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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: MrBuzz who wrote (120364)1/16/2001 6:40:21 AM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 120523
 
ANALYST WATCH: Applied Materials
hibernating for now

By Larry Barrett ZDII


COMMENTARY-- Applied Materials shares continued to
wilt this week after absorbing another in a steady
procession of downgrades from leading brokerage firms.

This stock isn't going anywhere for a few quarters, but
history shows that Applied can more than handle any
short-term discomfort.

We've all heard in great detail about the trouble chip,
PC and cellular phone companies are having and will
continue to have in the next few quarters. But so far
very little has been said about the
semiconductor-equipment market.

That's about to change.

Analysts say there's a good chance that chip
equipment spending will be flat to slightly lower in 2001.
Not good news, but not all that bad considering the
sector enjoyed about an 85 percent surge in 2000 to
more than $30 billion.

Sound off here!!

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Of course Applied (Nasdaq: AMAT) raked in the lion's
share of those sales and despite the gloomy
macroeconomic climate, stands to benefit one way or
the other through this downturn.

Equipment orders, sales sure to decline

Applied officials will give the Street a better idea of just
how slow sales will be in February when it announces
its first-quarter results. Right now analysts are
forecasting a profit of 75 cents a share on sales of
roughly $2.8 billion.

Sources close to the company say orders in the quarter
will be down about 10 percent, give or take a point, and
the company will likely guide analysts lower in the next
couple of quarters.

All this sets the stage for a robust recovery in the
second half. With Applied shares hovering around $45 a
share at a price-to-earnings ratio of 18ish, the question
is, do you believe the stock will go much lower before it
recovers in the fall?

Network equipment and telecommunications customers
are still placing huge orders, just not as huge as they
were six or nine months ago. Sales of video game units
are also on the rise, giving Applied another healthy
revenue stream.

"The main reason we're downgrading Applied now is
that we're seeing a recession for the first half of the
year," said Gerald Fleming, an analyst at Tucker
Anthony Capital Markets. "It's only a matter of time
before this slips over into the equipment industry."

Last week, Fleming cut the stock to a "market perform"
rating from a "strong buy," largely in response to the
flood of profit warnings from the likes of Intel (Nasdaq:
INTC), Micron (NYSE: MU) and Advanced Micro
Devices (NYSE: AMD).

However, this downturn presents some interesting
opportunities for Applied and its investors.

Making the best of a bad situation

"Applied has a lot of cash, roughly $4 billion, and a
strong balance sheet," said Chris Chaney, an analyst
at A.G. Edwards. "It wouldn't surprise me to see them
go into an acquisition mode."

Surely Applied could find some company, perhaps an
inspection equipment maker such as Rudolph
Technologies (Nasdaq: RTEC), to round its already
formidable product line.

This downturn in information technology spending
makes smaller chip equipment companies, trading at
50 percent or more below their 52-week highs, even
more enticing.

Sue Billat, Robertson Stephens' chip equipment
analyst, maintained her "strong buy" rating last month
but did lower her fiscal 2001 earnings estimate to $2.89
a share from $3.29 while slashing her sales target from
$12.57 billion to $11.46.

"We note that most chipmakers are reviewing their
2001 capital budgets, which we believe are still very
much in flux, as visibility remains low," she wrote in a
research note. "In our experience, Applied Materials
has a track record of making market share gains during
downturns and achieving high levels of profitability
during upturns. In 2001, we expect the company to
continue in this vein."

Lehman Brothers strategist Jeffrey Applegate is high on
Applied as well, naming it along with BEA Systems
(Nasdaq: BEAS), America Online (NYSE: AOL) and
JDS Uniphase (Nasdaq: JDSU) as his firm's top picks
for 2001.

After the predictable decline in orders for the next few
quarters passes, Applied will be positioned to capitalize
as chipmakers shift to more 300mm and sub-micron
processes. Any acquisition bargains would be icing on
the cake.

Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International
(SEMI), the global trade association for the chip
equipment and flat panel display industry, might have
been a bit optimistic about growth in 2001, calling for
sales of wafer process equipment to improve 24.1
percent to $38.7 billion this year.

The trade group made that prediction back in early
December, well before anyone recognized the
magnitude of this economic slowdown.

But even if chip-equipment sales fall 10 percent for the
year, we're still talking about $27 billion to $28 billion in
worldwide sales.

"When the equipment market comes back, Applied's
going to be the stock to own," Fleming said. "It's the
Mercedes or Lexus of the industry."