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To: rupert1 who wrote (71631)11/11/1999 9:07:00 PM
From: Captain Jack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 97611
 
Thanks Victor,,,, Mom is 70 and really felt happy dad was mentioned. The best part is it was a 'happy' Veterans Day story...



To: rupert1 who wrote (71631)11/11/1999 9:17:00 PM
From: Captain Jack  Respond to of 97611
 
Vic-- If CPQ had posted results like this it would have been just "ho humm" and Kumar would be ranting like a lunatic instead of patting himself and Mikey on the back,,, maybe we can get a little ride out of DELL tomorrow.. Naturally cpq has to be given a little jab too...

(REUTERS) FOCUS-Dell Q3 results in line, Y2K seen manageable
FOCUS-Dell Q3 results in line, Y2K seen manageable

(adds CEO and CFO comments on outlook, context throughout,
stock prices, byline, pvs ROUND ROCK)
By Eric Auchard
NEW YORK, Nov 11 (Reuters) - Dell Computer Corp. <DELL.O>
on Thursday said third-quarter net profits, excluding a charge,
were $483 million, matching recently lowered expectations tied
to a shortages of key computer components, as revenues grew a
healthy 41 percent.
Dell, the world's No. 2 maker of personal computers, said
net income for the third quarter ended in October rose 21
percent to $483 million, or 18 cents per share, compared with
$384 million, or 14 cents per share.
Revenue rose 41 percent to $6.78 billion, in line with Wall
Street's expectations. Growth was driven by a 72-percent
increase in sales of its powerful computers and storage systems
to big businesses, as Dell shrugged off any pause in spending
by corporate customers tied to Year 2000 computer repair.
Shares of Dell gained more than a point to $44.88 in
after-hours trading, up from a closing price of $43.44 on the
Nasdaq stock market. Shares rose $2 in anticipation of the
report, which was released after the regular trading session
ended.
"It was a very strong quarter for us," Michael Dell, the
company's chairman, chief executive and founder, said afterward
in a phone interview.
Third quarter net income excluded a previously disclosed
charge of $194 million, or 7 cents per share for ConvergeNet
Technologies Inc., a maker of high-speed storage equipment,
Dell's first ever acquisition. Including the charge, third
quarter net was $289 million, or 11 cents a share.
The latest quarter's profit was in line with Wall Street's
consensus, according to First Call/Thomson Financial, which
tracks broker estimates. The company had warned in mid-October
that profit margins would be hurt by a spike in prices for
computer memory chip components it uses to build PCs, leading
analysts to temper their third quarter earnings estimates.
After the report, Dell executives said the company was
poised to dodge the Year 2000 spending pause that is expected
to hurt results at some computer rivals into early next year.
"We expect that the fourth quarter is going to be a healthy
one," Dell told Reuters, referring to the company's fiscal
fourth quarter ending in January 2000. Analysts predict Dell
revenue growth around 40 percent to continue into next year.
"There seems to be a group of customers that are buying at
a more intense level -- small businesses certainly and we think
consumers are going to be strong enough that they offset any
Y2K effect," Dell said.
Some corporate customers, especially buyers of powerful PCs
used to manage big business operations, have said they will
pause in buying new equipment around the New Year in order to
fix possible Year 2000 software glitches in older machines.
"We don't see a real concern in terms of customer buying
activity," Dell said.
Dell officials said the computer maker is focusing on
high-growth business segments such as Internet commerce sites,
small businesses and consumers to offset any possible slowing
among big corporate buyers.
"We are benefiting from the buildout of the dot.com world,"
Dell said, noting the company's No. 1 market position and focus
on the small business market is paying off among emerging Web
businesses.
Third quarter revenue from the Americas region climbed 45
percent, as Dell surged during the quarter to become the No. 1
PC supplier in terms of shipments in the United States for the
first time, moving ahead of struggling Compaq Computer Corp.
<CPQ.N>, which nonetheless remains No. 1 worldwide.
European revenue rose 22 percent year-over-year, but a
strong 8 percent sequentially during the normally difficult
late summer selling season. In Asia-Pacific and Japan, Dell
shipments expanded at three times the industry rate, and
revenue rose 69 percent.
Nonetheless, Wall Street analysts remained cautious.
Several noted that while company executives painted a rosy
picture of its outlook heading into early next year, Dell's
tight PC sales turnaround cycles of as little as one week make
it difficult to forecast results through the end of January.
"They feel good about Y2K in that on a net basis it won't
effect them," Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette analyst Kevin
McCarthy said after the conference call with Dell officials.
"(But) with 75 days left in the quarter, my confidence is
not as high as there's," McCarthy said of Dell's fiscal fourth
quarter ended in late January.
Ashok Kumar, an analyst with Minneapolis-based brokerage
Piper Jaffray, said Dell's third quarter results were
essentially in line with his forecasts.
"You have a company that is at an annualized rate of $25
billion growing at 40 percent plus," Kumar said of Dell's
continued gravity-defying financial performance. "No other
company does this at this magnitude of revenues," he said.
Internet sales, a key focus for the world's top direct PC
seller, reached $35 million a day during the quarter, or 43
percent of overall revenue. On an annual basis, sales at
dell.com alone would be $12 billion, qualifying it
for Fortune 125 status.
((-- Eric Auchard, New York newsdesk, 212-859-18