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Technology Stocks : Compaq -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: hlpinout who wrote (89233)1/25/2001 6:29:37 AM
From: hlpinout  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
January 25, 2001

Market for Hand-Held Computers
Doubled Amid Slowing PC Sales

By PUI-WING TAM
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Personal-computer sales may have slowed, but the U.S. market for
hand-held computers doubled to more than $1 billion last year, according
to a study being released Thursday.

The study by market research firm, NPD Intelect, underscores the rising
popularity of what are variously called organizers, pocket PCs and
personal digital assistants. Revenues from selling such products hit $1.03
billion in 2000, more than twice the $436.5 million sold in 1999. In terms
of unit growth, manufacturers sold 3.5 million devices in 2000, more than
two-and-a-half times the 1999 figure of 1.3 million.

In one worrying sign for the industry though, NPD noted that the average
selling price of hand-held computers dropped 11% to $293.51 in 2000,
suggesting pressure on manufacturers' profit margins. The price decline
"reflects that there is now more choice in the market," said Sima Vasa, vice
president of tech products at NPD, which is based in Port Washington,
N.Y. "It's up to each manufacturer to continue differentiating themselves
from the competition."

Growth Stands Out

While those sales totals pale in comparison with numbers put up by the
much larger PC and mobile-phone industries, the growth rate stands out in
a tech sector that has been hobbled by earnings warnings from mature
hardware and software companies. Meanwhile, in sharp contrast to
hand-held devices, U.S. PC sales grew just 10% in 2000, according to
Gartner Group Inc.'s Dataquest unit.

Indeed, for hand-held device makers, 2000 could well be the year in
which their products moved from being niche tools for mobile professionals
to something that mainstream American consumers bought in large
numbers.

"The increasing sales speaks to acceptance of the category in the consumer
marketplace," Ms. Vasa said. "The hand-held device space is just heating
up."

A Pivotal Year

Indeed, 2000 was also a pivotal year for the industry as competition in the
hand-held market increased. Two dominant manufacturers, Palm Inc. and
Handspring Inc., offered stock to the public for the first time. Other giant
companies also jumped into the market. Sony Corp., for instance, late last
year unveiled a device called Clie that also uses the Palm software.

Behemoth Microsoft Corp. tried to step up its attack on Palm. It
introduced an updated version of its Pocket PC software, taking aim at its
rival with an ad campaign that asked "Can your Palm do that?" Yet, Palm
remained entrenched in its top spot in the market, which ignited after the
company released its Palm Pilot organizer in 1996.

NPD said Palm's unit share in 2000 was 72%, down from 78% in 1999,
but still far ahead of No. 2 Handspring, which had a unit share of 14%.
Handspring, which also uses the Palm operating system, was started by
Palm co-founders and entered the market in 1999.

Companies that use Microsoft's Pocket PC software had mixed results.
Casio Inc. saw its unit share decline to 6% in 2000 from 11% in 1999.
Hewlett-Packard Co.'s share slipped to 2.3% from 2.9%. But Compaq
Computer Co., which began shipping its iPaq device last year, grabbed
2% of the market, up from virtually nothing in 1999, NPD said.

Write to Pui-Wing Tam at pui-wing.tam@wsj.com



To: hlpinout who wrote (89233)1/25/2001 6:56:01 AM
From: hlpinout  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
January 24, 2001 1:10pm

Compaq disparages rivals' price cuts

By Ken Popovich eWEEK


In a rebuke of its rivals, Compaq Computer Corp.
derided its competitors' recent escalation of a PC price
war, belittling any increases in sales and market share
that they may gain through such efforts as "fleeting."

Marking a sharp contrast to recent vows by Dell
Computer Corp. and Gateway Inc. to continue
aggressive pricing, the world's largest PC vendor
instead insisted it would maintain a more conservative
policy, which it calls the "most reasonable approach for
all."

"We will not price down to the very lowest levels of the
market to chase share which we know is fleeting," said
Mike Winker, executive vice president of Compaq's
global business units, speaking to analysts after the
company posted its fourth-quarter earnings.

"I think we will continue to be more prudent and
reasonable in the pricing world," Winkler said. "We
think the industry will become more settled down,
recognizing that this is the most reasonable approach
for all."

PC makers began cutting prices in late November after
a traditional upswing in holiday sales failed to
materialize, severely undermining computer makers'
profits in what is normally their strongest quarter. Stung
by the sudden downturn, PC makers, including
Compaq, began reducing prices as well as offering
rebates and free upgrades to rekindle sales and reduce
unsold inventory.

Compaq's fourth-quarter earnings revealed the damage
caused by falling demand, with its consumer unit
reporting an operating loss of $6 million, compared to a
profit of $69 million last year. Meanwhile, the
company's larger commercial PC business saw its
operating income dip $20 million from the previous
quarter, down to $113 million, although that still
represented a nearly $200 million improvement over last
year's $79 million loss.

Rough sailing ahead

While Winkler said he expects consumer PC sales to
pick up in the coming months, he added, "We do think
it's going to continue to be an even rougher market, a
much rougher market, in fact, than the commercial
market in the first half of the year."

In an interview with eWEEK, Winkler was particularly
critical of Dell's aggressive PC pricing strategy. On
Monday, Dell executives touted their low-cost initiative
as key to helping the company increase its global
market share, narrowing the gap between it and
Compaq.

"What Dell would like you to think is that [top market
share] takes them to a new plateau in the industry. In
fact, what we have found is that bought share is rented
share," Winkler said. "Share gained purely on price is
only as good as the next buying decision, because
they'll go to whoever is lower in price that next time."

Dell officials did admit on Monday that the aggressive
pricing moves had cut into the company's profit
margins. Several market analysts questioned the
decision to sacrifice profits to boost sales.

"Dell was able to grow revenues, but at the massive
expense of gross margins," said Rob Cihra, a market
analyst with ING Barings in New York, who estimated
Dell's profit margin is now 18.2 percent, its lowest level
since 1996.

Calling the company's low-cost strategy
"ultra-aggressive," Cihra on Wednesday questioned the
"merits of Dell's price-cut approach."

By contrast, Compaq reported yesterday that its gross
profit margins increased 1.5 percentage points to 23.7
percent during the fourth quarter, due in large part to the
company's strong sales of high-end computing
systems, which have larger profit margins than PCs.

'Cutting Compaq off at the knees'

Even taking into account Dell's made-to-order business
model, Compaq's Winkler said he doesn't think his
competitor can continue its low-margin strategy.

"What Dell needs to be worried about is that to
maintain the share they get they're going to have to go
to permanently lower margin levels," Winkler said. "And
I'm not sure their business model can sustain that.
Then you say, 'How do you get out of it without
relinquishing share?' There's no way."

But for the short term, Dell's strategy may prove
successful in luring more price-conscious customers
away from Compaq, said Ashok Kumar, a market
analyst with US Bancorp Piper Jaffray in Minneapolis.

"Dell is doing its best to cut Compaq off at the knees,"
Kumar said. "The areas where they can do it are
primarily in the small and medium business segment,
as well as the consumer segment."

Falling component prices in recent weeks have enabled
Dell to further undercut Compaq's prices, but Kumar
added that low-cost PCs won't be enough to lure away
Compaq's corporate customers.

"It won't have the same effectiveness [with large
business clients] because those customers have
decided to do business with Compaq for a variety of
reasons, not just PCs," Kumar said.

In fact, non-PC sales accounted for a majority of
Compaq's fourth-quarter revenue, with the company's
enterprise computing segment, which includes servers
and storage devices, posting sales of $4.11 billion, up
20 percent from a year ago, and operating income of
$722 million.

Overall for the fourth quarter, Compaq posted earnings
of $515 million, or 30 cents a share, beating recently
lowered Wall Street estimates by 2 cents per share,
according to First Call/Thomson Financial.

Those earning figures exclude a one-time $1.8 billion
charge related to the devaluation of Compaq's
investment stake in CMGI Inc.

Compaq's performance was largely in keeping with
projections it made last month when it first warned that
slumping sales would hurt revenues, Cihra said. Still,
those numbers are respectable, given the tough
economic conditions.

"In a PC market hurt by sharply lower consumer
demand, a general slowdown in IT spending and
aggressive pricing by competitors, Compaq reported 4Q
results at the high end of reduced expectations," he
said.

Opportunities in store

In looking ahead through the rest of this year, Compaq
is predicting growth of only 3 to 5 percent in the first six
months, with stronger sales in the second half resulting
in overall annual revenue growth of 6 to 8 percent, or
slightly below previous projections.

Although Compaq's conservative pricing policy may
cost it some share of the PC market, Chairman Michael
Capellas said that it's more important for the company
to focus on the bottom line.

"The name of the game in this environment is profitable
growth and that means that is what we're going to
drive," Capellas told analysts during a conference call
yesterday. "But that doesn't mean that there are not
opportunities."

In particular, the chief executive said he's very
optimistic about potential sales of electronic devices
that are increasingly being used in conjunction with
PCs, such as personal digital assistants along the lines
of Compaq's handheld IPAQ, digital cameras, MP3
players as well as upgrades such as upcoming
DVD-RW drives.

"We've seen some really innovative new hotspots and
some new markets," Capellas said. "There's a lot of
space to be had in [the PC] sector ... in all the stuff and
capabilities that go around it."



To: hlpinout who wrote (89233)1/25/2001 7:05:40 AM
From: hlpinout  Respond to of 97611
 
January 25, 2001


Dow Jones Newswires

Business News From The Polish Press
Thursday

Dow Jones Newswires

U.S. computer maker Compaq (CPQ) plans to boost its Polish sales to
900 million zlotys ($1=PLZ4.1438) this year from PLZ600 million in
2000, the daily Puls Biznesu reports. The company plans to focus on
systems integration, as competition from cheaper local makes have
restricted computer sales to 30%-35% of total revenue.

The Economy Ministry continues to push for the merger of Polish
steelmakers Huta Katowice, Huta Tadeusza Sendzimira, Huta Florian and
Huta Cedler into one group, Puls Biznesu reports. The Treasury is awaiting
preliminary bids, due Feb. 2, for the four from potential foreign investors.
In talks with company and trade union officials, the Economy Ministry
acknowledged that the mills need an immediate capital injection of PLZ3
billion.



To: hlpinout who wrote (89233)1/25/2001 7:10:36 AM
From: hlpinout  Respond to of 97611
 
Compaq Computer Reiterated 'Neutral' at Noble Financial
1/25/01 3:35:00 AM
Source: Bloomberg News

Princeton, New Jersey, Jan. 25 (Bloomberg Data) -- Compaq
Computer Corp. (CPQ US) was reiterated ''neutral'' by analyst Daniel
A Morgan at Noble Financial Group.