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Strategies & Market Trends : Cents and Sensibility - Kimberly and Friends' Consortium -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Smart_Money who wrote (90203)3/29/2000 4:06:00 PM
From: Ron Pratt  Respond to of 108040
 
Anyone see this? Wednesday March 29, 2:40 pm Eastern Time Chip companies to shine this quarter amid boom times By Therese Poletti

SAN FRANCISCO, March 29 (Reuters) - Forget about investing in money-losing dot-com
companies, the $149 billion worldwide semiconductor industry is on a roll.

The semiconductor business, known for its boom-to-bust cycles, is in full recovery from its
most recent three-year downturn, which also happened to be the industry's longest.

Factories are humming again at almost full capacity, supplies are getting tight and chip stocks
have been skyrocketing faster than some newly-public dot-coms.

But unlike profit-averse Internet companies, chip companies are making money and as
earnings this quarter will show, many U.S. chip companies could report better-than-expected
results.

``They will all do well, they will all have upside surprises, their stocks will all rise, it's a semiconductor up-cycle,' said Dan Niles,
an analyst at Robertson Stephens. ``Most of my companies have real earnings and the multiples -- relative to other spaces --
are reasonable.'

Indeed, since the beginning of the year, the Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index (^SOXX - news) has soared
about 82 percent, in part fueled by huge surges in networking and communications chip companies.

Many chip companies have been trading near or at their 52-week highs, before losing some recent gains this week.

Analysts and fund managers said they expect chip stocks to continue to climb, despite declines in some tech stocks this week,
as strong earnings will further buoy a bullish outlook.

``I think generally speaking business is pretty good and I suspect they will all report a good quarter,' said Steve Shapiro,
president of Intrepid Capital Management in New York. ``A lot of them have had pretty fabulous moves, so we don't own as
much as we used to. We still own them selectively.'

Of course the risk for an investor getting into chip stocks now, as some stocks are near or at year highs, is that they will begin to
sell off on the news of strong earnings, or at the first signs of too much supply and excess capacity.

But analysts are mostly bullish, saying demand remains strong for the near-term, possibly through the year.

``I think earnings results and the outlooks will be strong enough to drive these stocks higher as we go into the second quarter,'
said Mark Edelstone, a Morgan Stanley Dean Witter analyst. ``I am pretty optimistic about how these stocks will trade going
into summer. Business is great.'

One of the first companies to report next month will be Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (NYSE:AMD - news), Intel Corp.'s
biggest rival in PC microprocessors, and now the comeback kid of the chip business.

Sunnyvale, Calif.-based AMD, which has struggled in the past with manufacturing problems and price wars with Intel, appears
to be running on all cylinders.

Analysts are looking for a strong first quarter, fueled by big demand for its Athlon processor family that is competing with Intel's
Pentium III chips and flash memory sales.

Intel, the world's largest semiconductor maker, had even been rumored to pre-announce that its first quarter results would be
better-than-forecast.

The Santa Clara, Calif.-based giant is likely to beat consensus estimates. Revenues, which Intel had predicted will be slightly
down from the fourth quarter, could even be flat to down around 2 percent to 4 percent, analysts said.

``I think they will exceed expectations,' said Hans Mosesmann, a Prudential Volpe Technology Group analyst. ``I think they
will have a decent outlook and I think ASPs (average selling prices) will be flat to up. People are going to want to own the
stock.'

Last year, Intel saw its average selling prices decline amid cut-throat price wars in the low-cost PC sector, but they rose again
slightly in the fourth quarter.

Companies developing chips for high-speed communications, networking and consumer electronics areas are all expected to
see continued strong sales, amid growing demand for cellular phones, pagers, video gaming consoles, and networking products.

The following is a list of many of the top U.S. semiconductor companies and their consensus earnings estimates, as compiled by
First Call/Thomson Financial.

COMPANY CONSENSUS REPORT DATE
Altera (NasdaqNM:ALTR - news) profit $0.34 April 12
AMD profit $0.44 April 12
Atmel (NasdaqNM:ATML - news) profit $0.17 April 20
Conexant (NasdaqNM:CNXT - news) Q2 profit $0.19 April 19
Cypress Semi (NYSE:CY - news) profit $0.33 April 18
Intel Corp. profit $0.69 April 18
LSI Logic (NYSE:LSI - news) profit $0.25 April 25
PMC Sierra (NasdaqNM:PMCS - news) profit $0.16 April 13
Texas Instruments(NYSE:TXN - news) profit $0.53 April 18
Vitesse (NasdaqNM:VTSS - news) Q2 profit $0.15 April 17
Xilinx (NasdaqNM:XLNX - news) Q4 profit $0.21 April 20