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


To: TimeToMakeTheInvs who wrote (356)2/15/2000 12:59:00 PM
From: Foo Bar  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 493
 
Can anybody elaborate on the reasons of down 20 points in a couple of weeks while others like JBL is doing okay?

Thx



To: TimeToMakeTheInvs who wrote (356)2/15/2000 1:09:00 PM
From: Foo Bar  Respond to of 493
 
Some here is some info on why the large EMS' are going down and the smaller ones are doing okay. Perhaps it's time to pick up some SLR?

Stock of the Day

Feb 15, 2000

Flextronics: EMS Up-an-Comer Stays Strong

The contract manufacturing industry, often called electronic manufacturing services (EMS), has produced a number of
stocks that are up tenfold in recent years. Just in the past few months, though, a divergence has occurred among the top
stocks in this business. A few of the biggest EMS firms have seen their stocks falter -- Solectron, SCI Systems and
Celestica to name a few -- while some of the fast-rising stars like Flextronics (Nasdaq:FLEX - news) remain at or near
their highs. The question for investors is how will this divergence be reconciled, if ever.

The EMS industry has been such a strong performer because of the massive outsourcing trend sweeping across most
high-tech industries. Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) such as PC and networking equipment companies find it more efficient and cost-effective to
contract out the manufacturing of the electronic components, and in some cases the assembly and distribution of the final products, to companies like
Flextronics. This allows the OEMs to concentrate on product development, marketing and sales, with an eye toward getting new products to market quickly
and having the flexibility to respond to changing markets more rapidly. Time to market is critical with the short product cycles of the high-tech world. Further,
by selling off manufacturing operations and outsourcing, OEMs can turn fixed costs into variable ones.

Electronics Manufacturing Services companies leverage their expertise and global production capacity to significantly lower production and distribution costs.
While manufacturing high-tech hardware and electronic components is a decidedly unglamorous side of the tech world, investors like the business for its
tremendous growth and earnings visibility.

A few years ago, the contract manufacturing industry was largely confined to assembling circuit boards for the original equipment makers (OEMs), but now
the OEMs are looking for help with product design, final systems assembly and testing. Flextronics has been one of the most aggressive in responding to this
demand by acquiring smaller companies with expertise in these areas, making the company a "one-stop shop" solution. This not only adds business for
Flextronics, but boosts the otherwise slim margins commonly associated with electronics manufacturing.

Flextronics recently announced plans to buy design firm Palo Alto Products, known for designing the PalmPilot. In a much larger deal announced last
November, Flextronics announced a deal to acquire DII Group, another EMS firm with sales of more than $1 billion. The DII acquisition adds significant
production capacity and global distribution, not to mention new customers. Flextronics had been a distant number four in terms of revenues among EMS
companies, behind Solectron (NYSE:SLR - news) , SCI Systems (NYSE:SCI - news) and Celestica (NYSE:CLS - news) , but this deal closes the gap
considerably.

The fact that Flextronics is growing so rapidly, both internally and through acquisition, may account in part for its stock outperforming its peers in recent
months. According to First Call, analysts predict earnings growth at FLEX to be 68% this fiscal year and 30%-35% over the next five years. That outstrips
most estimates for the overall industry growth rate of 25%, suggesting Flextronics will continue to gain market share.

Shares of FLEX have soared from a split-adjusted $6.58 in August 1998 to $55.50 currently, which is fairly representative of the EMS stocks in general. But
while FLEX and some of the other smaller contract manufacturers -- Jabil Circuit (NYSE:JBL - news) and Sanmina (Nasdaq:SANM - news) to name a few
-- are within 10% of their highs, the three largest EMS stocks are suddenly down 20% to 33% from their highs.

This divergence bears close monitoring. The selling in the larger stocks could foreshadow a similar fate for the rest of the group, or it may just signal a shift by
investors into the smaller, faster growing players. Regardless of investment flows, Flextronics has proven itself to be strong on execution, and it is clearly
parked in front of a powerful evolution in the technology sector. Management has focused on winning higher-margin business and has actually turned down
contracts that would tie up capacity with lower-margin products. In other words, the company isn't just chasing revenues by expanding capacity; it is
concentrating on areas where return on investment is maximized. That's a good quality to find for investors.

- James Hale
The Online Investor