10 tech buys, and 10 tech sells. is cover story for Barrons today. Qcom excerpt Telecom
Cut The Cord
Let's be blunt. We're worried about the cellular business. The issue is relatively simple. The market for cellular voice traffic is maturing. The cellphone companies think they can stimulate replacement demand with color screens, built-in cameras and other new features. And yet most people use cellphones to make voice calls. We fear current estimates for handset sales for both this year and next year are too high -- and if that's true, the stocks could see another down leg.
Merrill's Milunovich says the cell- phone makers are suffering from a condition Harvard tech guru Clay Christensen calls "overshoot," meaning current technology is already more than good enough for most users. In markets where that happens, Milunovich says, profits shift from systems companies, such as Nokia and Motorola, to component companies, such as Qualcomm and Texas Instruments.
Montgomery's Rezaee says he'd be a buyer of Qualcomm shares "once the dust settles." The company's CDMA technology has a strong foothold in Korea, Latin America and in the U.S., where Sprint and Verizon have standardized around it. Unlike Motorola or Nokia, Qualcomm does not make phones. Rather, it collects licensing fees from systems using CDMA technology, and it sells chips for CDMA-based phones. With the stock trading for about 23 times expected earnings for the September 2003 fiscal year, though, it seems fully valued.
Of the large handset companies, Motorola is having a better time of it for the moment than Nokia. While Motorola has been showing some results from a long restructuring process, its Finnish rival has lost some market share. Motorola is "doing things it should have done years ago," as Rezaee puts it, although it remains to be seen if the company can produce reliable revenue growth.
Nokia dominated the phone business in the late 1990s, thanks in part to ineffective competition from Ericsson and Motorola. But competition has heated up. Though not in our top 20, the company gaining the most ground in the wireless phone market at the moment is Samsung. Meanwhile, the sector as a whole could see more disappointments, as the industry's struggling carriers attempt to lure investors to use additional services made possible with so-called 2.5G and 3G services.
Neither handset maker looks expensive at the moment -- Nokia trades for 14 times expected 2003 earnings, versus 24 times for Motorola, though Motorola looks cheaper on a revenue basis, at 0.9 times expected 2003 results, about half that of Nokia. And yet we think estimates, and stock prices, face one more down leg. For now, we would not be buyers of any companies in the handset business.
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