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


To: Elwood P. Dowd who wrote (89628)2/11/2001 3:30:26 PM
From: hlpinout  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 97611
 
El, looks like almost a direct quote from earlier guidance. Although MC has been consistent since earnings, with the mentality of some investors there's no telling how many will jump ship on this news.

--

Wednesday January 24, 10:59 am Eastern Time

TheStreet.com - Silicon Valley
Guidance Puts Compaq in a Delicate Balancing Act

It cuts revenue guidance, but not EPS projections. How will it pull that off?

By Thomas Lepri
Senior Writer

Updated from 4:54 p.m. ET

Compaq (NYSE: CPQ - news) reported earnings and revenue surpassing drastically lowered expectations Tuesday, sending the
stock soaring in after-hours trading. But while investors were bidding up those shares, the company was quietly turning its
guidance for fiscal 2001 into a high-wire act.

For the fourth quarter, Compaq said that, excluding charges, it earned $515 million, or 30 cents a share, surpassing the 28 cents
that analysts polled by First Call/Thomson Financial were expecting. Revenue, meanwhile, came in at $11.5 billion, around $200
million more than expectations. Never mind that estimates for both earnings and revenue had been sharply reduced after Compaq
warned investors of shortfalls in early December. Compaq shares caught fire on Instinet , rocketing as high as $24, or 20% above
their New York close of $20.05.

But investors thinking of piling onto that bandwagon might want to look more closely at the guidance the company gave for 2001
sales and earnings. On the conference call following the earnings release, CEO Michael Cappellas told analysts to expect revenue
to grow 6% to 8% in 2001. The low end of that growth rate would put Compaq's sales at $44.93 billion, or about $1.3 billion below
the latest First Call consensus estimate. Even 8% growth would leave 2001 sales around $450 million short of Wall Street's
expectations.

Moreover, Compaq thinks it will need a second-half rebound to get to that 6%-to-8% range. Capellas forecast sales growth in the
3%-to-5% range for the first half of 2001. For the first quarter, he told analysts that they should look for revenue to come in at
$9.61 billion, nearly flat from the year-ago period and $600 million lower than the consensus estimate compiled by Multex.com .


Here's the kicker: Despite those reductions in guidance, Compaq isn't lowering its outlook for earnings per share in 2001. Capellas
said the company remained comfortable with analysts' expectations of EPS growth in a 20%-to-25% range. Meanwhile, Capellas
told analysts to expect earnings of 21 cents a share for the first quarter, a penny above the consensus, despite the expected $600
million shortfall.

Exactly how does Compaq plan to pull this off?

"That's the question I'm grappling with," said SG Cowen analyst Richard Chu. "I'm not sure. They're talking about a $2 billion drop
in revenue between Q4 and Q1. I'm surprised that they effectively brought down revenue guidance fairly significantly, particularly
for the first quarter, without changing EPS." (SG Cowen hasn't done recent underwriting for Compaq.)

The plan, according to Compaq, is to abandon the least-profitable parts of the market. In other words, adding a new twist to the
unfolding PC price war story, Compaq claims it's not going to fight for market share in the low-end PC market.

"We will not price down to the very lowest levels to gain share that we know is fleeting," Capellas said. "We've learned that
bought share is rented share. We prefer to take a more comfortable approach to pricing, one that is competitive but not as
aggressive as we could be."

Capellas knows the cost of chasing market share. That strategy helped Compaq's commercial PC group rack up huge losses in
1999. It took the company, under Capellas' leadership, more than a year to bring the commercial business back into the black. This
time around, Compaq lost money in its normally profitable consumer PC segment, thanks to a very tough pricing environment in
that market.

Many investors would cheer a decision by Compaq to back off of the low-end PC market. But it remains to be seen whether
Compaq can avoid the price war in the higher-end machines more typical in the corporate market. That market includes Dell
(Nasdaq: DELL - news) , which vowed on more than one occasion to use price-cutting to win market share.

It's unlikely, then, that Compaq will be able to make its first-quarter and full-year earnings estimates without strong performances
in its enterprise hardware businesses -- i.e., servers and storage devices. Both of those markets are seeing stronger demand than
the PC industry, and both are more profitable.

But both are getting increasingly crowded by large firms like Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HWP - news) , IBM (NYSE: IBM -
news) , Sun Microsystems (Nasdaq: SUNW - news) and EMC (NYSE: EMC - news) .

For now, Compaq flies through the after-hours markets with the greatest of ease. But Compaq will soon have to give analysts and
investors more details on how it intends to carry out 2001's balancing act. The company will hold its annual analyst meeting Friday
morning in Houston.

Sometimes the corporate accountants taketh away.

Don't forget that Compaq's fourth-quarter results excluded a whopping $1.8 billion charge for the writedown of its tanked Internet
investments, mainly CMGI (Nasdaq: CMGI - news) . Including that charge, the company lost $672 million, or 39 cents a share.

Compaq's writedown is about $800 million more than Capellas had estimated on the company's conference call following last
month's earnings warning. Since that time, though, CMGI has plummeted another 35%. Compaq picked up its stake in CMGI -- a
$220 million note and stock equivalent to 41.6 million split-adjusted CMGI shares, some of them preferred -- in June 1999 in
exchange for 82% of its AltaVista unit. At the time the transaction was announced, those shares were worth about $2 billion.
Now, they're worth about $271 million. It should be noted that Compaq never spent any cash for its CMGI stake.

CMGI isn't where the charges end, though. In June, Compaq spent $25 million to buy roughly 1.72 million shares of CMGI's
publicly traded, online advertising subsidiary, Engage (Nasdaq: ENGA - news) .

Those shares are now worth about $3.1 million. Compaq also holds shares in such steadfast tech outfits as divine Interventures
(Nasdaq: DVIN - news) and AskJeeves (Nasdaq: ASKJ - news) , down about 86% and 98%, respectively, from their peaks.



To: Elwood P. Dowd who wrote (89628)2/12/2001 6:42:30 AM
From: hlpinout  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
February 12, 2001

Compaq's CEO Got a Big Bonus,
Raise After He Became Chairman

By GARY MCWILLIAMS
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

HOUSTON -- Compaq Computer Corp. Chief Executive Michael D.
Capellas received a three-year contract that more than doubled his pay
after he became chairman last fall, according to a Securities and Exchange
Commission filing.

Last September, Mr. Capellas became chairman
and CEO following the retirement of former
chairman Benjamin M. Rosen. Two weeks later,
he received an $850,000 one-time bonus, base
pay of at least $1.6 million a year and annual
bonus of as much as twice his base pay.

The contract was disclosed late Friday as part of
the company's annual report filed with the SEC.
The contract also calls for performance-based
stock options and incentive awards that are
targeted to a range of seven to 10 times his $1.6
million salary.

Directors described the higher pay as compensation for taking on the
chairman's title and to guarantee Mr. Capellas the "financial security to
focus" on Compaq. In 1999, Mr. Capellas was paid an annual salary of
$850,000 and received a $1 million bonus plus stock options.

Under Mr. Capellas, Compaq's operating
income last year more than tripled to $1.7
billion. Including a $1.8 billion charge for
write-down of investments, net profit last year was unchanged at $569
million.

As part of the new contract, Mr. Capellas received options for nearly a
million shares of Compaq stock. About half the options vest at various
dates based on Mr. Capellas's continued employment through 2004. The
remainder can vest according to a schedule of stock-price targets or if
increases in earnings per share match or exceed those of major rivals.

In an incentive to raise the company's stock price, 250,000 of the share
options can vest if shares stay for 15 days above a stair-stepped schedule
of stock-price targets. The targets range from $35 a share to $55 a share.
(As of 4 p.m. Friday, in New York Stock Exchange composite trading,
Compaq shares fell 91 cents to $22.50.) Another 250,000 shares can vest
if the increase in Compaq's earnings per share matches or exceeds the
average increase of rivals Dell Computer Corp., Hewlett-Packard Co. and
International Business Machines Corp. over specified time periods.

Write to Gary McWilliams at gary.mcwilliams@wsj.com