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Strategies & Market Trends : Market Gems-Trading Strong Earnings Growth and Momentum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dana Johnson who wrote (4851)2/17/2001 12:13:06 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 6445
 
TXN pummeled unmercifully......ADI in same boat.....
Analog Devices lowers expectations

By Sergio G. Non ZDII


Analog Devices lowered its financial targets for
the second quarter and the full year, but don't
worry too much, analysts said Thursday.

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After market close Thursday, the maker of integrated
circuits for computers and communications devices
said it now expects second-quarter earnings of 43
cents to 44 cents per share, on revenue of $710 million
to $725 million. Analog Devices (NYSE: ADI) sees a
2001 profit of $1.85 to $1.90 per share.

Analyst consensus was predicting profits of 49 cents
per share for the quarter ending in April and $2.02 per
share for the full year, according to earnings tracking
firm First Call.

Executives from Analog Devices expect 2001 revenue
growth of about 20 percent from last year's $2.58 billion.

Considering the rash of warnings from companies in the
technology and communications sectors, Analog
Devices' forecast could have been much worse,
analysts said.

"The guidance was not dramatically bad, compared to
others," said John Geraghty, analyst with Gerard Klauer
Mattison. "It was better than I expected."

Shares of Analog Devices traded at $49.50 in
after-hours activity on the Island ECN, immediately
following the release of quarterly results. Analog
Devices rose 55 cents to $51.51 in Thursday's regular
trading ahead of the news.

"I don't expect the stock to react too much," said
analyst Eric Ross, with Thomas Weisel Partners. "It's
just a two-quarter slowdown, and then it's back to the
races."

During a Thursday afternoon conference call with
analysts, Analog Devices executives said customers
are pointing to a rebound in the second half of the year.

Analog Devices reported fiscal first-quarter net income
of $190.2 million, or 50 cents per share, on revenue of
$772 million. Analyst consensus predicted a profit of 50
cents per share on revenue of $773.8 million, according
to First Call.

Revenue was also slightly below the company's own
lowered forecast; last month Analog Devices predicted
first-quarter sales of $775 million.

Sales of analog products increased 1 percent
sequentially in the first quarter, though the amount sold
through distributors fell 9 percent. Analog sales to
communications equipment manufacturers rose 10
percent from the fourth quarter.

Analog Devices has more than 40 percent of the market
for data converters and high-performance amplifiers,
Fishman said.

Digital signal processor sales fell 18 percent
sequentially, because of cancellations and inventory
adjustments from customers in North America and
southeast Asia, Fishman said.

First-quarter gross margin of 58.6 percent was about
the same as the previous quarter. That's a testament to
Analog Devices' ability to let its partners absorb much
of the demand slump, said Cody Acree, analyst with
Frost Securities. "ADI's fabs are still fully utilized, so
it's keep gross margins up," he said.

The company couldn't have done much to avoid a
slump, analysts said.

"It's not simply ADI, it's the industry," said Acree, who
has a "strong buy" rating on the stock. "I think ADI is
handling it better than most."