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Technology Stocks : The New Qualcomm - a S&P500 company -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ruffian who wrote (2188)10/11/1999 3:15:00 PM
From: 2brasil  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13582
 
Qualcomm Plans More Spending To Speed CDMA

By Jessica Hall

GENEVA (Reuters) - Qualcomm Inc (Nasdaq:QCOM - news)., which develops digital
wireless telephone technology, said Monday it will use part of its $1.4 billion cash to invest
in companies that would speed the adoption of the technology it pioneered.

Qualcomm, known for developing CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access) wireless phone
technology, would look for deals similar to previous ones with companies such as Leap
Wireless, where it took a small stake, and with Brazilian companies that use wireless local
loop technology, Qualcomm's Chairman Irwin Jacobs told Reuters at the Telecom 99 trade
show in Geneva.

Other initiatives could be a joint venture like its Wireless Knowledge venture with Microsoft
Corp (Nasdaq:MSFT - news)., he said.

Qualcomm is also looking to expand beyond its core phone business. It is currently studying
how to distribute motion pictures digitally instead of by film, and working on
speech-recognition technology, Jacobs said.

Qualcomm said it hopes to announce new business and revenue-generating opportunities by
the end of the year but Jacobs declined to elaborate.

''We've always been very opportunistic. Our strength in life has always been coming up with
new technology...and we continue to look at new possibilities, reaching out in different
directions,'' Jacobs said. ''You should think of Qualcomm as an energetic start-up with
good cash flow,'' he said.

Jacobs said he sees strong growth potential in HDR (high data rate) technology that would
allow cellular phone companies to provide high-speed Internet access.

Qualcomm ''would be working with other companies to support the development of that
type of capability,'' Jacobs said.

San Diego-based Qualcomm reiterated that it aims to sell its wireless handset business by
the end of the year. It is talking to several potential buyers, including telephone handset
manufacturers who want to get into the CDMA market and other manufacturers who want
to break into the telephone business.

While the sale of the handset business will eliminate some revenues, Qualcomm's profits
would remain robust since it would still get royalties from the use of its technology in each
phone that is sold, he said. Qualcomm reported net income of $59 million for its third
quarter this year on revenues of $1.0 billion.

The expected sale of the handset business, as well as the recent sale of its wireless
infrastructure business earlier this year would leave Qualcomm mostly a chipset developer
and research company. But Qualcomm could become a manufacturer again if an attractive
opportunity arises.

''We don't mind manufacturing if it's an area where we're bringing a technology lead and a
lead in the marketplace ... if the spread of technology can benefit from manufacturing,''
Jacobs said.