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Technology Stocks : Compaq -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Captain Jack who wrote (65246)7/16/1999 7:26:00 PM
From: Captain Jack  Respond to of 97611
 
Dell Sees Expanding Into A Contracting
Industry

By Jeff Franks

AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - Dell Computer Corp. (Nasdaq:DELL - news)
executives Friday predicted their company would be a survivor in a contracting PC industry and
vowed they would aggressively enter the market for Internet access.

Speaking at Dell's annual shareholder meeting, Chairman Michael Dell predicted that one of the
current top five computer makers would soon be forced out of the business.

He did not name the company he thought most likely to get out, but, as is his custom, took several
jabs at troubled Texas rival Compaq Computer Corp (NYSE:CPQ - news) .

''There are not, we believe, dramatic, fundamental changes going on in the industry. Prices have
declined at fairly predictable levels similar to trends in other industries, and in this kind of
environment the superior business model thrives and those without it flounder,'' said Dell, whose
company is the king of direct sales to customers.

Using a chart, Dell showed that Compaq's cost structure was ''about double'' that of Dell's, which is
based in Round Rock, Texas near Austin.

''This is a market where the inefficient will not survive. I believe that one of the top five players in the
PC market will drop out over the next several years,'' he said. Dell said the company was making a
big push into selling Internet access along with its computers, partly in response to competitors who
are offering free or low-cost machines to customers who also agree to buy Internet service.

The company had been rumored to be interested in buying an Internet service provider such as
MindSpring Enterprises, but vice chairman Kevin Rollins told Reuters it was more likely the
company will build up its own Dell.Net service now offered in three European countries and soon to
be available in the United States.

''We don't think we need to (buy),'' he said. ''We look at the premiums we would need to pay to
make an acquisition and we think we can take that premium and if we gave it to our highly-
motivated and talented management team they could probably use that to create something similar,''
Rollins said.

Compaq is the number one PC maker in the world with about 13.4 percent of the market, but has
said it will lose money in the second quarter because of pricing pressure on excess inventory -- the
same problem that struck the company in 1998.

Houston-based Compaq, which has traditionally sold most of its computers through resellers, fired
chief executive Eckhard Pfeiffer in April and is looking for a replacement.

Dell, according to industry figures, is the second leading PC company, with 9.2 percent of the global
market, followed in order by IBM Corp., Hewlett-Packard Co. (NYSE:HWP - news), and
Gateway Inc. (NYSE:GTW - news) .

Michael Dell said the company he founded out of his University of Texas dormitory room in 1984 is
snatching up market share in virtually all categories of the PC industry, including the consumer end.
Total company revenues this year are expected to be about $26 billion