The Barron's article:
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Zero Hour
Even as Intel's prospects start to look cloudy, investors refuse to see anything but blue skies
By Jay Palmer
Few companies dominate their industries the way Intel dominates the $25 billion microprocessor industry. Relying on a combination of design excellence and unparalleled manufacturing efficiency, the Santa Clara-based colossus has captured an almost obscene 80% share of the market for personal computer chips. That, coupled with the inexorable rise in PC sales, has helped Intel post average annual earnings growth of nearly 30% for more than two decades.
Wall Street analysts look for the stock to continue shooting higher, rising from a recent price of 75 a share tomore than 100 in the not too distant future. Among big-time technology money managers, Intel remains an almost universally popular core holding. The company is expected to earn about $8 billion this year, or $2.30 a share, on revenues approaching $30 billion.
Intel has been a prime engine behind the computer revolution that's swept America in the past two decades. And investors who have recognized that have profited mightily. Since 1985, Intel's share price has risen 6,300%, versus an 800% gain for the Standard & Poor's 500 Index.
But what many investors may not understand is that Intel's business is changing dramatically. The company stands at what co-founder and former chief executive Andrew Grove calls an "inflection point," a critical moment of change that must be identified and managed if a company is to continue to be successful.
For Intel, which has historically garnered an estimated 80% of its sales and 100% of profits from high-powered chips for personal computers, the moment of inflection came last year when the sudden popularity of PCs selling for less than $1,000 began to cannibalize the longstanding sales growth of high-end PCs. From less than 30% in 1997, sub-$1,000 PCs have swelled to the point where they now account for more than 60% of units sold. Such a tectonic shift has altered the landscape of Intel's business in a way that, quite simply, threatens the company's ability to maintain its historic rate of profit growth. Next year, for example, Intel's earnings are expected to rise by less than 20%. Yet Intel's stock price reflects none of this risk. The shares currently trade at 33 times consensus estimates for 1999 and 28 times estimates for 2000. That's nearly twice the company's expected growth rate in 2000. If Intel's multiple were to drop to, say, 1.5 times growth, its shares would trade at around 59. And if they were to trade at one times growth, the shares would fetch just 39. Once investors wake up to the fact that Intel's glory days are over, that could easily happen.
That said, Intel is deservedly rated one of America's best-managed companies. And though it may have been slow to wake up to the threat to its core business, it has not been totally asleep at the switch. Over the past 18 months, Chief Executive Craig Barrett has taken steps to make the best of a bad situation. Recognizing that the PC chip business may never be the engine of growth it once was, Barrett is redirecting Intel into a new market, the Internet.
In essence, Intel wants to move up the food chain and become a supplier of chips to servers and networking devices, the high-end computers that power the Internet. And given the sheer potential of the 'Net, combined with Intel's track record, Barrett's strategy looks smart. The server market alone is growing at around 35% a year, compared to just 15% growth for PCs. Yet this new strategy by definition remains untried. Powerhouses in the server business, like IBM and Sun Microsystems, are not likely to willingly cede market share to Intel. And heavyweight networking chipmakers like Motorola and Texas Instruments aren't likely to roll over and play dead, either.
Nor is it assured that the growth of the Internet will continue in hyperdrive. If the rollout of broadband access to the American home comes slower than expected, demand for Intel-powered servers and networking devices may not prove strong enough to make up for the slowdown in the company's revenue growth from the PC market.
"The simple fact is that while it may be dangerous to bet on Intel failing, its new ventures are anything but guaranteed," says Howard Anderson, president of the Yankee Group. "Investors think Intel is bulletproof, but it isn't."
In a very real sense, Intel has prospered over the last 30-odd years by following one basic tenet, Moore's Law. It was back in 1965 that young Gordon Moore, then an engineer at Fairchild Semiconductor and later Intel's chief executive, first postulated that technological advances would allow the number of transistors on a chip to double every 18-24 months, thus doubling potential computing power. Much as E=MC2 opened the door for nuclear power and the atomic bomb, Moore's Law provided a roadmap to success, and Intel executives took it straight to the bank. Beginning with the 8088 chip in 1981, Intel has churned out a steady stream of everfaster microprocessors -- 8086, 286, 386, 486 and the Pentiums I, II and III-each setting the standard for performance and each consequently selling at a premium price.
A basic pillar of this strategy, of course, was that PC makers, not to mention PC buyers, saw the faster chips as a "must-have" product. For throughout all the early PC years, there was hardly a time when software wasn't running ahead of hardware or when PC owners didn't find that the machine acquired just 12 or 18 months earlier could no longer run the latest versions of many popular programs. It was part of Intel's credo that everyone always wanted the newest and best chip. That is, until last year.
Exactly what happened in 1998 is something sociologists and economists will be writing about for years to come. Some say it had to do with the economic laws of diminishing returns and the near-saturation of the U.S. PC marketover 70% of homes with kids now have a machine. Others, like Intel's Barrett, cite the Asian economic crisis, which forced memory-chip and disc-drive makers to sell their products below cost just to keep their factories operating. Still others insist it all had to do with software, especially the fact that these "good enough" PCs happily run just about 99% of all the software on the market, including the browsers and graphics programs needed to access the Internet.
Whatever the case, cheap PCs became the standard overnight. Companies like Compaq and Gateway and scores of no-name brands began pumping out sub$1,000 PCs at a ferocious clip. And most were powered with cheaper non-Intel chips. As if that weren't bad enough, it soon became apparent that the cheaper machines were not so much attracting a new breed of skinflint customers -- as some in the business had hoped -- as cannibalizing the existing market for mid-priced higher-powered PCs. As a result, over the first half of 1998, demand for Intel's top-of-the-line Pentium chips faded faster than underwear at an orgy, knocking sales lower and cutting earnings by 36% in the first quarter and 28% in the second.
With its stock in a dive-Intel's shares fell to as low as 35 in mid-1998-the company's first reaction was to slash the prices of its older, low-end Pentium chips almost in half to make them competitive with chips from Advanced Micro Devices and Cyrix, which were being used to power these new cheap PCs. Intel's response was to rush to market with its new, relatively low-performance and relatively inexpensive Celeron chip. Though there were a few glitches along the way, that move, combined with further price cuts this year, subsequently won back much of the market share lost in those initial months. Certainly, from Intel's perspective, it would have been dangerous to surrender the low end of the market on a permanent basis, since that would have left AMD and others with a base from which to expand up into Intel's main market.
Intel maintains that the margins on its low-end Celeron chip are not that different from those of its high-end chips. Perhaps so, but that still means that the company has to sell five $100 Celeron chips it makes to one Pentium III. And with sub-$1,000 PCs here to stay and the market growing overall at just 15% a year, that limits the long-term potential.
Barrett, a 25-year Intel veteran who was named CEO in May 1998, first made his mark at the company in the late 1980s, when U.S. chipmakers were under attack from their Japanese competitors. At the time, Intel was so battered that it was forced to lay off 20% of its work force and shut down its memory-chip operations just to survive. Rather than focus on what rivals like Hitachi, NEC and Toshiba were doing wrong-many in the industry accused them of dumping products below cost-Barrett, a soft-spoken former Stanford professor, took a close look at what they were doing right. Dumping or no, he recognized that his Asian competitors were turning out silicon cheaper, faster and better than anyone else.
His response was to go on a whirlwind tour, visiting U.S. chipmaking equipment companies to get detailed descriptions of just how Japanese chip plants used their machines, touring plants owned by Intel's Japanese allies, and even going out of his way to get reports from chip customers of what they had seen while visiting Japanese facilities. His conclusion was that while Intel still excelled at chip design, its manufacturing process was downright inefficient. It was Barrett who led the effort to overhaul manufacturing from the bottom up, setting the stage for the company to become widely recognized as the single most efficient chip maker of the 'Nineties.
"For the previous 15 years or so, no one had really paid attention to the idea that we needed to be efficient," says Barrett. "It was enough to be a technology-creation machine."
The challege Barrett faces today is less specific than the one he faced a decade ago, but it is no less urgent. "If life at Intel was based on just the sub-$1,000 PC market, it would be painful," he concedes with a grin. He adds, however, that there are new software applications out there on the consumer horizon, like speech recognition, digital imaging and video conferencing, that will require high powered PCs. And as they take hold, he says, PC buyers may once again start moving up to higher-priced models.
That said, he's not waiting around for the high-end PC business to come screaming back. Intel's next growth engine, he says, will be the Internet. "From our perspective, the continuing boom in Internet traffic will create an immense market for an infrastructure of workstations, servers and networking devices. Job 1 at Intel is to be the building-block supplier of the Internet economy."
Consider the server market. These high-end computers form the backbone of the World Wide Web, not only storing and transmitting the data, but also controlling, policing and supervising the flow of information-plus operating millions of Web pages. Barrett, who can be excused for holding an optimistic view of the market potential, figures that the number of servers needed to manage the 'Net could grow exponentially over the next five years.
"Just take the rule of thumb that for every 10 PCs on the Internet you need one server," says Barrett. "I'm looking out and I see a billion Internet users. On that basis I'll need 100 million servers, roughly 20 times the number that exist today. It's a huge potential market." Industry analysts differ in their projections, but most agree that we are looking at a total chip server market which could quickly eclipse PCs in importance and size.
Barrett maintains that selling server chips is not that different from selling PC chips for PCs. While they are manufactured by a variety of firms, including IBM, Hewlett-Packard and Dell Computer, the key element is the processor, a business Intel knows well. To win business from established server chip makers, Intel will be peddling a range of offerings starting with its Pentium III processors and the blazingly fast Pentium Xeon processor that was rolled out in June '98. Next year, Intel plans to launch its 64-bit Intel chip, code-named Merced. And to further kick-start its way into the Internet business, Intel quadrupled its research and development spending to an astonishing $8 billion last year.
A second and no less important leg of Intel's Internet strategy is designing and manufacturing chips for networking devices, the powerful computers that control traffic over the Web. Much like a traffic cop, networking computers analyze the differences between voice and data, determine whether data are coming or going, assign importance and priorities to traffic and control just what data get sent when and to whom.
Intel chips are already being bought by the likes of Cisco Systems, Lucent and Nortel, the major communications vendors, but the Santa Clara company wants a bigger slice of the pie. Toward that end, over the past two years, Intel has spent roughly $8 billion to invest in or buy outright eight different companies, many in some way key to the networking push. Especially important was the acquisition of StrongARM, a novel chip design that can be used in high-end switchers and routers from Digital Equipment and the $2.7 billion purchase just this year of Level One, a maker of chips that combine analog and digital technologies in local and wide-area networks. A key element of Intel's new strategy is not just to sell the chips into this expanding market but also to try to lay down some basic guidelines on how network chips interact with one another. Last month, Intel unveiled its new Internet Exchange Architecture (or IEA), in effect a blueprint for networking based on a new Intel family of products.
What Intel is in effect attempting to do is replay the PC model in networking. Just as there were many different standards for PCs in the early 1980s, not all of which were compatible with one another, there are many standards for networking today, and few are compatible with each other. If Intel has its way, the standards would merge, and Intel would be the biggest beneficiary.
"If you step back and look at the big picture, you find that nature rather abhors narrow vertical solutions to anything," says Barrett. "Nature likes horizontal solutions with standard building blocks and open interfaces. Being a success in this market is not dissimilar to being a success in the PC market. You don't just create one device. You create an architecture, a processor plus a way of doing things. You're throwing out a complete solution. That's the strength of our push."
Intel's most exciting offer ing in this market so far is the IXP1200 network processor, one of a new breed of interchangeable programmable chips from In tel that will allow network system designers to add functions to chips even after they are installed with software. Competitive chips from the likes of Motorola, AMD and Texas Instruments are pre-programmed for their particular function and not changeable once installed.
However, the Intel Inside concept may not give the company the same kick in this market that it gets from PCs. Says Yankee Group's Howard Anderson, "If you knew that Domino Sugar was in Coke, would that make you buy it instead of Pepsi?" In other words, explains Anderson, the guts of the machine are less important to customers than what they actually do. What's more, he says, "The industry is deadly afraid of letting Intel be the power in networking that they are in PCs."
Intel is also keeping a close eye on the interactive market-everything from Palm Pilots and TV-set Internet access boxes. In one sense, this growing market represents a threat to Intel's core PC business. After all, if people migrate toward special-purpose PCs, and away from Intel-based PCs, Intel's PC processor business could be even further eroded. Barrett, however, chooses to see it as an opportunity for Intel's lowestend processors, including a variant of its StrongARM chip designed to run in low-powered units on AA batteries. "When I read stories about how Intel has missed out on the appliance wave," he says, "I wonder if those people ever took high school math. Sure, the chip we make for such a device may sell for only $20. But if you are talking about a market for 100 million such devices, that's still 100 million times $20, or $2 billion. It may not be huge, but that's still between 5% and 10% of our current microprocessor business."
A growing awareness of these heady prospects helps explain just why Intel stock has raced ahead to the present 76 from a low of about 50 in May, outstripping both the S&P 500 and the benchmark semiconductor index by a wide margin. Yet there is a very real danger that, in its enthusiasm, the market has gone too far, too fast.
Let us look first at the numbers. This year, with six months in the bag and third-quarter numbers, due out within weeks, set to be upbeat, Street analysts are shooting for earnings as high as $2.40 a share, with a consensus somewhere around $2.30 -- an advance of 29% over the very depressed 1998 return. In 2000, at least one bull figures Intel could earn $2.90 a share, but most are a lot closer to $2.70, up just 17% over 1999. On the basis of those consensus numbers, the stock is trading at multiples of 33 for 1999 and 28 for 2000, roughly twice the underlying rate of growth in earnings.
By comparison, the S&P 500 index trades at roughly 1.5 times 1999 growth estimates. This is significant, because Intel has long tracked the S&P pretty closely on this measure. But now, just as the company faces the challenge of remaking itself with all the attendant risks that this entails, its shares have raced ahead to the point that they trade at a substantial premium.
And while Intel seems to have a clear strategy going forward, there is much that could go wrong. What if, for example, the competition for server chips from the likes of Sun, HewlettPackard and IBM proves fiercer than expected? And what if Intel has a tough time trying to dictate networking standards and that new Internet architecture fails to catch on as quickly as hoped? And what if Intel's new Merced chip, already delayed for a year, faces even further delays next year? And what if the rollout of broadband Internet services to American homes takes longer to accomplish than the phone companies and cable companies, which are racing to get there first, anticipate?
None of these factors are under Intel's control any more than the cannibalizing of the PC market by sub-$1,000 PCs was. Says Greg Blatnik, vice president at Zona Research: "Intel is performing a delicate balancing act in these new markets. In the past it had the advantage of owning the market, of being a benevolent dictator. But that's changed. They now face new competition and the difficulties of establishing new relationships with customers. I think they'll succeed but there is certainly a risk that things will not work out as planned."
Factoring in the current risk, the company's shares should probably trade at a P/E equal to 1.5 times the company's 17% pace of earnings growth. As noted earlier, that's somewhere south of 60. No matter how good Intel management and how bullish the prospects, anything above that is all fluff. ********************************************
What is the big deal?
John
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