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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Moderated Thread - please read rules before posting
QCOM 177.78-2.2%Jan 9 9:30 AM EST

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To: foundation who wrote (8508)3/13/2001 3:08:26 PM
From: laodeng  Read Replies (2) of 197157
 
Isn't briefing too brief?

"Our information suggests there's no significant inventory buildup," he said.

=DJ Qualcomm CFO Thornley Says Spinco IPO Now Unlikely

13 Mar 14:03



By Johnathan Burns

Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES



NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Qualcomm Inc. (QCOM) Chief Financial Officer Anthony

Thornley said Tuesday it is likely there will be no public offering of its

chipset manufacturing business Spinco, which is to be spun off to shareholders

later this year.

"(With) current market conditions, there's a reasonable possibility we won't

do an IPO," he said. "The chip company doesn't need the cash."

Qualcomm is spinning off its chipset business to compete better in the

chipset market. The spin allows Qualcomm to aggressively protect its

intellectual property rights on wireless technology without damaging chipset

sales.

Thornley, speaking at a Merrill Lynch Global Communications Investor

Conference in Manhattan, also said Qualcomm's licensing and royalty position is

as strong in wideband code-division multiple access (WCDMA) wireless technology

as it is in current CDMA technologies.

Even so, Thornley said Qualcomm's CDMA2000 wireless technology, the

next-generation competitor to WCDMA, will provide carriers cost savings.

He said carriers such as Verizon Communications (VC) and Sprint PCS (PCS)

will be able to gain market share in the United States because the technology

will provide them a competitive advantage.

Additionally, Thornley said the expected slowdown in handset sales growth

this year is mainly based on handsets using the European technology, not CDMA.

"There's no question the slowing economy has an impact on markets like the

United States, but I think fundamentally the factors are different for CDMA,"

he said.

Thornley also said he isn't concerned that carriers have built up large

inventories of handsets.

"Our information suggests there's no significant inventory buildup," he said.

Qualcomm expects more than 90 million CDMA-based handsets will be sold

globally this year.

Thornley also said recent decisions by Korean wireless service providers to

use a technology migration path to WCDMA was influenced by their hopes of

drawing investments from Japanese and European service providers. He said those

Korean carriers still have the option of choosing CDMA2000 even as their

network upgrades progress.

-By Johnathan Burns, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-202;

johnathan.burns@dowjones.com

laodeng
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