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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Incorporated (QCOM) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ramsey Su who wrote (34159)7/7/1999 8:58:00 AM
From: Ron M  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
Ramsey: That post causes me to adopt a bit of the chicken little approach. I well remember being cautioned about selling MOT, so far so good but is this the hint to return? With the rumors that you are enjoying baseball, golf etc it does make one a bit nervous.

A report on NOK FWIW. Note many positive references to CDMA and NOK.

NOK: HANDSET BUSINESS CONTINUES TO BE VERY STRONG DESPITE NEW
PRODUCTS FROM COMPETITORS. 6/24/99 - Prudential Securities-Equity Luke
T. Szymczak

Ticker symbols referenced in this document: NOK, MOT, ERICY, PCS

NOK: HANDSET BUSINESS CONTINUES TO BE VERY STRONG DESPITE NEW PRODUCTS
FROM COMPETITORS.

R E S E A R C H N O T E S June 24, 1999

Subject: Nokia Oy (NOK--86 3/16)--NYSE
TELECM EQUIP
OPINION
Current: STRONG BUY
Analysts: Luke T. Szymczak (212) 778-4789 Prior:
Wendy M. Liu (212) 778-1522 Risk: HIGH

12-Month Target Price: $100
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ind. Div.: $0.52 Yield: 0.6% Shares: 1182.9 mil. 52-Wk.Range: 91-29
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPS FY Year P/E 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q
Actual 12/98 $ 1.61A 53.5X $0.24A $0.34A $0.46A $0.59A
Current 12/99 $ 1.95E 44.2X $0.46A $0.45E $0.47E $0.55E
Current 12/00 $ 2.35E 36.7X $0.53E $0.58E $0.56E $0.68E
Estimates based on a Euro/US$ rate of 0.945 for 1999 and 2000.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

* Our checks suggest very strong demand for Nokia's handsets in the June
quarter, and we expect that this should be enough to more than offset
weakness in infrastructure sales growth related to sluggish Chinese sales.
Current expectations appear to call for a stronger 2H1999 in China.

* The transition in the 6100 family from the 6110 single-band GSM phone to
the 6150 dual-band GSM phone appears to be smooth. Our checks suggest the
mix shift from 6110 to 6150 may slow the sequential ASP decline of the 6100
family.

* New CDMA products are contributing modestly at the end of the quarter,
and as we expected, the reception for Nokia's new CDMA phones appears to be
strong, which bodes well for Q3 and beyond.

* Handset demand in Asia and China appears to be strong. Likewise, demand
in Latin America seems to be ahead of expectations. We believe Europe and
the U.S. remain solid as well.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Nokia appears to be headed toward another strong finish in its handset
business this quarter. Our channel checks (details below) suggest that
handset demand remains robust, and we believe that the strength in handsets
should be enough to offset any softness as a result of a lull in wireless
infrastructure sales in China. We think that Nokia should be able to
exceed our EPS estimate of 0.43 (Euros) based on sales of 4.23 billion
Euros thanks to robust handset sales. However, the US Dollar has
strengthened since the March quarter, and the present exchange rate (0.9671
EUR/USD) shaves about a penny from US Dollar EPS relative to the 0.945
exchange rate we used to generate estimates in April.

We expect that handset growth can compensate for what appears to be
sluggishness in infrastructure sales in China. Precisely what the issues

are in China is unclear, but the net result has been sluggish
infrastructure sales since early this year. We suspect that China Unicom's
plans for CDMA deployment, along with the political issues that China
Telecom has faced for several months now may be having an impact on GSM

infrastructure demand. However, our sense is that the GSM networks in
China are in need of more capacity given healthy subscriber growth, and
vendors seem to be hopeful that first half weakness can be offset by a
strong second half. In the case of Nokia, infrastructure accounts for only
32% of our current revenue estimate (and less if handset sales surpass our
expectations), and we believe GSM infrastructure sales in China represent
only a small part of this, although China is admittedly a key growth
engine. The net result, we believe is that Nokia's infrastructure business
is likely to grow at the lower-end of the 25% to 35% growth target range.

June quarter results should benefit from the transition to dual-band GSM
handsets. The transition from single-band GSM (the 6110) to dual-band (the
6150) is underway at full swing in most major markets. In those markets in
which it is taking place, we believe this transition is helping to keep
ASPs on the 6100 GSM family relatively stable with last quarter, which is
favourable for revenues given ongoing volume increases. In some countries
Nokia is shifting the 6110 slightly downmarket to a lower price point, and
in others it is being phased out all together in favour of the dual-band
6150. The 6150 may at some point be impacted by Ericsson's new dual-band
T18, but so far volumes of the T18 are too low to reach a conclusion.

Low-end and high-end products are contributing as well. The high-end 8810
continues to be a niche product, with high pricing (around $600) and cache.
We do not think this is a major contributor to sales given what appear to
be much lower volumes than the 6100 and 5100 families, although this is
favourable to profit margins. The 8810 seems to be popular in China, but
is less so in markets where dual-band is becoming a requirement. The new
dual-band 8850 should address this when it begins shipping in Q4. We
believe the 5100 GSM family continues to perform well at the low-end of
the market, although declining pricing (in our view reflecting the lack of
dual-band capability) is likely to offset some of the volume increases.

New CDMA products should be modestly incremental in the June quarter, and
TDMA seems to be growing, despite the notoriously poor quality of AT&T's
network. The CDMA products seem to off to a good start, with demand
outstripping supply in the early weeks of shipment. Sprint PCS is now
selling the 6185 and should start selling the 5170 shortly. We believe the
demand for TDMA phones has held up well despite the unacceptably poor
quality of the AT&T Wireless network, the largest U.S. TDMA operator.
Limited competition in TDMA phones and a stronger-than-expected recovery
in Latin American demand are likely responsible for the growth.

Asia and Latin America appear to be on the comeback, while the U.S. and
Europe remain healthy. Most notably, handset demand in China seems to be
robust, and thanks to its strong lineup, Nokia appears to be taking share
from Ericsson, which has yet to launch its new line-up in China, and to a
lesser degree Motorola. Other markets in Asia appear to be growing as
well. In Latin America, Nokia has begun selling CDMA phones. In addition,
production in the new Brazilian factory is underway and Latin American
demand seems to have come back faster than expected. In Europe, Nokia
seems to be faring well despite a good ramp for Motorola's new V-series
StarTAC.

Our checks suggest that Nokia's new handsets should be positive for the
September quarter. The 3210 and 7110 GSM models should begin shipping, and
together with the 6150, the bulk of Nokia's products will be dual-band
capable. This product lineup should put Nokia on par with Motorola in the
transition to dual-band, and a little ahead of Ericsson due to its later
ramp of new products. In the Americas, we expect a full quarter of CDMA
shipments, virtually all of which should be incremental sales contribution
to Nokia.

Companies Mentioned:
Motorola (MOT-91 1/2; rated Accumulate)
Ericsson (ERICY-32 1/2; not rated)
Sprint PCS (PCS-58 3/16; rated Hold by Chris Larsen)

Prudential Securities Incorporated acts as a specialist that makes a market
in the security of Motorola, Inc. At any given time the specialist may
have a position, either long or short, in the security, and, as a result of
the associated specialist's function as a market maker, such specialist may
be on the opposite side of orders executed on the floor of a national
securities exchange.

Prudential Securities Incorporated (or one of its affiliates) or their
officers, directors, analysts, or employees may have positions in
securities or commodities referred to herein, and may, as principal or
agent, buy and sell such securities.

Any OTC-traded securities or non-U.S. companies mentioned in this report
may not be cleared for sale in all states. See BLUE on ERA.
(c)Prudential Securities Incorporated, 1999, all rights reserved. One
Seaport Plaza, New York, NY 10292 Information contained herein is based on
data obtained from recognized statistical services, issuer reports or
communications, or other sources, believed to be reliable. However, such
information has not been verified by us, and we do not make any
representations as to its accuracy or completeness. Any statements
nonfactual in nature constitute only current opinions, which are subject to
change. Prudential Securities Incorporated (or one of its affiliates) or
its officers, directors, analysts, or employees may have positions in
securities or commodities referred to herein and may, as principal or
agent, buy and sell such securities or commodities. An employee, analyst,
officer, or a director of Prudential Securities Incorporated, or its
affiliates, may serve as a director for companies mentioned in this report.
Neither the information nor any opinion expressed shall constitute an offer
to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any securities or commodities
mentioned herein. There may be instances when fundamental, technical, and
quantitative opinions may not be in concert. This firm (or one of its
affiliates) may from time to time perform investment banking or other
services for, or solicit investment banking or other business from, any
company mentioned in this report.

There are risks inherent in international investments, which may make such
investments unsuitable for certain clients. These include, for example,
economic, political, currency exchange rate fluctuations, and limited
availability of information on international securities. Prudential
Securities Incorporated and its affiliates make no representation that the
companies which issue securities which are the subject of their research
reports are in compliance with certain informational reporting requirements
imposed by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Sales of securities covered
by this report may be made only in those jurisdictions where the security
is qualified for sale. The contents of this publication have been approved
for distribution by Prudential-Bache Securities (U.K.) Inc., which is
regulated by The Securities and Futures Authority Limited. We recommend
that you obtain the advice of your Financial Advisor regarding this or
other investments. Additional information on the securities discussed
herein is available upon request.

PRUDENTIAL SECURITIES INCORPORATED

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To: Ramsey Su who wrote (34159)7/7/1999 9:34:00 AM
From: Clarksterh  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
One thing that I really scratch my head about QCOM at this point in time; why did they not extend the CDMA revolution to boardband wireless.

And HDR is? ... narrowband? How about CDMA2000? I literally do not understand this message. Perhaps MOT is coming back, but it sounds like whoever the sender is, he is ignoring the state of Qualcomm. Perhaps he means that MOT has a lead in broadband wireless, but I have seen no evidence in that from any news or the info in the message.

JMCO (Just My Confused Opinion)

Clark



To: Ramsey Su who wrote (34159)7/8/1999 3:44:00 PM
From: JMD  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
Ramsey 'Padres Fanatic' Su, the ex-poster warning us not to forget the strengths of the Bat Wing empire--someone forgot to lock the kennel door?
Well I will give the Illinois crowd a 'P' for persistence and my wife's investment club has made a boatload on their Motorola and zip on their Loral which compromises the hell out of me, but is the pooch worried that the mighty Q is going to miss the internet/data/wireless tidal wave by not migrating CDMA over to the data neck of the woods?
Tell him howdy for me and ask for further details--I was kind of thinking that we were ready for internet prime time with Wireless Knowledge and the PdQ and spread spectrum being all data bursty friendly and so forth--but if he's worried then I'm a bit agitated myself. OTOH, it seems a bit far fetched that Irwin hasn't gotten the message: he doesn't seem to have missed much else.
On the Siemens thing: JV to piss Nokia off, keep Ericy honest (jesus if that isn't an oxymoron), expand manufacturing capacity to plant the CDMA flag at a faster clip, and dive right into the heart of the wireless world: Europa. Sony bails to concentrate on higher value add products more in keeping with the rest of their product line; Siemens writes the check and San Diego loses a few Sushi joints and picks up a couple of beer gardens. What's the mystery? SM