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Strategies & Market Trends : Market Gems:Stocks w/Strong Earnings and High Tech. Rank -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: puborectalis who wrote (112567)8/26/2000 10:42:57 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 120523
 
ANALYST WATCH: VA Linux finally
shows signs of life

By Larry Barrett ZDII

VA Linux won back some fans on Wall Street this week
with its impressive fourth-quarter earnings report. While
it appears to have some momentum and has carved out
a nice little niche for itself, investors shouldn't expect a
miraculous recovery anytime soon.

That's not to say VA Linux can't be a fine investment,
short- or long-term. Those who believe in the Linux
operating system will undoubtedly take a second look
at VA Linux considering it's trading at an 85 percent
discount from its all-time high of $320 a share.

This week, it surprised analysts when it posted a loss
of $4 million, or 10 cents a share, on sales of $50.7
million.

First Call Corp. consensus expected VA Linux
(Nasdaq: LNUX) to lose 15 cents a share in the quarter.

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THE WEEK AHEAD: Summertime
blues...
ANALYST WATCH: VA Linux
finally shows signs of life...
VA Linux shares up sharply after
earnings...

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More impressive, the company managed to expand its
revenue base, if only slightly, beyond its core system
sales base. Sure, 92 percent of its sales came from the
system software but it also posted some respectable
Web initiatives and service sales.

Naturally, those service sales will improve as more and
more companies adopt the Linux platform.

In fact, CFO Todd Schull told analysts to expect
system sales of about 75 percent in fiscal 2001 with
service and Web-related sales accounting for 15
percent and 10 percent, respectively.

In the bigger picture, Schull said sales will jump 2.5 to
2.7 times 2000 sales of $120.3 million. Long-term gross
margins should be in the 27 percent range with profits
by the end of calendar 2001.

That's all well and good, but the verdict is still out on
Linux as a viable economic platform. There's a big
difference between being popular in the developer
community and popular at the cash register.

Wall Street's lore is chalked full of stories about
companies that had great technology but weren't able
to cash in on it.

Putting aside the whole Microsoft gauntlet, you can bet
that companies such as Dell (Nasdaq: DELL),
Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HWP) and IBM (NYSE: IBM)
will all be vigorously attacking this relatively new
market. In fact, they already are.

Schull and the rest of the folks at VA Linux are
convinced they can fend off the big boys. But the big
boys have deep pockets, enormous sales and
marketing teams and, most important, lots of key
partnership and distribution agreements with those
all-important resellers.

On the bright side, there's every reason to believe one
of those huge firms might be more than a little
interested in buying VA Linux and running it as a
separate business unit. Why go mucking up something
you don't really understand?

Even if VA Linux were to become a takeover target, it
certainly wouldn't garner a $300 or even $200 a share
premium. At least not yet.

But after watching the stock fall to a low of 26 1/2
earlier this month, analysts couldn't help but heap
praise on VA Linux following the earnings report.

WR Hambrecht analyst Prakesh Patel upgraded VA
Linux to a "strong buy" and predicted the company
would reach profitability by the end of calendar 2001.

"We believe that the current valuation of VA Linux
systems does not reflect the company's solid progress
and renewed positive outlook," Patel wrote in the report,
which placed a 52-week price target of $60 on the
stock.

CS First Boston analyst Amit Chopra reiterated his
"buy" rating on the company and set a 12-month price
target of $65 a share. He also raised his 2001 revenue
forecast from $271 million to $323 million, changing the
EPS estimate from a loss of 44 cents a share to a loss
of 26 cents a share.

Investors who believe in the Linux craze might want to
hedge their bets a bit just in case VA Linux continues
to execute as well as it did in the fourth quarter.