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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Incorporated (QCOM) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Boplicity who wrote (70273)4/5/2000 11:42:00 PM
From: LBstocks  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
SAWS news is excellent for QCOM. I think the announcement was done to support the price of SAWS. May have been to fend off some FUD about missing earnings due to component shortages, etc. Could have also been done to fend off a possible hostile takeover if the stock got too cheap...



To: Boplicity who wrote (70273)4/6/2000 11:25:00 AM
From: LBstocks  Respond to of 152472
 
U.S. pushes China on CDMA mobile technology

BEIJING, April 6 (Reuters) - U.S. Commerce Secretary
William Daley said he won a pledge from Chinese Premier Zhu
Rongji on Thursday to try to kickstart the stalled rollout of
CDMA mobile phone technology in China.
Daley raised the issue during broader talks with Chinese
leaders aimed at underscoring White House determination to push
through key trade legislation that supports Beijing's entry to
the World Trade Organisation.
China agreed last year to roll out networks using CDMA
(Code Division Multiple Access) cellular standard, which was
pioneered by U.S. company Qualcomm Inc <QCOM.O>.
But the plans were held up by industry regulators in
Beijing just days after Qualcomm reached a patent licensing
agreement with Chinese negotiators.
Zhu last month blamed the holdup on bureaucratic snags,
saying the main phone company with plans to use CDMA had failed
to coordinate with the Ministry of Information Industry before
it began accepting contract bids by foreign equipment vendors.
"Zhu promised that he would enourage the ministry to move
forward," Daley told reporters.
Qualcomm would earn licensing royalities from a CDMA
rollout, while North American telecoms manufactures such as
Motorola Corp <MOT.N>, Lucent Technologies Inc <LU.N> and
Nortel Networks Corp <NT.TO> could win meaty contracts.
Daley said some people believe China is stalling the
rollout to give domestic firms a chance to catch up on the
technology and compete for contracts.
MUTUAL SUPPORT FOR TRADE PACT
Daley also met President Jiang Zemin on Thursday, and Daley
said he was confident Congress would vote to grant China
Permanent Normal Trade Relations (NTR).
Congress cannot block China's WTO entry, but without
granting Beijing permanent NTR the United States would not be
able to reap lower Chinese tariffs and other trade and
investment concessions.
Passage is vitually assured in the Senate, but the House of
Representatives vote, scheduled for the week of May 22-26, is
expected to be tight.
U.S. President Bill Clinton is pushing hard for its
passage, but many members of his Democratic party are siding
with labour unions which believe free trade with China kills
American jobs.
"We are very positive about the prospects of passing WTO,"
Daley told reporters.
Zhu and Jiang showed a solid understanding of the political
minefield the issue has become in Congress, he said.
"I caution everyone that there will be lots of coments made
over the next few months -- charges, allegations, hysteria
going on as this heats up," he said.
Jiang told Daley normal trade relations are "in the
interest of both China and the U.S.," Xinhua news agency said.
"China will as always, make an active contribution to the
healthy develpment of the world's economy and trade," Xinhua
quoted Jiang as saying.
REUTERS
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