Comments from The Street Dot Com on 3/29/01
  f you've ever signed the UPS guy's little computer notebook, then                you've touched one of Symbol Technologies' (SBL:NYSE -                news) many products. The company manufactures and sells                barcode scanners and portable computer devices that allow                people to manage data and inventory while wearing brown tube                socks in the middle of suburbia. 
                 Unfortunately, with the current economic climate cooling, Lehman                Brothers analyst Jeff Kessler thinks the company's sales will fall,                simply because its customer base is facing such a tough time                meeting earnings growth targets. Kessler downgraded the                company to buy from strong buy, dropped his 2001 earnings                estimate to $1.25 from $1.32 a share and lowered his price                target to $56 from $63. Wall Street, on average, expects the                company to make $1.31 a share. Yesterday, Symbol closed at                $39.10. 
                 "Our fears surrounding negative preannouncements, from logistic                providers like UPS and FedEx (FDX:NYSE - news) to wireless                device manufacturers like Palm (PALM:Nasdaq - news), cause                us to question how long Symbol can buck the trends surrounding                its markets," he wrote. "Our last checks with the company                (several weeks ago) indicated that order rates were still holding                up. However, our visibility on Symbol's revenue base gets                cloudier as several of its end markets continue to deteriorate." 
                 Although Kessler said Symbol was the dominant company in the                barcode market and could very well meet his old earnings                estimate for 2001, he felt the company's stock could fall to $30,                just because the economy is that bad. |