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Technology Stocks : Dell Technologies Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lee who wrote (134555)6/25/1999 9:54:00 AM
From: Patricia Walton  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176387
 
From today's Street.com...

Hardware & PCs: As AltaVista Deal Looms, It's Still the Same Old Same
Old at Compaq

By Eric Moskowitz
Senior Writer

Compaq (CPQ:NYSE) executives must be inclined to remain seated in a
theater when someone shouts fire. As other PC makers scramble to stake
out territory in the Internet economy, Compaq appears ready to
surrender its own hyped Web strategy.

Unless Compaq Chairman Ben Rosen has a change of heart, the CEO Compaq
is seeking won't have the search engine AltaVista at his or her
disposal. The planned sale of AltaVista to CMGI (CMGI:Nasdaq) --
currently in preliminary negotiations, according to Compaq -- will
close in the next week, according to a source familiar with the
situation.

Employees at AltaVista are hopeful about a move to CMGI, says the
source, because they consider CMGI an ideal breeding ground for a
future IPO. AltaVista CEO Rod Schrock will likely retain his role
because he and CMGI CEO David Wetherell are "old friends," notes the
source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

For Compaq, such a move would make the world's leading hardware maker
.. the world's leading hardware maker. So much for a monumental
transformation for the company. And is selling hardware enough to
appease investors looking for change? The early consensus is no.

"I'm not a shareholder anymore and I feel real happy about that," says
John Mannino, an individual investor who just sold his Compaq shares
and moved into Dell (DELL:Nasdaq) instead. "Compaq's in turmoil and I
don't have time for it anymore."

Compaq's decision is all the odder because the company recently vowed
to embark on an Internet-based strategy that would seek to combine the
reach of the world's leading PC maker into an Internet portal player on
par with a Lycos (LCOS:Nasdaq) or Excite, now a part of Excite@Home
(ATHM:Nasdaq). AltaVista, really the only valuable piece of the $9.6
billion pie Compaq acquired in its buy of Digital Equipment last year,
was going to be its trump card.

But it seems as if Compaq realized the cost would be too great to push
Altavista into that top tier of portal sites. The most compelling
rationale for a change in Compaq's Internet strategy is its
management's realization of the significant investments required during
the next two years for AltaVista to compete effectively with
well-entrenched competitors like Yahoo! (YHOO:Nasdaq), Salomon Smith
Barney analyst Richard Gardner said in a Thursday note to clients.
Gardner rates Compaq neutral and his firm has done no Compaq
underwriting.

This latest shakeup has left Rosen in charge of a company with low
morale and a stock price in desperate need of a push. The PC maker's
last hope of an Internet strategy, it seems, will be extinguished. "We
thought we were going to show Dell a thing or two about the Internet,"
laments one Compaq executive who requested anonymity.

Compaq's Eckhard Pfeiffer was intent on beating intrastate rival Dell
at its own game, says the executive. A Compaq spokesman said the
company doesn't discuss rumors or speculation, and the Compaq-CMGI
rumors are certainly both at this point. But what about this apparent
change of thinking this year? "It's just speculation," reiterated the
spokesman.

Now, Compaq's apparent about-face has investors wondering where the
company's going next. "I'm hearing their quarterly quotas aren't even
close to being achieved by the end of the month," when Compaq's second
quarter ends, brags a top executive at a competing company who
requested anonymity. Certain people have been bragging that stealing
Compaq clients is like "shooting ducks in a barrel," added the
executive.

Compaq had a chance to reassure jittery customers at PC Expo, a
three-day tribute to the PC industry and its indirect channel that
ended Thursday. In years past, Compaq hyped the event with full-page
ads in all the major print publications. But this year, Rosen's fiscal
constraints have kept his company out of the limelight.

"The company's keeping its low-margin products and throwing out the one
asset that gave them credibility," said one PC Expo visitor to Compaq's
booth, a CEO at a company that does business with the PC maker.
"Strategically it's a disaster."

Mannino, the individual investor who switched to Dell, went one step
further: "Compaq has just thrown its credibility out the window." While
Michael Dell projects a vision for his company, says Mannino, Compaq's
whole Internet marketing plan just fell apart.

At least there may be end in sight to Rosen's tumultuous term as acting
CEO: Compaq is likely to conclude its search for a new chief executive
by the end of this week, according to another source familiar with the
Compaq situation.

John Clifford, a managing director at Boston-based broker/dealer
Kimball & Cross, seems to have the right kind of attitude for a Compaq
investor at this point. Last week's second-quarter warning from Compaq
didn't budge its stock. "I knew there couldn't be any other bad news
left that could send this stock lower," says Clifford.

With the way Compaq is executing this year, don't be so sure.



To: Lee who wrote (134555)6/25/1999 2:41:00 PM
From: Mohan Marette  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 176387
 
U.S. Economy's Growth Is Boosting Earnings-OOooooh bad news (NOT)

Lee:
Dang more baaaaad news (NOT).<vbg>
============================

By Deborah Stern

U.S. Stocks Rise as Corporate Profit Growth Accelerates

New York, June 25 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks rose after a report showed first-quarter profits rose almost 50 percent faster than previously estimated with little sign of inflation. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose for the first time this week.
............

''People think this economy still has a lot of juice in it, so you'd better buy now,'' said Alan Day, who helps oversee about $4 billion at Stratevest Group in Burlington, Vermont, with 70 percent stocks and 30 percent bonds.
.......

With investors leaving early on a summer Friday, some 378 million shares changed hands on the Big Board by 1:30 p.m., about 10 percent lower than at the same time on the Friday before the Memorial Day holiday weekend. ..........

Copper prices slumped to their lowest level in 12 years in March as consumption growth slowed and mining companies increased copper output in Latin America, where production costs are lower.

After-tax profits rose 6.2 percent in the first quarter, previously estimated as a 4.3 percent gain, after falling 1 percent in the fourth quarter, the Commerce Department said.

Profits in the fourth quarter were depressed by the costs to tobacco companies of their health-care settlement with the U.S. government last year.

The report contained little to suggest that the Federal Reserve would raise interest rates by more than the 50 basis points the market is expecting by the end of the year.

The Federal Open Market Committee, which meets Tuesday and Wednesday, said after its last meeting that it was leaning toward raising interest rates to head off inflation.

Abby Cohen

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. strategist Abby Joseph Cohen told Bloomberg Television next week's likely interest-rate increase by the Federal Reserve is already reflected in stock prices. The U.S. economy shows no signs of overheating and companies are showing strong increases in quarterly earnings, she said.

''Federal Reserve action will not be harmful to the stock market,'' although a temporary decline is possible in the aftermath of the news, she said. ''To the extent that the Federal Reserve convinces folks that they're focusing on inflation and taking actions to ensure that the (economic) cycle lasts as long as possible, it could be helpful.''

Analysts expect the best showing from second-quarter earnings since the start of 1997. Companies in the S&P 500 will probably report an 11.7 percent increase in second-quarter profits, up from a 3.5 percent gain in the year-earlier period, according to the average forecast of analysts surveyed by First Call Corp.

Consumers were more upbeat about their finances and economic prospects in June than they were last month, according to a University of Michigan study on consumer sentiment.

''The economy is healthy and robust -- and there is no sign of slowing,'' said Astrid Adolfson, an economist at MCM MoneyWatch in New York.