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Technology Stocks : Dell Technologies Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TTOSBT who wrote (159460)8/11/2000 12:20:06 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176387
 
Dell inches past estimates, yet sales disappoint
By Ian Fried
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
August 10, 2000, 3:20 p.m. PT
update Dell Computer edged past Wall Street earnings estimates today but reported sales figures below what many analysts expected.

Including gains from investments, the direct-sales PC giant said it earned $603 million, or 22 cents per share, on revenue of $7.67 billion. In the same quarter a year ago, Dell earned $507 million, or 19 cents a share, on sales of $6.14 billion.

Analysts had been expecting Dell to report earnings of 21 cents a share, according to First Call/Thomson Financial.

"Our second-quarter results and expectations for strong industry demand in the second half of the year keep us on track toward our goal of 30 percent full-year sales growth," said chief executive Michael Dell. "There remains tremendous room for expansion in all product categories, customer groups and regional markets, and the fundamental advantages of our direct model are more compelling than ever."

Sales placed through Dell's Web site accounted for half of the company's revenue.

While most analysts had originally targeted Dell to come in with revenue near $7.8 billion, several had cautioned that sales could come in a little lower than expectations.

"Even though revenue is going to be a little light, I don't think it's going to be a disaster," Lehman Brothers analyst Dan Niles said this week. "The PC business is going to be the exact opposite from last year. The back half of the year is going to be absolutely terrific."


2 messages
Hopefully these earnings keep the techs from bombing. eander
My take? Who cares?!?!

More commentary


Dell blamed the revenue shortfall on weaker government sales, as well as on a slowdown in Europe, where sales were down 8 percent from the prior quarter.

"We did fall short of our original expectations by about $200 million," chief financial officer James Schneider said in a conference call following the announcement.

Bear Stearns analyst Andrew Neff said in a research note this week that a revenue shortfall in the range of what Dell reported would not ordinarily be that big a deal, except for the fact the company had already lowered growth expectations in January.

"The disappointment for investors is that the real expectation was not that they would hit the target, but that they had set a target they could surpass," Neff said. "That no longer looks to be the case."

Schneider said the company believes the second half of the year will be strong, with seasonal improvements in the coming quarter. Dell typically sees 10 to 13 percent sequential revenue growth in the third quarter.

"The lower end of that range is consistent with our view," Schneider said.

The company sees both positives and negatives for its profit margins but said they should improve in the second half of the year. The mix of products should improve in the coming quarters, but component costs, particularly memory, are volatile.

Sales of items other than base computer systems accounted for $1.3 billion of Dell's revenue, a company record. Sales of services worldwide were $577 million, up 35 percent from a year ago.

Notebook computers, workstations, servers and storage products accounted for 49 percent of total system sales, up 9 percentage points from last year's second quarter.

cnet.com



To: TTOSBT who wrote (159460)8/20/2000 6:12:18 PM
From: jmac  Respond to of 176387
 
Yes, I believe Oct. will be early this year. I got stuck riding this storm out but had some cash on the sidelines and have been putting it to work over the past week. You have to be in no later than Labor Day (IMO). I am also very hopeful that QCOM has based in the 60s and will close out the year with more than a 50% gain from here. You have to be in now becuase when it moves, it will be too late to get in.