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Technology Stocks : Intel Corporation (INTC) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Road Walker who wrote (102386)4/15/2000 1:19:00 PM
From: Felix Appolonia  Respond to of 186894
 
John Re<Then the capital gain or loss is applied for or against earnings.>

Last quarter they had gains which affected the earnings positively by .07 per share, I believe. Or is that figure wrong. What happens next quarter when they don't show that in the earnings per share.?

Felix



To: Road Walker who wrote (102386)4/15/2000 1:42:00 PM
From: Felix Appolonia  Respond to of 186894
 
John- according to this, savvy investors ignore the cash
gains. They may have also have a large amount of
unrealized gains which offers protection from such
market corrections. We will probably hear something
about this in the conference call.
Felix

Friday April 14, 7:27 pm Eastern Time

U.S. technology firms get double blow
from selloff

By Nicole Volpe

NEW YORK, April 14 (Reuters) - Leading U.S. technology
firms took a double-whammy on Friday. Not only were their
market values slashed by the crushing sell-off on Wall Street,
but their return on investments in other listed companies, were
also put in jeopardy.

Intel Corp. (NasdaqNM:INTC - news), Microsoft Corp. (NasdaqNM:MSFT - news) and
Compaq Computer Corp. (NYSE:CPQ - news), among other big names, have made large gains
on their investments in cutting edge technology companies because of the surge in technology
stock prices in recent years. As some of these investments are sold, the gains have contributed to
earnings.

But in the current bear market in technology stocks that extra kick to profits from a company's
investment income is under threat, leading to the possibility of earnings disappointments as
companies lose the flexibility to massage their accounts.

``When you start counting on market gains, especially outlandish market gains, you wind up in
trouble whether you are an individual investor, or Intel,' said SG Cowen analyst Drew Peck.
``You are adding a great deal of volatility when you do that.'

Intel, at last report, had more than $8 billion in holdings of securities in both privately held and
publicly traded firms.

The microchip giant reported $327 million in investment income in its results for the fourth quarter
of last year. Intel said in January it expects to report some $500 million in interest and other
income, largely from returns on investments, when it reports its first quarter results, which are due
out next Tuesday.

The current market shakeout would not affect those first quarter prospects, but could have an
impact on the sale of shares in the second quarter, and -- if the downdraft is sustained -- for the
rest of the year.

``I'm sure Intel is watching very closely and crossing their fingers and hoping this correction doesn't
interfere with their ability to sell shares in the second quarter,' said Peck.

Microsoft in January noted in its fiscal second quarter report a gain on investments of $773 million,
off a total portfolio of nearly $20 billion.

Compaq held $8.3 billion in investments in publicly traded stocks alone in January, according to
industry estimates. The computer maker recorded a $50 million net gain on its investments as part
of its bottom line earnings report for the fourth quarter of 1999.

The reaction to Intel's earnings in January, which exceeded Wall Street expectations on the
strength of the gain on investments, suggested some investors may treat gains on investments as
though they were a reflection of the company's ongoing operations. The stock jumped more than
10 percent after the earnings report.

To be sure, analysts pointed out that many savvy investors ignore the cash gains.

``You can think about it almost like foreign exchange effect,' said Chase Hambrecht & Quist
analyst Walter Winnitzki, in reference to losses and gains on the translation of revenue and profits
from one currency to another. ``It could jump from pluses to minuses real fast.'

And companies with such large portfolios have an enormous amount in unrealized gains, making
them somewhat protected from market corrections.

``If you look at Intel, it's one of the largest venture capital firms out there,' said CS First Boston
analyst Charlie Glavin. He said that Intel's Chief Financial Officer Andy Bryant ``is looking at how
much could he roll out over the next two or three years, not over the next two or three quarters.'

But any gain taken in the second quarter, if the bear market continues, would have to be made at
depressed rates, meaning Intel and other tech companies would need to sell more shares to boost
their profits.

Because of the current market slide, companies with investments may need to lower the value of
their assets on their balance sheet to reflect any lower market value of their investments.

``It could be that companies like Intel in their first quarter conference calls are going to caution that
the second quarter's numbers may have a noncash impact in the current market environment,' said
James Meyer, analyst with Janney Montgomery Scott Inc.