Notes.
 
   
    On  a  pro forma  basis,  giving effect  to  the Reorganization  and related
transactions, the Company's capital structure will consist of $131.8 million  in
debt  and $24.0 million in total  stockholders' equity (see "Capitalization" and
"Pro Forma Condensed Combined Financial Statements"). The pro forma debt balance
will include $120.0 million outstanding under the Bank Credit Facility (assuming
a public offering price of $16.00 per share). Additional availability under  the
Bank  Credit Facility after completion of this  Offering is expected to be $30.0
million.  Obligations  under  the  Bank  Credit  Facility  are  expected  to  be
guaranteed  by  each of  the Company's  subsidiaries. The  loans under  the Bank
Credit Facility are expected to  be secured by the  common stock of each  direct
and  indirect  subsidiary  of the  Company  and all  other  equipment, property,
inventory and  accounts receivable  of  each such  subsidiary. The  Bank  Credit
Facility is expected to contain customary performance and financial covenants.
    
 
   
    As  a result of the Alcatel acquisition, on a pro forma basis to reflect the
Reorganization, the Company's ratio of debt plus preferred stock to equity  will
have increased from 1:1.3 at April 30, 1995 to 2.4:1 at April 28, 1996, to 6.3:1
on  a pro forma basis for this Offering at July 28, 1996. However, the Company's
debt financing  costs  will decline  as  a  result of  the  Reorganization  from
approximately  13.8% per year in fiscal 1996 to approximately 8.3% per year on a
pro forma basis for the quarter ended July  28, 1996 and the ratio of EBITDA  to
interest  expense plus preferred dividends will  improve from 2.3:1 for the year
ended April 28,  1996 to  approximately 3.9:1 pro  forma for  the twelve  months
ended  July  28,  1996. Based  on  the  operating cash  flows  that  the Company
generated over  fiscal  1996  and the  three  months  ended July  28,  1996,  as
discussed   below,  the  Company  expects  to  generate  sufficient  funds  from
operations to enable  it to reduce  the balance under  the Bank Credit  Facility
over the next twelve months.
    
 
                                       32
<PAGE>
   
    During  the remainder of fiscal 1997,  the Company expects to have principal
debt service requirements of $0.4 million and intends to invest $4.5 million  to
$6.5   million  in  capital  expenditures  for  product  line  expansions,  cost
reductions  and  maintenance  of  business  activities.  The  Company  does  not
anticipate any other material commitments over this period.
    
 
   
    The  Company experienced significant  growth in operating  cash flows during
fiscal 1996 and for the three months ended  July 28, 1996 due to (i) the  impact
of  the  Alcatel  Acquisition,  (ii)  improvements  in  gross  margin  and (iii)
improvements in working capital management. During the twelve months ended  July
28,  1996, on a pro  forma basis, the Company  generated $46.8 million in EBITDA
and approximately $20.8 million in cash  flows after income taxes, debt  service
and  capital expenditures. These amounts would have been available to reduce the
balance under the Bank Credit Facility, make additional investments in  existing
and  new business opportunities or increase  cash balances. The Company believes
that its cash flows  from operating activities will  be sufficient to cover  its
principal  debt service requirements and its  capital expenditures over the next
twelve-month period.
    
 
    The Company's business is subject to significant risks that could cause  the
Company's   results   to  differ   materially  from   those  expressed   in  any
forward-looking statements  made in  this Prospectus.  These risks  include  the
matters  set forth above under this caption, under "Risk Factors," and elsewhere
herein.
 
                                       33
<PAGE>
                                    BUSINESS
 
INTRODUCTION
 
   
    The Company is a leading manufacturer of copper telecommunications wire  and
cable  products for the local loop  segment of the telecommunications network in
the United States.  It also  develops and manufactures  data communications  and
other  electronic equipment, including multiplexers, for defense, government and
commercial applications.
    
 
    The Company has led a recent consolidation in the telecommunications  copper
wire  and  cable industry  by acquiring  the  Alcatel Business  in May  1995 and
consummating the BICC Transaction in November 1995. Through these  acquisitions,
the Company increased its annual production capacity from 28 bcf in one plant to
an  aggregate  of 92  bcf  in four  geographically  diverse plants.  The Company
believes  that  it   has  successfully  integrated   its  acquired   businesses,
particularly  by  implementing improved  production  techniques at  each  of its
plants and reducing the cost structure of its operations.
 
   
    Due to further industry-wide consolidation, total industry capacity has been
reduced, the  number  of  manufacturers  has declined  and  the  size  of  those
remaining  has increased. As a result, the  Company has become a key supplier of
copper wire and cable to  six of the seven RBOCs  and the two major  independent
telephone  companies and believes  that it will  continue to be  able to compete
effectively as its  major customers consolidate  their vendor base  in order  to
stablilize  their  sources  of  supply and  ensure  timely  delivery  of quality
products on a consistent basis. The  Company estimates that its pro forma  share
of domestic copper telecommunications cable and wire production was over 30% for
fiscal   1996.  The   industry  consolidation,   increased  demand   for  copper
telecommunications wire and  cable and the  resulting changes in  the nature  of
customer  relationships  have  led  to  a  recent  improvement  in  the  pricing
environment for the Company's products.
    
 
TELECOMMUNICATIONS WIRE AND CABLE
 
    INDUSTRY OVERVIEW
 
    Copper wire and cable is the most widely used medium for transmission in the
local  loop  portion  of  the  telecommunications  infrastructure.  The  Company
believes  that copper will continue  to be the transmission  medium of choice in
the local loop due to factors such as: the installed base of copper cable in the
local loop  representing  an  investment  of over  $150  billion  that  must  be
maintained  by  the  RBOCs  and  other  local  telephone  companies;  the  lower
installation and maintenance costs of copper compared to optical fiber and other
media; technological advancements  that expand  the bandwidth  of the  installed
local  loop  copper  network, such  as  ISDN,  HDSL and  ADSL,  which  allow the
continued use of  copper as  the transmission medium  for the  new voice,  data,
video  and multi-media uses demanded by customers; the increasing demand for new
services, which,  because  of technological  advances,  can be  supported  by  a
copper-based  local  loop; and  the increasing  demand for  multiple residential
access lines.
 
    Demand for copper telecommunications wire and cable is dependent on  several
factors,  including  the rate  at which  new  lines are  installed in  homes and
businesses; the level of spending for  highways, bridges and other parts of  the
infrastructure,  which often necessitates installation of new telecommunications
cable; and the level of general maintenance spending by telephone companies. The
installation of  new access  lines is  in turn  dependent on  the level  of  new
construction  and, increasingly in recent years,  on demand for second telephone
lines and lines dedicated to facsimile  machines and computer modems, which  are
used  for,  among  other purposes,  business  communications and  access  to the
Internet.
 
   
    Based on the most recently available  data published by the U.S.  Department
of   Commerce,  the  Company  estimates   that  domestic  production  of  copper
telecommunications distribution  wire and  cable  was $1.2  billion in  1994.  A
substantial  majority  of  Superior's products  sold  in the  United  States are
purchased by the  RBOCs and  other domestic  telephone companies.  Prior to  the
break-up  of AT&T in 1984, it was the sole supplier of copper telecommunications
wire and cable products to its operating companies. However, after the break-up,
the RBOC market became  open to all  suppliers. It is  estimated that the  seven
RBOCs
    
 
                                       34
<PAGE>
   
purchase  approximately 60%  of the copper  telecommunications distribution wire
and cable purchased by U.S. telephone companies, while the two major independent
telephone  holding  companies  (GTE   Corporation  and  North  Supply   (Sprint)
Corporation)  purchase approximately  21% and  over 1,200  small local telephone
operating companies purchase the remainder.
    
 
    The Company believes it  is well-positioned to take  advantage of the  rapid
changes  in the  telecommunications industry as  the demand for  voice, data and
video services over the local  loop increases dramatically and new  technologies
and products are developed to enable the local loop to satisfy that demand.
 
    Installed  Base.   The local loop  is the segment  of the telecommunications
network that connects the customer's  premises to the nearest telephone  company
wire   center  or  central  office.   It  comprises  approximately  160  million
residential and business access lines in  the United States. The installed  base
of copper wire and cable in the local loop represents an investment of over $150
billion  that  must  be  maintained  by  the  RBOCs  and  other  local telephone
companies. Although other media, such as  fiber optic cable, are used for  trunk
lines between central offices, substantially all local loop lines continue to be
copper-based.   Local  loop  lines  are  continually  maintained  and  replaced,
providing a steady demand for copper wire and cable.
 
   
    Lower Installation Costs and Ease of  Repair.  The Company believes that  in
the  local loop, copper has significantly lower installation costs and is easier
to repair than other media primarily  because it does not require an  additional
power  source and other  electronics. Installation of fiber  optic cable is both
capital and labor intensive, and deployment  of fiber optic cable generally  has
been limited to trunk and feeder lines and wide area loop configurations.
    
 
    Technological  Advances.  Copper dominance in the local loop continues to be
supported by technological  advances that expand  the use and  bandwidth of  the
installed  local  loop  copper  network. These  advances  include  ISDN  and DSL
technologies,   including   HDSL   and    ADSL.   These   technologies    permit
telecommunications  carriers, private  network owners and  end-user consumers to
employ the existing  copper wire  and cable  infrastructure for  high speed  and
bandwidth-intensive applications.
    ISDN  is a  set of digital  transmission signaling  protocols and interfaces
that provides  end-to-end  digital  connectivity  to support  a  wide  range  of
services.  ISDN service over the existing copper local loop is rapidly expanding
due to the increased demand for digital telecommunications applications such  as
remote  office  connectivity  and  Internet access.  The  Company  believes that
globally-standardized ISDN service will become a widely-used vehicle for digital
network services,  including  Internet access,  and  that it  will  support  the
continued dominance of copper wire and cable in the local loop.
 
    Another  technological  advance  is DSL  technology.  DSL  technology, which
includes ADSL and HDSL, has increased the bandwidth capacity of copper wire  and
cable  products  in  the  local  loop  through  sophisticated  multiplexing  and
modulation techniques. DSL technology  currently expands the bandwidth  capacity
of  twisted pair copper wire in the local  loop from 1.5 million bits per second
("bps") (over a T-1 line) to over 6 million bps.
 
   
    ADSL transmits  interactive  video  and data  services  including  video  on
demand,  on-line shopping, banking and other  data services, as well as Internet
access, over the existing copper-based local loop, requiring substantially  less
investment of capital and labor than alternatives such as installing fiber optic
or  hybrid  fiber  optic/coaxial  cable  products in  the  local  loop.  ADSL is
asymmetric in that it is high bandwidth in one direction and lower bandwidth  in
the  other.  This arrangement  is  primarily intended  to  support one  way high
bandwidth applications, such as  the provision of  broadcast quality video  into
the  home. It is easily installed  and portable, relatively inexpensive compared
to fiber optic  or coaxial cable,  and can  be deployed for  an individual  user
anywhere in the network in a short time period.
    
 
    HDSL,  as opposed to ADSL, derives its  name from the high bandwidth that is
transmitted in  both directions  over twisted  pair copper  wire. HDSL  provides
advanced  digital voice, data and video services  to local loop customers with a
high level  of signal  quality  over the  existing copper  infrastructure  while
doubling  the  distance  a  digital  signal  can  travel  without  the  need for
amplification or repeaters. In contrast to fiber
 
                                       35
<PAGE>
optic cable applications, HDSL uses a minimal amount of power on the remote  end
of  the line, making the traditional power supplied by copper telecommunications
wire sufficient for its use. In corporate campuses of office buildings,  several
satellite  locations can  be linked with  HDSL quickly  and inexpensively, using
existing  copper  wire  to  produce  the  equivalent  of  fiber  optic   quality
transmission.
    Demand  for New  Services.  Technological  advances, regulatory developments
and increased competition  among service providers  have accelerated the  demand
for  and  introduction of  new  bandwidth intensive  telecommunication services.
These services  include  integrated voice  and  data, broadcast  and  conference
quality  video, Internet and on-line data services access, high speed LAN to LAN
connectivity,  collaborative   network   processing   and   other   specialized,
bandwidth-intensive applications.
    Demand  for Multiple Residential Access Lines.  An increasing number of U.S.
households are installing additional access lines for multiple telephone  lines,
facsimile  machines, access  to the Internet,  home offices  and other purposes.
Additional access lines increase the  demand for copper telecommunications  wire
and cable in the local loop.
 
    BUSINESS STRATEGY
 
    The  Company believes that the ongoing alignment of productive capacity with
market demand,  technological developments  that have  enhanced the  ability  of
end-users  to  utilize the  existing  copper wire  and  cable telecommunications
infrastructure for high  speed data, video  and imaging transmissions,  industry
consolidation  and the  Company's emphasis on  new, higher  margin products will
strengthen the Company's competitive position, profitability and cash flow.
 
    The Company's strategy in the telecommunications products business is to (i)
respond to  the current  and  changing needs  of its  customers'  communications
networks  and continue to expand its business in the local loop by continuing to
develop, manufacture and  sell a full  line of copper  wire and cable  products;
(ii)  expand its product lines to include transmission media such as data cable,
including UTP products, and hybrid wire products, including coaxial/copper  wire
and  fiber  optic/copper wire  combinations; (iii)  take advantage  of strategic
acquisition opportunities in data cable, the  local loop and its other  markets;
and  (iv) expand its  international business through  increased export sales and
the establishment of joint ventures or similar arrangements.
 
    PRODUCTS
 
    Through  Superior,  the  Company  manufactures  a  wide  variety  of  copper
telecommunications  wire and cable products. Cable is the transmission medium in
the part of the local loop from a local telephone company's central office to  a
subscriber's  property line; wire  is the transmission media  that begins at the
subscriber's property line and runs to  the subscriber's access device, and  may
be  either outside or  on-premises. The Company's  products include distribution
cable and wire and premises wire products, ranging in size from a single twisted
pair wire to  a 4,200 pair  cable. These products  are variously configured  for
aerial and underground use in the local loop and for on-premise applications.
 
    The  basic unit of virtually all  copper telecommunications wires and cables
is the "twisted pair," a pair of insulated wires twisted around each other. Both
wires in  the  pair are  used  to complete  the  telecommunications  connection.
Twisted  pairs are bundled together to form telecommunications wires and cables.
In calculating bcf, the length of each wire in a twisted pair is counted.
 
    Superior's copper telecommunications  cable products range  in size and  are
differentiated  by  design variations  depending  on where  the  cable is  to be
installed. Cable products used for direct underground burial are designed to  be
water  resistant and are filled with  compounds to prevent moisture from getting
into the cable structure.  The individual copper wires  in these cables  utilize
either a solid polyethylene or polypropylene insulation or cellular polyethylene
covered with a solid polyethylene skin. Cable products used for underground duct
or  aerial applications,  where water  penetration is  not a  major concern, are
 
                                       36
<PAGE>
designed with solid polyethylene insulation and no filling compound. The  copper
telecommunications  cable products normally have metallic shields for mechanical
protection and electromagnetic  shielding of  the copper  wires, as  well as  an
outer polyethylene jacket.
 
    Superior's  distribution wire products  range in size  from a single twisted
pair to a six-pair product. Similar to copper cable products, distribution  wire
products  are designed  for both direct  burial and aerial  applications and are
also manufactured  in a  variety of  designs, including  a number  of  different
metallic shield configurations and several different jacketing materials.
 
    Superior's  copper  telecommunications wire  for  interior use,  or premises
wire, generally  ranges  in size  from  a single  twisted  pair to  a  four-pair
product.  Premises wire is  used within buildings  to connect telecommunications
devices  (telephones,   facsimile  machines   and   computer  modems)   to   the
telecommunications  network and, in commercial buildings, to establish LANs. All
of Superior's premises wire has been listed by Underwriters' Laboratories, which
is required by most local building codes. Construction of premises wire  differs
from distribution wire and cable.
 
    An  important  element  of the  Company's  strategy  in the  wire  and cable
business is to expand into performance-enhanced copper-based wire products  that
provide  opportunities for higher  growth and higher  margins than the Company's
current product lines. The Company will attempt to sell a broader range of  wire
and  cable products to  its existing customers. As  described below, the Company
has introduced and is in the process of introducing a number of new products  in
this regard.
 
    In  fiscal  1995, Superior  introduced a  line of  UTP copper  wire products
designed for high-speed data transmission  across private networks. The  Company
believes that UTP, which was first introduced into the market in the early 1990s
as  an alternative  to fiber optic  cable, has  become the medium  of choice for
private data network communications due to its (i) significant installation  and
maintenance  cost advantages  over fiber  optic cable  and (ii)  its performance
capabilities, which  are sufficient  to  address a  substantial portion  of  the
market for private data networks requiring high-speed transmission rates.
 
    The Company also has recently developed or is in the process of developing a
number   of  other  new  products,   including  (i)  hybrid  products  combining
twisted-pair copper wires  with coaxial  or fiber optic  cable for  distribution
service,   (ii)  aerial  drop  non-metallic   support  products,  which  utilize
fiberglass yarn and twisted-pair copper wires for distribution service and (iii)
riser products,  which  are copper  wires  used inside  high-rise  buildings  or
telephone  central  offices for  vertical connections  providing voice  and data
transmissions. Sales to date of these products have not been material.
 
    MARKETING AND DISTRIBUTION
 
   
    For the twelve  months ended July  28, 1996, 88.2%  of Superior's net  sales
were  to the RBOCs and the two major independent telephone companies, 10.7% were
sold to other telephone companies in the United States and Canada,  construction
companies  and others and the remaining 1.1% were sold outside the United States
and Canada.
    
 
   
    Superior sells to the RBOCs and two major independent telephone companies on
a direct basis  through a  sales force of  five salespersons.  The remainder  of
Superior's   products   are  sold   through  distributors,   original  equipment
manufacturers and sales  representatives and agents.  The Company believes  that
there  will be opportunities  for international expansion of  its wire and cable
business, either through export sales or the establishment of joint ventures  or
similar arrangements.
    
 
    Superior's sales to telephone companies are generally pursuant to multi-year
supply  agreements in which the customer  agrees to have Superior supply certain
of the customer's wire or cable needs as the primary supplier during the term of
the agreement. Prior to awarding a contract, customers forecast their needs  and
manufacturers  such as Superior  bid and quote prices  based upon the forecasted
order amount, although customers  are not obligated  to purchase the  forecasted
amount  or any minimum amount. Superior currently has multi-year agreements with
respect  to  certain  of   its  wire  and  cable   products  with  six  of   the
 
                                       37
<PAGE>
   
seven  RBOCs and with two major  independent telephone companies. For the twelve
months ended  July 28,  1996,  sales to  Bell  South Corporation,  North  Supply
Corporation  (Sprint), GTE  Corporation, SBC  Corporation and  NYNEX Corporation
accounted for 20.4%,  17.0%, 16.3%,  13.5% and  12.8% of  Superior's net  sales,
respectively. No other single customer accounted for more than 10% of Superior's
net sales. Additionally, as is customary in the industry, the Company's sales to
customers  other  than large  telephone companies  are  primarily on  the "spot"
market on the basis of short-term  purchase orders. In recent years these  sales
have declined as a proportion of total sales.
    
 
    MANUFACTURING
 
    Copper  rod is  the base  component for  most of  Superior's wire  and cable
products. The manufacturing processes for these products require that the copper
rod be drawn and insulated. Superior purchases copper rod of 5/16" diameter from
third-party suppliers. Superior then  "draws" the wire to  one of four  American
wire  gauges ("AWGs").  Wire drawing  is the  process of  reducing the conductor
diameter by pulling the copper rod through a converging die until the  specified
AWG  is attained. Since the reduction is limited by the breaking strength of the
conductor, this  operation  is  repeated several  times  internally  within  the
machine. As the wire becomes smaller, less pulling force is required. Therefore,
machines  operating in specific size ranges  are required. Take-up containers or
spools are generally  large, allowing  one person to  operate several  machines.
Individual  copper  wires are  then typically  insulated with  plastic compounds
through an  extrusion  process.  Extrusion involves  the  feeding,  melting  and
pumping  of a compound through a die to shape  it in final form as it is applied
to insulate the wire.  Superior uses five primary  types of insulating  material
compounds:  high density polyethylene, high  density cellular polyethylene foam,
flame retardant polyethylene,  fluoropolymers and  polyvinyl chloride.  Superior
purchases these insulating compounds from a variety of suppliers.
 
    Superior's  products also  require that  the wire  be "twisted"  so that two
insulated single conductors are  combined to create  a twisted pair.  Superior's
products  are often  "cabled" or  "stranded" so  that multiple  twisted pairs of
insulated wires  are combined  to form  larger units  of multiple  pair  cables.
Typically, cabling or stranding is done only on large (I.E., 25 or more) numbers
of pairs. Smaller numbers of pairs (I.E., fewer than 25) are not cabled, but are
sent directly for jacketing.
 
    Once  insulated, Superior's copper wire and cable products are "jacketed" or
covered through the application of filling, flooding and shielding compounds  to
the  insulated  wire.  Products to  be  installed underground  are  protected by
metallic shielding  (E.G., aluminum  and steel)  for electrical  and  mechanical
isolation  and by  plastic compounds of  polyvinyl chloride  or polyethylene for
protection against water and other sources of corrosion and interference.  After
the wire and cable products are fabricated, they are packaged and shipped either
directly to customers or to distributors.
 
    RAW MATERIALS
 
    The  principal raw materials used by Superior in the manufacture of its wire
and cable products  are copper,  aluminum, bronze,  steel and  plastics such  as
polyethylene  and  polyvinyl chloride.  These raw  materials are  available from
several sources and  Superior has not  experienced any shortages  in the  recent
past.
 
    The  cost of copper, the  most significant raw material  used by Superior in
its wire and cable  business, has been subject  to considerable volatility  over
the past several years. However, this volatility has not had, nor is it expected
to  have, an  impact on Superior's  profitability due  to customers' contractual
arrangements that  provide  for the  pass-through  of changes  in  copper  costs
through  price revisions. Nevertheless,  sharp increases in  the price of copper
can reduce demand  if telephone  companies decide  to defer  their purchases  of
copper telecommunications wire and cable products until copper prices decline.
 
    The  production of UTP products is dependent upon teflon, which is currently
manufactured by only two producers and is in short supply. As a result, Superior
is currently evaluating alternative production methods in order to increase  the
quantity  of production  per pound  of teflon  or to  eliminate its requirement.
Until this
 
                                       38
<PAGE>
is resolved or the supply of teflon  increases, Superior will have to limit  its
production of UTP. From time to time, particular plastics have been difficult to
obtain,  but in recent  years none of  these shortages has  required Superior to
limit production. The inability of  Superior to obtain sufficient quantities  of
raw materials could adversely affect its operating results.
 
    FOREIGN SALES
 
   
    The  Company's telecommunications  wire and  cable business  has a  plant in
Winnipeg, Manitoba that supplies both the Canadian and U.S. markets.  Superior's
net  sales for the  twelve months ended  July 28, 1996  to customers outside the
United States and  Canada were  $4.4 million,  or 1.1%  of sales,  of which  the
majority were in Latin America.
    
 
    COMPETITION
 
   
    The  copper telecommunications wire and  cable business is very competitive.
Superior has three major domestic  competitors in the copper  telecommunications
wire  and  cable  business:  Cable Systems  International,  Inc.,  General Cable
Corporation, a  subsidiary of  Wassall,  plc; and  Essex Group  Incorporated,  a
subsidiary  of BCP/Essex  Holding, Inc. Competition  in this market  is based on
price, service  and  quality.  See  "Management's  Discussion  and  Analysis  of
Financial  Conditions and Results of Operations--Results of Operations." Because
several RBOCs have adopted  policies of limiting the  number of their  suppliers
and  requiring that these  suppliers provide additional  services, the degree of
competition based on service is increasing.
    
 
   
DATA COMMUNICATIONS AND ELECTRONICS
    
 
    Through DNE,  the  Company  designs  and  manufactures  data  communications
equipment, integrated access devices and other electronic equipment for defense,
government  and commercial  applications. It  the largest  supplier to  the U.S.
defense forces of data and voice  multiplexers used in tactical secure  military
applications.  Multiplexers are  integrated access devices  that combine several
information-carrying channels  into one  line, thereby  permitting  simultaneous
multiple  voice and  data communications over  a single line.  DNE also produces
military  avionic  products,  including  switches,  dimmers,  relays  and  other
electronic controllers, sensors and refueling amplifiers.
 
   
    The Company is considering the expansion of its data communications products
business  by developing commercial versions of its integrated access devices and
marketing them  to  the  telecommunications industry,  including  the  Company's
telecommunications   wire   and  cable   customers.  Such   development  efforts
potentially could require a significant  investment of capital. The Company  has
developed  and  begun marketing  a data  and voice  multiplexer product  for the
commercial market.
    
 
    The Company has reduced its dependence on the defense market in recent years
primarily by taking  advantage of  opportunities to manufacture  equipment on  a
contract  basis.  The  Company  provides  contract  manufacturing  services  for
subassembly equipment to approximately five original equipment manufacturers  in
the  technology industry  and NASA. The  Company expects to  expand its contract
manufacturing services business for its existing commercial customers and to add
additional commercial  customers in  the future,  while sales  to NASA  are  not
expected  after the  current contract  expires in  fiscal 1997.  In fiscal 1996,
DNE's sales to customers other than departments of the U.S. government accounted
for 33.6% of DNE's sales, compared to 17.7% in fiscal 1995.
 
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
 
    In response to the changing requirements of the telecommunications industry,
Superior has focused  its recent product  development activities on  performance
enhanced  copper-based wire products that are  designed to meet the existing and
future needs of  the telephone companies.  Several of these  projects have  been
undertaken  in  conjunction  with  Superior's  telephone  company  customers and
include the development  of composite  cables that include  copper twisted  pair
wire  and  coaxial  cable or  optical  fibers  in a  single  cable construction.
Superior is currently developing shielded  twisted pair products and the  retail
packaging of certain of its products for on-premise use as well as extensions of
its UTP products, such as patch cords for
 
                                       39
<PAGE>
use  in connecting Superior products within  premises and 25-pair UTP cables for
certain data  transmission  applications. The  Company  expects to  explore  new
product development opportunities to meet the evolving needs of its customers.
 
    In  response to  the evolving  product needs  of its  customers, the Company
intends to spend approximately $2.0 million in fiscal 1997 for the establishment
and operation of a product development  center. The purpose of this center  will
be  to design, develop and test  new telecommunications wire and cable products,
including hybrid coaxial and fiber optic cable and wire products.
 
    In order to compete for contracts,  DNE frequently invests its own funds  on
research  and  development in  order to  determine  the financial  and practical
feasibility of manufacturing the  products. DNE is currently  in the process  of
developing  a new  multiplexer for secure  communications for  a U.S. government
agency.
 
PROPERTIES
 
    The Company conducts  its operations primarily  at the facilities  described
below:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     SQUARE
LOCATION                                       PRODUCTS              FOOTAGE         LEASED/OWNED
- -----------------------------------  -----------------------------  ---------  ------------------------
<S>                                  <C>                            <C>        <C>
Brownwood, Texas...................  Telecommunications               328,000  Leased (expires 2013)
                                     distribution wire and cable
                                     and premise wire
Tarboro, North Carolina............  Telecommunications               295,000  Owned
                                     distribution wire and cable
Winnipeg, Manitoba.................  Telecommunications               190,000  Owned
                                     distribution wire and cable
                                     and premise wire
Elizabethtown, Kentucky............  Telecommunications               163,000  Owned
                                     distribution cable
Wallingford, Connecticut...........  Data communications              155,000  Owned
                                     and electronics
Atlanta, Georgia...................  Corporate offices                 20,000  Leased (expires 2001)
</TABLE>
    
 
    Depending   on  product  mix,  aggregate  capacity  in  the  Company's  four
telecommunications wire and cable facilities ranges from 85 bcf to 92 bcf.  Each
of  these facilities is operating  at utilization rates of  between 90% and 95%.
Facilities in this segment  are suitable and adequate  for the businesses  being
conducted.  Capital  spending  plans  for the  operations  in  this  segment are
primarily designed to keep up with  current technology and to increase  capacity
in existing product lines.
 
   
    The Company's data communications and electronics facility in Wallingford is
adequate  and  suitable for  the businesses  being conducted  and operates  at a
utilization rate  of between  50%  and 60%.  It is  subject  to a  $4.7  million
mortgage.
    
 
    Pursuant  to the Services  Agreement, Alpine will  share approximately 2,000
square feet of the Company's 20,000  square foot Atlanta, Georgia executive  and
administrative  office space. Pursuant to such agreement, the Company will share
a portion of Alpine's 5,375 square feet New York executive office. See  "Certain
Transactions and Relationships--Services Agreement."
 
EMPLOYEES
 
   
    As  of April 28, 1996, the Company employed 1,678 people, including 1,485 in
the  telecommunications  wire   and  cable   business  and  193   in  the   data
communications and electronics business.
    
 
    Approximately   412  persons   employed  at   the  Company's   Winnipeg  and
Elizabethtown plants are represented by unions.
 
    The Company considers relations with its employees to be satisfactory.
 
                                       40
<PAGE>
ENVIRONMENTAL MATTERS
 
    Superior's and  DNE's  manufacturing  operations  are  subject  to  numerous
federal, state and local laws and regulations relating to the storage, handling,
emission,   transportation  and  discharge  of  hazardous  materials  and  waste
products. Compliance with  these laws  has not been  a material  cost to  either
company  and  has  not  had  a material  effect  upon  their  respective capital
expenditures, earnings  or  competitive  position. Violation  of  such  laws  or
regulations,   even  if  inadvertent,  could  have  an  adverse  impact  on  the
operations, business or financial results of the Company.
 
    Operations of  Superior  and DNE  have  resulted in  releases  of  hazardous
substances  at sites currently or formerly  owned or operated by such companies.
Superior and DNE are presently involved in investigatory and remedial activities
at two sites under the oversight of state governmental authorities, as described
below, neither of which  is expected to  have a material  adverse effect on  the
Company.
 
    Soil  and groundwater at Superior's Brownwood, Texas facility has been found
to be contaminated with volatile organic compounds as a result of operations  at
the  facility which management believes occurred prior to Superior's acquisition
of the  facility.  Superior  is in  the  process  of obtaining  approval  for  a
remediation  plan from the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission. Based
upon investigations performed  to date, the  Company believes that  the cost  of
this remediation will not be in excess of $0.5 million. Pursuant to an agreement
between  Superior  and  the former  owner  of  the facility,  Superior  has been
reimbursed for approximately  85% of the  costs incurred to  date in  connection
with  the investigation  and remediation  of this  facility, and  is entitled to
reimbursement of  future  expenses  at  percentages  ranging  from  85%  to  25%
(depending  on the  time at  which such  expenses are  incurred), subject  to an
aggregate expense reimbursement of not less than 75%.
 
    In connection with the sale of a facility in Woburn, Massachusetts  formerly
owned  by  and currently  under lease  to  DNE, low  levels of  volatile organic
compounds were discovered in shallow groundwater. DNE has assumed responsibility
for this contamination pursuant to an indemnity granted to the purchaser of  the
facility,  which indemnity  is in turn  guaranteed by Alpine.  This facility has
been designated  as  a non-priority  site  by the  Massachusetts  Department  of
Environmental  Protection ("MDEP") which granted a  waiver to Alpine allowing it
to proceed with  further investigation  and, if necessary,  remediation, of  the
groundwater contamination without MDEP oversight, subject to certain conditions.
In  accordance with  the waiver, investigation  and remediation  efforts must be
completed by August 1997. Based on the results of a Phase II comprehensive  site
assessment completed during May 1996, it appears that no remedial activities are
warranted  for this site,  but approximately $10,000 may  be required to perform
MDEP filing and response actions.
 
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
 
    There  are  no  threatened  or  pending  litigations  or  proceedings   that
management believes will have a material adverse effect upon the Company.
 
                                       41
<PAGE>
                                   MANAGEMENT
 
   
    Set  forth below is  certain information concerning  the directors, director
nominees and executive  officers of  the Company (all  of whom,  other than  the
director  nominees, were elected to their  respective positions with the Company
upon its  organization in  July  1996) and  certain  officers of  the  Company's
subsidiaries.  Each director nominee has consented to serve as a director of the
Company upon  completion of  this Offering.  There are  no family  relationships
among the directors and executive officers of the Company.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
          NAME               AGE                              TITLE
- ------------------------  ---------  --------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>        <C>
Steven S. Elbaum                 47  Chairman of the Board of Directors, President and Chief
                                      Executive Officer
David S. Aldridge                42  Chief Financial Officer
Justin F. Deedy, Jr.             40  Senior Vice President, President of Superior
Edmond Branger                   62  Vice President
William Gill, Jr.                46  President of DNE
T. Mike McMillan                 47  Senior Vice President of Superior
Harold M. Karp                   39  Senior Vice President - Manufacturing of Superior
Tracye C. Gilleland              37  Vice President - Finance of Superior
Terry A. Richards                37  Vice President - Marketing and Sales of Superior
Charles R. Rudd, Jr.             52  Vice President - International of Superior
Daniel P. Vivone                 47  Vice President - Finance and Controller of DNE
Eugene P. Connell                58  Director Nominee
Robert J. Levenson               55  Director Nominee
Bragi F. Schut                   55  Director
Charles Y.C. Tse                 69  Director Nominee
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    STEVEN  S. ELBAUM has been Chairman of the Board of Directors, President and
Chief Executive Officer of  the Company since  July 1996. He  has also been  the
Chairman  of the Board of Directors and  Chief Executive Officer of Alpine since
1984. He is  also a  director of  Interim Services,  Inc., one  of the  nation's
largest  providers of value-added staffing  and health care services, PolyVision
Corporation, an information display company, and Humascan, Inc., a developer  of
medical testing devices.
    
 
    DAVID S. ALDRIDGE has been Chief Financial Officer of the Company since July
1996. He has also been the Chief Financial Officer of Alpine since November 1993
and  was Chief Financial Officer of Superior  from 1985 until its acquisition by
Alpine in November 1993. The  services of Mr. Aldridge  will be provided to  the
Company  by Alpine pursuant to the Services Agreement. See "Relationship between
the Company and Alpine."
 
    JUSTIN F. DEEDY,  JR. has been  Senior Vice President  of the Company  since
July  1996 and the President of Superior  since July 1993. He was Vice President
of Superior from  April 1991 through  July 1993 and  Vice President and  General
Manager  of  Wilcom Products,  Inc.,  formerly a  subsidiary  of Superior  and a
manufacturer of testing equipment for  copper wire and fiber optic  transmission
equipment, from May 1989 through March 1991.
    EDMOND  BRANGER  has been  Vice President  of the  Company since  July 1996.
During the prior five years, he was  employed by Alpine and its affiliates in  a
variety  of capacities, most recently as Vice President-Planning. He has over 25
years  of  experience  in  the  information  processing  and  telecommunications
industries.
 
    WILLIAM  GILL, JR. has been President of DNE since May 1995. He held various
positions at DNE for more than five years prior thereto.
 
    T. MIKE MCMILLAN has been Senior Vice President of Superior since July 1993.
He joined  Superior in  1969 and  since then  has held  numerous positions  with
Superior, including General Manager of its Brownwood, Texas facility.
 
                                       42
<PAGE>
    HAROLD  M.  KARP has  been Senior  Vice President-Manufacturing  of Superior
since the Alcatel acquisition in May 1995. He worked for the Alcatel Business as
Vice President and General Manager of  Copper Cable and Wire Products from  1994
to  1995 and  as Director-Business  Planning and  Export/Non-Contract Sales from
1991 to 1994.
 
    TRACYE C. GILLELAND has been  Vice President-Finance of Superior since  July
1993. She was Superior's Corporate Controller for eight years prior to that.
 
    TERRY  A. RICHARDS has  been Vice President-Marketing  and Sales of Superior
since 1993. Prior  thereto, he was  a product manager  of Wilcom Products,  Inc.
from 1990 to 1993.
 
    CHARLES R. RUDD, JR. has been Vice President-International of Superior since
December  1995. He worked for the  telecommunications products division of Essex
Group, Inc., a producer  of electrical wire, cable  and insulation products,  as
Vice  President-International  Sales  and Marketing  from  1994 to  1995  and as
Director-International Business Operations from 1987 to 1994.
    DANIEL P. VIVONE has been Vice President-Finance and Controller of DNE since
September 1995. He was DNE's Director of Operations from 1988 to September 1995.
 
   
    EUGENE P. CONNELL is Chairman of Lynch Interactive Corporation, an owner and
operator of independent telephone companies  throughout the United States.  From
January   1996  to  June  1996,  he  served  as  Vice  President-Global  Markets
Integration of NYNEX Corporation. From October  1992 to January 1996, he  served
as  President, Chief Executive Officer and Director of NYNEX CableComms Group, a
provider of  telecommunications  services and  cable  television in  the  United
Kingdom.  From May 1989 to October 1992,  he was Vice President of Marketing and
Technology of New York Telephone Company, a subsidiary of NYNEX Corporation. Mr.
Connell held numerous other positions with  New York Telephone Company over  the
prior 32 years.
    
 
   
    ROBERT  J. LEVENSON has been  an Executive Vice President  and a Director of
First Data Corp.,  a provider  of information processing  and related  services,
since  May  1993. Mr.  Levenson  formerly served  as  the Senior  Executive Vice
President, Chief Operating Officer, member of the Office of the President and  a
director  of  Medco  Containment  Services, Inc.,  a  provider  of  managed care
prescription benefits (now a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc.), from October 1990
through December 1992. From  1985 until October 1990,  Mr. Levenson was a  Group
President  and  a Director  of Automatic  Data Processing,  Inc., a  provider of
computerized transaction processing. Mr. Levenson  also serves as a director  of
Broadway and Seymour, Inc., a software company.
    
 
    BRAGI  F. SCHUT has been Executive Vice President of Alpine since 1986 and a
director of Alpine since 1983. He is also a director of PolyVision Corporation.
 
   
    CHARLES Y.C. TSE is the former Vice-Chairman and President of  international
operations  of  Warner  Lambert  Company, a  major  pharmaceutical  and consumer
products company.  Mr. Tse  is  a director  of  Foster Wheeler  Corporation  and
Transcell  Technologies, Inc. Mr. Tse served as President of The Cancer Research
Institute, Inc. from 1991 to 1992.
    
 
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
    The Company's Board  of Directors  currently consists of  two persons.  Upon
completion  of this Offering, the  Company will expand the  size of the Board of
Directors to six persons, of which a majority will not be officers or  employees
of  the Company  and will not  be affiliates  of Alpine. Alpine  has advised the
Company that it will use its best efforts to ensure that following completion of
this Offering a majority of the members of the Company's Board of Directors will
not be officers or employees of the Company or affiliates of Alpine.
 
    Directors who are employees of the Company will receive no compensation,  as
such,  for service as members of the  Board or its committees. Directors who are
not employees of the Company will  receive annual compensation of $15,000,  plus
$1,000  for each meeting of the Board of Directors or any committee of the Board
of Directors attended by them  (other than with respect  to any meetings of  any
committee  on a day  on which the Board  of Directors also  meets) and will also
participate in the Company's 1996 Non-Employee
 
                                       43
<PAGE>
Directors' Stock Option Plan. In addition, all directors will be reimbursed  for
expenses  incurred in connection with attendance at meetings. See "Management --
Executive Compensation -- 1996 Non-Employee Directors' Stock Option Plan."
 
   
    Each director  holds office  until  the next  succeeding annual  meeting  of
stockholders  and  until  his successor  has  been elected  and  qualified. Each
officer of the Company holds  office for such term as  may be prescribed by  the
Board of Directors from time to time.
    
 
COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
    As  soon as practicable after the completion  of this Offering, the Board of
Directors will establish an Audit Committee and a Compensation Committee.
 
    The functions of  the Audit  Committee, which  will be  comprised solely  of
directors  who are not affiliated with Alpine,  will be to recommend annually to
the Board  of Directors  the  appointment of  the  independent auditors  of  the
Company,  discuss and  review in advance  the scope  and the fees  of the annual
audit and review the results thereof  with the independent auditors, review  and
approve  non-audit services of the  independent auditors, review compliance with
existing major  accounting  and financial  reporting  policies of  the  Company,
review  the adequacy  of the  financial organization  of the  Company and review
management's procedures and policies relating  to the adequacy of the  Company's
internal  accounting controls  and compliance  with applicable  laws relating to
accounting practices.  The Audit  Committee  will also  be responsible  for  the
review  and approval  of all future  agreements between the  Company and Alpine,
including amendments  to  the  Services  Agreement.  The  Audit  Committee  will
establish policies to ensure that the Company's purchase of services from Alpine
are commercially reasonable.
 
    The  functions  of  the  Compensation Committee  will  be  to  establish the
Company's executive compensation program in  order to attract, retain,  motivate
and  reward qualified persons serving as  executive officers of the Company. The
Compensation Committee  will  make  determinations  with  respect  to  executive
salaries,  bonuses and compensation of each of the Company's executive officers,
except to  the  extent that  any  of the  foregoing  are specified  in  existing
employment  agreements  between the  Company  and such  executive  officers. The
Compensation Committee will also administer the Company's stock option and other
benefit plans.  It  is  anticipated  that  the  Company's  overall  compensation
strategy  and specific compensation  plans will tie a  significant portion of an
executive's  compensation  to  the   Company's  success  in  meeting   specified
performance  goals and, through the grant of stock options and other stock-based
awards, to appreciation in the price of the Common Stock.
 
COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION
    Compensation policies  and decisions,  including those  relating to  salary,
bonuses  and benefits of executive officers, have  been set or made by the Board
of Directors since the formation of the Company.
 
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
    GENERAL
    Because the  Company is  newly-formed, there  was no  compensation paid  to,
deferred  or accrued for the benefit of the Company's Chief Executive Officer or
any other executive officer  by the Company during  the fiscal year ended  April
28,  1996. Similarly, no such individual received any other annual compensation,
restricted  stock  awards,  stock   appreciation  rights,  long-term   incentive
performance  payouts or other compensation from  the Company for the fiscal year
ended April 28, 1996.
 
    EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS
 
    Prior to the  completion of this  Offering, the Company  will enter into  an
agreement with Steven S. Elbaum for his employment by the Company as Chairman of
the  Board of  Directors, President and  Chief Executive  Officer. The agreement
will have an indefinite term and provide for an annual base salary of  $175,000,
as  adjusted annually for increases  in the Consumer Price  Index, and an annual
bonus payable at the discretion of the  Board of Directors. It is expected  that
the  agreement will contain other customary terms and provisions with respect to
termination and other matters.
 
                                       44
<PAGE>
    Superior has entered into an employment agreement with Mr. Deedy (the "Deedy
Agreement") providing for his employment as  President of Superior at an  annual
base  salary of  $181,000, as  adjusted annually  for increases  in the Consumer
Price Index, plus an annual performance-based bonus. The Deedy Agreement may  be
terminated  by  either party  on  notice, for  cause  by Superior  and  upon the
occurrence of  certain  other  events.  The  Deedy  Agreement  contains  certain
provisions  relating  to  compensation  upon  his  termination.  Effective  upon
completion of this Offering, the Company will assume the Deedy Agreement.
 
   
    During Superior's fiscal  year ended April  28, 1996, Mr.  Deedy received  a
salary  of $164,035, a  bonus of $80,000  and $11,584 of  other compensation. In
addition, Mr. Deedy  was granted  options to  purchase 95,700  shares of  Alpine
common stock at an exercise price equal to or in excess of the fair market value
at  the time of grant. As of April  28, 1996, Mr. Deedy held options to purchase
63,800 shares of Alpine common stock at  an exercise price of $5.125 per  share,
which  options  expire May  1, 2005,  options  to purchase  24,000 shares  at an
exercise price of $3.75  per share and  options to purchase  7,900 shares at  an
exercise price of $5.625 per share, which options expire May 1, 2006, options to
purchase  30,503 shares at an  exercise price of $7.85  per share, which options
expire November 10, 2003, and options  to purchase 13,525 shares at an  exercise
price  of  $3.25 per  share,  which options  expire  May 17,  1998.  The options
generally vest over a three-year period. During fiscal 1996, Mr. Deedy exercised
options for 14,780 shares  and realized a  value of $33,240.  The values of  Mr.
Deedy's  remaining  exercisable  and  unexercisable  options  were  $16,906  and
$23,925, respectively,  as of  April 28,  1996.  Mr. Deedy  and Mr.  Elbaum  are
referred  to hereinafter as the "Named Executive Officers." Other than Mr. Deedy
no (i) executive offier of the Company  or (ii) executive officer of any of  its
subsidiaries  who performed policy making functions  for the Company received in
excess of $100,000 in compensation in fiscal 1996.
    
 
    COMPENSATION UNDER PLANS
 
    1996 EMPLOYEE  STOCK  INCENTIVE PLAN.    Prior  to the  completion  of  this
Offering,  the Company  will adopt the  1996 Employee Stock  Incentive Plan (the
"Plan") for  the benefit  of certain  officers and  other key  employees of  the
Company  and its subsidiaries. The purpose of  the Plan is to attract and retain
executives and other key employees who  are important to the success and  growth
of  the Company  and to  create a long-term  mutuality of  interest between such
persons and the stockholders of the Company.
 
    Under the Plan, options to purchase an aggregate of not more than  1,000,000
shares of Common Stock (subject to certain adjustments) may be granted from time
to  time  to  key  employees  and  officers  of,  and  advisors  and independent
consultants to, the Company  or its subsidiaries, other  than directors who  are
neither  officers nor employees of the Company or its affiliates. In general, if
options are for any  reason cancelled, or expire  or terminate unexercised,  the
shares covered by such options will again be available for the grant of options.
No options may be granted after 10 years from the effective date of the Plan. It
is anticipated that options held by 10 key employees to purchase an aggregate of
575,000  shares of Common Stock at an exercise price equal to the initial public
offering price will  be outstanding on  the closing date  of this Offering.  The
Company  intends  to grant  to  Messrs. Elbaum,  Deedy  and Aldridge  options to
purchase 250,000, 100,000 and 50,000  shares of Common Stock, respectively,  and
to  grant options to purchase  25,000 shares of Common  Stock to each of Messrs.
Branger, Gill, McMillan, Karp Richards and Rudd and Ms. Gilleland.
 
    The Plan will provide for the  grant of incentive stock options ("ISOs")  to
employees  and nonqualified stock  options ("NQSOs") to  employees, advisors and
independent consultants. In the  case of ISOs, the  exercise price of an  option
may not be less than 100% of the fair market value of a share of Common Stock at
the  time of grant (or 110% of such  fair market value if the optionee owns more
than 10% of the shares of Common Stock outstanding at the time of grant). In the
case of NQSOs, the exercise price of an option may not be less than 100% of  the
fair  market value  of a  share of  Common Stock  at the  time of  grant. Unless
 
                                       45
<PAGE>
otherwise provided in the applicable  option agreement, all options granted  and
not  previously exercised will become vested  and immediately exercisable upon a
change in control of the Company (as defined in the Plan).
 
    The  Plan  will  be  administered  and  interpreted  by  a  committee   (the
"Committee")  appointed by the Company's Board of Directors consisting of two or
more members of the Company's Board of Directors, each of whom is intended to be
a "disinterested person" as provided by Rule 16b-3 under the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (to the extent then required). The Committee generally is  empowered
to  interpret  the  Plan,  prescribe  rules  and  regulations  relating thereto,
determine the terms of the option agreements, amend them (in certain cases  only
with the consent of the optionee), determine the individuals to whom options are
to  be granted, determine  the number of  shares subject to  each option and the
exercise price thereto, and take all actions in connection with the Plan and the
options thereunder as the Committee, in its sole discretion, deems necessary  or
desirable.  Options will be exercisable for  a term determined by the Committee.
The Committee may modify, suspend or terminate the Plan; provided, however, that
certain material  modifications  affecting the  Plan  must be  approved  by  the
Company's  stockholders, and any change in the Plan that may adversely affect an
optionee's rights under an option previously granted under the Plan requires the
consent of the optionee.
 
    1996 NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS' STOCK OPTION PLAN.  Prior to the completion  of
this  Offering, the  Company will adopt  the 1996  Non-Employee Directors' Stock
Option Plan (the  "Directors' Plan"),  which will  provide for  the granting  of
NQSOs  to purchase shares of Common Stock to each director of the Company who is
not an employee  or officer of  the Company  or a subsidiary  thereof (each,  an
"Eligible  Director").  The  Directors'  Plan is  designed  to  provide Eligible
Directors with an opportunity to invest in the Company, thereby maintaining  and
strengthening  their  desire  to remain  with  or  join the  Company's  Board of
Directors and stimulating their efforts on the Company's behalf.
 
    The Directors'  Plan authorizes  the issuance  of up  to 250,000  shares  of
Common Stock, subject to adjustments in certain circumstances. No options may be
granted after 10 years from the effective date of the Directors' Plan.
 
    Eligible  Directors  may  receive  options  under  the  Directors'  Plan  in
accordance with  the  terms thereof.  Each  Eligible Director  will  receive  an
initial  grant of  an option  to purchase  15,000 shares  of Common  Stock at an
exercise price equal to the  per share price paid  for shares purchased in  this
Offering.  Each year thereafter, other than with respect to the year in which an
Eligible Director receives an initial grant of  options, as of the first day  of
the  month following the annual meeting  of stockholders, each Eligible Director
will receive a nonqualified option to  purchase 7,500 shares of Common Stock  at
on  exercise price equal to the fair market  value of such shares at the time of
grant.
 
    The options to  purchase shares of  Common Stock described  above will  vest
evenly  in three equal annual installments.  Options may be exercised only after
the Eligible Director has served as a  director of the Company for at least  one
year.  In addition, options  granted and not  previously exercisable will become
vested and  fully exercisable  immediately upon  a "change  in control"  of  the
Company (as defined in the Directors' Plan).
 
    Each option will expire upon the tenth anniversary of the date of grant.
 
    If an Eligible Director terminates his service on the Board of Directors for
any  reason, including  disability, death, resignation  or failure  to stand for
reelection, any exercisable option which has  not expired may be exercised  with
respect  to the number of  shares of Common Stock  which were exercisable on the
date the Eligible Director terminated his  service with the Company at any  time
during  the earlier of (i) the one-year  period following such date and (ii) the
remaining term  of the  option.  Any unexpired  but unexercisable  option  shall
terminate  and  become  null and  void  as  of the  date  the  Eligible Director
terminates his service with the Company.
 
                                       46
<PAGE>
    The Directors' Plan  will be administered  by the Board  of Directors (or  a
duly appointed committee of the Board) which has the full and final authority to
interpret  the Directors' Plan and to adopt and amend such rules and regulations
for the administration of the Directors'  Plan as the Board may deem  desirable.
In  addition, the  Board of Directors  has the  right to amend  or terminate the
Directors' Plan in certain circumstances;  provided, however, that unless  first
duly  approved  by the  holders of  Common  Stock entitled  to vote  thereon, no
amendment or change  may be made  in the  Directors' Plan to:  (i) increase  the
number  of shares available for grant under the Directors' Plan; (ii) reduce the
minimum exercise price at  which any option may  be exercised; (iii) change  the
requirements as to eligibility for participation under the Directors' Plan; (iv)
change  the date on  which such options are  to be granted;  or (v) increase the
benefits accruing to participants under the Directors' Plan.
 
                     CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS AND RELATIONSHIPS
 
SERVICES AGREEMENT
 
   
    Pursuant to the Services Agreement,  Alpine will provide, during the  period
commencing with the completion of this Offering, through April 30, 1998, certain
services  to the Company, including, among  other things, assistance with public
company reporting,  certain  financial reporting  functions,  legal  compliance,
banking,  risk management and operational and strategic matters. Pursuant to the
Services Agreement, David  S. Aldridge, Alpine's  Chief Financial Officer,  will
serve  as the  Company's Chief  Financial Officer.  The Services  Agreement will
provide for the payment by the Company  to Alpine of $0.9 million per year  plus
reimbursement  of  any  third party  expenses  incurred by  Alpine.  The Company
believes that  $0.9 million  represents a  reasonable estimate  of the  cost  of
obtaining  the services described  above. The Services  Agreement will expire on
April 30, 1998.
    
 
    Under the Services Agreement, Alpine  will share approximately 2,000  square
feet of the Company's Atlanta office space, and the Company will share a portion
of Alpine's New York office space.
 
    The  parties to  the Service Agreement  have agreed to  indemnify each other
against liability arising out of the  willful misconduct or gross negligence  of
the indemnifying party.
 
   
    The  terms upon which these services will  be provided to and by the Company
and the compensation therefor were not determined in arms' length  negotiations.
As  soon  as practicable  after the  completion  of the  Offering, the  Board of
Directors of the Company will establish an Audit Committee, comprised solely  of
directors  who are not affiliated with Alpine, which will review and approve all
future agreements  between Alpine  and  the Company  and establish  policies  to
ensure  that the  Company's purchases of  services from  Alpine are commercially
reasonable.
    
 
   
PREFERRED STOCK EXCHANGE AGREEMENT
    
 
   
    Upon the consummation  of the  Reorganization, the Company  and Alpine  will
enter  into  an agreement  (the "Preferred  Stock Exchange  Agreement") granting
Alpine the right to exchange the  Superior Preferred Stock that Alpine will  own
for  preferred stock of the Company  having identical terms. ("TeleCom Preferred
Stock"). In addition, pursuant to the Preferred Stock Exchange Agreement, Alpine
may demand registration under the Securities Act of the TeleCom Preferred  Stock
at any time commencing one year after the completion of this Offering.
    
 
ALPINE FINANCING ARRANGEMENTS
 
   
    On July 21, 1995, Alpine completed the placement of $153.0 million of 12.25%
Senior  Secured Notes  (the "Alpine  Notes") and  entered into  an $85.0 million
revolving credit facility (the "Alpine  Credit Facility"). The Alpine Notes  and
the  Alpine  Credit  Facility  were guaranteed  by  Superior  and  Adience, Inc.
("Adience"), another subsidiary of Alpine. The Alpine Notes were also secured by
a pledge of the capital stock of Superior and Adience.
    
 
                                       47
<PAGE>
   
    Prior to or concurrently with the completion of this Offering, an  amendment
to  the indenture relating to the Alpine Notes will become effective pursuant to
which the aforementioned  pledge will  be released and  the Superior  guarantees
terminated.  In  connection  with  the  completion  of  this  Offering  and  the
Reorganization and related transactions, Alpine  will pledge to the trustee  for
the  benefit  of the  holders  of the  Alpine  Notes all  of  its shares  of the
Company's Common Stock and the  Superior Preferred Stock. In addition,  Alpine's
financing  arrangements with Superior  and DNE will  be terminated in connection
with the Bank  Credit Facility. See  Notes 8  and 16 to  the combined  financial
statements of Superior and DNE.
    
 
   
INTERCOMPANY DEBT
    
 
   
    The  intercompany debt  being repaid with  the initial  borrowings under the
Bank Credit Facility arose in connection with the placement of the Alpine  Notes
and the closing of the Alpine Credit Facility. The intercompany debt consists of
the following:
    
 
   
           (1) $88.9  million payable  by Superior  to Alpine  under a  note due
               2003.  The  note  is  subject  to  certain  mandatory  prepayment
       requirements. Interest is payable semi-annually at an annual rate of 14%.
    
 
   
           (2) $24.3  million  payable  by  Superior  and  DNE  to  Alpine under
               revolving credit facilities due 2000. Interest is payable monthly
       at prime  rate plus  0.375% or  LIBOR plus  2.25%. Borrowings  under  the
       revolving credit facility are subject to a rate borrowing base determined
       as  a  percentage  of  eligible accounts  receivable  and  inventory. The
       revolving credit facility is secured  by a pledge of Superior's  accounts
       receivable and inventory.
    
 
   
           (3) $2.2  million payable  by DNE  to Alpine  under a  note due 2003.
               Interest is payable semi-annually at an annual rate of 14%.
    
 
   
           (4) $2.0 million payable  by Superior  Cable Corporation,  Superior's
               Canadian  subsidiary, to  Adience, Inc., a  subsidiary of Alpine,
       under a  note due  on demand.  Interest is  payable semi-annually  at  an
       annual rate of 8%.
    
 
   
           (5) $14.5 million payable by Alpine to Superior. This indebtedness is
               a  non-interest  bearing  receivable which  arose  primarily from
       funds  advanced  by  Superior  in  connection  with  Alpine's  1995  debt
       restructuring.
    
 
   
TAX MATTERS
    
 
    Superior  and  DNE  currently  are included  in  the  consolidated  group of
domestic corporations of which  Alpine is the common  parent for federal  income
tax  and certain other purposes. Upon consummation of this Offering, the Company
will cease  to be  included in  the consolidated  group for  federal income  tax
purposes  of which Alpine is  the common parent. Alpine  has agreed to indemnify
the Company for any consolidated federal income tax liability (and certain state
and local tax  liabilities), including  any amounts determined  to be  due as  a
result  of redeterminations of the tax liability of Alpine arising from an audit
or otherwise, and certain other liabilities of Alpine or any of its subsidiaries
that the Company is actually  required to pay, but only  to the extent, if  any,
that  such  liability  exceeds  the amount  of  such  liability  attributable to
Superior, DNE or the Company. The value of this indemnity is dependent upon  the
financial  condition of Alpine. Neither the Company nor any of its affiliates is
aware of  any potential  federal income  tax  liability of  the Company  or  its
subsidiaries  (other than the Company's own tax liability) for which the Company
would be liable.
 
   
    Alpine, the Company  and its subsidiaries  have agreed to  enter into a  tax
sharing  agreement (the "Tax Sharing Agreement")  pursuant to which, in general,
the consolidated federal income tax liability  (and certain state and local  tax
liabilities)   will  be  allocated  and  assessed   among  each  member  of  the
consolidated group based on the ratio that each member's tax liability (computed
as though that member filed  a separate income tax return)  bears to the sum  of
the  separate return tax  liabilities of all members.  The Tax Sharing Agreement
also provides for the reimbursement to  a member for the utilization of  losses,
credits or
    
 
                                       48
<PAGE>
   
deductions  by other  members of the  group. The Tax  Sharing Agreement provides
that,  in  general,  any   consolidated  tax  liability   arising  out  of   the
Reorganization  and  the  Offering and  related  transactions will  be  the sole
responsibility of Alpine.
    
 
                             PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDERS
 
CAPITAL STOCK OF THE COMPANY
 
    The following table and  notes set forth information  as of August 1,  1996,
and  as adjusted to reflect  sale of the shares  of Common Stock offered hereby,
with respect to the voting securities  of the Company beneficially owned by  (i)
each  person known by the Company to be  the beneficial owner of more than 5% of
the shares of Common  Stock, (ii) each director  individually, (iii) each  Named
Executive Officer individually, and (iv) all executive officers and directors as
a group. The address for Alpine is 1790 Broadway, New York, New York 10019.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                   AMOUNT AND NATURE OF                   AMOUNT AND NATURE OF
                                   BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP                   BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP
                                      PRIOR TO THIS        PERCENT OF          AFTER THIS        PERCENT OF COMMON
NAME OF BENEFICIAL OWNER                 OFFERING         COMMON STOCK        OFFERING (1)           STOCK (1)
- ---------------------------------  --------------------  ---------------  --------------------  -------------------
<S>                                <C>                   <C>              <C>                   <C>
Alpine...........................         6,024,048             100.0%           6,024,048                50.1%
Steven S. Elbaum (2).............         6,024,048             100.0            6,024,048                50.1
Justin F. Deedy, Jr..............           --                 --                  --                   --
Bragi F. Schut...................           --                 --                  --                   --
Directors and officers as a group
 (3 individuals) (2).............         6,024,048             100.0            6,024,048                50.1
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
(1) Assumes no exercise of the Underwriters' over-allotment option.
 
(2) Includes 6,024,048 shares of Common Stock owned by Alpine. Mr. Elbaum may be
    deemed  to be the beneficial owner of  such shares by virtue of his position
    as Chairman  of the  Board and  Chief Executive  Officer of  Alpine and  his
    beneficial  ownership of 9.6% of the  issued and outstanding common stock of
    Alpine.
 
                          DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK
 
    The following  brief description  of the  Company's capital  stock does  not
purport to be complete and is subject in all respects to applicable Delaware law
and  to the provisions of the Company's Certificate of Incorporation and Bylaws,
copies of which will be filed  with the Securities and Exchange Commission  (the
"Commission").
 
    The authorized capital stock of the Company consists of 25,000,000 shares of
Common Stock, $.01 par value per share, and 1,000,000 shares of Preferred Stock,
$.01  par value  per share  (the "Preferred  Stock"). Immediately  following the
consummation of  this Offering,  the  Reorganization and  related  transactions,
there will be 12,024,048 shares of Common Stock and no shares of Preferred Stock
outstanding.  The  outstanding shares  of Common  Stock are,  and the  shares of
Common Stock to be outstanding upon completion of this Offering will be, validly
issued, fully paid and non-assessable.
 
COMMON STOCK
 
    Each holder of Common Stock is entitled  to one vote per share on any  issue
requiring  a vote at any meeting. Holders of  shares of Common Stock do not have
cumulative voting rights  in the  election of  directors. All  shares of  Common
Stock  are non-assessable and, subject to the rights of holders of any series of
Preferred Stock having a preference over the Common Stock, are entitled to share
equally in such dividends as the Board  of Directors of the Company may  declare
on the Common Stock from sources legally available therefor. The Company intends
to  retain any future earnings  for use in its  business and does not anticipate
paying any cash  dividends on the  Common Stock in  the foreseeable future.  See
"Dividend Policy."
 
                                       49
<PAGE>
Upon  any liquidation, dissolution or winding up  of the Company, subject to the
prior liquidation rights of  the holders of any  series of Preferred Stock,  the
net  assets  of  the  Company  remaining  after  payment  of  creditors  will be
distributed to the  holders of Common  Stock in proportion  to their  interests.
Holders  of  Common  Stock  do  not  have  preemptive  rights  to  subscribe for
additional shares of Common Stock if  additional shares are offered for sale  by
the Company.
 
PREFERRED STOCK
 
   
    The  Board  of  Directors  of  the  Company  is  authorized  without further
stockholder action  to provide  for the  issuance from  time to  time of  up  to
1,000,000 shares of Preferred Stock, in one or more classes or series, with such
powers, designations, preferences and relative, participating, optional or other
special rights, qualifications, limitations or restrictions as will be set forth
in  the resolutions adopted by  the Board of Directors  of the Company providing
for the issue  of such  classes or  series of  Preferred Stock.  The holders  of
Preferred Stock will have no preemptive rights (unless otherwise provided in the
applicable  certificate  of  designation)  and will  not  be  subject  to future
assessments by the Company. Such Preferred Stock may have voting or other rights
which could  adversely affect  the rights  of holders  of the  Common Stock.  In
addition,  the  issuance  of  Preferred Stock,  while  providing  flexibility in
connection with possible acquisitions and other corporate purposes, could, under
certain circumstances, make it more difficult for a third party to gain  control
of  the Company, discourage bids for the Common Stock at a premium, or otherwise
adversely affect the market price of the Common Stock. Upon the consummation  of
the  Reorganization, the Company and Alpine  will enter into the Preferred Stock
Exchange Agreement granting Alpine the right to exchange the Superior  Preferred
Stock that Alpine will own for TeleCom Preferred Stock. In addition, pursuant to
the Preferred Stock Exchange Agreement, Alpine may demand registration under the
Securities  Act of the TeleCom  Preferred Stock at any  time commencing one year
after the completion of this Offering.
    
 
POSSIBLE ANTI-TAKEOVER EFFECT OF CERTAIN CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION AND BYLAW
PROVISIONS
 
    The Company's  Certificate  of  Incorporation  and  Bylaws  contain  several
provisions  that may be deemed  to have the effect  of making more difficult the
acquisition of control of the Company by  means of a hostile tender offer,  open
market purchases, a proxy contest or otherwise.
 
    The  provisions  of the  Company's Certificate  of Incorporation  and Bylaws
discussed below are  designed to help  ensure that holders  of Common Stock  are
treated  fairly and equally  in a multi-step acquisition.  In addition, they are
intended to  encourage persons  seeking to  acquire control  of the  Company  to
initiate   such  an  acquisition  through  arms'-length  negotiations  with  the
Company's Board of  Directors. The  Company's Certificate  of Incorporation  and
Bylaws  may have the effect  of discouraging a third  party from making a tender
offer or otherwise attempting to obtain control of the Company, even though such
an attempt might be economically beneficial to the Company and its stockholders.
In addition, because the Company's  Certificate of Incorporation and Bylaws  are
designed  to discourage the accumulation of large blocks of the voting shares of
the Company by purchasers whose objective  it is to have such stock  repurchased
by  the  Company at  a premium,  the anti-takeover  provisions of  the Company's
Certificate of Incorporation and  Bylaws could tend to  reduce the price of  the
voting  shares of the  Company caused by such  accumulations. In addition, these
provisions may also have the effect of precluding a contest for the election  of
directors.
 
    STOCKHOLDER  MEETINGS.  Subject  only to the rights  of holders of Preferred
Stock, if any, only a majority of  the Company's Board of Directors (other  than
those  directors affiliated with or elected  by an Interested Person, as defined
below), the Chairman  of the  Board, the Vice  Chairman or  the Chief  Executive
Officer  of the  Company will be  able to call  an annual or  special meeting of
stockholders. In addition,  subject only to  the rights of  Preferred Stock,  if
any, stockholders may not take any action by written consent.
 
    RESTRICTIONS ON CERTAIN BUSINESS COMBINATIONS.  The Company's Certificate of
Incorporation  provides that certain business  combinations, such as mergers and
stock and asset sales, with an "Interested Person" (typically a beneficial owner
of more  than 15%  of the  outstanding voting  shares of  the Company's  capital
stock,  excluding certain persons, including Messrs. Elbaum and Schut (directors
of the Company), their lineal descendants, affiliates and associates, or  trusts
for    their   benefit),   be   approved   by    (i)   the   holders   of   two-
 
                                       50
<PAGE>
thirds or more of the voting power of the then outstanding voting shares, voting
together as a single class, and (ii) at least a majority of the voting power  of
the  then outstanding  voting shares,  voting as a  single class,  which are not
owned beneficially, directly or indirectly, by the Interested Person, unless the
transaction is approved by a majority of certain directors or meets certain fair
price provisions.
 
    REQUIREMENTS  FOR  ADVANCE  NOTIFICATION   OF  STOCKHOLDER  NOMINATION   AND
PROPOSALS.    The Company's  Certificate of  Incorporation and  Bylaws establish
advance  notice  procedures  with  regard  to  stockholder  proposals  and   the
nomination,  other than by  or at the direction  of the Board  of Directors or a
committee thereof, of candidates for election as directors.
 
    VOTE REQUIRED  TO  AMEND  OR  REPEAL CERTAIN  PROVISIONS  OF  THE  COMPANY'S
CERTIFICATE   OF  INCORPORATION  AND  BYLAWS.    The  Company's  Certificate  of
Incorporation establishes certain supermajority voting requirements to amend  or
repeal  certain  provisions of  the  Company's Certificate  of  Incorporation or
Bylaws.
 
    DIRECTOR'S LIABILITY.  The  Company's Certificate of Incorporation  provides
that to the fullest extent permitted by the GCL, a director of the Company shall
not be liable to the Company or its stockholders for monetary damages for breach
of  fiduciary duty  as a  director. Under current  Delaware law,  liability of a
director may not be limited (i) for any breach of the director's duty of loyalty
to the Company or its stockholders, (ii) for acts or omissions not in good faith
or that involve intentional misconduct or  a knowing violation of law, (iii)  in
respect   of  certain  unlawful  dividend   payments  or  stock  redemptions  or
repurchases, and (iv)  for any transaction  from which the  director derives  an
improper  personal  benefit.  The  effect of  this  provision  of  the Company's
Certificate of Incorporation is to eliminate  the rights of the Company and  its
stockholders  (through stockholders' derivative suits  on behalf of the Company)
to recover monetary damages against a director for breach of the fiduciary  duty
of  care as a  director (including breaches resulting  from negligent or grossly
negligent behavior) except in  the situations described  in clauses (i)  through
(iv) above. This provision does not limit or eliminate the rights of the Company
or  any  stockholder  to  seek  non-monetary relief  such  as  an  injunction or
rescission in the event of a breach  of a director's duty of care. In  addition,
the  Company's  Certificate of  Incorporation  provides that  the  Company shall
indemnify its directors and executive  officers to the fullest extent  permitted
by Delaware law.
 
    SECTION  203 OF THE GCL.  The  Company as a Delaware corporation, is subject
to Section  203 of  the GCL.  In general,  Section 203  prevents an  "interested
stockholder"  (defined  as  a person  who  is the  owner  of  15% or  more  of a
corporation's  voting  stock,  or  who,  as  an  affiliate  or  associate  of  a
corporation,  was the owner  of 15% or  more of that  corporation's voting stock
within the prior  three years)  from engaging  in a  "business combination"  (as
defined under the GCL) with a Delaware corporation for three years following the
date such person became an interested stockholder unless: (i) before such person
became  an  interested stockholder  the board  of  directors of  the corporation
approved the transaction  or the  business combination in  which the  interested
stockholder  became  an interested  stockholder; (ii)  upon consummation  of the
transaction that resulted in the  interested stockholder becoming an  interested
stockholder,  the interested stockholder owned at  least 85% of the voting stock
of the corporation outstanding at the time the transaction commenced  (excluding
shares  owned by persons who are both  officers and directors of the corporation
and shares held  by certain  employee stock  ownership plans  in which  employee
participants  do not have  the right to  determine confidentially whether shares
held subject to the  plan will be  tendered in a tender  or exchange offer);  or
(iii)  following  the  transaction in  which  such person  became  an interested
stockholder, the business combination is approved  by the board of directors  of
the  corporation and authorized at a  meeting of stockholders by the affirmative
vote of the holders of  at least two-thirds of  the outstanding voting stock  of
the   corporation  not  owned  by  the  "interested  stockholder."  A  "business
combination"  generally  includes  mergers,  stock  or  asset  sales  and  other
transactions resulting in a financial benefit to the "interested stockholders."
 
CERTAIN EFFECTS OF AUTHORIZED BUT UNISSUED STOCK
 
    Upon   consummation  of  this  Offering,   the  Reorganization  and  related
transactions, the Company's authorized but  unissued capital stock will  consist
of 12,975,952 shares of Common Stock (12,075,952 shares
 
                                       51
<PAGE>
if  the Underwriters' over-allotment option is  exercised in full) and 1,000,000
shares of Preferred Stock. All of  the foregoing authorized but unissued  shares
of  capital  stock will  be available  for  future issuance  without stockholder
approval. These additional  shares may be  utilized for a  variety of  corporate
purposes,  including  issuance  pursuant  to employee  stock  options  and other
employee plans,  director stock  options and  future public  offerings to  raise
additional capital or to facilitate corporate acquisitions.
 
    The  Company does not presently have any plans to issue additional shares of
Common Stock other than shares of Common Stock which may be issued upon exercise
or options which  may be granted  in the  future to the  Company's Directors  or
employees.
 
TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISTRAR
 
    The transfer agent and registrar for the Common Stock will be American Stock
Transfer and Trust Company.
 
                        SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE
 
    Upon completion of this Offering, the Company will have 12,024,048 shares of
Common  Stock outstanding and no shares of Preferred Stock outstanding. Of those
shares, the 6,000,000 shares  of Common Stock offered  hereby will be  available
for  immediate  sale as  of the  date of  this Prospectus  in the  public market
without restriction by persons other than  "affiliates" of the Company, as  that
term  is defined in the regulations promulgated under the Securities Act. Alpine
holds an additional 6,024,048 shares which  shares will be eligible for sale  in
the public markets, subject to the holding period and volume limitations of Rule
144.  Sales of substantial  amounts of Common  Stock in the  public market could
have an adverse impact on the market price of the Common Stock.
 
   
    In general, under  Rule 144  as currently in  effect, a  person (or  persons
whose  shares are aggregated) who has beneficially owned "restricted securities"
(defined generally  in  Rule  144  as  securities  issued  in  transactions  not
involving  a public offering) for at least  two years, including persons who may
be deemed  to be  affiliates of  the Company,  is entitled  to sell  within  any
three-month  period a number of shares that does not exceed the greater of 1% of
the then outstanding shares of Common Stock (which number, immediately following
this Offering, will be 120,240 shares) and the average weekly trading volume  in
the  Common Stock during the four calendar  weeks preceding the filing of a Form
144 with respect to such sale, provided that the Company has been subject to and
complied with certain  reporting requirements  under the Exchange  Act, and  the
sale  is made in  a "broker's transaction"  or in a  transaction directly with a
"market-maker," as those terms are used in Rule 144, without the solicitation of
buy orders by  the broker  or such  person and  without such  person making  any
payment  to any person other than the broker  who executes the order to sell the
shares of Common Stock. A person (or persons whose shares are aggregated) who is
not deemed to have been  an affiliate of the Company  at any time during the  90
days  preceding a  sale of  restricted securities  by such  person, and  who has
beneficially owned the restricted securities for at least three years (including
the holding period of any prior owner except an affiliate), is entitled to  sell
such  shares under Rule 144 without regard  to the volume limitations and public
information  and  manner  of  sale  requirements  described  above.   Restricted
securities  properly  sold  in  reliance upon  Rule  144  are  thereafter freely
tradeable without restrictions or registration under the Securities Act,  unless
thereafter held by an affiliate of the Company.
    
 
    The Commission has proposed to amend the holding period required by Rule 144
to  permit sales of restricted  securities after one year  rather than two years
(and two years rather than three  years for "non-affiliates" who desire to  sell
such  shares under  Rule 144(k)). If  such proposed amendment  were enacted, the
restricted securities would become freely  tradeable (subject to any  applicable
contractual restrictions) at correspondingly earlier dates.
 
    Prior to this Offering, there has been no public market for the Common Stock
of  the Company. No predictions can be made of the effect, if any, that the sale
or availability for sale of shares of additional
 
                                       52
<PAGE>
Common Stock will have  on the market price  of the Common Stock.  Nevertheless,
sales  of a substantial amount of such  shares by the existing stockholder or by
stockholders purchasing in  this Offering could  have a negative  impact on  the
market price of the Common Stock.
 
                                  UNDERWRITING
 
    Each  of the Underwriters named below (the "Underwriters"), for which Furman
Selz LLC, Oppenheimer &  Co., Inc. and BT  Securities Corporation are acting  as
the  Representatives, has severally agreed, subject  to the terms and conditions
of the Underwriting Agreement, to purchase from the Company the number of shares
of Common Stock set forth opposite its name below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   NUMBER OF
UNDERWRITERS                                                                         SHARES
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------  ----------
<S>                                                                                <C>
Furman Selz LLC..................................................................
Oppenheimer & Co., Inc...........................................................
BT Securities Corporation........................................................
 
                                                                                   ----------
    Total........................................................................   6,000,000
                                                                                   ----------
                                                                                   ----------
</TABLE>
 
    The Underwriting Agreement provides that the obligations of the Underwriters
to purchase the shares of Common Stock listed above are subject to the  approval
of   certain  legal  matters  by  counsel  and  various  other  conditions.  The
Underwriting Agreement  also provides  that the  Underwriters are  committed  to
purchase  all of the shares of Common Stock offered hereby, if any are purchased
(without  consideration  of  any  shares  that  may  be  purchased  through  the
Underwriters' over-allotment option).
 
    The  Representatives have advised the  Company that the Underwriters propose
to offer  the shares  of Common  Stock to  the public  initially at  the  public
offering  price set forth on the cover of this Prospectus and to certain dealers
at such price less a concession not in excess of $   per share. The Underwriters
may allow, and such selected dealers may reallow, a concession not in excess  of
$   per share to certain other dealers. After the initial public offering of the
shares,  the public offering price and other selling terms may be changed by the
Representatives.
 
    Prior to the offering made hereby, there  has been no public market for  the
Common Stock. Accordingly, the initial public offering price has been determined
by  negotiation between the  Company and the  Representatives. Among the factors
considered  were  the  Company's   results  of  operations,  current   financial
condition, estimates of the business potential and prospects of the Company, the
market  for the Company's products, the  experience of the Company's management,
the economics of the industry in general, the general condition of the  equities
market  and other relevant  factors. There can  be no assurance  that any active
trading market will develop for the Common Stock or as to the price at which the
Common Stock may trade in the public market from time to time subsequent to  the
offering made hereby.
 
    The  Company has granted the Underwriters  an option, exercisable during the
30-day period  after the  date of  this Prospectus,  to purchase  up to  900,000
additional  shares of Common Stock at the public offering price set forth on the
cover page of this Prospectus,  less underwriting discounts and commissions.  To
the  extent the Underwriters exercise this  option, each Underwriter will have a
firm commitment,  subject to  certain  conditions, to  purchase such  number  of
additional  shares of  Common Stock  as is  proportionate to  such Underwriter's
initial commitment to  purchase shares  from the Company.  The Underwriters  may
exercise  such  option  solely to  cover  over-allotments, if  any,  incurred in
connection with the sale of shares of Common Stock offered hereby.
 
    The Company  has  agreed  to  indemnify  the  Underwriters  against  certain
liabilities,  including under the  Securities Act, or  to contribute to payments
that the Underwriters may be required to make in respect thereof.
 
                                       53
<PAGE>
    The Company  and the  holders of  6,024,048 shares  of Common  Stock in  the
aggregate,  including Alpine and  each officer and director  of the Company have
agreed, subject to certain exceptions, not  to offer, sell, contract to sell  or
otherwise  dispose of any  shares of Common Stock  or securities exchangeable or
exercisable for or convertible into shares  of Common Stock (other than, in  the
case  of the Company,  the granting of  options pursuant to  the Company's stock
option plan)  for  a period  of  180 days  from  the date  of  the  Underwriting
Agreement, without the prior written consent of Furman Selz LLC.
 
    The  Representatives have informed the Company  that the Underwriters do not
intend to confirm sales to any  accounts over which they exercise  discretionary
authority.
 
   
    BT Securities Corporation has provided investment banking services to Alpine
and  is acting  as Dealer Manager  in connection  with the tender  offer for and
solicitation of consent of the holders  of the Alpine Notes, for which  services
it  will receive customary compensation. Bankers  Trust Company, an affiliate of
BT Securities Corporation, will act  as Administrative Agent in connection  with
the Bank Credit Facility and will receive customary compensation.
    
 
   
    The  Company has  applied for listing  of the  Common Stock on  the New York
Stock Exchange under the symbol "SUT."
    
 
                                 LEGAL MATTERS
 
    Certain legal matters with  respect to the legality  of the issuance of  the
Common  Stock offered hereby  will be passed  upon for the  Company by Proskauer
Rose Goetz & Mendelsohn LLP, New York, New York. Certain legal matters  relating
to this Offering will be passed upon for the Underwriters by Stroock & Stroock &
Lavan, New York, New York.
 
                                    EXPERTS
 
   
    The  combined financial statements of Superior and DNE (to be reorganized as
the Company), as of April 30, 1995 and April 28, 1996 and for each of the  three
fiscal  years  in  the  period  ended April  28,  1996,  the  combined financial
statements of the Alcatel Business as of December 31, 1993 and 1994 and for each
of the three years in the period ended December 31, 1994, and the balance  sheet
of  the  Company as  of  September 11,  1996,  included in  this  Prospectus and
elsewhere in the  Registration Statement  have been audited  by Arthur  Andersen
LLP,  independent public accountants, as indicated in their reports with respect
thereto, and are included in reliance upon the authority of said firm as experts
in accounting and auditing.
    
 
                             AVAILABLE INFORMATION
 
    The Company has filed with the  Commission a Registration Statement on  Form
S-1  (the "Registration Statement") under the Securities Act with respect to the
Common Stock offered hereby.  As permitted by the  rules and regulations of  the
Commission,  this Prospectus, which is part  of the Registration Statement, does
not contain all of the information  set forth in the Registration Statement  and
the exhibits and schedules filed therewith. For further information with respect
to  the Company and the Common Stock offered hereby, reference is hereby made to
the Registration Statement and  to the exhibits  and schedules filed  therewith.
Statements  contained in this Prospectus regarding  the contents of any contract
or other document are not necessarily  complete, and in each instance  reference
is  made to the  copy of such  contract or document  filed as an  exhibit to the
Registration Statement, each such statement  being qualified in all respects  by
such reference. The Registration Statement, including the exhibits and schedules
thereto,  may  be  inspected  without  charge at  the  principal  office  of the
Commission, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20549, the New York  Regional
Office  located at 7 World  Trade Center, Suite 1300,  New York, New York 10048,
and the Chicago Regional Office located at 500 West Madison Street, Suite  1400,
Chicago,  Illinois 60661, and copies of all  or any part thereof may be obtained
at prescribed  rates  from the  Commission's  Public Reference  Section  at  its
principal  office. They are  also available through  the Commission's World Wide
Web site (http://www.sec.gov).
 
                                       54
<PAGE>
                         INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                    <C>
SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.                                                                       PAGE
                                                                                             ---
    Report of independent public accountants.........................................        F-2
    Balance sheet at September 11, 1996..............................................        F-3
    Notes to balance sheet...........................................................        F-4
 
COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATION INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
AUDITED COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
    Report of independent public accountants.........................................        F-5
    Combined balance sheets as of April 30, 1995 and April 28, 1996..................        F-6
    Combined statements of operations for the years ended May 1, 1994, April 30, 1995
     and April 28, 1996..............................................................        F-7
    Combined statements of stockholder's equity for the years ended May 1, 1994,
     April 30, 1995 and April 28, 1996...............................................        F-8
    Combined statements of cash flows for the years ended May 1, 1994, April 30,
     1995, and April 28, 1996........................................................        F-9
    Notes to combined financial statements...........................................       F-10
UNAUDITED CONDENSED COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
    Condensed combined balance sheets as of April 28, 1996 and July 28, 1996.........       F-24
    Condensed combined statements of operations for the three months ended July 29,
     1995 and July 28, 1996..........................................................       F-25
    Condensed combined statement of cash flows for the three months ended July 29,
     1995 and July 28, 1996..........................................................       F-26
    Condensed combined statement of stockholder's equity for the three months ended
     July 28, 1996...................................................................       F-27
    Notes to condensed combined financial statements.................................       F-28
 
THE ALCATEL BUSINESS
AUDITED COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
    Report of independent public accountants.........................................       F-30
    Combined balance sheets at December 31, 1993 and 1994............................       F-31
    Combined statements of operations for the years ended December 31, 1992, 1993 and
     1994............................................................................       F-32
    Combined statements of changes in owners' investment for the years ended December
     31, 1992, 1993 and 1994.........................................................       F-33
    Combined statements of cash flows for the years ended December 31, 1992, 1993 and
     1994............................................................................       F-34
    Notes to combined financial statements...........................................       F-35
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      F-1
<PAGE>
   
                    REPORT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
    
 
   
To:  The Alpine Group, Inc.
    
 
   
    We  have audited the accompanying balance  sheet of Superior TeleCom Inc. (a
Delaware corporation)  as of  September  11, 1996.  This  balance sheet  is  the
responsibility  of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an
opinion on this balance sheet based on our audit.
    
 
   
    We conducted  our  audit  in accordance  with  generally  accepted  auditing
standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance  about  whether  the  balance sheet  is  free  of  material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts  and  disclosures in  the  balance  sheet. An  audit  also  includes
assessing  the  accounting principles  used  and significant  estimates  made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement  presentation.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
    
 
   
    In  our opinion, the balance sheet referred to above presents fairly, in all
material respects,  the  financial  position  of Superior  TeleCom  Inc.  as  of
September 11, 1996, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
    
 
   
Arthur Andersen LLP
    
 
   
September 11, 1996
    
   
Atlanta, Georgia
    
 
                                      F-2
<PAGE>
   
                             SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.
                                 BALANCE SHEET
                               SEPTEMBER 11, 1996
    
 
   
                                     ASSETS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                  <C>
  Cash.............................................................  $  60,240
                                                                     ---------
      Total assets.................................................  $  60,240
                                                                     ---------
                                                                     ---------
 
                             STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
 
Common stock, $.01 par value; authorized 25,000,000 shares, issued
 6,024,048.........................................................  $  60,240
                                                                     ---------
      Total stockholder's equity...................................  $  60,240
                                                                     ---------
                                                                     ---------
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      F-3
<PAGE>
   
                             SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.
                             NOTE TO BALANCE SHEET
                               SEPTEMBER 11, 1996
    
 
   
1.  ORGANIZATION AND NATURE OF BUSINESS
    
   
    Superior  TeleCom Inc. ("Superior TeleCom")  was incorporated under the laws
of the State of Delaware on July 17, 1996. The purpose of incorporating Superior
TeleCom was  to enable  The Alpine  Group, Inc.  ("Alpine"), Superior  TeleCom's
parent  company and only  stockholder, to complete  a reorganization whereby two
subsidiaries of Alpine, Superior Telecommunications  Inc. and DNE Systems,  Inc.
will  be  contributed to  Superior  TeleCom. As  of  July 17,  1996  and through
September 11, 1996, Superior TeleCom has not conducted any operations or had any
cash flows subsequent  to the  $60,240 initial capitalization  by Alpine.  There
were no commitments and contingencies at September 11, 1996.
    
 
                                      F-4
<PAGE>
                    REPORT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
 
To:  The Alpine Group, Inc.
 
   
    We  have  audited  the  accompanying  combined  balance  sheets  of Superior
Telecommunications Inc. and  subsidiary and DNE  Systems, Inc. and  subsidiaries
(collectively  referred to as the "Companies"  and to be contributed to Superior
TeleCom Inc. in connection with the  reorganization as discussed in Note 16)  as
of  April 30, 1995  and April 28,  1996, and the  related combined statements of
operations, stockholders' equity and cash flows  for each of the three years  in
the  period ended  April 28, 1996.  These combined financial  statements are the
responsibility of the Companies' management. Our responsibility is to express an
opinion on these combined financial statements based on our audits.
    
 
    We conducted  our  audits in  accordance  with generally  accepted  auditing
standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence  supporting
the  amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles used  and  significant estimates  made  by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
    In our opinion, the combined financial statements referred to above  present
fairly,  in  all  material  respects, the  combined  financial  position  of the
Companies as of  April 30, 1995  and April 28,  1996, and the  results of  their
operations  and their cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended
April 28, 1996, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
 
Arthur Andersen LLP
 
New York, New York
   
September 11, 1996
    
 
                                      F-5
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
 
                            COMBINED BALANCE SHEETS
   
                      (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT SHARE AMOUNTS)
    
 
                                     ASSETS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                      PRO FORMA
                                                                                                      APRIL 28,
                                                                            APRIL 30,   APRIL 28,       1996
                                                                               1995        1996      (UNAUDITED)
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
<S>                                                                         <C>         <C>         <C>
                                                                                        (SEE NOTE 16)
Current Assets:
  Cash and cash equivalents...............................................  $      273  $      351   $   (90,913)
  Accounts receivable (less allowance for doubtful accounts of $59 in 1995
   and $166 in 1996)......................................................      23,272      53,689        53,689
  Inventories.............................................................      25,695      57,726        57,726
  Other current assets....................................................       1,732       6,142         6,142
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
    Total current assets..................................................      50,972     117,908        26,644
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
Property, plant and equipment, net........................................      30,044      76,528        76,528
Goodwill, net.............................................................      32,412      48,414        48,414
Long-term investments and other assets....................................       6,699       1,215         1,215
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
    Total assets..........................................................  $  120,127  $  244,065   $   152,801
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
 
                               LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
 
Current liabilities:
  Current portion of long-term debt.......................................  $    2,758  $      484   $       484
  Accounts payable........................................................      20,147      46,253        46,253
  Accrued expenses........................................................       5,317      12,445        12,445
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
    Total current liabilities.............................................      28,222      59,182        59,182
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
Due to Alpine and affiliate...............................................         525     113,736       113,736
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
Long-term debt, less current portion......................................      33,784      11,540        11,540
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
Other long-term liabilities...............................................       7,742       7,951         7,951
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
Commitments and contingencies
Stockholder's equity:
  Common stock, Superior Telecommunications Inc., $.01 par value;
   authorized 10,000 shares; issued 1,000 shares..........................      --          --           --
  Common stock, DNE Systems, Inc. $1.00 par value; authorized 100,000
   shares; issued 750 shares..............................................           1           1             1
  Capital in excess of par value..........................................      45,700      42,254        42,254
  Cumulative translation adjustment.......................................      --            (214)         (214)
  Retained earnings.......................................................       4,153       9,615       (81,649)
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
    Total stockholder's equity............................................      49,854      51,656       (39,608)
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
    Total liabilities and stockholder's equity............................  $  120,127  $  244,065   $   152,801
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
                                                                            ----------  ----------  -------------
</TABLE>
    
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of these combined financial
                                  statements.
 
                                      F-6
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
 
                       COMBINED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                            YEAR ENDED
                                                                                 ---------------------------------
                                                                                  MAY 1,    APRIL 30,   APRIL 28,
                                                                                   1994        1995        1996
                                                                                 ---------  ----------  ----------
<S>                                                                              <C>        <C>         <C>
                                                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
Net sales......................................................................  $  68,510  $  164,485  $  410,413
Cost of goods sold.............................................................     56,250     142,114     362,854
                                                                                 ---------  ----------  ----------
    Gross profit...............................................................     12,260      22,371      47,559
Selling, general, and administrative expense...................................      8,884      11,632      14,223
Amortization of goodwill.......................................................      2,186       1,124       1,556
                                                                                 ---------  ----------  ----------
    Operating income...........................................................      1,190       9,615      31,780
Interest income................................................................        137      --             349
Interest expense...............................................................     (1,879)     (3,700)    (17,355)
Other income (expense), net....................................................        (61)        231          55
                                                                                 ---------  ----------  ----------
    Income (loss) from continuing operations before income taxes...............       (613)      6,146      14,829
Provision for income taxes.....................................................       (521)     (2,240)     (6,722)
                                                                                 ---------  ----------  ----------
    Income (loss) from continuing operations...................................     (1,134)      3,906       8,107
(Loss) from discontinued operations............................................       (287)       (176)     --
                                                                                 ---------  ----------  ----------
    Income (loss) before extraordinary item....................................     (1,421)      3,730       8,107
Extraordinary item -- (loss) on early extinguishment of debt...................     --          --          (2,645)
                                                                                 ---------  ----------  ----------
    Net income (loss)..........................................................  $  (1,421) $    3,730  $    5,462
                                                                                 ---------  ----------  ----------
                                                                                 ---------  ----------  ----------
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of these combined financial
                                  statements.
 
                                      F-7
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
 
                  COMBINED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
 
                    FOR THE THREE YEARS ENDED APRIL 28, 1996
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          SUPERIOR
                                         DNE SYSTEMS, INC.
                                                                  TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC.
                                           COMMON SHARES               COMMMON SHARES        CAPITAL IN                 CUMULATIVE
                                     --------------------------  --------------------------   EXCESS OF    RETAINED     TRANSLATION
                                       SHARES        AMOUNT        SHARES        AMOUNT       PAR VALUE    EARNINGS     ADJUSTMENT
                                     -----------  -------------  -----------  -------------  -----------  -----------  -------------
<S>                                  <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>          <C>
                                                                  (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT SHARE AMOUNTS)
Balance at April 30, 1993..........         750     $       1                                 $   3,071    $   1,844
Acquisition of Superior............                                   1,000                      58,594
Superior dividend..................                                                             (17,450)
Transfer of Posterloid from
 Alpine............................                                                               3,485
Net (loss) for the year ended May
 1, 1994...........................                                                                           (1,421)
                                                           --                          --
                                            ---                       -----                  -----------  -----------        -----
    Balance at May 1, 1994.........         750             1         1,000                      47,700          423
DNE dividend.......................                                                              (2,000)
Net income for the year ended April
 30, 1995..........................                                                                            3,730
                                                           --                          --
                                            ---                       -----                  -----------  -----------        -----
    Balance at April 30, 1995......         750             1         1,000                      45,700        4,153
Contribution from Alpine...........                                                                 100
Transfer of Posterloid to Alpine...                                                              (3,546)
Cumulative translation
 adjustment........................                                                                                      $    (214)
Net income for the year ended April
 28, 1996..........................                                                                            5,462
                                                           --                          --
                                            ---                       -----                  -----------  -----------        -----
Balance at April 28, 1996..........         750     $       1         1,000                   $  42,254    $   9,615     $    (214)
                                                           --                          --
                                                           --                          --
                                            ---                       -----                  -----------  -----------        -----
                                            ---                       -----                  -----------  -----------        -----
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                       TOTAL
                                     ---------
<S>                                  <C>
 
Balance at April 30, 1993..........  $   4,916
Acquisition of Superior............     58,594
Superior dividend..................    (17,450)
Transfer of Posterloid from
 Alpine............................      3,485
Net (loss) for the year ended May
 1, 1994...........................     (1,421)
 
                                     ---------
    Balance at May 1, 1994.........     48,124
DNE dividend.......................     (2,000)
Net income for the year ended April
 30, 1995..........................      3,730
 
                                     ---------
    Balance at April 30, 1995......     49,854
Contribution from Alpine...........        100
Transfer of Posterloid to Alpine...     (3,546)
Cumulative translation
 adjustment........................       (214)
Net income for the year ended April
 28, 1996..........................      5,462
 
                                     ---------
Balance at April 28, 1996..........  $  51,656
 
                                     ---------
                                     ---------
</TABLE>
    
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of these combined financial
                                  statements.
 
                                      F-8
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
 
                       COMBINED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                            YEAR ENDED
                                                                                ----------------------------------
                                                                                  MAY 1,    APRIL 30,   APRIL 28,
                                                                                   1994       1995        1996
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
<S>                                                                             <C>         <C>        <C>
                                                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
Cash flows from operating activities:
  Net income (loss) from continuing operations................................  $   (1,421) $   3,730  $     8,107
  Adjustments to reconcile net income to cash provided by operations:
    Depreciation and amortization.............................................       4,259      4,586        8,451
    Amortization of deferred financing costs..................................         124        253          360
  Change in assets and liabilities:
    Accounts receivable.......................................................      (3,409)    (5,480)      (2,709)
    Inventories...............................................................       2,157     (3,303)         742
    Other assets..............................................................        (120)      (145)         808
    Accounts payable..........................................................         533      6,667       11,220
    Accrued expenses and other liabilities....................................        (873)     1,046           89
    Other, net................................................................         749         90          170
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
Cash provided by operating activities.........................................       1,999      7,444       27,238
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
Cash flows from investing activities:
  Acquisition, net of cash acquired...........................................      --         --         (103,409)
  Capital expenditures........................................................      (1,560)    (1,782)      (4,339)
  Acquisition of BICC assets..................................................      --         --           (5,447)
  Other.......................................................................      (3,683)        43        1,419
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
Cash (used for) investing activities..........................................      (5,243)    (1,739)    (111,776)
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
Cash flows from financing activities:
  Borrowings (repayments) under revolving credit facilities, net..............       7,268     (1,181)     (17,623)
  Borrowings from (repayments to) Alpine, net.................................        (169)       141      112,571
  Long-term borrowings........................................................      16,911     --          141,170
  Dividends paid to Alpine....................................................     (17,450)    (2,000)     --
  Repayment of long-term borrowings...........................................      (3,771)    (3,439)    (148,237)
  Capitalized financing costs.................................................      --         --           (3,365)
  Other.......................................................................        (422)       370          100
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
Cash provided by (used for) financing activities..............................       2,367     (6,109)      84,616
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents..........................        (877)      (404)          78
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period..............................       1,554        677          273
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period....................................  $      677  $     273  $       351
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
Supplemental disclosures:
  Cash interest paid during the period (including interest paid to Alpine)....  $    2,490  $   4,709  $    18,620
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
  Cash income taxes paid during the period....................................  $   --      $     228  $       237
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
                                                                                ----------  ---------  -----------
Non-cash investing and financing activities:
  Acquisition of business:
    Assets, net of cash acquired..............................................                         $   126,127
    Liabilities assumed.......................................................                             (22,718)
                                                                                                       -----------
      Net cash paid...........................................................                         $   103,409
                                                                                                       -----------
                                                                                                       -----------
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of these combined financial
                                  statements.
 
                                      F-9
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
                     NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
1.  BASIS OF PRESENTATION AND NATURE OF BUSINESS
   
    Superior  Telecommunications Inc.  and its  wholly-owned subsidiary Superior
Cable Corporation (together referred to as "Superior") and DNE Systems, Inc. and
its wholly-owned subsidiaries DNE Technologies,  Inc. and DNE Manufacturing  and
Service  Company (together referred to  as "DNE") were wholly-owned subsidiaries
of The Alpine Group, Inc. ("Alpine"). Concurrently with Superior Telecom  Inc.'s
("Superior Telecom") entering into the new bank credit facility and prior to the
completion  of  this  Offering  of  common  stock  described  elsewhere  in this
prospectus, Alpine  will  contribute all  of  the outstanding  common  stock  of
Superior  and  DNE  to  Superior  TeleCom  for  the  purpose  of  completing the
transactions  more  fully  described  in  Note  16.  The  accompanying  combined
financial  statements  of  Superior  and  DNE  present  their  combined  assets,
liabilities, revenue, expenses and cash flows as if Superior and DNE existed  as
a   separate  corporation  during  the  periods  presented  which  reflects  the
acquisition of Superior in November 1993,  as discussed in Note 5. The  combined
companies  are  referred  to as  the  "Companies" in  the  accompanying combined
financial statements.
    
 
    Superior is engaged in the manufacture and sale of copper wire and cable for
the telecommunications industry and DNE is  engaged in the manufacture and  sale
of  data communication  and other electronic  products and  systems for defense,
government and commercial application.
 
    These  combined  financial  statements  include  transactions  with   Alpine
relating  to insurance and tax sharing arrangements, intercompany borrowings, as
well as for other administrative services (see Note 8).
 
    The financial information  included herein may  not necessarily reflect  the
financial  position, results of operations or cash flows of the Companies in the
future or what the  financial position, results of  operations or cash flows  of
the  Companies would have been  if they were combined  as a separate stand-alone
company during the periods presented.
 
2.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
    CONTRACT REVENUE RECOGNITION
 
   
    Revenues related  to certain  of DNE's  government long-term  contracts  and
programs,  are recognized by the percentage of completion method measured on the
basis of costs  incurred to  estimated total costs  which approximates  contract
performance  to date. Recognized revenue is that percentage of total contractual
revenue that incurred costs to date  bear to estimated total costs after  giving
effect  to the most recent estimates of costs to complete. Contracts in progress
are reviewed monthly and sales and  earnings are adjusted in current  accounting
periods  based on revisions in contract value and estimated costs at completion.
Provisions for estimated losses on contracts are recorded when identified.
    
 
    CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
 
    All highly liquid investments purchased with a maturity at acquisition of 90
days or less are considered to be cash equivalents.
 
    INVENTORIES
 
    Inventories, other  than  inventoried  costs  relating  to  DNE's  long-term
contracts,  are  stated at  the lower  of  cost or  market, using  the first-in,
first-out (FIFO) method. Inventoried costs relating to DNE's long-term contracts
and programs are stated at  actual production cost, including factory  overhead,
initial  tooling  and  other related  nonrecurring  costs, reduced  by  the cost
related to revenue recognized. Included in the
 
                                      F-10
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
               NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
2.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
   
accompanying combined balance  sheet are DNE  inventories amounting to  $137,000
and  $708,000 at April  30, 1995 and  April 28, 1996,  respectively, relating to
contracts and programs having production cycles longer than one year.
    
 
    PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT
 
    Property,  plant  and  equipment  are   stated  at  cost  less   accumulated
depreciation  and amortization. Depreciation and  amortization are provided over
the estimated useful  lives of the  assets using the  straight-line method.  The
estimated lives are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                        <C>
                                                                5-30
Building and improvements................................      years
                                                                3-12
Machinery and equipment..................................      years
</TABLE>
 
    Maintenance  and  repairs  are charged  to  expense as  incurred.  Long term
improvements are capitalized as additions to property, plant and equipment. Upon
retirement,  or  other  disposal,  the   asset  cost  and  related   accumulated
depreciation  are  removed  from  the  accounts and  the  net  amount,  less any
proceeds, is charged or credited to income.
 
    GOODWILL
 
   
    The excess  of  the purchase  price  over  the net  identifiable  assets  of
businesses  acquired is amortized  ratably over periods  not exceeding 30 years.
Accumulated amortization of goodwill  at April 30, 1995  and April 28, 1996  was
$1.4  million and $3.1 million, respectively.  Goodwill is allocated to specific
assets or product lines and reviewed periodically to assess recoverability  from
future  operations  using  undiscounted  cash  flows,  in  accordance  with  the
provisions of Statement of Financial  Accounting Standards No. 121,  "Accounting
for the Impairment of Long-Lived Assets and for Long-Lived Assets to Be Disposed
Of."  Impairments would be  recognized in operating  results, if the anticipated
cash flows from an asset (undiscounted and excluding interest) are less than the
asset's carrying value. During fiscal 1994, DNE expensed $1,511,000 relating  to
the  remaining  unamortized balance  of an  intangible  asset associated  with a
product line  which was  not forecasted  to generate  sufficient cash  flows  to
recover the carrying value of such intangible asset.
    
 
    FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION
 
    The  financial  position and  results  of operations  of  Superior's foreign
subsidiary is measured using local  currency as the functional currency.  Assets
and  liabilities of operations denominated  in foreign currencies are translated
into U.S. dollars at  exchange rates in effect  at year-end, while revenues  and
expenses  are translated at  average exchange rates  prevailing during the year.
The resulting translation gains  and losses are  charged directly to  cumulative
translation  adjustment,  a  component  of  stockholder's  equity,  and  are not
included in  net  income until  realized  through  sale or  liquidation  of  the
investment.
 
    CONCENTRATION OF CREDIT RISK
 
   
    Superior's  revenues constitute 93.6%  of the Companies'  total revenues for
fiscal 1996. During fiscal 1994,  1995 and 1996 sales  to the six regional  Bell
operating  companies and three major independent telephone companies represented
74%, 78% and 90% of Superior's net  sales, respectively (see Note 14). At  April
30,  1995 and April 28, 1996,  accounts receivable from these customers amounted
to $14.0 million and $41.9 million, respectively.
    
 
                                      F-11
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
               NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
2.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
    INCOME TAXES
 
    Superior and DNE file a consolidated  Federal income tax return with  Alpine
and  its other  subsidiaries. However,  income taxes  have been  provided in the
Companies statements of  operations as  if the Companies  were separate  taxable
entities and filed separate Federal income tax returns.
 
    USE OF ESTIMATES
 
    The  preparation  of  financial  statements  in  conformity  with  generally
accepted  accounting  principles  requires  management  to  make  estimates  and
assumptions  that  affect the  reported amounts  of  assets and  liabilities and
disclosures of contingent assets  and liabilities at the  date of the  financial
statements  and  the  reported  amounts  of  revenues  and  expenses  during the
reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
3.  INVENTORIES
    The components of inventories are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         1995       1996
                                                                       ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                    <C>        <C>
                                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
Raw materials........................................................  $   9,483  $  11,086
Work in process......................................................      7,228     13,216
Finished goods.......................................................      8,984     33,424
                                                                       ---------  ---------
                                                                       $  25,695  $  57,726
                                                                       ---------  ---------
                                                                       ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
4.  PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT
    Property, plant and equipment consists of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         1995       1996
                                                                       ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                    <C>        <C>
                                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
Land.................................................................  $   1,123  $   2,965
Building and improvements............................................      9,253     18,678
Machinery and equipment..............................................     25,264     67,276
                                                                       ---------  ---------
                                                                          35,640     88,919
Less: accumulated depreciation.......................................      5,596     12,391
                                                                       ---------  ---------
                                                                       $  30,044  $  76,528
                                                                       ---------  ---------
                                                                       ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
    Depreciation expense for the years ended May 1, 1994 and 1995 and April  28,
1996 was $1.9 million, $3.4 million and $6.7 million, respectively.
 
5.  ACQUISITIONS
 
    ALCATEL ACQUISITION
 
    On   May  11,  1995,  Superior   completed  the  acquisition  (the  "Alcatel
Acquisition") of  the U.S.  and Canadian  copper wire  and cable  business  (the
"Alcatel  Business") of Alcatel  NA Cable System, Inc.  and Alcatel Canada Wire,
Inc. (collectively, "Alcatel NA"). In connection with the acquisition,  Superior
sold
 
                                      F-12
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
               NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
5.  ACQUISITIONS (CONTINUED)
$140.0  million aggregate  principal amount  of notes  (the "Alcatel Acquisition
Notes"). The  Alcatel  Acquisition Notes  were  subsequently redeemed  with  the
proceeds  of funds advanced by  Alpine (see Note 8).  The following reflects the
allocation of the purchase price of the net assets of the Alcatel Business based
upon the fair values of such assets (in thousands):
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                 <C>
Acquisition cost..................................................  $ 103,409
Less: historical book value of net assets at May 11, 1995.........    (80,909)
Write-up of property, plant and equipment.........................     (5,718)
Accrual of Alcatel employee relocation and severance costs........        500
                                                                    ---------
Acquisition goodwill..............................................  $  17,282
                                                                    ---------
                                                                    ---------
</TABLE>
 
    The acquisition cost of $103.4 million included $102.9 million paid in  cash
to Alcatel NA and acquisition expenses of $500,000.
 
    The  Alcatel Acquisition has  been accounted for  using the purchase method,
and, accordingly, the results of operations of the Alcatel Business are included
in Superior's  results on  a prospective  basis from  the date  of  acquisition.
Goodwill is being amortized on a straight line basis over 30 years.
 
    Unaudited condensed pro forma results of operations which give effect to the
acquisition  of the Alcatel  Business as if it  had occurred on  May 1, 1994 are
presented below. The pro  forma results of operations  for the year ended  April
30,  1995 include the  results of the  Alcatel Business for  the 12-month period
ended March 31, 1995. The pro forma amounts reflect acquisition related purchase
accounting adjustments, including adjustments  to depreciation and  amortization
expense.  The pro forma financial information  does not purport to be indicative
of  either  the  results  of  operations  that  would  have  occurred  had   the
acquisitions  taken place at the beginning of the periods presented or of future
results of operations.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                               PRO FORMA (UNAUDITED)
                                                                               ----------------------
                                                                                  1995        1996
                                                                               ----------  ----------
<S>                                                                            <C>         <C>
                                                                                   (IN THOUSANDS)
Net sales....................................................................  $  368,663  $  417,934
Income from continuing operations before income taxes........................       9,023      15,377
Income from continuing operations before extraordinary item..................       4,934       8,655
(Loss) from discontinued operations..........................................        (176)     --
Extraordinary (loss) on early extinquishment of debt.........................      --          (2,645)
Net income...................................................................       4,758       6,010
</TABLE>
 
    SUPERIOR ACQUISITION
 
    On November 9, 1993, Superior's former  parent company merged with and  into
Alpine  resulting in Superior being a  wholly owned subsidiary of Alpine. Alpine
paid approximately $19.2 million in  cash (including approximately $2.2  million
in  merger-related expenses),  issued 4,467,610 shares  of its  common stock and
assumed existing stock options as consideration for the merger.
 
    The merger was  accounted for  using the purchase  method and,  accordingly,
Superior's  results of operations have been  included in the Companies' combined
results on a prospective basis from the  date of the merger. The total  purchase
price  for  acquiring  Superior  (including  merger  related  expenses) amounted
 
                                      F-13
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
               NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
5.  ACQUISITIONS (CONTINUED)
to approximately $58.6  million and was  allocated to the  fair market value  of
Superior's assets and liabilities as of the merger date resulting in goodwill of
approximately  $35.3 million.  Goodwill is  being amortized  on a  straight line
basis over 30 years.
 
6.  DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS
   
    On October 1, 1993, DNE transferred all of the outstanding capital stock  of
Posterloid Corporation ("Posterloid"), then a wholly owned subsidiary of Alpine,
for  $1.8 million in cash plus a  contingent earnout. The transfer was accounted
for as a reorganization of entities under  common control and the excess of  the
book  value of the net assets transferred over cash exchanged (amounting to $3.5
million) was recorded  as a  capital contribution in  the accompanying  Combined
Statement of Stockholder's Equity.
    
 
   
    On  May 1, 1995, DNE transferred Posterloid  back to Alpine for $1.3 million
in cash. The transfer  was accounted for as  a reorganization of entities  under
common  control and the excess  of the book value  of the net assets transferred
over cash received ($3.5  million) was recorded  as a return  of capital in  the
accompanying Combined Statement of Stockholder's Equity. Posterloid's results of
operations  from the transfer date through April 30, 1995 have been reflected as
a loss from discontinued operations  in the accompanying Combined Statements  of
Operations.
    
 
7.  DEBT
    Debt consists of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         1995       1996
                                                                       ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                    <C>        <C>
                                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
Lease finance obligations (a)........................................  $   5,968  $   5,853
Promissory note (b)..................................................     --          1,170
Revolving credit loans (c)...........................................     17,161     --
Term loan (c)........................................................      5,386     --
Mortgage loan (d)....................................................      5,296      4,996
Subordinated note (e)................................................      2,469     --
Other................................................................        262          5
                                                                       ---------  ---------
Total debt...........................................................     36,542     12,024
    Less: Current portion............................................      2,758        484
                                                                       ---------  ---------
Long-term debt.......................................................  $  33,784  $  11,540
                                                                       ---------  ---------
                                                                       ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
(a) The  lease  finance  obligations  result  from  the  sale/leaseback  of  two
    properties during fiscal  1994 which, because  of the Companies'  continuing
    involvement  in  the form  of repurchase  options,  were recorded  under the
    finance method. The lease finance obligations at April 28, 1996 consist  of:
    (a)  $5.0 million related to  the sale/leaseback of Superior's manufacturing
    facility, and (b) $853,000 related to the sale/ leaseback of a manufacturing
    facility owned by DNE.
 
    The Superior  sale/leaseback  transaction included  a  sales price  of  $5.0
    million and net cash proceeds (after fees and expenses) of $4.5 million. The
    term of the leaseback is twenty years, with five additional option terms (at
    Superior's  election) of five years each. Superior  has a one time option to
    repurchase the property during  the eleventh year of  the lease term at  the
    greater  of the property's  Fair Market Value  (as defined in  the lease) or
    $5.0 million  plus  related  ancillary  costs.  Annual  lease  payments  are
 
                                      F-14
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
               NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
7.  DEBT (CONTINUED)
    approximately  $630,000 and are  subject to adjustments  based on changes in
    short-term interest  rates (monthly)  and increases  in the  consumer  price
    index  (on a  tri-annual basis). Until  the repurchase option  expires or is
    exercised, all lease  payments will  be reflected as  interest expense.  The
    related  asset, which is  being depreciated over  its estimated useful life,
    has a  net carrying  value of  $6.9  million as  of April  28, 1996  and  is
    classified  as  property, plant  and equipment  in the  accompanying balance
    sheet.
 
    The DNE sale/leaseback transaction  included a sales  price of $1.3  million
    and a lease term of nine years. DNE has an option to repurchase the property
    during  the fourth and fifth  years of the lease  term for $1.3 million plus
    ancillary costs; however,  the lessor may  elect to terminate  the lease  in
    lieu  of accepting such repurchase offer. Annual lease payments are $177,900
    and are subject  to annual adjustments  based on increases  in the  consumer
    price  index. As of April 28,  1996, remaining total lease payments amounted
    to $1.1 million,  of which $853,000  will be applied  against principal  and
    $208,500  will be recorded as interest  expense. The related asset, which is
    being depreciated over the term of the lease and has a net carrying value of
    $785,000 as of April  28, 1996, is classified  in long-term investments  and
    other assets in the accompanying balance sheet.
 
(b) The  promissory note is  payable to BICC Phillips,  Inc. from which Superior
    acquired certain wire and cable  manufacturing assets on November 28,  1995.
    The note does not bear interest and is due on December 31, 1996.
 
(c) The  revolving credit loans and term loan represented borrowings by Superior
    and DNE under  credit facilities  which were  repaid in  full during  fiscal
    1996. The Superior credit facility, which included a $28.0 million revolving
    credit  facility and a $5.4 million term  loan, was repaid from the proceeds
    of the Alcatel Acquisition Notes (see Note 5).
 
    The DNE credit facility, which provided  for a revolving credit facility  of
    up to $3.5 million, was repaid by DNE from the proceeds of funds advanced by
    Alpine in July 1995 (see Note 8).
 
(d) The mortgage loan is payable by DNE to the Connecticut Development Authority
    ("CDA").  The loan is guaranteed by  Alpine and collateralized by DNE's real
    estate, machinery and equipment.  The loan is payable  in March 2002 and  is
    subject  to a 20-year amortization schedule. However, DNE may be required to
    make additional payments of  principal based upon  annual retained net  cash
    earnings (as defined). Based upon retained net cash earnings in fiscal 1996,
    DNE  is obligated to make a payment of $143,000 in August 1996. The interest
    rate is 7.25% through February 28, 1999 and the higher of 7.25% or the yield
    on U.S. Treasury securities with the same maturity thereafter. The  mortgage
    loan  contains covenants which limit the ability of DNE to pay dividends and
    incur indebtedness.
 
(e) The subordinated promissory note payable to  the previous owners of DNE  was
    redeemed  in  August, 1995  at  a discount  which  resulted in  recording an
    extraordinary gain, net of taxes of $166,000.
 
    At April 28, 1996, the fair value  of the Companies debt is estimated to  be
$12.2  million, which estimate is based on  quoted market prices for the same or
similar issues  or on  current rates  offered  for debt  of the  same  remaining
maturities.
 
                                      F-15
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
               NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
7.  DEBT (CONTINUED)
    The  aggregate maturities of long-term debt for the five years subsequent to
April 28, 1996 are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
FISCAL YEAR                                                                AMOUNT
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------  ---------------
<S>                                                                    <C>
                                                                       (IN THOUSANDS)
1997.................................................................     $     484
1998.................................................................           361
1999.................................................................           388
2000.................................................................           418
2001.................................................................           449
</TABLE>
 
8.  RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
    On July 21, 1995, Alpine completed the placement of $153.0 million of 12.25%
Senior Secured Notes  (the "Alpine  Notes") and  entered into  an $85.0  million
revolving  credit facility  (the "Credit  Facility"). The  Alpine Notes  and the
Credit Facility  are  guaranteed  by Superior  and  Adience,  Inc.  ("Adience"),
another  subsidiary of Alpine. The Alpine Notes  are also secured by a pledge of
the capital stock of Superior and Adience.
 
    In connection with the placement of the Senior Notes and the closing of  the
Credit  Facility, the Companies entered  into financing arrangements with Alpine
whereby Alpine  advanced funds  to  the Companies.  The  proceeds of  the  funds
advanced  by Alpine  were used (a)to  redeem the Alcatel  Acquisition Notes plus
accrued interest (see Note 5), (b) to repay DNE's revolving credit facility  and
the  subordinated promissory note due  to DNE's former parent  (see Note 7), and
(c) to fund working capital  requirements. At April 28,  1996 the due to  Alpine
and  affiliates  in  the  accompanying Combined  Balance  Sheets  included notes
payable in the amount of $126.1 million related to such financing arrangements.
 
    Such notes payable to Alpine include:
 
       (1) $88.9 million note payable by  Superior due 2003 (subject to  certain
           mandatory    prepayment   requirements),    with   interest   payable
    semi-annually at an annual rate of 14%.
 
       (2) $35.0 million in borrowings under revolving credit facilities between
           Alpine, Superior and  DNE due  2000. Interest is  payable monthly  at
    prime plus 0.375% or LIBOR plus 2.25%. Borrowings under the revolving credit
    facility  are  subject to  a borrowing  base determined  as a  percentage of
    eligible accounts receivable and inventory. The revolving credit facility is
    secured by a pledge of Superior's accounts receivable and inventory.
 
       (3) $2.2 million promissory note payable by DNE due in 2003 with interest
           payable semiannually at an annual rate of 14%.
 
    Also included in  the due  to Alpine  and affiliates  is an  amount of  $2.0
million  owed by Superior  Cable Corporation, Superior's  Canadian subsidiary to
Adience's Canadian subsidiary. The advance bears interest at 8%.
 
    Further included  in the  due to  Alpine and  affiliates is  a  non-interest
bearing  receivable from  Alpine which  arose primarily  from funds  advanced by
Superior in connection with Alpine's debt restructuring.
 
    In connection with the redemption of the Alcatel Acquisition Notes, Superior
recorded a  $2.8  million  extraordinary  loss,  net  of  taxes,  on  the  early
extinguishment of debt.
 
                                      F-16
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
               NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
8.  RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS (CONTINUED)
    Total  interest  expense  charged during  fiscal  1996 by  Alpine  under the
aforementioned financing arrangements amounted to $12.7 million.
 
   
    Alpine  allocates  certain  direct  expenses  to  the  Companies,  the  most
significant  of  which  is  insurance  expense  which  is  allocated  based upon
projected payrolls,  property  values  and  forecasted  losses.  Such  allocated
expenses totaled $1.9 million during fiscal 1996 and were applied as a reduction
in  amounts  due to  Alpine. Alpine  also  provides, on  a limited  basis, other
indirect administrative  services to  the Companies  such as  treasury and  cash
management,  tax planning  and risk management  which were not  allocated to the
Companies.
    
 
   
    During  fiscal  1994  and  1995  DNE  was  charged  $360,000  and  $111,000,
respectively  for certain incremental indirect  costs associated with compliance
with certain  contractual arrangements.  No  such amounts  in fiscal  1996  were
significant.
    
 
9.  DEFINED CONTRIBUTION PLANS
    The   Companies   sponsor  several   defined  contribution   plans  covering
substantially all U.S. employees. The plans provide for limited company matching
of participants' contributions. Company contributions to these plans amounted to
$227,000, $396,000 and $403,000 for the years  ended May 1, 1994, and April  30,
1995 and April 28, 1996, respectively.
 
10. DEFINED BENEFIT RETIREMENT PLANS
    During  fiscal 1996, certain  employees of Superior  participated in various
defined benefit retirement plans sponsored by Alcatel NA. These plans  generally
provide for payment of benefits, commencing at retirement between the ages of 55
and  65, based on the  employee's length of service  and earnings. In connection
with the  Alcatel acquisition,  Superior  is evaluating  alternative  retirement
planning  options and, in substantially all  cases, participation in these plans
has been frozen. Expense recorded for fiscal year 1996 service under these plans
was approximately $304,000.
 
    During fiscal 1996, Superior also  sponsored a defined benefit pension  plan
for  employees  of  one  of its  manufacturing  facilities  previously  owned by
Alcatel. Benefits under that  plan, which were also  based on length of  service
and  earnings, were frozen effective December 31, 1995 and the plan was replaced
with a defined  contribution plan.  The amount  charged to  pension expense  for
fiscal  year 1996  under the  plan was  $138,000. The  accrued pension liability
related to this plan was  $67,000 at April 28, 1996  and is included in  accrued
liabilities in the accompanying balance sheet.
 
    In addition, Superior sponsored a defined benefit pension plan for employees
of  its  Canadian  manufacturing  facility  also  previously  owned  by Alcatel.
Benefits under the plan are based on  length of service. The amount charged  for
pension expense for fiscal year 1996 under the plan was $58,000.
 
    The following table shows the plan's funded status at April 28, 1996:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                               <C>
Accumulated benefit obligation (100% vested)....................  $2,105,000
Fair value of plan assets.......................................  2,388,000
Projected benefit obligation....................................  2,314,000
Plan assets in excess of projected benefit obligation...........     74,000
Unrecognized net gain...........................................    (74,000)
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-17
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
               NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
10. DEFINED BENEFIT RETIREMENT PLANS (CONTINUED)
    A  discount rate of 8% and an expected long-term rate of return on assets of
8% were assumed for the above actuarial calculations.
 
11. POSTRETIREMENT HEALTH CARE BENEFITS
    The Companies'  current  policy  for  postretirement  health  care  benefits
provides  certain  employees and  their spouses  upon  reaching normal  or early
retirement and  upon achieving  certain minimum  service requirements,  a  fixed
monthly benefit for the purchase of company-sponsored health care insurance. The
amount  of  the fixed  monthly  benefit will  not  be increased  in  the future,
notwithstanding medical-based inflation cost increases.
 
    The accumulated  postretirement health  care  benefit obligation,  which  is
included  in long-term liabilities in  the accompanying balance sheet, consisted
of the following at April 30, 1995 and April 28, 1996:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            1995       1996
                                                                          ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                       <C>        <C>
                                                                             (IN THOUSANDS)
Retirees................................................................  $     733  $     427
Fully eligible active plan participants.................................        164        284
Other active plan participants..........................................        596        571
                                                                          ---------  ---------
                                                                              1,493      1,282
Unrealized net gain from past experience and change in assumptions......     --            211
                                                                          ---------  ---------
                                                                          $   1,493  $   1,493
                                                                          ---------  ---------
                                                                          ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
    Net periodic postretirement benefit  cost includes the following  components
for fiscal 1994, 1995 and 1996:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                      1994        1995       1996
                                                                                      -----     ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                <C>          <C>        <C>
                                                                                            (IN THOUSANDS)
Service cost for benefits earned.................................................   $      24   $      45  $      45
Interest cost on accumulated postretirement benefit obligation...................          37         118        117
                                                                                          ---   ---------  ---------
                                                                                    $      61   $     163  $     162
                                                                                          ---   ---------  ---------
                                                                                          ---   ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
    An  increase in the health care cost  trend assumptions would not change the
annual exposure  or  obligation amounts  as  the employer  cost  is  effectively
capped.
 
    The  weighted-average  discount  rate used  in  determining  the accumulated
postretirement benefit  obligation was  6.5%, 8.0%  and 7.75%  for fiscal  years
ended May 1, 1994, April 30, 1995 and April 28, 1996, respectively.
 
12. INCOME TAXES
    For  Federal income tax purposes, the  Companies' taxable income is included
as part of the  Alpine consolidated Federal return.  The Companies do,  however,
file  separate state income tax returns.  The Companies account for income taxes
on a stand alone  basis, as if  they filed a separate  Federal return, with  any
current Federal income taxes due being reflected as a payable to Alpine.
 
                                      F-18
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
               NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
12. INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED)
    U.S. income tax expense (benefit) for fiscal 1994, 1995 and 1996 consists of
the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                1994       1995       1996
                                                                              ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                           <C>        <C>        <C>
                                                                                      (IN THOUSANDS)
Current:
  Federal...................................................................  $     166  $   1,830  $   7,131
  State.....................................................................         23        320        891
                                                                              ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                              $     189  $   2,150  $   8,022
                                                                              ---------  ---------  ---------
Deferred:
  Federal...................................................................  $     288  $      78  $  (1,160)
  State.....................................................................         44         12       (140)
                                                                              ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                    332         90     (1,300)
                                                                              ---------  ---------  ---------
Total income tax expense....................................................  $     521  $   2,240  $   6,722
                                                                              ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                              ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
    Due  to losses incurred, no foreign income  taxes were recorded for the year
ended April 28, 1996.
 
    A  reconciliation  of  income  tax  expense  reported  in  the  accompanying
statements  of operations to the amount of  income tax expense that would result
from applying  the Federal  statutory  rate of  34%  to income  from  continuing
operations  before income taxes for the fiscal periods ended 1994, 1995 and 1996
is as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                1994       1995       1996
                                                                              ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                           <C>        <C>        <C>
                                                                                      (IN THOUSANDS)
 
Expected income tax expense at Federal statutory tax rate...................  $    (208) $   2,089  $   5,042
Non deductible goodwill amortization........................................        147        382        382
State income tax expense; net of Federal tax benefit........................         44        219        496
Net tax loss of foreign subsidiary..........................................     --         --            327
Other, net..................................................................        538       (450)       475
                                                                              ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                              $     521  $   2,240  $   6,722
                                                                              ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                              ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
    Statement of Financial Accounting Standards  No 109, "Accounting for  Income
Taxes," requires the recognition of deferred tax assets and liabilities for both
the  expected future tax impact of temporary differences arising from assets and
liabilities whose tax basis are different from financial statement amounts,  and
for  the expected future tax benefit to  be derived from tax loss carryforwards.
The statement also requires that a  valuation allowance be established if it  is
more  likely than not that all  or a portion of deferred  tax assets will not be
realized. Realization of the future tax benefits is dependent on the ability  to
generate
 
                                      F-19
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
               NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
12. INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED)
taxable  income  within the  carryforward period  and the  periods in  which net
temporary  differences  reverse.  Items  that  result  in  deferred  tax  assets
(liabilities)  and the related  valuation allowance at April  30, 1995 and April
28, 1996 are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       CURRENT              LONG-TERM
                                                                 --------------------  --------------------
                                                                   1995       1996       1995       1996
                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                              <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
                                                                               (IN THOUSANDS)
Depreciation and amortization..................................  $  --      $  --      $  (8,452) $  (8,753)
Sale / leaseback...............................................     --         --          1,760      1,735
Accruals not currently deductible for tax......................        555      1,536        691        626
Inventory reserves.............................................        626        915     --         --
Inventory cost capitalization..................................        264        719     --         --
Tax net operating loss carryforwards...........................     --         --         --            550
Other..........................................................         15     --         --         --
                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                     1,460      3,170     (6,001)    (5,842)
Less: Valuation allowance......................................       (255)      (471)      (138)      (492)
                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Total deferred income tax asset (liability)....................  $   1,205  $   2,699  $  (6,139) $  (6,334)
                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
13. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
    At April  28,  1996,  future minimum  lease  payments  under  non-cancelable
operating leases are as follows:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   REAL AND
                                                                                   PERSONAL
FISCAL YEAR                                                                        PROPERTY
                                                                                 -------------
<S>                                                                              <C>
                                                                                      (IN
                                                                                  THOUSANDS)
1997...........................................................................    $     573
1998...........................................................................          400
1999...........................................................................          380
2000...........................................................................          371
2001...........................................................................          320
Thereafter.....................................................................           53
                                                                                      ------
                                                                                   $   2,097
                                                                                      ------
                                                                                      ------
</TABLE>
    
 
    Rent  expense  under  cancelable  and  non-cancelable  operating  leases was
$288,000, $555,000 and $668,000 for the years ended May 1, 1994, April 30, 1995,
and April 28, 1996, respectively.
 
    Approximately 28% of Superior's total  labor force is covered by  collective
bargaining  agreements. One collective bargaining  agreement representing 11% of
Superior's total labor force will expire within one year.
 
    During fiscal 1995, DNE  was awarded a $600,000  grant from the  Connecticut
Department of Economic Development (DED) in connection with a five year contract
award  from  National Aeronautics  and  Space Administration  (NASA).  The grant
requires that the Company maintain its operation in Connecticut for a period  of
ten  years, or refund the grant if a relocation out of Connecticut occurs within
the specified period. This  grant is being  recorded as a  reduction of cost  of
revenues as earned. At April 28, 1996, $150,000 has yet to be earned.
 
                                      F-20
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
               NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
13. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES (CONTINUED)
   
    Soil  and groundwater at Superior's Brownwood, Texas facility has been found
to be contaminated with volatile organic compounds as a result of operations  at
the  facility which management believes occurred prior to Superior's acquisition
of the  facility.  Superior  is in  the  process  of obtaining  approval  for  a
remediation  plan  from  the  Texas  Natural  Resource  Conservation Commission.
Pursuant to an agreement between Superior and the former owner of the  facility,
Superior has been reimbursed for approximately 85% of the costs incurred to date
in  connection with the  investigation and remediation of  this facility, and is
entitled to reimbursement of future expenses at percentages ranging from 85%  to
25%  (depending on the time at which  such expenses are incurred), subject to an
aggregate expense reimbursement of not less than 75%. Based upon  investigations
performed to date, the Company has accrued an amount of $84,000 consisting of an
assessment  that the remediation costs  will total approximately $335,000 offset
by a receivable of $251,000 from the former owner.
    
 
    In connection with the sale of a facility in Woburn, Massachusetts  formerly
owned  by  and currently  under lease  to  DNE, low  levels of  volatile organic
compounds were discovered in shallow groundwater. DNE has assumed responsibility
for this contamination pursuant to an indemnity granted to the purchaser of  the
facility,  which indemnity  is in turn  guaranteed by Alpine.  This facility has
been designated  as  a non-priority  site  by the  Massachusetts  Department  of
Environmental  Protection ("MDEP") which granted a  waiver to Alpine allowing it
to proceed with  further investigation  and, if necessary,  remediation, of  the
groundwater contamination with MDEP oversight, subject to certain conditions. In
accordance  with  the  waiver,  investigation and  remediation  efforts  must be
completed by August 1997. Based on the results of a Phase II comprehensive  site
assessment completed during May 1996, it appears that no remedial activities are
warranted  for this site,  but approximately $10,000 may  be required to perform
MDEP filing and response actions.
 
    The Companies are subject to other  legal proceedings and claims which  have
primarily  arisen in the ordinary  course of business and  have not been finally
adjudicated.
 
    Two executives of Superior and DNE have employment contracts which generally
provide minimum  base  salaries  aggregating approximately  $0.5  million,  cash
bonuses  based  on  the  Superior and  DNE  achievement  of  certain performance
objectives, discretionary stock options and  restricted stock grants of  Alpine,
and  certain retirement  and other employee  benefits. Further, in  the event of
termination or voluntary resignation for  "good reason" accompanied by a  change
in  control  of  Alpine,  as defined,  such  employment  agreements  provide for
severance payments equal to  two times annual cash  compensation and bonus,  and
the continuation for stipulated periods of other benefits, as defined.
 
    In  the opinion of management, based on  its examination of such matters and
discussions with counsel, the ultimate  resolution of all pending or  threatened
litigation, claims and assessments will have no material adverse affect upon the
Companies financial position, liquidity or results of operations.
 
14. SEGMENT INFORMATION
    The  Companies conduct business in two segments: telecommunications wire and
cable products (through  Superior, acquired  in November 1993,  and the  Alcatel
Business,  acquired  in  May  1995),  and  data  communications  and electronics
(through DNE).
 
                                      F-21
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
               NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
14. SEGMENT INFORMATION (CONTINUED)
    The following provides financial information about each business segment:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       MAY 1,    APRIL 30,   APRIL 28,
                                                                        1994        1995        1996
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
<S>                                                                  <C>         <C>         <C>
                                                                               (IN THOUSANDS)
Net sales (a):
  Telecommunications wire and cable................................  $   46,857  $  136,578  $  384,237
  Data communications and electronics..............................      21,653      27,907      26,176
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                     $   68,510  $  164,485  $  410,413
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
Operating income (loss):
  Telecommunications wire and cable................................  $    1,625  $    8,016  $   29,741
  Data communications and electronics..............................        (435)      1,599       2,039
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                     $    1,190  $    9,615  $   31,780
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
Identifiable assets at year end:
  Telecommunications wire and cable................................  $   95,027  $   98,497  $  226,045
  Data communications and electronics..............................      15,340      16,836      18,020
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                     $  110,367  $  115,333  $  244,065
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
Depreciation and amortization expense:
  Telecommunications wire and cable................................  $    1,562  $    3,714  $    7,719
  Data communications and electronics..............................       2,697         872         732
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                     $    4,259  $    4,586  $    8,451
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
Capital expenditures:
  Telecommunications wire and cable (b)............................  $      420  $    1,388  $    9,337
  Data communications and electronics..............................       1,140         394         449
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                     $    1,560  $    1,782  $    9,786
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                     ----------  ----------  ----------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
   
(a)  (i) Two customers accounted for $41.0 million and $21.9 million or 30%  and
         16%,  respectively,  of net  sales in  fiscal  1995 and  five customers
         accounted for  $82.7  million,  $65.0  million,  $61.7  million,  $49.1
         million and $48.1 million or 22%, 17%, 16%, 13% and 13% of net sales in
         fiscal 1996 in the telecommunications wire and cable segment.
    
 
   
    (ii) The  data communications and electronics  segment has historically been
         dependent on government funding of  programs in which it  participates.
         Significant  changes in the  levels of funding  for such programs could
         have a material adverse effect on the segment. Sales to agencies of the
         U.S. government were $18.7 million, $23.2 million and $17.4 million  or
         86.4%,  82.3% and 66.4% of  net sales of this  segment for fiscal 1994,
         1995 and 1996, respectively.
    
 
(b) During fiscal  1996,  Superior  acquired certain  Canadian  assets  of  BICC
    Phillips   for  $5.4   million,  which   amount  is   reflected  in  capital
    expenditures.
 
                                      F-22
<PAGE>
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
               NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
15. QUARTERLY FINANCIAL INFORMATION (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     FISCAL 1995 QUARTER ENDED
                                                    -----------------------------------------------------------
                                                     JULY 31   OCTOBER 31   JANUARY 31    APRIL 30      YEAR
                                                    ---------  -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
<S>                                                 <C>        <C>          <C>          <C>         <C>
                                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
Net sales.........................................  $  39,330   $  40,552    $  38,266   $   46,337  $  164,485
Gross profit......................................      5,685       5,278        5,068        6,340      22,371
Operating income..................................      2,604       1,874        2,016        3,121       9,615
Income from continuing operations.................      1,160         403          626        1,717       3,906
(Loss) from discontinued operations...............     --          --           --             (176)       (176)
                                                    ---------  -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
Net income........................................  $   1,160   $     403    $     626   $    1,541  $    3,730
                                                    ---------  -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
                                                    ---------  -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                                                     FISCAL 1996 QUARTER ENDED
                                                    -----------------------------------------------------------
                                                     JULY 31   OCTOBER 31   JANUARY 31    APRIL 28      YEAR
                                                    ---------  -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                 <C>        <C>          <C>          <C>         <C>
Net sales.........................................  $  99,324   $ 109,076    $  91,185   $  110,828  $  410,413
Gross profit......................................      9,503      11,040       10,901       16,115      47,559
Operating income..................................      5,830       7,262        7,020       11,668      31,780
Income before extraordinary item..................      1,674       1,571        1,617        3,245       8,107
Income (loss) from extraordinary item.............     (2,811)        166       --           --          (2,645)
                                                    ---------  -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
Net income (loss).................................  $  (1,137)  $   1,737    $   1,617   $    3,245  $    5,462
                                                    ---------  -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
                                                    ---------  -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
</TABLE>
 
16. SUBSEQUENT EVENT
   
    In September 1996,  Superior TeleCom  filed an amendment  to a  registration
statement  with the  Securities and  Exchange Commission  in which  it disclosed
Alpine's intention to: (i) recapitalize Superior by issuing 20,000 shares of  6%
Cumulative  Preferred  Stock  par  value  $1.00  per  share  with  a liquidation
preference of $1,000 per share, (ii) contribute all of the common stock of  both
Superior  and DNE to Superior  TeleCom, (iii) cause Superior  and DNE to declare
dividends on their common stock in  an aggregate amount equal to the  difference
between  $205.0 million  and the  net amount of  intercompany debt  then owed by
Superior and DNE to  Alpine and (iv)  to cause Superior  Telecom to complete  an
offering  of 6,000,000  shares of  common stock  (or approximately  49.9% of the
outstanding  shares  after   such  offering)   assuming  no   exercise  of   the
underwriters' over-allotment option.
    
 
   
    In  order to finance the payment of  the intercompany debt, the dividend and
future working capital needs,  Superior TeleCom has  received a commitment  from
Bankers  Trust  Company, acting  as administrative  agent,  and Bank  of Boston,
acting as  co-agent,  to enter  into  a  revolving facility  (the  "Bank  Credit
Facility")  which will  initially provide for  a credit line  of $175.0 million,
however, on completion of  the Offering the facility  will be reduced to  $150.0
million.  Interest will be  payable monthly based  upon prime rate  plus 0.5% or
Eurodollar rate plus  1.5%; the  variable components  of these  rates after  the
first  anniversary  of the  closing of  the facilities  are subject  to periodic
adjustment based on Superior TeleCom's debt to EBITDA ratio on a trailing twelve
month basis. The initial rate of interest is expected to be approximately  7.5%.
Obligations under the Bank Credit Facility are expected to be guaranteed by each
of  Superior TeleCom's direct  and indirect subsidiaries and  secured by all the
common stock, equipment,  property, inventory  and accounts  receivable of  each
such subsidiary.
    
 
   
    The  proposed dividends  on the common  stock of Superior  and DNE discussed
above has been  reflected in the  accompanying pro forma  balance sheet on  page
F-6, excluding the effects of offering proceeds and other transactions occurring
simultaneous  with  this  Offering  described  above,  in  accordance  with  the
Securities and Exchange Commission Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 55.
    
 
                                      F-23
<PAGE>
   
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
    
 
   
                       CONDENSED COMBINED BALANCE SHEETS
                    (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE AMOUNTS)
    
 
   
                                     ASSETS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                          JULY 28,
                                                                             APRIL 28,      1996
                                                                                1996     (UNAUDITED)
                                                                             ----------  -----------   PRO FORMA
                                                                                                       JULY 28,
                                                                                                         1996
                                                                                                      (UNAUDITED)
                                                                                                      -----------
                                                                                                       (SEE NOTE
                                                                                                          4)
<S>                                                                          <C>         <C>          <C>
Current Assets:
  Cash and cash equivalents................................................  $      351   $     139    $(101,947)
  Accounts receivable (less allowance for
   doubtful accounts; April, $166; July, $63...............................      53,689      53,223       53,223
  Inventories..............................................................      57,726      47,737       47,737
  Other current assets.....................................................       6,142       5,999        5,999
                                                                             ----------  -----------  -----------
    Total current assets...................................................     117,908     107,098        5,012
                                                                             ----------  -----------  -----------
  Property, plant and equipment, net.......................................      76,528      76,143       76,143
  Goodwill (less accumulated amortization: April, $3,114;
   July, $3,546)...........................................................      48,414      47,897       47,897
  Long-term investments and other assets...................................       1,215       1,222        1,222
                                                                             $  244,065   $ 232,360    $ 130,274
                                                                             ----------  -----------  -----------
                                                                             ----------  -----------  -----------
 
                                      LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
 
Current liabilities:
  Current portion of long-term debt........................................  $      484   $     364    $     364
  Accounts payable.........................................................      46,253      39,348       39,348
  Accrued expenses.........................................................      12,445      12,777       12,777
                                                                             ----------  -----------  -----------
    Total current liabilities..............................................      59,182      52,489       52,489
                                                                             ----------  -----------  -----------
Due to Alpine and affiliate................................................     113,736     102,914      102,914
                                                                             ----------  -----------  -----------
Long-term debt, less current portion.......................................      11,540      11,475       11,475
                                                                             ----------  -----------  -----------
Other long-term liabilities................................................       7,951       8,050        8,050
                                                                             ----------  -----------  -----------
Commitments and contingencies
Stockholder's equity:
  Common stock, Superior Telecommunications Inc.,
   $.01 par value; authorized 10,000 shares; issued 1,000 shares...........      --          --           --
  Common stock, DNE Systems, Inc. $1.00 par value;
   authorized 100,000 shares; issued 750 shares............................           1           1            1
  Capital in excess of par value...........................................      42,254      42,254       42,254
  Cumulative translation adjustment........................................        (214)       (406)        (406)
  Retained earnings........................................................       9,615      15,583      (86,503)
                                                                             ----------  -----------  -----------
    Total stockholder's equity.............................................      51,656      57,432      (44,654)
                                                                             ----------  -----------  -----------
    Total liabilities and stockholder's equity.............................  $  244,065   $ 232,360    $ 130,274
                                                                             ----------  -----------  -----------
                                                                             ----------  -----------  -----------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed combined
                             financial statements.
    
 
                                      F-24
<PAGE>
   
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOMINC.)
                  CONDENSED COMBINED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
    
 
   
                                  (UNAUDITED)
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                        THREE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                      ----------------------
                                                                                       JULY 29,    JULY 28,
                                                                                         1995        1996
                                                                                      ----------  ----------
<S>                                                                                   <C>         <C>
                                                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
Net sales...........................................................................  $   99,324  $  123,824
Cost of goods sold..................................................................      89,821     105,447
                                                                                      ----------  ----------
    Gross profit....................................................................       9,503      18,377
Selling, general, and administrative expense........................................       3,299       3,888
Amortization of goodwill............................................................         374         432
                                                                                      ----------  ----------
    Operating income................................................................       5,830      14,057
Interest income.....................................................................         348      --
Interest expense....................................................................      (4,081)     (4,258)
Other income (expense), net.........................................................          28         (53)
                                                                                      ----------  ----------
    Income (loss) from continuing operations before income taxes....................       2,125       9,746
Provision for income taxes..........................................................        (451)     (3,778)
                                                                                      ----------  ----------
    Income (loss) from continuing operations........................................       1,674       5,968
(Loss) from discontinued operations.................................................      --          --
                                                                                      ----------  ----------
    Income (loss) before extraordinary item.........................................       1,674       5,968
Extraordinary item -- (loss) on early extinguishment of debt........................      (2,811)     --
                                                                                      ----------  ----------
    Net income (loss)...............................................................  $   (1,137) $    5,968
                                                                                      ----------  ----------
                                                                                      ----------  ----------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed combined
                             financial statements.
    
 
                                      F-25
<PAGE>
   
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
    
 
   
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
                  CONDENSED COMBINED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
    
 
   
                                  (UNAUDITED)
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                             THREE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                           -----------------------
                                                                                            JULY 29,     JULY 28,
                                                                                              1995         1996
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
                                                                                               (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                                        <C>          <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
  Net income from continuing operations..................................................  $     1,674  $    5,968
  Adjustments to reconcile net income to cash provided by operations:
    Depreciation and amortization........................................................        1,963       2,251
    Amortization of deferred financing costs.............................................          320          12
Change in assets and liabilities:
    Accounts receivable..................................................................         (764)        466
    Inventories..........................................................................       10,499       9,989
    Other assets.........................................................................          295         112
    Accounts payable.....................................................................       10,056      (6,905)
    Accrued expenses and other liabilities...............................................       (1,309)        332
    Other, net...........................................................................          196          67
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
Cash provided by operating activities....................................................       22,930      12,292
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
Cash flows from investing activities:
  Acquisition, net of cash acquired......................................................      (93,324)     --
  Capital expenditures...................................................................       (1,204)     (1,511)
  Other..................................................................................        1,350         (84)
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
Cash (used for) investing activities.....................................................      (93,178)     (1,595)
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
Cash flow from financing activities:
  Borrowings (repayments) under revolving credit facilities, net.........................      (16,014)     --
  Borrowings from (repayments to) Alpine, net............................................       95,228     (10,961)
  Long-term borrowings...................................................................      140,000          22
  Dividends paid to Alpine...............................................................      --           --
  Repayment of long-term borrowings......................................................     (145,499)       (207)
  Capitalized financing costs............................................................       (3,215)     --
  Other..................................................................................      --           --
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
Cash provided by (used for) financing activities.........................................       70,500     (11,146)
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents.....................................          252        (449)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period.........................................          273         588
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period...............................................  $       525  $      139
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
Supplemental disclosures:
  Cash interest paid during the period (including interest paid to Alpine)...............  $     4,709  $    4,258
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
  Cash paid during the period for income taxes...........................................  $       318  $      418
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
Non-cash investing and financing activities:
  Acquisition of business:
    Assets, net of cash acquired.........................................................  $   126,127  $   --
    Deferred purchase consideration......................................................       (9,909)
    Liabilities assumed..................................................................      (22,894)     --
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
      Net cash paid......................................................................  $   (93,324)     --
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
                                                                                           -----------  ----------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed combined
                             financial statements.
    
 
                                      F-26
<PAGE>
   
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
    
 
   
              CONDENSED COMBINED STATEMENT OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
    
 
   
                    FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED JULY 28, 1996
    
   
                                  (UNAUDITED)
    
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         SUPERIOR
                                         DNE SYSTEMS, INC.
                                                                 TELECOMMUNICATIONS, INC.
                                           COMMON SHARES              COMMMON SHARES       CAPITAL IN                 CUMULATIVE
                                     --------------------------  ------------------------   EXCESS OF    RETAINED     TRANSLATION
                                       SHARES        AMOUNT        SHARES       AMOUNT      PAR VALUE    EARNINGS     ADJUSTMENT
                                     -----------  -------------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -------------
<S>                                  <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
                                                                 (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT SHARE AMOUNTS)
Balance at April 28, 1996..........         750     $       1         1,000                 $  42,254    $   9,615     $    (214)
Cumulative translation
 adjustment........................                                                                                         (192)
Net income for the year ended July
 28, 1996..........................                                                                          5,968        --
                                                           --
                                            ---                       -----          ---   -----------  -----------        -----
Balance at July 28, 1996...........         750     $       1         1,000                 $  42,254    $  15,583     $    (406)
                                                           --
                                                           --
                                            ---                       -----          ---   -----------  -----------        -----
                                            ---                       -----          ---   -----------  -----------        -----
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                       TOTAL
                                     ---------
<S>                                  <C>
 
Balance at April 28, 1996..........  $  51,656
Cumulative translation
 adjustment........................       (192)
Net income for the year ended July
 28, 1996..........................      5,968
 
                                     ---------
Balance at July 28, 1996...........  $  57,432
 
                                     ---------
                                     ---------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed combined
                             financial statements.
    
 
                                      F-27
<PAGE>
   
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
    
 
   
                NOTES TO CONDENSED COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                  (UNAUDITED)
    
 
   
1.  BASIS OF PRESENTATION
    
   
    The  accompanying unaudited condensed  combined financial statements reflect
all adjustments which, in  the opinion of management,  are necessary for a  fair
presentation  of the  results of operations  for the  interim periods presented.
These financial statements  should be read  in conjunction with  the summary  of
accounting  policies and the  notes to the financial  statements included in the
Companies' Combined Financial Statements for the year ended April 28, 1996.
    
 
   
2.  INVENTORIES
    
   
    The components of inventories are:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                    APRIL 28,  JULY 28,
                                                                                      1996       1996
                                                                                    ---------  ---------
                                                                                       (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                                 <C>        <C>
Raw Material......................................................................  $  11,086  $  11,390
Work-in-process...................................................................     13,216     11,290
Finished goods....................................................................     33,424     25,057
                                                                                    ---------  ---------
                                                                                    $  57,726  $  47,737
                                                                                    ---------  ---------
                                                                                    ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
3.  COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
    
   
    Soil and groundwater at Superior's Brownwood, Texas facility has been  found
to  be contaminated with volatile organic compounds as a result of operations at
the facility which management believes occurred prior to Superior's  acquisition
of  the  facility.  Superior is  in  the  process of  obtaining  approval  for a
remediation plan from the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission.  Based
upon  investigations performed  to date, the  Company believes that  the cost of
this remediation will  not be in  excess of $500,000.  Pursuant to an  agreement
between  Superior  and  the former  owner  of  the facility,  Superior  has been
reimbursed for approximately  85% of the  costs incurred to  date in  connection
with  the investigation  and remediation  of this  facility, and  is entitled to
reimbursement of  future  expenses  at  percentages  ranging  from  85%  to  25%
(depending  on the  time at  which such  expenses are  incurred), subject  to an
aggregate expense reimbursement of not less than 75%.
    
 
   
    In connection with the sale of a facility in Woburn, Massachusetts  formerly
owned  by  and currently  under lease  to  DNE, low  levels of  volatile organic
compounds were discovered in shallow groundwater. DNE has assumed responsibility
for this contamination pursuant to an indemnity granted to the purchaser of  the
facility,  which indemnity  is in turn  guaranteed by Alpine.  This facility has
been designated  as  a non-priority  site  by the  Massachusetts  Department  of
Environmental  Protection ("MDEP") which granted a  waiver to Alpine allowing it
to proceed with  further investigation  and, if necessary,  remediation, of  the
groundwater contamination with MDEP oversight, subject to certain conditions. In
accordance  with  the  waiver,  investigation and  remediation  efforts  must be
completed by August 1997. Based on the results of a Phase II comprehensive  site
assessment completed during May 1996, it appears that no remedial activities are
warranted  for this site,  but approximately $10,000 may  be required to perform
MDEP filing and response actions.
    
 
   
    The Companies are subject to other  legal proceedings and claims which  have
primarily  arisen in the ordinary  course of business and  have not been finally
adjudicated.
    
 
                                      F-28
<PAGE>
   
                SUPERIOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
                     AND DNE SYSTEMS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                  (TO BE REORGANIZED AS SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.)
    
 
   
          NOTES TO CONDENSED COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
    
 
   
3.  COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES (CONTINUED)
    
   
    In the opinion of management, based  on its examination of such matters  and
discussions  with counsel, the ultimate resolution  of all pending or threatened
litigation, claims and assessments will have no material adverse affect upon the
Companies financial position, liquidity or results of operations.
    
 
   
4.  SUBSEQUENT EVENT
    
   
    In September 1996,  Superior TeleCom  filed an amendment  to a  registration
statement  with the  Securities and  Exchange Commission  in which  it disclosed
Alpine's intention to: (i) recapitalize Superior by issuing 20,000 shares of  6%
Cumulative  Preferred  Stock  par  value  $1.00  per  share  with  a liquidation
preference of $1,000 per share, (ii) contribute all of the common stock of  both
Superior  and DNE to Superior  TeleCom, (iii) cause Superior  and DNE to declare
dividends on their common stock in  an aggregate amount equal to the  difference
between  $205  million and  the net  amount  of intercompany  debt then  owed by
Superior and DNE to  Alpine and (iv)  to cause Superior  Telecom to complete  an
offering  of 6,000,000  shares of  common stock  (or approximately  49.9% of the
outstanding  shares  after   such  offering)   assuming  no   exercise  of   the
underwriters' over-allotment option.
    
 
   
    In  order to finance the payment of  the intercompany debt, the dividend and
future working capital needs,  Superior TeleCom has  received a commitment  from
Bankers  Trust  Company, acting  as administrative  agent,  and Bank  of Boston,
acting as  co-agent,  to enter  into  a  revolving facility  (the  "Bank  Credit
Facility")  which will  initially provide for  a credit line  of $175.0 million,
however, on completion of  the Offering the facility  will be reduced to  $150.0
million.  Interest will be  payable monthly based  upon prime rate  plus 0.5% or
Eurodollar rate plus  1.5%; the  variable components  of these  rates after  the
first  anniversary  of the  closing of  the facilities  are subject  to periodic
adjustment based on Superior TeleCom's debt to EBITDA ratio on a trailing twelve
month basis. The initial rate of interest is expected to be approximately  7.5%.
Obligations under the Bank Credit Facility are expected to be guaranteed by each
of Superior Telecom's direct and indirect subsidiaries and secured by the common
stock,  equipment,  property, inventory  and  accounts receivable  of  each such
subsidiary.
    
 
   
    The proposed dividends  on the common  stock of Superior  and DNE  discussed
above  has been reflected  in the accompanying  pro forma balance  sheet on page
F-24,  excluding  the  effects  of  offering  proceeds  and  other  transactions
occurring  simultaneous with this  Offering described above,  in accordance with
the Securities and Exchange Commission Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 55.
    
 
                                      F-29
<PAGE>
                    REPORT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
 
To Alcatel NA Cable Systems, Inc. and
 Alcatel Canada Wire and Cable, Inc.:
 
    We have audited the accompanying combined balance sheets of The Copper Cable
Group  of Alcatel NA Cable Systems, Inc. and Alcatel Canada Wire and Cable, Inc.
as of  December  31, 1993  and  1994, and  the  related combined  statements  of
operations,  changes in owners' investment and cash  flows for each of the three
years in the period ended December 31, 1994. These financial statements are  the
responsibility  of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an
opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.
 
    We conducted  our  audits in  accordance  with generally  accepted  auditing
standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence  supporting
the  amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles used  and  significant estimates  made  by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
    In our opinion, the financial  statements referred to above present  fairly,
in  all material respects, the  financial position of The  Copper Cable Group of
Alcatel NA Cable Systems,  Inc. and Alcatel  Canada Wire and  Cable, Inc. as  of
December  31, 1993 and 1994, and the  results of their operations and their cash
flows for each  of the three  years in the  period ended December  31, 1994,  in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
 
                                          Arthur Andersen LLP
 
Greensboro, North Carolina,
February 24, 1995
 (except for the matter discussed in Note 14,
 as to which the date is May 11, 1995).
 
                                      F-30
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
                            COMBINED BALANCE SHEETS
                           DECEMBER 31, 1993 AND 1994
                                     ASSETS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                            1993        1994
                                                                                         ----------  ----------
                                                                                         (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                                      <C>         <C>
Current assets:
  Cash.................................................................................  $      602  $    3,124
  Trade accounts receivable, less allowance for
   doubtful accounts of $813 and $457, respectively....................................      19,171      29,389
  Receivables from affiliates (Note 7).................................................       7,614       1,259
  Inventories (Note 4).................................................................      36,519      36,983
  Deferred income taxes (Note 6).......................................................       7,152       4,123
  Other current assets.................................................................       1,474       1,861
                                                                                         ----------  ----------
    Total current assets...............................................................      72,532      76,739
Property, plant and equipment, net (Note 5)............................................      45,702      42,247
Intangible asset (Note 8)..............................................................         272         366
                                                                                         ----------  ----------
                                                                                         $  118,506  $  119,352
                                                                                         ----------  ----------
                                                                                         ----------  ----------
 
                                      LIABILITIES AND OWNERS' INVESTMENT
 
Current liabilities:
  Trade accounts payable...............................................................  $   11,386  $   13,577
  Accrued liabilities..................................................................      17,386      12,184
  Income taxes payable (Note 6)........................................................         664         271
  Payables to affiliates (Note 7)......................................................      31,523      40,663
                                                                                         ----------  ----------
    Total current liabilities..........................................................      60,959      66,695
Deferred income taxes (Note 6).........................................................       4,727       1,440
                                                                                         ----------  ----------
    Total liabilities..................................................................      65,686      68,135
Commitments and contingencies (Notes 4, 11 and 13)
Owners' investment.....................................................................      52,820      51,217
                                                                                         ----------  ----------
                                                                                         $  118,506  $  119,352
                                                                                         ----------  ----------
                                                                                         ----------  ----------
</TABLE>
 
            The accompanying notes to combined financial statements
                 are an integral part of these balance sheets.
 
                                      F-31
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
                       COMBINED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  1992        1993        1994
                                                                               ----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                                     (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                            <C>         <C>         <C>
Net sales....................................................................  $  228,852  $  212,610  $  194,651
Cost of goods sold...........................................................     207,476     189,940     182,264
Restructuring costs (Note 3).................................................      12,000           0           0
                                                                               ----------  ----------  ----------
    Gross margin.............................................................       9,376      22,670      12,387
Selling expenses.............................................................       2,907       2,961       2,415
General and administrative expenses..........................................       2,767       2,677       2,332
Management fees to affiliates (Note 7).......................................       3,534       5,907       4,971
Administrative fees to affiliates (Note 7)...................................       3,389       2,179       1,254
                                                                               ----------  ----------  ----------
    Income (loss) from operations............................................      (3,221)      8,946       1,415
Interest expense to affiliates, net (Note 7).................................       1,766       1,944       1,980
                                                                               ----------  ----------  ----------
Income (loss) before provision (benefit) for income taxes....................      (4,987)      7,002        (565)
Provision (benefit) for income taxes (Note 6)................................      (1,069)      2,191          29
                                                                               ----------  ----------  ----------
Net income (loss)............................................................  $   (3,918) $    4,811  $     (594)
                                                                               ----------  ----------  ----------
                                                                               ----------  ----------  ----------
</TABLE>
 
            The accompanying notes to combined financial statements
                   are an integral part of these statements.
 
                                      F-32
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
              COMBINED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN OWNERS' INVESTMENT
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                  <C>
Balance, December 31, 1991.........................................................  $  54,463
  Net loss.........................................................................     (3,918)
  Currency translation adjustment..................................................     (1,444)
  Pension equity adjustment (Note 8)...............................................        (28)
                                                                                     ---------
Balance, December 31, 1992.........................................................     49,073
  Net income.......................................................................      4,811
  Currency translation adjustment..................................................       (916)
  Pension equity adjustment (Note 8)...............................................       (148)
                                                                                     ---------
 
Balance, December 31, 1993.........................................................     52,820
  Net loss.........................................................................       (594)
  Currency translation adjustment..................................................     (1,089)
  Pension equity adjustment (Note 8)...............................................         80
                                                                                     ---------
Balance, December 31, 1994.........................................................  $  51,217
                                                                                     ---------
                                                                                     ---------
</TABLE>
 
            The accompanying notes to combined financial statements
                   are an integral part of these statements.
 
                                      F-33
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
                       COMBINED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                    1992       1993        1994
                                                                                  ---------  ---------  ----------
                                                                                       (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                               <C>        <C>        <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
  Net income (loss).............................................................  $  (3,918) $   4,811  $     (594)
  Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net cash provided by operating
   activities --
    Depreciation................................................................      5,838      6,208       6,219
    Deferred income taxes.......................................................     (5,285)       873        (330)
    Restructuring costs (Note 3)................................................     12,000          0           0
    (Gain) loss on sale of property, plant and equipment........................         (3)        (2)          2
    Other.......................................................................       (764)      (540)       (417)
Change in current assets and liabilities --
  (Increase) decrease in:
    Trade accounts receivable...................................................     (6,248)    (2,375)    (10,218)
    Receivables from affiliates.................................................        (83)    (7,502)      6,355
    Inventories.................................................................      1,056        105        (464)
    Other current assets........................................................       (322)      (533)       (387)
  Increase (decrease) in:
    Trade accounts payable......................................................      6,145     (5,625)      2,191
    Accrued liabilities.........................................................      6,770     (5,230)     (5,383)
    Income taxes payable........................................................     (2,291)     2,224        (393)
    Payables to affiliates......................................................     (5,322)    13,143       9,140
                                                                                  ---------  ---------  ----------
      Net cash provided by operating activities.................................      7,573      5,557       5,721
                                                                                  ---------  ---------  ----------
Cash flows from investing activities:
  Purchases of property, plant and equipment....................................     (7,076)    (7,569)     (4,294)
  Proceeds from sales of property, plant and equipment..........................        319      1,603       1,095
                                                                                  ---------  ---------  ----------
      Net cash used for investing activities....................................     (6,757)    (5,966)     (3,199)
                                                                                  ---------  ---------  ----------
Net increase (decrease) in cash.................................................        816       (409)      2,522
Cash, beginning of year.........................................................        195      1,011         602
                                                                                  ---------  ---------  ----------
Cash, end of year...............................................................  $   1,011  $     602  $    3,124
                                                                                  ---------  ---------  ----------
                                                                                  ---------  ---------  ----------
</TABLE>
 
            The accompanying notes to combined financial statements
                   are an integral part of these statements.
 
                                      F-34
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
                     NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                        DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
1.  ORGANIZATION:
    The  Copper  Cable  Group  (the  "Alcatel  Business")  is  comprised  of the
operating divisions  of both  Alcatel NA  Cable Systems,  Inc. ("ACS")  and  its
affiliate,  Alcatel Canada Wire  and Cable, Inc.  ("ACW"), which manufacture and
market copper  cable  products  used in  the  telecommunications  industry.  The
Alcatel   Business  is  headquartered  in  Claremont,  North  Carolina,  and  is
controlled  by   Alcatel   Alsthom,  a   Brussels-based   corporation.   Various
subsidiaries  of Alcatel Alsthom  own 100% of  the common stock  of both ACS and
ACW.
 
2.  SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES:
    Significant accounting policies followed by the Company are as follows:
 
    PRINCIPLES OF COMBINATION
 
    The combined financial statements include the copper cable operations of ACW
which are located in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and the copper cable operations of  ACS
which  are located in Tarboro, North Carolina; Elizabethtown, Kentucky; Fordyce,
Arkansas and Claremont, North Carolina.  The combined financial statements  also
include  fiber optic cable  and data cable  operations that are  part of the ACW
facility located in  Winnipeg, Manitoba.  These operations are  not material  to
Alcatel   Business's  operating  results  as  presented  herein.  All  of  these
operations are managed by ACS management. All significant intercompany  accounts
and transactions have been eliminated.
 
    INVENTORIES
 
    Inventories are stated at the lower of cost or market. Cost is determined by
the first-in, first-out (FIFO) method for all inventories.
 
    PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT
 
    Property,   plant  and  equipment  are  stated  at  cost,  less  accumulated
depreciation and amortization.  Expenditures for repairs  and betterments  which
increase  the  estimated  useful life  or  capacity of  assets  are capitalized;
expenditures for repairs and maintenance are charged to operations as  incurred.
Gains  and losses on routine dispositions  are included in operations as general
and administrative expenses.
 
    Depreciation is computed using the  straight-line method over the  estimated
useful  lives of the various classes of  assets as follows: land improvements --
10 years; buildings -- 20 to 40 years; machinery and equipment -- 3 to 15 years;
furniture and fixtures -- 10 years and transportation equipment -- 5 years.
 
INCOME TAXES
 
    The U.S. operations  of Alcatel  Business are included  in the  consolidated
federal income tax return of Alcatel USA Corp. Pursuant to an income tax sharing
agreement  between  ACS and  Alcatel USA  Corp., U.S.  federal income  taxes are
determined as if Alcatel Business filed its U.S. federal income tax return as  a
separate entity. The Canadian operations of Alcatel Business are included in the
Canadian  income tax return of ACW, and  Canadian income taxes are determined as
if Alcatel Business filed its Canadian income tax return as a separate entity.
 
    Effective January 1, 1993, the Alcatel Business adopted Financial Accounting
Standards Board  Statement of  Financial Accounting  Standards (SFAS)  No.  109,
"Accounting for Income Taxes", which requires an asset and liability approach to
financial  accounting and reporting for income taxes. Deferred income tax assets
and liabilities  are computed  annually for  differences between  the  financial
statement and tax bases of
 
                                      F-35
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
             NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                        DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
2.  SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES: (CONTINUED)
assets  and liabilities that will result in taxable or deductible amounts in the
future based on enacted tax  laws and rates applicable  to the periods in  which
the  differences are expected to affect taxable income. Valuation allowances are
established when necessary to reduce deferred tax assets to the amount  expected
to  be realized. The provision (benefit) for  income taxes is the tax payable or
refundable for the period plus or minus the change during the period in deferred
tax assets and liabilities.
 
    The effect of adopting SFAS No. 109 in 1993 was not material.
 
PENSION PLANS
 
    The Alcatel Business has various  noncontributory pension plans which  cover
substantially   all  employees.  Plans  covering  salaried  and  certain  hourly
employees provide  pension benefits  that are  based on  employee  compensation.
Other plans, covering most hourly employees and union members, generally provide
benefits  of stated amounts for  each year of service.  The costs of the various
plans are provided  over the service  life of the  employees using an  actuarial
method  which  includes amortization  of past  service costs.  The costs  of the
various plans are funded by means of deposits with trustees of the plans.
 
POSTRETIREMENT BENEFITS
 
    The Alcatel  Business  provides  certain  health  care  and  life  insurance
benefits  for eligible retired employees in  the U.S. Substantially all salaried
employees become eligible for these benefits if they reach age 55 while  working
for the Company and satisfy certain years of service requirements.
 
    Effective  January  1,  1993, the  Alcatel  Business adopted  SFAS  No. 106,
"Employers' Accounting for Postretirement  Benefits Other Than Pensions".  Under
this statement, the Alcatel Business is required to accrue the estimated cost of
retiree  health and  life insurance benefits  over the years  that the employees
render service.  The Alcatel  Business  previously expensed  the cost  of  these
benefits  as claims were incurred. The Alcatel Business elected to recognize the
initial accumulated liability, measured  as of January 1,  1993, over a  20-year
amortization  period as permitted by  SFAS No. 106. As  a result, the cumulative
effect on prior years of this  change in accounting principle was not  material.
The effect of this change on 1993 operating results was not significant.
 
FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION
 
    The  financial statements of the Winnipeg,  Manitoba, operations of ACW have
been translated into U.S. dollars at the year-end rate of exchange for asset and
liability accounts and  the average  rate of exchange  for the  year for  income
statement  accounts. Resulting  translation gains  or losses  are included  as a
component of owners'  investment in the  accompanying balance sheet  and do  not
affect  the results of  operations. Cumulative currency  translation losses were
$2,360 at December 31, 1993, and $3,449 at December 31, 1994.
 
FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
 
    In the normal course of business, the Alcatel Business employs a variety  of
off-balance  sheet financial  instruments to reduce  its exposure  to changes in
foreign currency exchange rates and commodity prices, including foreign currency
forward exchange contracts and commodity futures contracts.
 
    Realized and  unrealized  gains  and  losses  on  foreign  currency  forward
exchange  contracts that  qualify as designated  hedges are  deferred. Gains and
losses realized  on  foreign  currency  transactions  that  do  not  qualify  as
designated hedges are included in operations.
 
                                      F-36
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
             NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                        DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
2.  SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES: (CONTINUED)
    Changes  in the market values of commodity futures contracts are included as
a component of inventory  cost. Gains and losses  resulting from changes in  the
market  value of  commodity futures  contracts are  recognized when  the related
inventory is sold.
 
3.  RESTRUCTURING COSTS:
    As a  result of  management's  review of  its  operating strategies  and  to
improve  competitiveness and future profitability, the Alcatel Business recorded
a restructuring charge of $12,000 in December 1992 for expected costs associated
with the planned shut-down of its Fordyce, Arkansas, manufacturing facility. The
charge  included  provisions  for  the  write-down  of  fixed  assets  ($4,750),
relocation of equipment and employees ($2,840), employee severance costs ($910),
employee benefit plan costs ($1,970) and other costs ($1,530).
 
    The Fordyce facility was closed in late 1993. At that time substantially all
132 employees of the facility were terminated. As a result, all of the severance
costs  recorded as part  of the restructuring  charge were expended  in 1993 and
1994. Approximately $520  of the employee  benefit plan costs  were expended  in
1993  and 1994. The remaining employee benefit  plan costs will be expended when
required by  the funding  provisions of  the Internal  Revenue Service  and  the
Department  of  Labor regulations.  All  other components  of  the restructuring
charge were  expended during  1993 and  1994 with  the exception  of the  $4,750
charge  to fixed assets, which was a noncash charge to write-down the book value
of those  assets  to estimated  fair  value. All  fixed  assets at  the  Fordyce
facility  have  been  disposed  or relocated  to  the  Alcatel  Business's other
manufacturing  facilities  as  of  December  31,  1994.  As  a  result  of   the
restructuring, the Alcatel Business expects to eliminate most of the fixed costs
previously  incurred at  the Fordyce facility  which are estimated  to be $2,000
annually.
 
4.  INVENTORIES:
    Inventories consist of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               1993       1994
                                                             ---------  ---------
<S>                                                          <C>        <C>
Raw materials..............................................  $   4,478  $   5,747
Work-in-process............................................      6,645      5,965
Finished goods.............................................     25,396     25,271
                                                             ---------  ---------
                                                             $  36,519  $  36,983
                                                             ---------  ---------
                                                             ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
    At December 31, 1994, the  Alcatel Business had contractual commitments  for
purchases  of copper  of approximately  $11,100 and  for purchases  of other raw
materials of approximately $1,100.
 
                                      F-37
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
             NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                        DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
5.  PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT:
    Property, plant and equipment consist of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               1993       1994
                                                             ---------  ---------
<S>                                                          <C>        <C>
Land and improvements......................................  $   2,725  $   2,706
Buildings..................................................     11,663     12,336
Machinery and equipment....................................     60,029     61,717
Furniture and fixtures.....................................        687        708
Transportation equipment...................................        151        151
Construction-in-progress...................................      1,802      1,943
                                                             ---------  ---------
                                                                77,057     79,561
Less -- Accumulated depreciation...........................    (31,355)   (37,314)
                                                             ---------  ---------
                                                             $  45,702  $  42,247
                                                             ---------  ---------
                                                             ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
6.  INCOME TAXES:
    Provision (benefit) for income taxes consists of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           1992       1993       1994
                                                         ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                      <C>        <C>        <C>
Current --
  U.S.:
    Federal............................................  $   3,489  $   1,053  $     609
    State..............................................        727        265       (250)
                                                         ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                             4,216      1,318        359
                                                         ---------  ---------  ---------
Deferred --
  U.S.:
    Federal............................................     (4,440)       737       (659)
    State..............................................       (845)       136        329
                                                         ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                            (5,285)       873       (330)
                                                         ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                         $  (1,069) $   2,191  $      29
                                                         ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                         ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-38
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
             NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                        DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
6.  INCOME TAXES: (CONTINUED)
    Provision (benefit) for income  taxes differed from  the amount computed  by
applying the federal statutory income tax rate due to:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     1992                    1993                     1994
                                            ----------------------  ----------------------  ------------------------
                                             AMOUNT      PERCENT     AMOUNT      PERCENT      AMOUNT       PERCENT
                                            ---------  -----------  ---------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                         <C>        <C>          <C>        <C>          <C>          <C>
Income taxes at U.S. federal statutory
 rate.....................................  $  (1,696)     (34.0)%  $   2,451       35.0%    $    (198)      (35.0)%
State income taxes, net of federal income
 tax benefit..............................        (77)      (1.5)         261        3.7            51         9.0
Canadian losses...........................        934       18.7           29        0.4           242        42.8
Reduction of income tax reserves..........       (264)      (5.3)        (600)      (8.5)         (100)      (17.7)
Other, net................................         34        0.7           50        0.7            34         6.0
                                            ---------    -----      ---------    -----           -----     -----
                                            $  (1,069)     (21.4)%  $   2,191       31.3%    $      29         5.1%
                                            ---------    -----      ---------    -----           -----     -----
                                            ---------    -----      ---------    -----           -----     -----
</TABLE>
 
    The  Alcatel Business's  Canadian operations  generated losses  of $2,741 in
1992, $83 in 1993 and $690 in  1994, which will be available to offset  Canadian
taxable  income,  if  any,  through  1999.  Because  of  uncertainties regarding
realization of  the  tax  benefit  of these  losses  in  the  future,  valuation
allowances were established to fully reserve the related net deferred tax asset.
 
    The components of the net deferred tax asset were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                1993       1994
                                                              ---------  ---------
<S>                                                           <C>        <C>
Deferred tax assets --
  Accounts receivable.......................................  $     324  $     160
  Inventories...............................................      1,021        856
  Self-insurance reserves...................................        283        468
  Workers' compensation reserves............................        836        764
  Accrued EPA claims........................................        112          0
  Deferred compensation and other compensation-related
   accruals.................................................      3,025      2,016
  Canadian loss carry forwards (expiring from 1996 to
   1999)....................................................      1,331      1,194
  Other reserves............................................      1,753        454
  Less -- Valuation allowance...............................     (1,533)    (1,789)
                                                              ---------  ---------
                                                                  7,152      4,123
Deferred tax liabilities -- Property, plant and equipment...     (4,727)    (1,440)
                                                              ---------  ---------
    Net deferred tax asset..................................  $   2,425  $   2,683
                                                              ---------  ---------
                                                              ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
    In  management's opinion, income  tax amounts presented  in the accompanying
financial statements would not be  materially different if the Alcatel  Business
had  not been eligible to  be included in the  consolidated income tax return of
Alcatel USA Corp. or in the income tax return of ACW.
 
                                      F-39
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
             NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                        DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
7.  RELATED PARTIES:
    In the normal course  of business, the Alcatel  Business engages in  various
arms-length   transactions  with  its  affiliates.  Inventories  purchased  from
affiliates, consisting primarily of copper rod purchases from a division of ACW,
totaled $17,183  in 1992,  $20,967 in  1993 and  $14,532 in  1994 and  sales  to
affiliates totaled $583 in 1992, and $1,751 in 1993 and $5,530 in 1994.
 
    The  Alcatel Business obtains working  capital through the treasury function
provided by ACS. To the extent that  the Alcatel Business is in a net  borrowing
position  with  ACS, interest  expense is  allocated to  ACS at  ACS's effective
borrowing rate. The net borrowing position is calculated as the average  monthly
outstanding  net payable  balance to  ACS. Average  short-term borrowings during
1992, 1993 and  1994 were $29,433,  $52,540 and $44,000,  respectively; and  the
weighted average interest rates were 6.0%, 3.7% and 4.5%, respectively.
 
    Under  agreements  with  affiliated  companies,  the  Alcatel  Business pays
service charges, research  and development  assessments and  other service  fees
(management  fees). Management fees incurred by the Alcatel Business under these
agreements totaled $3,534 in 1992, $5,907 in 1993 and $4,971 in 1994.
 
    Alcatel  NA,  Inc.  and  ACW  provide  legal,  accounting,  tax,   treasury,
insurance, employee benefits, data processing, transportation and other services
to  the Alcatel Business. Expenses that are directly attributable to the Alcatel
Business are charged  directly to the  Alcatel Business. Expenses  that are  not
directly attributable to a particular subsidiary or business unit of Alcatel NA,
Inc.  or ACW  are allocated  each month to  all subsidiaries  and business units
receiving the services. Amounts allocated  are based on a particular  subsidiary
or  business  unit's  relative percentage  of  net sales,  payroll  expenses and
average total assets to the net sales, payroll expenses and average total assets
of all the  subsidiaries and business  units receiving services.  Administrative
fees  allocated to  the Alcatel  Business for  these services  totaled $3,389 in
1992,  $2,179  in  1993  and  $1,254  in  1994.  Management  believes  that  the
administrative  fees for these services would not have been materially different
if they had been incurred directly by the Alcatel Business.
 
8.  EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS:
    The Alcatel Business has various  noncontributory pension plans which  cover
substantially  all employees. Financial  information related to  these plans was
determined by the Alcatel Business's actuary, William M. Mercer Incorporated.
 
    Net pension cost for the U.S. plans is summarized as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         1992       1993       1994
                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                    <C>        <C>        <C>
Service cost.........................................................  $     304  $     286  $     361
Interest cost........................................................        186        213        279
Return on plan assets................................................        (86)      (267)        17
Other................................................................        (76)       251       (235)
                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                       $     328  $     483  $     422
                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-40
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
             NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                        DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
8.  EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS: (CONTINUED)
    The funded  status  and accrued  pension  cost for  the  U.S. plans  are  as
follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    DECEMBER 31, 1993
                                                               ----------------------------
                                                               ASSETS EXCEED   ACCUMULATED
                                                                ACCUMULATED     BENEFITS
                                                                 BENEFITS     EXCEED ASSETS
                                                               -------------  -------------
<S>                                                            <C>            <C>
Fair value of plan assets....................................    $   1,492      $   1,050
Projected benefit obligation.................................        2,389          1,383
                                                                    ------         ------
Projected benefit obligation in excess of plan assets........         (897)          (333)
Unrecognized net loss........................................          378            326
Unrecognized prior service cost..............................          (47)            43
Adjustment required to recognize minimum liability...........            0           (371)
                                                                    ------         ------
Accrued pension cost.........................................    $    (566)     $    (335)
                                                                    ------         ------
                                                                    ------         ------
Accumulated benefits.........................................    $   1,377      $   1,383
                                                                    ------         ------
                                                                    ------         ------
Vested benefits..............................................    $   1,260      $   1,205
                                                                    ------         ------
                                                                    ------         ------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    DECEMBER 31, 1994
                                                               ----------------------------
                                                               ASSETS EXCEED   ACCUMULATED
                                                                ACCUMULATED     BENEFITS
                                                                 BENEFITS     EXCEED ASSETS
                                                               -------------  -------------
<S>                                                            <C>            <C>
Fair value of plan assets....................................    $   1,994      $   1,280
Projected benefit obligation.................................        2,032          1,324
                                                                    ------         ------
Projected benefit obligation in excess of plan assets........          (38)           (44)
Unrecognized net (gain) loss.................................         (212)           154
Unrecognized prior service cost..............................          (43)            34
Adjustment required to recognize minimum liability...........            0           (186)
                                                                    ------         ------
Accrued pension cost.........................................    $    (293)     $     (42)
                                                                    ------         ------
                                                                    ------         ------
Accumulated benefits.........................................    $   1,306      $   1,324
                                                                    ------         ------
                                                                    ------         ------
Vested benefits..............................................    $   1,220      $   1,224
                                                                    ------         ------
                                                                    ------         ------
</TABLE>
 
    Actuarial assumptions used for the U.S. plans are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          1992         1993         1994
                                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                                                    <C>          <C>          <C>
Assumed discount rate................................................        9.0%         8.0%         9.0%
Assumed rate of compensation increase -- salaried plan...............        5.5          5.5          5.0
Expected rate of return on plan assets...............................        8.0          8.0          8.0
                                                                            --           --           --
                                                                            --           --           --
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-41
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
             NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                        DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
8.  EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS: (CONTINUED)
    Net pension cost for the Canadian plans is summarized as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        1992       1993       1994
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Service cost........................................................  $     134  $     113  $     106
Interest cost.......................................................        224        224        227
Return on plan assets...............................................       (207)      (194)      (214)
Other...............................................................         13         19         11
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                      $     164  $     162  $     130
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
    The  funded status and  accrued pension cost  for the Canadian  plans are as
follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    DECEMBER 31, 1993
                                                               ----------------------------
                                                               ASSETS EXCEED   ACCUMULATED
                                                                ACCUMULATED     BENEFITS
                                                                 BENEFITS     EXCEED ASSETS
                                                               -------------  -------------
<S>                                                            <C>            <C>
Fair value of plan assets....................................    $   1,071      $   1,720
Projected benefit obligation.................................        1,045          1,856
                                                                    ------         ------
Projected benefit obligation exceeded by (in excess) of plan
 assets......................................................           26           (136)
Unrecognized net gain........................................         (109)          (130)
Unrecognized prior service cost..............................            0            320
Adjustment required to recognize minimum liability...........            0           (190)
                                                                    ------         ------
Accrued pension cost.........................................    $     (83)     $    (136)
                                                                    ------         ------
                                                                    ------         ------
Accumulated benefits.........................................    $     725      $   1,856
                                                                    ------         ------
                                                                    ------         ------
Vested benefits..............................................    $     724      $   1,763
                                                                    ------         ------
                                                                    ------         ------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    DECEMBER 31, 1994
                                                               ----------------------------
                                                               ASSETS EXCEED   ACCUMULATED
                                                                ACCUMULATED     BENEFITS
                                                                 BENEFITS     EXCEED ASSETS
                                                               -------------  -------------
<S>                                                            <C>            <C>
Fair value of plan assets....................................    $     909      $   1,584
Projected benefit obligation.................................        1,061          1,851
                                                                    ------         ------
Projected benefit obligation in excess of plan assets........         (152)          (267)
Unrecognized net loss........................................           21             34
Unrecognized prior service cost..............................            0            284
Adjustment required to recognize minimum liability...........            0           (317)
                                                                    ------         ------
Accrued pension cost.........................................    $    (131)     $    (266)
                                                                    ------         ------
                                                                    ------         ------
Accumulated benefits.........................................    $     740      $   1,851
                                                                    ------         ------
                                                                    ------         ------
Vested benefits..............................................    $     739      $   1,758
                                                                    ------         ------
                                                                    ------         ------
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-42
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
             NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                        DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
8.  EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS: (CONTINUED)
    Actuarial assumptions used for the Canadian plans are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          1992         1993         1994
                                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                                                    <C>          <C>          <C>
Assumed discount rate................................................        8.0%         8.0%         8.0%
Assumed rate of compensation increase -- salaried plan...............        5.8          5.8          5.8
Expected rate of return on plan assets...............................        8.0          8.0          8.0
                                                                            --           --           --
                                                                            --           --           --
</TABLE>
 
    The provisions of SFAS No. 87, "Employers' Accounting for Pensions," require
companies with any plans that have an unfunded accumulated benefit obligation to
recognize an  additional minimum  pension  liability, an  offsetting  intangible
pension  asset and, in certain situations,  an adjustment to owners' investment,
net of the related  deferred tax benefit. In  accordance with the provisions  of
SFAS  No. 87, the combined balance sheets at December 31, 1993 and 1994, include
an intangible pension  asset of  $272 and  $366, an  additional minimum  pension
liability  of $561 and  $503 and a cumulative  adjustment to owners' investment,
net of the related deferred tax benefit of $176 and $96, respectively.
 
9.  POSTRETIREMENT BENEFIT OBLIGATIONS OTHER THAN PENSIONS:
    The Alcatel  Business  provides  certain  health  care  and  life  insurance
benefits  for  eligible retired  employees  in the  U.S..  Financial information
related to  this plan  was determined  by the  Company's actuaries,  William  M.
Mercer, Incorporated.
 
    Net periodic postretirement benefit costs include the following components:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  1993         1994
                                                                                  -----        -----
<S>                                                                            <C>          <C>
Service cost.................................................................   $      38    $      37
Interest cost................................................................          36           36
Amortization of the transition obligation....................................          20           20
                                                                                      ---          ---
                                                                                $      94    $      93
                                                                                      ---          ---
                                                                                      ---          ---
</TABLE>
 
    The funded status and accrued cost for the plan is as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                DECEMBER 31
                                                                            --------------------
                                                                              1993       1994
                                                                            ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                         <C>        <C>
Accumulated postretirement benefit obligation --
  Retirees................................................................  $      33  $      31
  Fully eligible active plan participants.................................        100        117
  Other active participants...............................................        369        321
                                                                            ---------  ---------
Accumulated benefit obligation............................................        502        469
Unrealized net gain (loss)................................................        (30)        76
Unrecognized transition obligation........................................       (378)      (358)
                                                                            ---------  ---------
Accrued postretirement cost...............................................  $      94  $     187
                                                                            ---------  ---------
                                                                            ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-43
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
             NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                        DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
9.  POSTRETIREMENT BENEFIT OBLIGATIONS OTHER THAN PENSIONS: (CONTINUED)
    The  accumulated postretirement  benefit obligations were  computed using an
assumed discount rate of  8.0% in 1993  and 9.0% in 1994.  The health care  cost
trend rate was assumed to be 13.0% for 1993 and 12.125% for 1994, then the trend
rate was assumed to decline by approximately 1% for each year to 6%, which would
continue for year 2001 and beyond.
 
    If the health care cost trend rate were increased one percent for all future
years,  the accumulated  postretirement benefit obligation  would have increased
20% as of December 31, 1993, and 18% as of December 31, 1994. The effect of this
change on the aggregate of service and interest cost for 1993 would have been an
increase of 23.16% and for 1994 would have been an increase of 20.23%.
 
10. SUPPLEMENTAL CASH FLOW INFORMATION:
    Cash payments for interest and income taxes were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     1992       1993       1994
                                                                   ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                <C>        <C>        <C>
Interest paid....................................................  $   1,766  $   1,944  $   1,980
Income taxes paid (received).....................................      6,507       (906)       752
                                                                   ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                   ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
11. FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS AND CREDIT RISK:
    The  Alcatel  Business's  activities  are  primarily  concentrated  in   the
telecommunications  industry. As of December 31,  1994, a substantial portion of
the Alcatel Business's trade  accounts receivables were  from companies in  that
industry.
 
    In  1992, sales to these five customers comprised 0%, 4.9%, 10.1%, 24.0% and
14.3% of  net sales.  In 1993,  sales to  these five  customers comprised  2.7%,
10.8%, 13.5%, 14.4% and 15.2% of net sales. In 1994, net sales to five customers
comprised  22.7%,  13.5%,  12.8%,  4.6% and  .6%,  respectively,  of  net sales.
Approximately 79.5% of net sales in 1992,  80.2% of net sales in 1993 and  81.2%
of net sales in 1994 were to 10 customers. Net export sales approximated 2.4% of
net sales in 1992, 15.5% in 1993 and 12.7% in 1994.
 
    At  December 31, 1994,  the Alcatel Business had  $6,027 of foreign currency
forward exchange contracts  outstanding to  hedge sales  denominated in  foreign
currencies.  The forward  exchange contracts'  maturity dates  do not  exceed 12
months and require  the Alcatel Business  to exchange U.S.  dollars for  foreign
currencies at maturity, at rates agreed to at inception of the contracts.
 
    The  Alcatel Business enters into futures  contracts to hedge certain copper
raw material purchases to  minimize costs risks due  to market fluctuations.  At
December  31, 1994,  the Alcatel Business  had $2,400 million  of copper futures
contracts that fix the price for a small portion of 1995 copper purchases.
 
    SFAS No.  107,  "Disclosure  About Fair  Value  of  Financial  Instruments,"
requires  the disclosure of estimated fair values for financial instruments. The
statement requires  all  entities  to  disclose  the  fair  value  of  financial
instruments,  both assets and  liabilities recognized and  not recognized in the
balance sheet, for which it is practicable to estimate fair value. Quoted market
prices, if available, are utilized as an estimate of the fair value of financial
instruments.
 
COMMODITY FUTURES CONTRACTS
 
    The fair value is  estimated by obtaining market  rate quotes. The  contract
value of $2,400 at December 31, 1994, approximates market value.
 
                                      F-44
<PAGE>
          THE COPPER CABLE GROUP OF ALCATEL NA CABLE SYSTEMS, INC. AND
                      ALCATEL CANADA WIRE AND CABLE, INC.
             NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                        DECEMBER 31, 1992, 1993 AND 1994
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
11. FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS AND CREDIT RISK: (CONTINUED)
FOREIGN CURRENCY FORWARD EXCHANGE CONTRACTS
 
    The contract value of $6,027 approximates market value.
 
12. GEOGRAPHIC AREA INFORMATION:
    The  Alcatel  Business is  engaged principally  in one  line of  business --
copper telecommunications cable  -- which  represents substantially  all of  the
combined  net sales. The following table  presents information about the Alcatel
Business by  geographic  area.  There  were no  material  amounts  of  sales  or
transfers among geographic areas.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               UNITED
                                                               STATES     CANADA      TOTAL
                                                             ----------  ---------  ----------
<S>                                                          <C>         <C>        <C>
1992 --
  Net sales................................................  $  192,999  $  35,853  $  228,852
  Pretax loss..............................................      (2,246)    (2,741)     (4,987)
  Assets...................................................      82,964     23,605     106,569
1993 --
  Net sales................................................     177,519     35,091     212,610
  Pretax income (loss).....................................       7,085        (83)      7,002
  Assets...................................................      91,789     26,717     118,506
1994 --
  Net sales................................................     164,062     30,589     194,651
  Pretax income (loss).....................................         125       (690)       (565)
  Assets...................................................      99,465     19,887     119,352
                                                             ----------  ---------  ----------
                                                             ----------  ---------  ----------
</TABLE>
 
    Net  export sales included in the United States net sales amounts above were
$5,401 in 1992, $20,772 in 1993 and  $18,264 in 1994. Net export sales  included
in  the Canadian net  sales amounts above were  $0 in 1992,  $12,107 in 1993 and
$6,431 in 1994.
 
13. CONTINGENCIES:
    The Alcatel  Business  is involved  in  various litigation  arising  in  the
ordinary  course of business. Although the  final outcome of these legal matters
cannot be determined,  based on the  facts presently known,  it is  management's
opinion  that these matters are not  significant and that their final resolution
will not have  a material  adverse effect  on the  Alcatel Business's  financial
position or future results of operations.
 
14. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS:
    In May 1995, ACS and ACW sold substantially all of the assets of the Alcatel
Business other than accounts receivable from affiliates to Superior TeleTec Inc.
("Superior"),  a wholly owned subsidiary of The Alpine Group, Inc., and Superior
assumed certain  liabilities  of the  Alcatel  Business which  did  not  include
amounts payable to affiliates.
 
                                      F-45
<PAGE>
- -------------------------------------------
                                     -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
                                     -------------------------------------------
 
    NO  PERSON  HAS BEEN  AUTHORIZED  TO GIVE  ANY  INFORMATION OR  TO  MAKE ANY
REPRESENTATIONS OTHER THAN THOSE CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS, AND, IF GIVEN  OR
MADE, SUCH INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS MUST NOT BE RELIED UPON AS HAVING BEEN
AUTHORIZED  BY  THE  COMPANY  OR  THE  UNDERWRITERS.  THIS  PROSPECTUS  DOES NOT
CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO  SELL OR THE  SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER  TO BUY ANY  OTHER
THAN THE SECURITIES TO WHICH IT RELATES OR ANY OFFER TO SELL OR THE SOLICITATION
OF  AN OFFER TO BUY SUCH SECURITIES IN  ANY CIRCUMSTANCES IN WHICH SUCH OFFER OR
SOLICITATION IS UNLAWFUL. NEITHER THE DELIVERY  OF THIS PROSPECTUS NOR ANY  SALE
MADE HEREUNDER SHALL, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES, CREATE ANY IMPLICATION THAT THERE
HAS  BEEN NO CHANGE IN THE AFFAIRS OF  THE COMPANY SINCE THE DATE HEREOF OR THAT
THE INFORMATION CONTAINED  HEREIN IS CORRECT  AS OF ANY  TIME SUBSEQUENT TO  ITS
DATE.
 
                            ------------------------
 
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    PAGE
                                                    -----
<S>                                              <C>
Prospectus Summary.............................           3
Risk Factors...................................           8
The Company....................................          13
Use of Proceeds................................          14
Dividend Policy................................          14
Capitalization.................................          15
Dilution.......................................          16
Pro Forma Condensed Combined Financial
 Statements....................................          17
Selected Historical Combined Financial Data of
 the Company...................................          21
Management's Discussion and Analysis of
 Financial Condition and Results of
 Operations....................................          22
Business.......................................          34
Management.....................................          42
Certain Transactions and Relationships.........          47
Principal Stockholders.........................          49
Description of Capital Stock...................          49
Shares Eligible for Future Sale................          52
Underwriting...................................          53
Legal Matters..................................          54
Experts........................................          54
Available Information..........................          54
Index to Financial Statements..................         F-1
</TABLE>
    
 
    UNTIL              , 1996  (25 DAYS AFTER THE  DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS), ALL
DEALERS EFFECTING TRANSACTIONS IN  THE COMMON STOCK  OFFERED HEREBY, WHETHER  OR
NOT PARTICIPATING IN THIS DISTRIBUTION, MAY BE REQUIRED TO DELIVER A PROSPECTUS.
THIS  IS IN ADDITION TO  THE OBLIGATION OF DEALERS  TO DELIVER A PROSPECTUS WHEN
ACTING  AS  UNDERWRITERS  AND  WITH  RESPECT  TO  THEIR  UNSOLD  ALLOTMENTS   OR
SUBSCRIPTIONS.
 
                                6,000,000 SHARES
 
                                     [LOGO]
 
                                  COMMON STOCK
 
                             ---------------------
 
                                   PROSPECTUS
 
                             ---------------------
 
                                  FURMAN SELZ
 
                            OPPENHEIMER & CO., INC.
 
                           BT SECURITIES CORPORATION
 
                                           , 1996
 
- -------------------------------------------
                                     -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
                                     -------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
                                    PART II
                   INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN THE PROSPECTUS
 
ITEM 13.  OTHER EXPENSES OF ISSUANCE AND DISTRIBUTION.
 
    The  following table sets forth the estimated expenses and costs (other than
underwriting discounts and commissions) expected  to be incurred by the  Company
in  connection  with  the  issuance and  distribution  of  the  securities being
registered under this registration statement. Except for the SEC and NASD filing
fees, all expenses have been estimated and are subject to future contingencies.
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                  <C>
SEC registration fee...............................................  $  40,448
NASD fee...........................................................     11,540
New York Stock Exchange listing fee................................    116,100
Legal fees and expenses*...........................................
Printing and engraving expenses*...................................
Accounting fees and expenses*......................................
Blue sky fees and expenses*........................................
Transfer agent and registrar fees..................................  $   3,500
Miscellaneous*.....................................................
                                                                     ---------
    Total..........................................................  $
                                                                     ---------
                                                                     ---------
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------
*  To be filed by amendment
 
ITEM 14.  INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS.
 
    Section 145  of  the  General  Corporation Law  of  the  State  of  Delaware
("Section  145") permits a Delaware corporation  to indemnify any person who was
or is a party or is threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending, or
completed action, suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative or
investigative (other than an action  by or in the  right of the corporation)  by
reason  of the fact that such person is  or was a director, officer, employee or
agent of the corporation, or is or was serving at the request of the corporation
as a director, officer, employee  or agent of another corporation,  partnership,
joint venture, trust or other enterprise, against expenses (including attorneys'
fees),  judgments, fines and amounts paid  in settlement actually and reasonably
incurred by such person  in connection with such  action, suit or proceeding  if
such  person acted in good faith and in a manner such person reasonably believed
to be in  or not opposed  to the best  interests of the  corporation, and,  with
respect to any criminal action or proceeding, had no reasonable cause to believe
such person's conduct was unlawful.
 
    In  the case of an action by or in the right of the corporation, Section 145
permits the corporation  to indemnify any  person who was  or is a  party or  is
threatened  to be made a party to any threatened, pending or completed action or
suit by or in the right of the corporation to procure a judgment in its favor by
reason of the fact that such person  is or was a director, officer, employee  or
agent of the corporation, or is or was serving at the request of the corporation
as  a director, officer, employee or  agent of another corporation, partnership,
joint venture, trust or other enterprise against expenses (including  attorneys'
fees)  actually and  reasonably incurred by  such person in  connection with the
defense or settlement of such action or suit if he acted in good faith and in  a
manner  such person  reasonably believed  to be  in or  not opposed  to the best
interests of the corporation. No indemnification  may be made in respect of  any
claim,  issue or matter as  to which such person shall  have been adjudged to be
liable to  the corporation  unless and  only to  the extent  that the  Court  of
Chancery  or the court in which such  action or suit was brought shall determine
upon application that, despite the adjudication of liability but in view of  all
the  circumstances of the case, such person is fairly and reasonably entitled to
indemnity for such  expenses which  the Court of  Chancery or  such other  court
shall deem proper.
 
                                      II-1
<PAGE>
    To  the extent that a director, officer,  employee or agent of a corporation
has been successful on the merits or otherwise in defense of any action, suit or
proceeding referred to  in the  preceding two paragraphs.  Section 145  requires
that  such person  be indemnified  against expenses  (including attorneys' fees)
actually and reasonably incurred by such person in connection therewith.
 
    Section 145 provides that expenses  (including attorneys' fees) incurred  by
an  officer  or director  in defending  any  civil, criminal,  administrative or
investigative action,  suit or  proceeding may  be paid  by the  corporation  in
advance of the final disposition of such action, suit or proceeding upon receipt
of  an undertaking  by or on  behalf of such  director or officer  to repay such
amount if it shall ultimately be determined that such person is not entitled  to
be indemnified by the corporation as authorized in Section 145.
 
    Article  Eighth of the Company's Certificate of Incorporation eliminates the
personal liability  of  the directors  of  the Company  to  the Company  or  its
stockholders  for monetary  damages for breach  of fiduciary  duty as directors,
with certain exceptions. Article Ninth requires indemnification of directors and
officers of the  Company, and  for advancement  of litigation  expenses, to  the
fullest extent permitted by Section 145.
 
    The  Underwriting  Agreement  filed  herewith as  Exhibit  1.1  provides for
indemnification of the directors, certain  officers, and controlling persons  of
the  Company by  the Underwriters  against certain  civil liabilities, including
liabilities under the Securities Act.
 
ITEM 15.  RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES
 
    Alpine subscribed for  6,024,048 shares of  Common Stock in  July 1996.  The
issuance of such shares was exempt from registration pursuant to Section 4(2) of
the Securities Act.
 
ITEM 16.  EXHIBITS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 EXHIBIT
   NO.                                                 DESCRIPTION
- ---------  ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>        <S>
     .1*1* Form of Underwriting Agreement
    3.1**  Certificate of Incorporation of the Company
    3.2**  Certificate of Amendment, dated July 12, 1996, to the Certificate of Incorporation of the Company
    3.3**  Certificate of Amendment, dated August 6, 1996 to the Certificate of Incorporation of the Company
    3.4**  By-Laws of the Company
 5*        Opinion of Proskauer Rose Goetz & Mendelsohn LLP re: validity of securities
   10.1*   1996 Employees' Stock Incentive Plan
   10.2*   Employment Agreement between the Company and Steven S. Elbaum
   10.3**  Employment Agreement, dated April 26, 1996, between Superior and Justin F. Deedy, Jr.
   10.4**  Form of Services Agreement between the Company and Alpine
   10.5**  Form of Letter Agreement between the Company and Alpine relating to tax indemnification
   10.6*   Bank Credit Facility
   10.7*   1996 Non-Employee Directors' Stock Option Plan
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      II-2
<PAGE>
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 EXHIBIT
   NO.                                                 DESCRIPTION
- ---------  ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   10.8    Lease Agreement by and between ALP(TX) QRS 11-28, Inc., and Superior, dated as of December 16, 1993
            (incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10(i) to the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q of Alpine
            for the quarter ended January 31, 1994); First Amendment to Lease Agreement, dated as of May 10,
            1995, by and between ALP (TX) QRS 11-28, Inc. and Superior (incorporated herein by reference to
            Exhibit 10(o) to the Annual Report on Form 10-K of Alpine for the year ended April 30, 1995);
            Second Amendment to Lease Agreement, dated as of July 21, 1995, by and between ALP(TX) QRS 11-28,
            Inc. and Superior (incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10(x) to the Annual Report on Form
            10-K of Alpine for the year ended April 30, 1995)
<C>        <S>
   10.9*   Tax Sharing Agreement
   12*     Statement re: computation of ratios
 21**      List of subsidiaries
   23.1*   Consent of Arthur Andersen LLP
   23.2*   Consent of Proskauer Rose Goetz & Mendelsohn LLP (contained in opinion to be filed as Exhibit 5)
   24.1*   Power of Attorney
   27*     Financial Data Schedule
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------
*   To be filed by amendment
   
**  Previously filed
    
 
ITEM 17.  UNDERTAKINGS
 
    The Registrant hereby undertakes that:
 
       (1) For purposes of determining any liability under the Securities Act of
           1933,  the information omitted  from the form  of prospectus filed as
    part of this registration statement in reliance upon Rule 430A and contained
    in a form of prospectus filed  by the registrant pursuant to Rule  424(b)(1)
    or (4) or 497(h) under the Securities Act shall be deemed to be part of this
    registration statement as of the time it was declared effective.
 
       (2) For the purpose of determining any liability under the Securities Act
           of  1933,  each  post-effective  amendment that  contains  a  form of
    prospectus shall be deemed  to be a new  registration statement relating  to
    the  securities offered therein, and the offering of such securities at that
    time shall be deemed to be the initial BONA FIDE offering thereof.
 
    The Registrant  hereby undertakes  to  provide to  the Underwriters  at  the
closing  specified in the Underwriting Agreement (filed herewith as Exhibit 1.1)
certificates in such denominations and registered  in such names as required  by
the Underwriters to permit prompt delivery to each purchaser.
 
    Insofar  as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act
of 1933 may be permitted to  directors, officers and controlling persons of  the
Registrant  pursuant to the  provisions described in Item  14, or otherwise, the
Registrant has been advised that in  the opinion of the Securities and  Exchange
Commission  such indemnification  is against public  policy as  expressed in the
Securities Act of  1933 and is,  therefore, unenforceable. In  the event that  a
claim  for indemnification against  such liabilities (other  than the payment by
the  Registrant  of  expenses  incurred  or  paid  by  a  director,  officer  or
controlling  person of the  Registrant in the successful  defense of any action,
suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling  person
in  connection with the securities being registered, the Registrant will, unless
in the  opinion  of its  counsel  the matter  has  been settled  by  controlling
precedent,  submit to a  court of appropriate  jurisdiction the question whether
such indemnification  by  it  is  against public  policy  as  expressed  in  the
Securities  Act of 1933 and  will be governed by  the final adjudication of such
issue.
 
                                      II-3
<PAGE>
                                   SIGNATURES
 
   
    Pursuant  to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the undersigned
registrant certifies  that  it has  duly  caused this  Amendment  No. 1  to  the
Registration  Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto
duly authorized, in the City of New York, State of New York, on the 11th day  of
September, 1996.
    
 
                                          SUPERIOR TELECOM INC.
 
                                          By:        /s/ STEVEN S. ELBAUM
 
                                             -----------------------------------
                                                      Steven S. Elbaum
                                              PRESIDENT, CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
                                                             AND
                                                   CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
 
   
                                   SIGNATURES
    
 
   
    Pursuant  to the requirements of the  Securities Act of 1933, this Amendment
No. 1 to the Registration Statement has been signed by the following persons  in
the capacities and on the dates indicated.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<C>                                                     <S>                                <C>
                      SIGNATURE                                       TITLE                         DATE
- ------------------------------------------------------  ---------------------------------  ----------------------
 
                                                        President, Chairman of the Board,
                      /s/ STEVEN S. ELBAUM               Chief Executive Officer and
     -------------------------------------------         Director (principal executive       September 11, 1996
                   Steven S. Elbaum                      officer)
 
                      /s/ DAVID S. ALDRIDGE             Chief Financial Officer
     -------------------------------------------         (principal financial and            September 11, 1996
                  David S. Aldridge                      accounting officer)
 
                        /s/ BRAGI F. SCHUT
     -------------------------------------------        Director                             September 11, 1996
                    Bragi F. Schut
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      II-4

<PAGE>

                                                              EXHIBIT 23.1


                      CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

As independent public accountants, we hereby consent to the inclusion in this
amendment no. 1 to a registration statement on Form S-1 of (1) our report
dated September 11, 1996 for Superior Telecommunications Inc. and subsidiary
and DNE Systems, Inc. and subsidiaries (to be reorganized as Superior
TeleCom Inc.), (2) our report dated September 11, 1996 for Superior TeleCom Inc.
and (3) our report dated February 24, 1995 (except for the matter discussed in
Note 14, as to which the date is May 11, 1995) for Alcatel NA Cable Systems,
Inc. and Alcatel Canada Wire and Cable, Inc. and to all references to our
Firm included in this registration statement.

                                                 ARTHUR ANDERSEN LLP

Atlanta, Georgia
September 11, 1996


© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission