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To: Clappy who wrote (25676)7/17/2000 6:45:33 PM
From: Dealer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35685
 
Posted by Ruffian on "Coming into Buy Range"

Patent victory may boost Qualcomm's bottom
line
By John Borland
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
July 17, 2000, 2:40 p.m. PT

update A key patent victory in two of the world's hottest wireless markets should help
Qualcomm bolster its stock price and protect its bottom line, analysts said today.

Shares of San Diego, Calif.-based Qualcomm have slid in recent months because of concerns
over the company's prospects for future revenue. Today, however, its stock jumped nearly 11
percent on news that the wireless communications company won a key
victory in a patent battle in Europe and Japan. Shares closed at $69.81, up
$6.75.

Today's news is doubly important because Qualcomm is set to release
quarterly earnings Wednesday. Analysts will be looking for any signs of weakness in the
company's revenue from royalty payments on patents.

"It definitely allows the people at Qualcomm to take a big sigh of relief," said Gartner wireless
analyst Bob Egan. "The consequences of this not being upheld would have been disastrous for
the company."

Qualcomm has structured its business model largely around the revenue it earns by licensing
its wireless intellectual property. Losing even a portion of these rights in some of the world's
strongest wireless markets could cloud the company's future revenue growth.

The fight surrounding wireless patents has been a long one. Finland's Nokia, Sweden's
Ericsson and NTT, the leading Japanese telecommunications company, have challenged
Qualcomm's wireless technology patents in Japan. A few less critical patents were similarly
challenged in Europe.

The issue centers on which next-generation wireless technology will become the de facto
standard in Europe and Asia. Many companies abroad are leaning
toward using a wireless standard called W-CDMA, instead of
Qualcomm's own CDMA2000 standard.

Qualcomm has claimed that W-CDMA, a next-generation
technology for the popular GSM mobile phone standard in Europe,
contains core elements of its original technology called code
division multiple access, or CDMA. Earlier, a coalition of
companies had challenged Qualcomm's rights to claim royalty
revenue for several wireless technologies, including W-CDMA.

Japanese regulators have now chosen to uphold companies' rights
to royalty revenues from both leading next-generation technologies:
CDMA2000 and W-CDMA. Today's decision specifically upheld
Qualcomm's original CDMA patent, which was originally filed in the
United States in 1986. The patent was granted in Japan in 1998.

Today's decision should help Qualcomm boost its bottom line and
bolster its strategy of relying more on licensing revenue, analysts
said. Establishing this foothold in one of the world's largest wireless
phone markets was critical, they added.

The ultimate effect on earnings is still unclear, however. Ericsson, which settled its outstanding
patent disputes with Qualcomm last year, said the decision was "not anything of significance"
to them.

A Nokia spokeswoman said the company had not yet seen the Japanese decision. She
declined to comment.

"The confirmation of these inventions strengthens our patent portfolio in Japan and Europe and
emphasizes the international value of the many licenses granted by Qualcomm," Ben Miller,
Qualcomm's chief patent strategist, said in a statement today.

Analysts said the regulators' decision could bring Nokia to the negotiating table. The ruling
"could set the stage for a licensing agreement with Nokia or litigation in 2001," PaineWebber
analyst Walter Piecyk wrote in a research report today.

Piecyk has been among the most bullish of Wall Street analysts, maintaining a 12-month
split-adjusted price target of $200 for Qualcomm in spite of the company's recent difficulties.

His pre-split $1,000 price target late last year epitomized how hot Qualcomm had become.

Other analysts have revised their estimates further, noting the company's difficulties in breaking
into the Chinese market despite early promise. Analysts have also raised questions about
uncertainty in Korea, one of Qualcomm's largest markets.

Analysts have said they expect few surprises in this week's earnings but are keeping an eye
out for any indication that a recent string of bad news for the company will be reflected in its
report to Wall Street.

"We believe the focus for the quarter will be predominantly on the book-to-bill ratio...as well as
management's comments during the conference call regarding the overall business and CDMA
market pace, especially in light of recent developments in the South Korean market," Salomon
Smith Barney analyst Alex Cena said today.



To: Clappy who wrote (25676)7/17/2000 6:59:17 PM
From: drenko  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35685
 
Clappy!!

You better styop or you will go blind!!

-drenko



To: Clappy who wrote (25676)7/17/2000 7:01:59 PM
From: Dealer  Respond to of 35685
 
Clappy!!
You better styop or you will go blind!!

-drenko


Or bald headed!!!

love,
dealer