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


To: R. Ramesh who wrote (44521)10/13/1999 4:06:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 152472
 
QCOM will rock------Qualcomm Says It's Garnered U.S., Foreign Interest in Phonemaking Unit
By Kate Norton

Qualcomm Garners U.S., Foreign Interest in Phone-Making Unit

Geneva, Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Qualcomm Inc., developer of
the world's second-most-popular wireless technology, said U.S.
and foreign companies have expressed an interest in buying its
phone-making unit.

San Diego-based Qualcomm is talking to ``a number' of
companies, Chairman and Chief Executive Irwin Jacobs said in an
interview at Telecom '99 in Geneva. Interested parties include
U.S. mobile-phone makers, foreign phone makers eager to gain or
strengthen a U.S. presence using Qualcomm's technology, and
companies that don't currently make mobile handsets, he said.
``There is significant interest in each area,' Irwin said.

The company announced plans to sell the unit last month
after a drop in handset prices and parts shortages made it
difficult for Qualcomm to compete with Nokia Oyj, Motorola Inc.
and Ericsson AB, the biggest cell-phone makers. Qualcomm hopes to
reach a sale agreement by year's end.

Irwin said Qualcomm would be willing to sell the unit to a
company that doesn't already make mobile handsets, but operates
in a slightly different field with large-scale, low-cost
production, and a low-cost source of components.

Qualcomm would also be willing to let such a company use the
Qualcomm brand name for the phones, he said.

Once the unit is sold, Qualcomm will generate revenue mainly
from its chip business and royalties from other phone makers that
license its code-division multiple access, or CDMA, technology.

The company is getting more from royalties as CDMA
technology gains in popularity. The company originally began
making handsets to help market its technology, which competes
with two other standards known as TDMA and GSM, the standard
widely used in Europe.

The unit could fetch between $800 million and $1.5 billion,
depending on what CDMA royalties the purchaser would have to pay,
according to some analysts.