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


To: Elwood P. Dowd who wrote (76608)1/25/2000 7:58:00 PM
From: Captain Jack  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 97611
 
El-- not quick enough,,, Kumar speaks,,,
HOUSTON, Jan 25, 2000 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- Compaq Computer Corp.
reported Tuesday a 56 percent tumble in fourth-quarter profits on a 4
percent drop in revenue, dragged down by lower sales of business
computers as the company struggled to maintain its global leadership in
PCs.

Compaq managed to beat Wall Street expectations, but the results were
bolstered by a gain of $50 million in its own investment portfolio,
separate from growth from its computer business.

Compaq said it earned $332 million, or 19 cents a share, in the final
quarter of 1999, off from $758 million, or 43 cents a share, in the
year-ago quarter. Sales dipped to $10.48 billion from $10.86 billion.

Analysts surveyed by First Call/Thomson Financial had expected Compaq
to earn 16 cents per share.

Compaq released its results after regular trading Tuesday on the New
York Stock Exchange, where the company's shares were at $32 a share,
down $1. In after-hours trading, Compaq shares were trading lower at
$31.50 a share.

While Compaq leads in worldwide sales of PCs, rival Dell Computer Corp.
overtook Compaq as the No. 1 U.S. PC company in the fourth quarter,
underscoring the company's uphill battle against stiff competition,
price wars and mismanagement. But Compaq president and chief executive
officer Michael Capellas said the company is recovering and pointed to
stronger sales of consumer PCs.

'During the second half of this year we took aggressive action to
return Compaq to profitable growth, and fourth quarter results reflect
our initial success where it matters most -- in the marketplace,' said
Capellas, who succeeded ousted former chief executive Eckhard Pfeiffer
last summer.

Capellas pointed to a record $2 billion in fourth-quarter revenue in
the company's consumer computing group, up 24 percent from the year-ago
period. Revenue from Internet access and traffic bolstered those
results, the company said.

Despite some encouraging signs, U.S. Bancorp Piper Jaffray analyst
Ashok Kumar said Dell already has won the personal computing war.

'I think their time has come and gone,' Kumar said, saying one of the
only attractive things about Compaq is its relatively low stock price.
'It's a value play more than anything else.'

Kevin Knox, of the Gartner Group, countered that Compaq can continue to
be a force in the personal computer business despite Dell's strength.

'Compaq still is the No. 1 PC manufacturer in the world. A lot of
people lose sight of that,' Knox said. 'While they have lost some
share, they're still a solid supplier of PC hardware and I don't see
that changing.'

For all of last year, Compaq earned $569 million, or 34 cents a share,
compared with a loss of $2.74 billion, or $1.71 a share, in 1998. The
1998 figure reflects costs associated with the acquisition of Digital
Equipment Corp.

Revenue totaled $38.53 billion, up 19 percent from $31.17 billion in
1998.

Copyright 1999 Associated Press, All rights reserved.



To: Elwood P. Dowd who wrote (76608)1/25/2000 8:01:00 PM
From: Captain Jack  Respond to of 97611
 
And a positive comment from an unknown from DLJ,,, not much to look fwd to tomorrow,,,

HOUSTON, Jan 25 (Reuters) - Compaq Computer Corp. <CPQ.N>
on Tuesday said fourth-quarter net income fell 56 percent to
$332 million, in line with lowered expectations, as the world's
largest personal computer maker closed out a trying year.
Net income fell to $332 million, or 19 cents per diluted
share, from $758 million, or 43 cents, in the year-earlier
quarter.
The decline in profits occurred as Compaq struggled to
rebound from plunging PC prices, a management house-cleaning
and the difficult time it has had in integrating several major
acquisitions over the past two years.
The computer maker said fourth-quarter results benefited
from an after-tax gain of $50 million on its portfolio of
investments in other companies, which appeared to boost
reported earnings by 15 percent, or nearly 3 cents per share.
Excluding the gains, the results were in line with the
consensus of 16 cents per share among analysts surveyed by
First Call/Thomson Financial.
Revenues fell 4 percent to $10.5 billion, as the effect of
translating foreign currency into U.S. dollars trimmed results
by 3 percentage points.
Following the report, which came after the regular trading
session, Compaq shares fell to 31 in composite U.S. stock
market trading, off 2 points from Monday's close. The stock had
closed at 32-9/16 on the New York Stock Exchange.
Compaq President and Chief Executive Michael Capellas, who
replaced former CEO Eckhard Pfeiffer after he was forced out
earlier this year, said the company's revenues would grow
roughly 15 percent in 2000 from $38.5 billion it generated in
1999.
Even so, he cautioned first-quarter revenue would decline
compared with fourth quarter, the company's strongest season,
when holiday sales of personal computers to consumers boomed.
"The first quarter will start out a little bit slow,"
Capellas told financial analysts in a conference call that
came after the financial report. "We expect revenue to decline
quarter-to-quarter due to seasonality."
"(Our) view of Q1 (first quarter) is somewhat conservative
but we're confident of the year ahead," Capellas said, adding
that he was comfortable with analysts' estimates at about $1.08
per share for 2000, the First Call survey consensus.
Kevin McCarthy, an analyst with brokerage Donaldson, Lufkin
& Jenrette, said the results were in line with expectations and
suggested the worst of Compaq's troubles were behind it. Over
time, the stock could trade nearly 50 percent higher, he said.
"Near-term, the stock has no reason to go below 30 and will
eventually go to 45," McCarthy said of firming interest in the
shares among investors, many of whom see the company as the
most undervalued among major-name technology stocks.
Sales of servers, the computers used to manage networks of
other computers, accounted for 51 percent of total revenue and
totaled $5.3 billion, down 3 percent from a year ago, Compaq
said.
However, that represented a 8 percent increase from 1999's
third quarter. The segment, which generates most of Compaq's
profits, realized operating income of $714 million, off 17
percent on the year.
Compaq was hardest hit in the category for which it is
perhaps best known -- commercial PCs -- where revenues amounted
to $3.1 billion, down 19 percent from a year earlier, but up 15
percent from the third quarter.
The company has been playing catch up here against
archrival Dell Computer Corp. <DELL.O>, the leading supplier of
PCs through direct distribution outlets such as telephone, and
increasingly the Internet.
Dell's booming business led it to surpass Compaq for the
No. 1 spot in combined U.S. business and consumer PC shipments
during the second half of 1999, although Compaq retained a
commanding lead worldwide, according to industry market data.
The unit, which accounts for 30 percent of total revenue,
posted a fourth-quarter loss of $79 million, improving from an
even steeper third-quarter loss of $169 million -- but a
reversal from the $157 million profit in fourth quarter 1998.
The consumer PC business remained a bright spot, as the
unit reported record revenue of $2 billion, up 24 percent from
the year-earlier period and up 34 percent from the third
quarter.
Importantly for the future, the company said its push to
derive a greater percentage of its revenue from items other
than PC themselves -- such as software, peripheral products and
Internet access -- was working, with growth at 50 percent.
Compaq benefited from the exit of rival PC makers from the
U.S. retail market, including International Business Machines
Corp. <IBM.N> and Packard Bell NEC Inc., a division of Japan's
giant NEC Corp. <6701.T><NIPNY.O>.
((-- Eric Auchard, New York newsdesk, 212-859-1840))
REUTERS
*** end of story ***



To: Elwood P. Dowd who wrote (76608)1/25/2000 8:34:00 PM
From: Jimbo Cobb  Respond to of 97611
 
Some favorable CPQ press from Barrons on-line tonight....

PC Stocks Ain't Dead Yet

By Carolyn Whelan

Until recently, technology investors have steered clear of computer
hardware companies.

If cheaper PCs, chip shortages and economic turmoil
abroad weren't enough, these companies were also
grappling with the impact of Y2K and the anticipated
spread of handheld devices and so-called Internet appliances. No wonder
investors stuck with wireless and business-to-business Internet plays.

But now the picture looks different. Recent market research and earnings
reports from some hardware companies suggest that the tide may be turning
for PC stocks.

And some on Wall Street point out that though these stocks almost certainly
won't rack up the gargantuan price appreciation of a Qualcomm or a JDS
Uniphase, they have good growth prospects and real revenues and earnings
-- today.

"The PC remains king," declares Roger Kay, an analyst at the International
Data Corp., a market research firm, noting the record shipment volume in
1999. "Everyone is buying because of the Internet."

Indeed, despite a soft fourth quarter (which experts blamed on earlier PC
purchases and supply shortages), U.S. PC shipments grew a whopping 25%
in 1999, according to IDC -- a huge increase over 1998's 15% growth. Even
better, percentage growth in worldwide PC shipments nearly doubled to
23%, from a 12.5% rise in 1998.

That's why Apple, for example, saw its profits grow 20% in its fiscal first
quarter, server manufacturer Sun Microsystems' net income rose 35% and
IBM topped fourth-quarter profit expectations, although revenue growth
seems to be slowing.

"1999 was a bang-up year," says Kay.

Previously perceived problems may have, in fact, begun to resolve
themselves. Prices, supply shortages and overseas economies have stabilized.
And as behemoths like IBM exit the retail PC business, it provides an opening
for leading PC players -- and may dampen the incidence of cutthroat retailing
price wars.

In fact, average selling prices for PCs actually are going up. They rose to
$844 in December, from $789 in August, according to market research firm
PC Data.

The best news of all: PC demand is growing again, and should remain steady,
particularly overseas. Domestically, new product releases should stimulate
corporate demand. For instance, Microsoft's new Windows 2000 operating
system, expected in February, is supposed to make systems more secure and
stable -- two key factors in enabling e-commerce.

Moreover, firmer prices, an ample supply of parts and overseas growth are
boosting previously shrinking profit margins. (The spike in prices of memory
chips after last fall's earthquake in Taiwan appears to be behind us now.) And
explosive demand for notebook PCs and Internet servers, where many box
companies get the lion's share of their profits, should help their bottom lines.

That bodes well, of course, for usual suspects Microsoft and Intel, but it's also
good news for Dell Computer and Compaq Computer -- once market
leaders whose stocks have lagged lately.

No. 1 U.S. PC maker Dell should
particularly benefit from strong demand
for servers: It gets around 17% of its
revenues from sales of workstations,
storage and servers. It also sells the
most notebook computers in the U.S.
-- one out of every six, according to
IDC.

"A tiny fraction of all the servers that
are required for the Internet exist
today," notes Mark Herskovitz,
primary portfolio manager of Dreyfus Premier Technology Growth
Herskovitz. That means plenty of upside for server manufacturers, like Dell,
which Herskovitz calls "a core holding" of his fund.

The release of Windows 2000 also should stimulate demand for corporate
PC purchases.

Microsoft's much hyped and long-delayed melding of its Windows operating
system for PCs and Windows NT for networked computers "is a substantially
different program," contends Herskovitz.

Compaq could benefit from robust consumer demand (a faster- growing
market than corporate), as well as increasing overseas demand for PCs
(worldwide and in Europe, it's number one). Compaq also sells the most PC
servers in the world, according to Kevin McCarthy, an analyst at Donaldson,
Lufkin and Jenrette.

"They're introducing new products, working on [their] logistics and cost
structure, and certainly [are] under much better management than they were
under [former CEO Eckhardt] Pfeiffer," says Kay. (See Weekday Trader, "Is
It Turnaround Time For Compaq?," July 12, 1999.)

Compaq reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter earnings late Tuesday
-- 19 cents a share, topping First Call's consensus estimates of 16 cents a
share.

Of the hardware manufacturers,
Lawrence York, lead portfolio manager
of the WW Internet Fund, calls Dell
and Compaq "the most attractive in
price. Dell is probably in a good buy
range."

At a late afternoon price of 42 1/8, Dell
is about 23% off the 52-week high of
55 it set last February. Its P/E of 41x
the $1.02 it is expected to earn in the
fiscal year ending January 2001 is only
slightly above its projected earnings growth rates of 40% next year and 35%
over the long term.

"Relative to the technology part of the S&P, the stock is cheap: [It] is
expected to increase its earnings at four times the [growth of the] market, but
is selling for less than twice [the market's P/E]," says Herskovitz.

Compaq stock, which traded at 33 late Tuesday, has begun to show some
good momentum after a long dormant period. It remains a third off its
52-week high of 49 1/4 it set last January. But at 31 times the $1.40 it is
expected to earn in 2000, it's trading at a reasonable premium to its projected
20% earnings growth rate next year and about in line with its five-year
average P/E of 28x forward earnings.

Wall Street has been turning more positive, too. Richard Chu of S.G. Cowen
recently upgraded the shares to Buy from Neutral on January 14th, and
McCarthy of DLJ boosted his rating on the stock to Buy this week, with a
price target of 45.

"Compaq is a turnaround story, and has more upside than downside," says
James Poyner of C.E. Unterberg Towbin.

PC stocks are not without risk, of course. Palm Pilots and Internet appliances
could cut into PC sales. And pricing pressures and supply shortages could
kick in again.

"But the rush to get on the Internet is so powerful that it's going to dominate
the [PC] market for a couple more years," says Kay.

As the PC business improves, investors could rush back into PC stocks, too.

interactive.wsj.com



To: Elwood P. Dowd who wrote (76608)1/25/2000 10:29:00 PM
From: jim kelley  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
3.8 weeks is correct from the Financial statement.