DELL Analyst Meeting: 4/9/99 (Part 3, Prudential Securities)
09:24am EDT 9-Apr-99 Prudential Securities (K.ALEXY 212-778-1049) DELL
DELL: HIGHLIGHTS FROM ANALYST MEETING; RAISING PRICE TARGET
DELL: HIGHLIGHTS FROM ANALYST MEETING; RAISING PRICE TARGET R E S E A R C H N O T E S April 9, 1999
Subject: Dell Computer (DELL--$44 15/16)--OTC OPINION ========= Current: Strong Buy/SBI/Select Analysts: Kimberly Alexy (212) 778-1049 Ellen Chae (212) 778-1751 RISK: High
12-Month Target Price: $60.00
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Ind. Div.: N/A Yield: N/A Shares: 2,528 mil. 52-Wk.Range: 55-16 _______________________________________________________________________ EPS FY Year P/E 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q Actual 1/99 $ 0.53 84.8X $ 0.11 $ 0.13 $ 0.14 $ 0.16 Current 1/00 $ 0.75E 59.9X $ 0.16E $ 0.17E $ 0.20E $ 0.22E Current 1/01 $ 0.99E 45.4X
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o Yesterday, Dell held its annual analyst meeting in New York City. As expected, the primary themes included a focus on the overall demand environment, and discussion surrounding Dell's Internet, consumer and enterprise initiatives.
o Importantly, management noted that despite weakness noted from competitors, Dell has seen no evidence of a slowdown in end demand and remains comfortable with the growth outlook. In fact, management noted strong demand trends across all geographies, product lines, and customer segments, and remains comfortable with its ability to increase revenues sequentially by 5%.
o Dell noted that it is on track to increase its e-commerce component of sales from 25% today to 50% over the next 2 years. This shift, which indirect vendors are not able to replicate, is one of the main drivers of cost reduction for Dell.
o In addition, Dell discussed its intention to broaden and diversify its revenue and income streams by extending the business model through the Internet. Management intends to increase the 38% of profits currently derived from "outside the box" in the company's consumer/small business segments by focusing on increased attach rates of peripherals, services, financing, and software at the time of sales.
o We believe that evidence that Dell has successfully weathered the macro weakness in the first quarter and has also rebounded from its execution mis-step in the fourth quarter will allow the company to re-establish its premium to growth. We are raising our price target to $60 from $45 using a 50% premium to our expected 40%+ growth rate.
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Dell Analyst Meeting Highlights Yesterday, Dell held its annual analyst meeting in New York City. As expected, the primary themes included a focus on the overall demand environment, and discussion surrounding Dell's Internet, consumer and enterprise initiatives focused on broadening and diversifying its revenue and income stream.
A key theme in management's comments was that demand remained strong across all geographies, customer segments, and product lines. And despite weakness noted from some of Dell's competitors in the corporate market segment, Dell has seen no change in buying and continues to expect to grow approx. 5% Q/Q vs. industry competitors which will likely post a 9%-10% decline.
Initiatives highlighted included:
1) Extending the business model through the Internet, particularly in the areas of service and support, e-commerce and customer relationships. Initiatives such as on-line help, Gigabuys and premier pages for corporate customers have increased revenue opportunities while maintaining relationships and lowering the costs of service and support. Dell has seen strong acceptance of its premier pages, which have reduced order status and technical support calls by 75% and 25%, respectively, resulting in cost savings averaging $3-$8 per call.
In addition, the company is tracking to a $5 billion run rate with $14 million/day of on-line sales. Dell noted that it is on track to increase its e-commerce component of sales from 25% today to 50% over the next 2 years.
2) Increased focus on the small business and consumer markets. In the consumer/small business segment, Dell is currently on a $3 billion run rate worldwide (or 16% of sales). The company's goal is to increase sales in this business to >30% - in line with market rates. The company's growth strategy in this segment is focused on increasing the amount of profits derived from "outside the box" with increased attach rates of peripherals, services, financing, and software at the time of sales. Approximately 38% of the margins are currently derived from non-hardware sales with the expectation that this will increase over time.
In response to questions surrounding its strategy for the sub-$1,000 market, Dell noted that its recently launched $999 desktop offering has received good consumer response. The company maintains that it is still able to achieve good margins at this price point. In the near term, the company expects to the higher end of the sub-$1,000 price range. Dell has not, however, ruled out lower price points to the extent they can maintain profitability, as they derive an increasing percentage of margin from associated products.
3) Increased penetration of corporate and enterprise markets. Dell believes it can further increase its share in the corporate market from current 20% levels. Management believes that this is achievable as Fortune 500 customers increasingly pare down their supplier base, and in some cases opt to work with one partner.
Over the past two years, Dell has achieved 85% growth in the enterprise segment, moving into the #2 position for server sales in the U.S. and solidifying their #4 rank worldwide. Storage products are just beginning to ramp, but management noted average configurations were tracking at greater than $100,000 per box. We believe these products have margins in excess of 40% versus 22% corporate margins derived today.
Investment Recommendation We believe Dell remains best positioned to compete and that the advantage of the direct model remains intact. With the launch of the PIII and two rounds of price cuts on the PII, coupled with increasing inventory levels in the channel, we believe Dell is well positioned to drive incremental share growth in this type of environment.
We believe that evidence that Dell has successfully weathered the macro weakness in the first quarter and has also rebounded from its execution misstep in the fourth quarter will allow the company to re-establish its premium to growth. We are raising our price target to $60 from $45 using a 50% premium to our expected growth rate of 40%+.
Dell remains our favorite stock. |