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


To: Jeffrey D who wrote (998)12/21/1999 10:07:00 PM
From: Daniel  Respond to of 1184
 
"Teradyne: Ensuring Quality in the New Economy"

at fnews.yahoo.com :

Stock of the Day

Dec 20, 1999

Teradyne: Ensuring Quality in the New Economy

Senior Analyst: Luciano Siracusano 12/20/99)

One of the drivers of the 1990?s bull market
has been the buoyant American consumer,
accounting for roughly two-thirds of the
growth in the economy.

Less noticed has been the large portion of the
remaining third stemming from capital investment in new technologies.

Over the past 12 months, companies that sell capital equipment to
semiconductor makers have been among the market?s stronger performers.
Investors in stocks such as Lam Research (NASDAQ:LRCX - news) ,
PMC-Sierra (NASDAQ:PMCS - news) , Applied Materials
(NASDAQ:AMAT - news) and KLA Tencor (NASDAQ:KLAC - news) have
reaped huge gains over the past year.

Another solid member of this cadre is Teradyne Inc. (NYSE:TER - news) ,
whose products help chipmakers and telecommunication providers test their
circuit boards, telephone lines, networks and software.

The stock has been on a roll since the company reported record sales and net
income in October, gaining more than 50% in the last two months.

Teradyne beat the Street?s consensus estimate of $0.31 per share in the
October quarter, earning $0.35 a share, 250% above the year-ago period.
Revenue ballooned to $497 million, a 24% sequential advance and a nearly
50% jump over a year ago.

Incoming orders increased to $490.5 million in the quarter, driven by a 186%
increase in orders for semiconductor test systems. Total backlog through the
first nine months stood at $843 million, compared with $524.7 million
through the first three quarter of 1998.

The company, which has virtually no debt, is improving margins by utilizing
more of its capacity and selling more of its higher-priced products.

One big factor fueling the growth is the communications revolution, with
new demand for chips coming from the wireless, networking, and fiber-optic
sectors.

New technologies -- high definition TV, cable-top boxes, DSL (digital
subscriber lines), chip cards (smart cards) and smart automobiles (cars
equipped with chips used for navigation and communication) - require more
powerful electronic components. Testing them to ensure quality and yield are
essential, providing unique opportunities for companies like Teradyne, which
is a leader in the automatic test equipment (ATE) market.

With more semiconductor companies outsourcing the testing and assembling
of their wafers to third parties, a new market opportunity is being created for
Teradyne, which is well positioned to supply these ?back end? manufacturers.

And the outlook for 2000 remains bright.

Industry Fundamentals Remain Strong

After a three-year-long, capacity-driven correction, exacerbated by an
economic slowdown and depressed prices in Asia, a multi-year recovery is
now underway in the semiconductor equipment industry.

Capital spending is ramping up among integrated circuit (IC)
manufacturers, with total capital spending for the semiconductor industry
projected to jump by nearly 80% to $55.5 billion over the next three years,
according to the market research firm IC Insights.

This is good news for semiconductor equipment makers.

In 1999, the overall market for semiconductor equipment is expected to grow
almost 9% to $23.4 billion and by more than 18% in 2000 to $27.7 billion,
according to forecasts released by Semiconductor Equipment and Materials
International (SEMI).

Sales of wafer process equipment are expected to rise to approximately $17.9
billion in 2000, an 18.7% increase above the $15.1 billion in sales projected for
1999. Demand for test equipment materials will likely stay strong, with year
2000 revenue projected to rise 18.6% from the $4.7 billion consensus estimate
for 1999.

By the end of 2002, SEMI projects shipments by semiconductor equipment
manufacturers will climb to $38.1 billion, an 80% advance from 1998 levels.

Teradyne, which is shipping high volumes of wafer-testing equipment,
should be among the group?s biggest beneficiaries.

The stock, which is currently trading at about 30 times the 2000 consensus
earnings estimate of $1.65 per share, is by no means cheap. Investors who
buy here are taking on valuation risk (the stock is also trading at a
historically high price/sales ratio).

They are also shouldering industry risk, as stocks in this sector are subject to
sharp gyrations because of the cyclical nature of the semiconductor capital
equipment business.

This said, we still think the shares are attractive at $49.19. Why?

We believe the industry?s business cycle should remain strong at least
through 2000. Earnings estimates for Teradyne are being revised upwards.
Also the company?s projected earnings per share growth rate for 2000, 60%,
is approximately 50% faster than the sector?s rate as a whole.

Bottom Line:

In this market, investors who have paid a premium for growth have been
handsomely rewarded. With the wind at its back, and potential upside
surprises on the horizon, we believe Teradyne stock still has a way to run,
even at these lofty levels.



To: Jeffrey D who wrote (998)12/21/1999 10:09:00 PM
From: Daniel  Respond to of 1184
 

cbs.marketwatch.com

Novellus boom lifts chips, PCs waver
Dell upgrade helps PCs; Intel launches new PIII
speeds

By Janet Haney, CBS MarketWatch
Last Update: 4:56 PM ET Dec 20, 1999
Silicon Stocks
Join the Discussion

NEW YORK (CBS.MW) -- A massive 33 percent upswing in
shares of Novellus helped muscle up some hardware stocks
Monday after the chip equipment maker said its fourth-quarter
earnings will be better than expected.

The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index ($SOX: news, msgs) shot
ahead as much as 4.4 percent, while the Goldman Sachs
Computer Hardware Index ($GHA: news, msgs) fell off its
previous advances to finish the day flat.

Novellus boosts shares

Novellus (NVLS: news, msgs) led
semiconductor stocks higher after the chip
equipment maker said late Friday that
it expects to report better than expected
fourth quarter results. Additionally,
the San Jose, Calif. company announced a 3-for-1 stock split.

Novellus said it anticipates exceeding Wall Street's earnings per
share estimate of 65 cents for the fourth quarter, citing an increase
in booking. Revenue is expected to be in the range of $190 million.
See full story.

The company's shares raced ahead 28 25/64
to 113 9/16, setting a new all-time high.
Applied Materials (AMAT: news, msgs) was
encouraged by the news and rose 5 9/16 116
5/16. Teradyne (TER: news, msgs) jumped 3
13/16 to 53 and KLA-Tencor (KLAC: news,
msgs) gained 4 1/8 to 100 11/16. Lam
Research (LRCX: news, msgs) hit a new
52-week high as its shares closed up 16
15/16, or 18.9 percent, to 106 1/2.

Following Novellus' announcement,
Warburg Dillon Read raised its rating on the
company to "strong buy" from a "buy," with a
new price target of $120 from $90 a share.

Intel tries to one-up AMD

Intel, the world's largest chip maker, unveiled its Pentium III
processors in speeds of 800 megahertz and 750MHz Monday,
coming on the heels of rival Advanced Micro Devices (AMD: news,
msgs) launch of its 750MHz Athlon processor in late November.
The PIII processor 800MHz is priced at $851 in 1,000-unit
quantities and the 750MHz version is priced at $803. See Tech
Report. The processors are based on 0.18 micron technology.

The much-expected announcement makes the 800MHz chip the
fastest yet. Intel (INTC: news, msgs) shares moved down 1 to 81
1/16, while AMD rose 1/2 to 29 5/16.

Additionally, Intel created a new wireless group to focus on the
cellular and wireless communications arena. See press release.

Dell upgrade

A 6 percent gain in Dell Computer (DELL: news, msgs) shares did
little to support PC issues. The computer maker was greeted with
a rating upgrade from J.P. Morgan, with a new outlook of a "buy"
from the previous "market performer." The investment and
banking firm said it thinks momentum will be renewed after the
beginning of the year. Dell's stock gained 2 1/8 to 47 11/16.

Apple (AAPL: news, msgs) lost 2 to 98 and Compaq (CPQ: news,
msgs) fell 3/8 to 25 3/8.

IBM (IBM: news, msgs) slipped 1 15/16 to 108 1/16 and
Hewlett-Packard (HWP: news, msgs) lost 1 to 104 1/4.

Cisco Systems (CSCO: news, msgs) said it will pay $2.15 billion for
Italian conglomerate Pirelli SpA's terrestrial optical system
business, which provides fiber-optic equipment for telecom
networks.

The two groups are
also forming a joint
alliance in the
optical
communications
market, in which
Cisco will invest 10
percent equity
worth $100 million
in Pirelli's newly
formed optical
components division and undersea cable transmissions systems
division. See full story.

Cisco (CSCO: news, msgs) rose 3 9/16 to 103 1/4.

Meanwhile, 3Com (COMS: news, msgs) said it acquired
privately-held Interactive Web Concepts. Terms of the deal
weren't disclosed. IWC has about 40 consultants and the
acquisition is part of a larger push by the networking equipment
maker to build up its services offering. Separately, 3Com will
release fiscal second-quarter results on Tuesday, with analysts
looking for earnings of 34 cents per share. Its shares moved higher
1/8 to 48 7/8.

Lucent Technologies (LU: news, msgs) was ahead by 1 207/256 to
82 79/256.



To: Jeffrey D who wrote (998)12/21/1999 10:15:00 PM
From: Daniel  Respond to of 1184
 
November Chip Equipment Orders Post Gains

dailynews.yahoo.com

Tuesday December 21 10:44 AM ET

November Chip Equipment Orders Post Gains

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. (Reuters) - North American
semiconductor equipment makers posted solid growth for
November, receiving an average of $110 in orders for every
$100 of products shipped, according to preliminary data
reported late Monday by trade group Semiconductor
Equipment and Materials International (SEMI).

By contrast, an average of $108 in orders was received for
every $100 in shipments during October. Investors use this
''book-to-bill'' data, which reflects a three-month moving
average of the ratio of bookings to billings, to gauge the
industry's growth prospects.

Bookings rose to a record $1.70 billion, up 6 percent from
October 1999, and 122 percent above the $767 million posted in
November 1998, SEMI said.

November bookings in absolute dollar terms were 4 percent
higher than the previous record high of $1.63 billion set in
November 1997, the industry highpoint before a sales slowdown
set in for the notoriously boom-to-bust chip industry.

''Semiconductor manufacturing equipment bookings posted an
all-time monthly high in November,'' Stanley Myers, president
of SEMI, said in a statement. ''The growth pattern in
semiconductor sales and the increasing adoption of new
technologies has helped drive continued strength in the
equipment market.''

Shipments in November were $1.5 billion, which was 4 percent
above the October 1999 level and 69 percent above the
November 1998 shipments level of $913 million, the trade
group said.

With chip demand forecast to accelerate 15 to 20 percent in
1999 and 25 percent in 2000, chipmakers are increasing capital
budgets to buy, build and equip production facilities, wrote
Kathryn Buegert, an analyst at Credit Suisse First Boston, in a
research note.

Merrill Lynch analyst Mark Fitzgerald said in a note to clients
that there were $112 worth of bookings for so-called front-end
equipment used by chipmakers in manufacturing and process
automation for every $100 of such products shipped.

Meanwhile, ''back-end'' equipment used to assemble
semiconductor components to test finished products had a
bookings to billing ratio of 1.05, he said.

Applied Materials Inc. (NasdaqNM:AMAT - news), the
dominant player in the industry, and the leading maker of
front-end production equipment, rose 2-15/16 to 119-1/4 on
the Nasdaq stock market.

Meanwhile, other large front-end equipment makers such as
Novellus Systems Inc. (NasdaqNM:NVLS - news) and Lam
Research Corp. (NasdaqNM:LRCX - news) saw their shares
slip after Monday's heady gains which followed Novellus'
announcement Friday that its business was booming.

Teradyne Inc. (NYSE:TER - news), a leading maker of
semiconductor testing equipment, gained 2-1/8 to 54-7/8 on the
New York Stock Exchange.



To: Jeffrey D who wrote (998)12/21/1999 10:20:00 PM
From: Daniel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1184
 
Investors bid up hardware stocks

cbs.marketwatch.com

Investors bid up hardware stocks
3Com to post second-quarter results

By Janet Haney, CBS MarketWatch
Last Update: 5:13 PM ET Dec 21, 1999



NEW YORK (CBS.MW) -- Personal computer and chip stocks
went through the roof Tuesday, as sizeable gains from Teradyne
and Compaq Computer shares provided an upward boost to the
sectors.

"The stocks are out of sight and will probably go further out of sight
before coming back to earth," said Stan Chadsey, an analyst at
Capital Planning Associates.

The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index ($SOX:
news, msgs) advanced 4.7 percent to 698.88,
setting a new all-time high. The index is up a
whopping 100 percent for the year.

Additionally, Semiconductor Equipment and
Materials International said the North
American-based chip equipment makers reported a November
book-to-bill ratio of 1.10 vs. the 1.08 posted in October. The
book-to-bill ratio means for every $110 in orders received, $100
worth of products were shipped.

"Semiconductor manufacturing equipment bookings posted an
all-time monthly high in November," said Stanley T. Myers,
president of SEMI. "The growth pattern in semiconductor sales
and the increasing adoption of new technologies has helped drive
continued strength in the equipment market."

Chip equipment makers were higher in trading. Applied
Materials (AMAT: news, msgs) gained 7 5/16 to 123 5/8 and
KLA-Tencor (KLAC: news, msgs) rose 7 3/16 to 107 7/8.
Teradyne (TER: news, msgs)
advanced 7 1/4 to 60 1/4, and Novellus (NVLS: news, msgs)
continued on its tear, rising 4 3/16 to 117 3/4.

Shares of a number of telecom equipment makers were higher.
J.P. Morgan Securities raised its price target on Motorola to $165
per share from $120 while Qualcomm's (QCOM: news, msgs)
target was lifted to $570 from $460 a share. In addition, Foundry
Networks' (FDRY: news, msgs) target was increased to $360 from
$225 per share. Motorola (MOT: news, msgs) shares jumped 4
11/128 to 138 3/4. Qualcomm added 30 1/8 to 496 7/8, while
Foundry was up 20 to 314.

Intel (INTC: news, msgs), the world's largest chip maker, gained 1
13/16 to 82 7/8. Micron Technology (MU: news, msgs) advanced 4
5/8 to 80 1/2 ahead of its quarterly results on Wednesday.

Apple shares get a polish

The Goldman Sachs Computer Hardware Index ($GHA: news,
msgs) rose 2.6 percent.

Shares of Apple Computer (AAPL: news, msgs) shined after
Merrill Lynch reinstated coverage on the PC maker with an
"accumulate" rating, coupled with a price objective of $120 per
share. The shares rose 4 1/2 to 102 1/2.

Hewlett-Packard (HWP: news, msgs) said it
will invest $32 million in high-speed Internet
provider Xcelera.com (XLA: news, msgs) as
part of an agreement to offer faster Internet
content delivery. See Tech Report.

Xcelera shares shot up 18 to 85 while H-P
rose 2.6 percent to 108 3/4.

IBM (IBM: news, msgs) rose 235/256 to 110
1/8.

Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal reported
that Compaq may be looking to boost its
build-to-order PC offerings. Quoting
industry executives and analysts, The
Journal said, Compaq and Omaha,
Neb.-based Inacom (ICO: news, msgs) are in
talks to "turn over" some of Inacom's assembly and distribution
operations to Compaq. Compaq (CPQ: news, msgs) gained 2 7/16 to
27 9/16. Shares of Inacom fell 10 percent to 7 5/8.

Neither company would comment on the speculation, but Compaq
said it has 9,000 kiosks in retail spaces where people can
custom-configure Presario PCs. Inacom is currently one of
Compaq's distribution partners.

3Com (COMS: news, msgs) will release fiscal second-quarter
results on Tuesday, with analysts looking for earnings of 34 cents
per share. Its shares moved higher by 4 1/4 to 53 1/8.

Lucent Technologies (LU: news, msgs) was lower at 79 15/16.
Cisco Systems (CSCO: news, msgs) was up 3/4 at 104.