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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Incorporated (QCOM) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ALTERN8 who wrote (99794)5/24/2001 5:06:44 PM
From: ronho  Respond to of 152472
 
Book to Bill discussion from Raging Bull

By: LongTimeAlaskan $$$$
Reply To: None
Thursday, 24 May 2001 at 12:34 PM EDT
Post # of 89526

Chip-sector indicator hits 10-year low
By John G. Spooner
Special to CNET News.com
May 24, 2001, 9:05 a.m. PT
A key indicator of the semiconductor sector's health, continuing a steady
decline, has hit its lowest point since the early 1990s.

Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International, or SEMI, this week said
that its April book-to-bill ratio of 0.42 is the lowest it has seen about 10 years.
The San Jose, Calif., organization tracks shipments and orders worldwide for
North America-based semiconductor-equipment makers.

SEMI laid the blame for the slowdown in the semiconductor industry on the
economic downturn in the United States. With chipmakers fighting to reduce
inventories, most have scaled back plans to add manufacturing capacity, which
affects the book-to-bill ratio.

The ratio reflects a three-month moving average that compares the number of
new orders placed for semiconductor-manufacturing equipment with the amount
of new equipment shipped to customers. The figure of 0.42 means that for every
$100 of equipment shipped during April, only $42 in new orders were received.

"The book-to-bill ratio is the lowest that the industry has posted in the past
decade and reflects the sharp order decline in April 2001," said Stanley Myers,
president and CEO of SEMI. "Cancellations of previously reported orders for
semiconductor-manufacturing equipment were a significant contributor to the
monthly bookings decline as worldwide chip manufacturers make adjustments to
bring capacity and inventory in line with demand."

By comparison, November's ratio was a much more favorable 1.12, meaning
$112 in orders received for every $100 worth of equipment shipped. Since then,
however, the ratio has fallen steadily. In February, it was 0.71, and in March,
0.59.

Meanwhile, both shipments of and orders for chip-making equipment have been
down as well. The three-month average of orders, or bookings, in April was
$711.8 million, 41 percent lower than March's $1.2 billion and 74 percent lower
than April's $2.7 billion.

Average shipments in April accounted for $1.7 billion, a drop of 17 percent from
March's $2 billion and down 15 percent from April's $1.99 billion.



To: ALTERN8 who wrote (99794)5/24/2001 11:42:59 PM
From: JGoren  Respond to of 152472
 
all patents expire. the trick is getting new blocking patents based on old patents that effectively extend the life of the patent that is expiring. how long? as long as the technology needs to use the patent; expiration is not a big deal, because most royalty agreements are not based on the life of the patent.



To: ALTERN8 who wrote (99794)5/25/2001 8:46:02 AM
From: Kent Rattey  Respond to of 152472
 
I believe the first one runs out in 2007. QCOM sells their patents in a pool however, and there are several "essential" patents. This enabled them to create Spinco.