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To: Andreas who wrote (90734)4/18/2001 8:07:48 AM
From: Elwood P. Dowd  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
HP Expects Lower Q2 Earnings
PALO ALTO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 18, 2001--Hewlett-Packard Company (NYSE:HWP - news) today announced that due primarily to rapid deterioration in consumer information technology (IT) spending around the world, the company now expects to report a revenue decline of between two and four percent both sequentially and year-over-year for its second fiscal quarter ending April 30, 2001.




The company said the results also reflect an approximately four percent adverse currency effect, as expected currency improvements did not materialize during the quarter.

Based on the slowdown in consumer IT spending globally, the company expects earnings per share to be in the range of 13 to 17 cents for the quarter. This estimate includes approximately $150 million of one-time inventory and capacity write-downs associated with some of the company's consumer products.

``When we issued our previous second fiscal quarter guidance, we had limited visibility into the extent of the U.S. consumer and commercial downturn, its potential impact on other regions and the continuation of adverse currency effects. At this time, it is quite clear that the U.S. downturn in the consumer market is now spreading to other regions, notably Europe,'' said Carly Fiorina, chairman, president and chief executive officer.

``Recent European PC market data suggests the European slowdown is beginning to mirror the pattern we saw in the U.S. -- growing softness in the retail sector and increasingly competitive pricing moves followed by a more subtle but just as meaningful slowdown in the enterprise space.

``Despite this difficult climate, on a global basis, we're seeing a slight improvement in our enterprise business. In contrast with the increasing weakness in the consumer space, revenues from our enterprise business are expected to be flat or up slightly on a sequential basis.

``In this challenging environment, we're staying focused on our strategy and working hard to achieve the right balance between adjusting costs and expenses downward to address current business conditions, while continuing to make the necessary investments in areas such as R&D to assure that we come out of this slowdown strong and well-positioned,'' said Fiorina.

Fiorina said that in recognition of the contributions HP employees are making during these tough times, the company will not defer salary increases beyond the 90-day delay instituted during the first quarter. Instead, the company will take additional actions to manage expenses, including maintaining tight control of discretionary spending, requiring employees to take incremental days off and reducing management cost structures by improving span of control through the elimination of up to 3,000 management positions.

``We remain confident that our strategy is the right one,'' said Fiorina. ``We believe we will emerge from this downturn a more aggressive and focused competitor.''

Fiorina said HP has limited visibility in this economic environment, but current planning assumptions for the third quarter call for flat revenues sequentially and year-over-year, with gross margins trending up. These assumptions are subject to change based on evolving market conditions.

A 30-minute conference call with Fiorina will begin today at 8:30 a.m. EDT/5:30 a.m. PDT. To listen to the conference call replay, available from 11 a.m. EDT/8 a.m. PDT today until 8 p.m. EDT/5 p.m. PDT April 24, 2001, call +1 858 812 6440, using reservation number 18643574.



To: Andreas who wrote (90734)4/18/2001 1:43:39 PM
From: tonyt  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
So, what's Ashok Kumar saying about Intel today?
;-)



To: Andreas who wrote (90734)4/21/2001 12:07:26 PM
From: The Duke of URLĀ©  Respond to of 97611
 
Oh yoo hoo, sailor??!!!!!??

Plaintiff's next in order, your honor:

From the Register.Uk

Silicon Investor posters can stay anonymous
By: Linda Harrison
Posted: 20/04/2001 at 21:28 GMT

A US judge has ruled that surfers accused of posting negative messages about a company on the Internet in the hope of lowering its share price can remain anonymous.

US District Judge Thomas Zilly said the first amendment applied to the Web, and this included the right of a person to speak without revealing their identity, AP reports.

This will have come as a blow to 2TheMart.com, a now defunct online auction outfit which had asked for the 23 names.

The California-based dotcom claimed to have been the victim of short sellers - people who sell borrowed securities and then buy them later at a cheaper price to pay back the loan - and alleged the message board posters had spread negative rumours about the company to push down its share price.

2TheMart.com wanted Infospace, the company that runs the Silicon Investor message board, to give it the names of the people involved.

The former dotcom said it needed them to defend itself against a class-action lawsuit. It wanted to prove the people in the chat room were also involved in the suit, which accuses the company of securities fraud.

But Judge Zilly decided the evidence was not worthy of setting aside the First Amendment.

Last week San Diego-based chip outfit MeltroniX said it would name and sue a group of surfers it claimed posted defamatory statements about the company in its Internet chat room. ®


theregister.co.uk

The defense rests. :)))