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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: Maverick who wrote (39354)10/14/1998 10:39:00 PM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (1) of 1571995
 
Maverick - Intel Corp. (Nasdaq:INTC - news) said
that its biggest challenge in the fourth quarter is meeting demand for its products, which it is barely meeting at the beginning of the quarter.

''We are just barely meeting demand in the first half of the fourth quarter,'' Paul Otellini, Intel executive vice president and general manager of the Intel architecture group. Intel said that the current demand is even stronger than it had forecast.

You can read the whole article hear, Brett-or-Bart:

Paul

{======================================}
biz.yahoo.com

Tuesday October 13, 11:01 pm Eastern Time

RPT-Intel says meeting current demand a
challenge

PALO ALTO, Calif., Oct 13 (Reuters) - Intel Corp. (Nasdaq:INTC - news) said
that its biggest challenge in the fourth quarter is meeting demand for its products, which it is barely meeting at
the beginning of the quarter.

''We are just barely meeting demand in the first half of the fourth quarter,'' Paul Otellini, Intel executive vice
president and general manager of the Intel architecture group. Intel said that the current demand is even
stronger than it had forecast.

Intel also told analysts on a conference call that its gross margins for the year will likely be in the range of 52
percent of revenues, plus or minus a few points.

''We expect to meet previous guidance of 52 percent gross margins, plus or minus a few points,'' chief
financial officer Andy Bryant told analysts.

The world's largest chip maker released third quarter earnings that were better than Wall Street expectations,
but some analysts were disappointed by Intel's forecast for fourth quarter revenues that are expected to be ''up

slightly'' from third quarter.

''The biggest challenge we face is being able to produce enough parts to meet our customers needs,'' Bryant
said.

Intel said that it saw strength across the board in all its products and that it was constrained across all products

in the third quarter, including some mobile processors.

Intel also said its new Celeron processor, for the lower-cost PC market, is now the second biggest selling
processor in the world, after only two quarters on the market.

The executives also said Intel's average selling prices had remained flat in the past five quarters, due in part to
the success of its product segmentation strategy.

For example, sales of its higher-cost Xeon processors for servers and workstations offset the lower priced
Celeron chips, resulting in a steady average selling price.
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