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Technology Stocks : The New Qualcomm - a S&P500 company
QCOM 180.74-0.1%Nov 3 3:59 PM EST

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To: engineer who wrote (11187)5/31/2000 12:05:00 PM
From: w molloy  Read Replies (3) of 13582
 
China news finally sinks in...

zdii.com

Shares in Qualcomm Inc. (Nasdaq: QCOM) were down another 8
percent Wednesday as news that the company's mobile phone
technology will not be adopted in China sunk in.

Qualcomm, which has been battered down about 56 percent since
January, was one of Wall Street's highest-flying stocks last year.
Shares were down 7 to 69 3/8 Wednesday, and the stock was the
most actively traded on the Nasdaq.

The shares are at their lowest level since November. They have lost
almost two-thirds of their value since a record close in January,
despite the fact that the company beat estimates in its second
quarter, and had a bullish outlook.

The shares were hit when China Unicom, China's No. 2 state
telephone carrier, said it would not adopt Qualcomm's
current-generation code division multiple access (CDMA) wireless
standards.

Analysts quoted China Unicom executives as saying on Monday in
Hong Kong that they had no reason to use the CDMA standard for
now. The executives made their comments at a presentation kicking
off a road show for a stock market listing.

Qualcomm had expected to grab a big piece of China's market when
it signed a CDMA royalty agreement with Unicom in February.

Unicom's estimated 7 million subscribers currently use the competing
Global Standard for Mobile Communications (GSM) wireless
standard. Industry sources said it made little sense for China Unicom
to use a current-generation CDMA network to compete with its GSM
business -- especially with more advanced technology coming soon.

CDMA technology takes information in a signal and spreads it over a
wide bandwidth. This allows telecommunications operators to carry
more phone traffic than GSM.

While the China trade pact has been good news for many tech
stocks, especially telecommunication companies such as Ericsson
(Nasdaq: ERICY), Nokia (NYSE: NOK) and Motorola (NYSE: MOT), it
could be a mixed bag for local companies, and the companies they
already have contracts with.
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