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To: DGMontana who wrote (2283)12/10/1999 3:49:00 PM
From: Philip W. Dunton, Jr  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3661
 
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Tech Stocks : Semiconductors

No Time to Hang the SOX Out to Dry
By Marcy Burstiner
Staff Reporter
12/9/99 6:53 PM ET

SAN FRANCISCO -- Anyone heavily invested in chip stocks
has got to be smiling these days. But when asked the
seemingly sensible question of whether it's time to bail, four
portfolio managers from chip-heavy funds say it's still too
early.

"We are still bullish on the semiconductor area," says Rod
Berry, a portfolio manager of Elijah Asset Management,
which has about a third of its assets invested in chip stocks.

Since Oct. 19, the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index
has risen 37%. And since the current chip rally began back
in October 1998, the SOX has risen more than 260%. That
has pushed valuations of some stocks to about 10 times the
average of the S&P 500. Broadcom (BRCM:Nasdaq) is
trading at 265 times its earnings in the year ending Dec. 31,
while modem chipmaker Conexant (CNXT:Nasdaq) is
trading at 230 times. The average P/E on the S&P 500 is 29.

To those numbers, money managers say, forget valuations --
this is a simple supply-and-demand issue. As Internet
demand rises, the supply of chips used in Net infrastructure
tightens, which in turn means rising profits. Until chipmakers
build more fabrication plants, that pattern won't reverse.
Downturns in the chip industry have not been caused by
falling demand, but by rising supply.

The communications chip companies have shown some of
the most spectacular growth in the rally driving the Nasdaq
in recent weeks. Since Nov. 1, Broadcom is up 62%;
Conexant is up 50%; Fairchild Semiconductor
(FCS:NYSE), which makes single function chips that sell for
20 cents a pop, is up 35%; and even that perennial
disappointer Advanced Micro Devices (AMD:NYSE),
which sells memory for communications devices along with
its core PC chips, is up 51%.

On Tuesday and Wednesday, the SOX slipped back 3%,
having risen 12% in the previous four trading days. But
expectations of strong demand suggest the rally will be back
on track before long.

Driving all that demand is the sale of devices such as cell
phones, MP3 players, digital cameras, modems and Palm
Pilots -- all of which require a vast new infrastructure of
telecommunications networks. And those networks need
chips. On top of these devices, something is bound to
appear on the market that no one expected but that will add
to that demand, says Ron Leckie, an analyst at chip
equipment consultant Infrastructure. "We didn't see Furbys
coming, but it drove a lot of Taiwan's chip output last year,"
he says.

On top of that, the chip market rose sharply in the second
half of last year despite an economic recession in Asia,
money managers say. They anticipate rising demand as
Asia businesses and consumers spend more money on new
technology.

Rising Chip Demand
Global chip sales

Source: Semiconductor Industry Associations

Supply won't increase until new plants are built. Money
managers say they watch closely the ratio, called the
book-to-bill, of new orders for chip equipment vs. products
shipped. When the ratio tops 1.00, it means times are
generally good; when it dips below that level, watch out. The
book-to-bill in this up-cycle first hit 1.00 in December of last
year. In October, the latest data available, it was 1.09.
Leckie says the book-to-bill can rise up to 2.00 without it
necessarily signaling that production will outstrip demand.

No Time to Sell
Fund managers say they'll wait until orders dip before selling
their chips.

Source: Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International

Berry points out that Cypress Semiconductor (CY:NYSE),
one of the first chipmakers to step up equipment buying,
won't have significant new capacity until the first half of next
year at the earliest. Cypress shut down a fabrication plant in
Minnesota last year when the industry was in recession, and
won't have it back on line until at least the second quarter, a
company spokesman said.

The first sign of big spending, says Leckie, will come from
the makers of memory chips in PCs. Last quarter,
equipment leader Applied Materials (AMAT:Nasdaq) said
20% of its revenue came from DRAM makers. When that
percentage doubles, Leckie says, watch out, because the
DRAM guys tend to be the first to open their wallets. When
they do, it's a sure sign the rest of the chip herd will soon
follow. "That would concern me," Leckie says.

Not all the rallying chip stocks are worth sticking with. One
Palo Alto hedge fund manager who has made a killing on
Broadcom says he is steering clear of PC chipmakers such
as Intel (INTC:Nasdaq) because growth in the computer
market has slowed and it tends to be more volatile than
communications. Communications chips are a different
story. After holding Broadcom for more than a year, he's not
ready to sell anytime soon, even if it's carrying a price that's
362 times trailing earnings.

"They have a great position in all the major developing
markets -- DSL cable, fast Ethernet, home networking," he
says. "I think it is worth the price."

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To: DGMontana who wrote (2283)12/10/1999 6:02:00 PM
From: Ian@SI  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3661
 
David,

I don't follow TRKN any longer. A couple years back it was a very fancy website, a few patents, several machines out for evaluation but no production customers.

I shouldn't have used it in the same post as VNE.

It was trying to become a legitimate business but without success. I'm more than a year out of date on its progress.

So I really can't offer a current opinion.

Hope your investment is successful.
Ian.