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To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (114769)10/23/2000 11:07:16 AM
From: Bald Eagle  Respond to of 186894
 
Didn't he say a few months ago that MSFT was too high? I wonder if he still thinks that :-)



To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (114769)10/23/2000 12:00:16 PM
From: Road Walker  Respond to of 186894
 
PC stocks get good news
October 23, 2000 08:30 AM PT
by Stefani Lako Baldwin

NEW YORK -- The PC sector got some good news today as two research firms said third-quarter PC shipments were strong overall and that 2001 is looking like a strong year for sales.

The findings come as the hardware and software sectors have been rocked by company bad news from Intel (INTC: +1.62, 44.69), Apple (AAPL: +0.81, 20.31) and Dell (DELL: -0.38, 28.06) and by good news from Microsoft (MSFT: -1.56, 63.62) and Gateway (GTW: -1.42, 55.56).

In other news, Seagate Technologies (SEG: -2.38, 76.56) and Veritas Software (VRTS: -4.94, 161.88) jumped over regulatory hurdles one week after settling a shareholder lawsuit. The plan to take Seagate private now awaits shareholder approval in Nov. 21.

New PC data

Two technology industry research firms found strong third-quarter PC shipments, while differing on the fourth-quarter outlook.

IDC's survey found that third quarter worldwide shipments increased 18.3 percent, while U.S. shipments had more almost half the growth, 9.5 percent. IDC attributed the U.S. slowdown to a cooling in corporate demand. It sees consumer demand, however, driving up fourth-quarter shipments to 20 percent. IDC analysts remain optimistic about the fourth quarter, saying problems in the PC sector are vendor and segment specific.

Dataquest, using a different data collection methodology, found that worldwide PC shipments rose 15.2 percent and forecast fourth-quarter growth at 18.6 percent, although it likely will lower that number to 16 percent.

The study is a welcome addition to the debate over whether PC sales are slowing. It has been a rough two months for the PC sector as Intel, Apple and Dell warned they would not meet analysts' earnings estimates due to sales slowdowns. Intel did manage to meet pre-lowered forecasts, while Apple did not. Dell has not yet reported. Microsoft, on the other hand, did report stronger-than-expected earnings and Gateway met estimates.

The mixed bag of trouble has hurt the stock prices of these companies as analysts and investors try to determine whether a slowdown existed in the past quarter and is hurting PC makers going forward.

Both IDC and Dataquest, who differ on fourth-quarter growth, have favorable outlooks for 2001, when they expect faster PCs to attract more buyers and more companies to upgrade to Windows 2000.

Individually Hewlett-Packard (HWP: +2.94, 98.94) led worldwide growth in the third quarter, seeing a rise of 40 percent, according to IDC. Compaq had a 13 percent increase and Dell an 18 percent increase. Domestically, Dell grew its PC shipments 22 percent, Compaq 18 percent and Hewlett-Packard an eye-opening 47 percent, again according to IDC.

Gateway and Dell were the lone PC makers with its share price trading down this morning. The rest of the stocks in the PC sector were enjoying modest gains.



To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (114769)10/24/2000 12:22:07 AM
From: Diamond Jim  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
You know he means SUNW.

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Software giant Microsoft Corp's (NasdaqNM:MSFT - news) chief executive officer Steve Ballmer said on Monday that some hi-tech stocks are still overvalued, and a further market correction could be expected.

``I think the stock market, with some exceptions, is now very rational. I do think there are some companies that are dramatically overvalued