Jan. 26, 2001, 10:36PM
Compaq sees non-PC lines as its future
Looking for Net profit
By TOM FOWLER Copyright 2001 Houston Chronicle
Compaq Computer's future has less to do with the boring gray box it was built upon and more with the powerful machines in a customer's back room or small devices in his jacket pocket, executives said Friday.
At the company's annual financial analysts meeting, the No. 1 computer maker described the coming decade as one in which powerful Web servers will push data and mixed-media content to home entertainment systems and wireless hand-held devices.
Naturally, this new generation of products will have the Compaq logo stamped on its sides, said President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman Michael Capellas.
"Most of what we will build will be about making the Internet real," Capellas said. "The world is going back to distributed computing. I really do believe this is the foundation of how the world will look."
For the more immediate future, Capellas told analysts to expect revenues to be slow in the first half of 2001. Its annual growth projection is 6 to 8 percent, or as much as 4 percent below previous expectations.
But Capellas said the company will meet expectations of earnings-per-share growth of 20 percent to 25 percent.
Both at Friday's conference and during informal meetings Thursday night, company executives kept emphasizing the growing sales of their high-end -- and high-margin -- enterprise servers, said Melanie Wyld, an analyst with BT Funds Management.
While Enterprise products accounted for more than half of sales in the fourth quarter of 2000 and the year, they generated more than 90 percent of profits for the quarter and 60 percent for the year.
Consumer products rebounded in 2000, but played a decreasing roll in the company's revenues. In fact, they actually lost $6 million in the fourth quarter.
"They didn't talk much about PCs, which is clearly a change I think most analysts want to see," Wyld said. "We don't want them to continue to lose money in that space."
The signals Compaq sent about de-emphasizing its consumer PC business were strong. Some analysts interpreted them as its willingness to either let the business go or to erode to the point that Compaq loses its top spot in the number of units shipped.
"I get the sense they're staying in the PCs to keep providing it to their existing customers, but don't expect them to contribute much to the bottom line in the future," said Chris Kuhn, an analyst with College Retirement Equities Fund.
Two analysts were so struck by executives distancing themselves from consumer PC sales that, over lunch, they mused on the unlikely scenario of Compaq selling off its consumer PC business.
"Who would want to buy a PC business in today's climate?" one asked. "No one," the other answered.
Capellas said the company will continue to make consumer PCs, but that the home PC of the future will play a different role.
"The personal computer will become the center of home entertainment," serving up movies, music and education, he said. "People still have a love for the computer."
Compaq executives repeated another mantra first chanted in an earnings call Tuesday afternoon: It will not get in a price war with Dell Computer or others just to keep market share.
"We will fiercely extend our value proposition to customers, but as we said repeatedly, getting into a price war on pure price, I'm not convinced will have any benefit for us," Capellas said.
That approach may lead to more lost market share, but Compaq has decided to focus on profitability rather than market share.
"Nobody can afford to die," Capellas said, referring to losing market share, but the company's growing margins in enterprise servers will allow it to weather the storm. "We can afford to be in the game longer," he said.
Just as in 2000, enterprise server sales are expected to lead the charge in 2001, growing 13 percent to 15 percent, Chief Financial Officer Jesse Green said. The professional services business is expected to grow 6 percent to 8 percent and the Internet access device business 3 percent to 5 percent.
While the traditional desktop PC market is expected to have a compound annual growth rate of 8 percent in coming years, a new generation of Web-access devices, including Web-enabled phones and pocket PCs, is expected to grow by 86 percent by 2004, company officials said.
The company's own portable device, the iPaq PocketPC, is on track to become a $1 billion business by itself, said Mike Winkler, Compaq's executive vice president of global business. Compaq has been able to ship 100,000 of the units per month, but Winkler said it could sell twice as many if production could keep pace.
When pressed about the competitive landscape, Capellas said Compaq plans to challenge IBM in the powerful-server category, Sun Microsystems in midrange servers and EMC in enterprise storage.
He failed to mention Dell Computer, but Senior Vice President Mary McDowell spoke of Dell's efforts to move into storage.
"You hear about a passion for the space from Dell, but aptitude-wise, they lack the tools to play," she said.
Ashok Kumar, an analyst with U.S. Bancorp Piper Jaffray, said Compaq's move away from its consumer-PC business makes sense, given the company's difficulty in making money by delivering low-priced equipment in bulk.
"It's safe to say that the enterprise side of the business is the cash cow, but it will only stay that way if they're able to keep expanding their customer base," Kumar said. "Companies don't buy enterprise equipment based on dollars per megabyte; they buy based on reliability and relationships."
That means competitors will have a hard time displacing Compaq from its enterprise customers, but it means challenges, too.
"It will also be very hard for them to displace IBM and EMC from their customers without a roadmap," Kumar said. |