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Technology Stocks : Intel Corporation (INTC) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Amy J who wrote (90106)10/13/1999 3:47:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
MORE GOOD NEWS..COPPERMINE!................Coppermine key for Intel's holiday
By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
October 12, 1999, 5:55 p.m. PT

The fourth quarter for chip giant Intel is going to largely depend on a chip
code-named Coppermine.

The "Coppermine" processor, a deluxe version of the Pentium III debuting October 25, will
likely become one of the major issues for the semiconductor industry over the next three
months.

What makes the chip special? At a speedy 733 MHz and faster, it should excite consumer
demand. At the same time, it will cost less to manufacture than current Pentium IIIs,
making it an accountant's dream.

If sales take off, the chip will help reinvigorate the performance segment of the market and
help Intel shrink the performance gap between its products
and AMD's high-end Athlon chip.

"It puts the Pentium III on more or less a clock-for-clock
parity," said Nathan Brookwood, principal consultant at
Insight 64. "When Intel pops with a 733 MHz, there is a
likelihood that they will be the fastest guy on the block."

On the other hand, if consumers continue to flock to budget
computers, Intel may continue to see the average selling
prices for its chips decline and, with that,
less-than-spectacular growth from Wall Street's perspective.
In fact, the chip has already had an effect. Originally due in
September, Intel put Coppermine off until October, a move
which contributed to lower-than-expected earnings.

"We underestimated the effect of the push-out of the high-performance, low-cost
processor," said Andy Bryant, Intel chief financial officer, during a conference call with
analysts. "We think we have a better cost story and a better product story going into the
fourth quarter."

Coppermine essentially is the code-name for the next generation of Pentium III processors.
Current Pentium III chips are made on the 0.25-micron manufacturing process, a
designation which means that several of the transistor-level components on the chip
measure 0.25 microns in width. These processors also come with 512KB of secondary
cache, sort of a data reservoir, that comes on chips located close to the processor.

The new chips will be made on the 0.18-micron process, resulting in smaller,
less-expensive, and faster chips. The smaller dimensions will also mean the chips will run
cooler, and allow Pentium IIIs to be put into notebooks for the first time.

Advancing the manufacturing process also permits Intel to integrate an "advanced transfer
cache." The advance transfer cache contains 256KB of memory, but it's four times as fast
as standard caches. In the end, the cumulative effect of these changes result in cheaper
processors that deliver a higher level of performance that would be achieved by merely
boosting the speed.

"The advance transfer cache will improve the performance by about 10 percent," said
Brookwood. "They [Coppermine and Athlon] will be very close." Coppermine, however, will
fall behind Athlon if Intel is unable to pair it with next-generation Rambus memory. Some
estimate that Rambus memory won't hit PCs until November at the earliest.

On October 25, consumers should expect to see an onslaught of these systems. Several
major PC makers will likely appear at an event in San Jose, California, to mark the release
of the processors. Desktop versions running at 700 MHz and 733 MHz will be released,
while versions for notebooks will come out at 450 MHz and 500 MHz.

The cost dynamic, however, will be equally important. The lower cost will allow Intel to
bring up its gross margins, stated Bryant and other Intel execs. The chip's delay was cited
as one of the two reasons profits dipped this past quarter.

"We didn't have as much success as we would have liked in the higher end," he said.

This also spells problems for AMD. Athlon currently is a more expensive chip to
manufacture, according to recent estimates from MicroDesign Resources. Further, Intel
will change the chip packaging in the future to make Coppermine even cheaper.

Still, Intel isn't out of the woods yet. Consumers still appear to be drawn more strongly to
ultra-cheap computers, which could blunt interest in Coppermine computers. The serial
delays Intel has experienced also bring up the possibility that something may occur in the
future.

"We are in general moving our road map faster than in the past," said Paul Otellini, general
manage of the Intel Architecture Business Group, in response to question about the
various bugs found in high-end Intel efforts this year. "I would like to think they are
random."




To: Amy J who wrote (90106)10/13/1999 12:47:00 PM
From: Paul Engel  Respond to of 186894
 
Amy - Re: 'Hi Paul, when was the last time Intel couldn't meet demand? 1997? The fact they even suggested this as a possibility, implies to me they are expecting a very healthy demand for Q4 unit shipments"

No - it was Q398/Q498 - just a year ago.

Paul



To: Amy J who wrote (90106)10/13/1999 12:49:00 PM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 186894
 
Amy - Re: "Everything sounds good to me. Are you going to buy some INTC tomorrow - if so, at what price would you consider purchasing more? I really hope Intel takes a dive tomorrow morning so I can pick some up. "

I will be buying Intel if it hits $67 - $68.

Other than that, I will be selling Intel November PUTs ~ $60 strike price.

Paul



To: Amy J who wrote (90106)10/13/1999 8:34:00 PM
From: Gerald Walls  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 186894
 
Everything sounds good to me. Are you going to buy some INTC tomorrow - if so, at what price would you consider purchasing more? I really hope Intel takes a dive tomorrow morning so I can pick some up.

I bought 100 at 71-3/8 last night after the CC. Sold it this morning at 73-3/8. I had intended to hold it but I decided afterwards that I already had all the Intel exposure I needed, with stock and LEAPS, and a quick two points is a quick two points. Then I went off to jury duty where I was, ugh!, selected.

BTW, it took E*Trade 55 minutes to tell me my order had executed. With the prices at the time of my order and immediately thereafter it must have executed within minutes.