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Technology Stocks : PCW - Pacific Century CyberWorks Limited -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ms.smartest.person who wrote (1476)6/25/2001 1:32:47 PM
From: ms.smartest.person  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2248
 
[OT] Legend profit seen rocketing up 80pc
Tuesday, June 26, 2001

REUTERS
Legend Holdings, China's dominant personal computer maker, is expected to report on Wednesday an increase of about 80 per cent in profit for the year to March 31 as healthy domestic demand remained immune to global sluggishness in PC sales.

Analysts estimated Legend would report earnings of about HK$866 million, compared with HK$481 million in the previous year.

Excluding the Digital China Holdings foreign brand distributor which began trading separately on June 1, Legend is expected to report a profit of HK$705 million, according to analysts' forecasts. In the previous year, it earned about HK$365 million excluding Digital China.

Legend is expected to report that it shipped 2.61 million PCs in the year, a 77 per cent rise.

ING Barings predicted Legend, which enjoys a 30 per cent market share in China, would report pro forma revenue of HK$18.5 billion, a 78.5 per cent surge from year-earlier sales of HK$10.37 billion. Including Digital China, turnover would be HK$27 billion, an increase of 55 per cent, ING predicted.

"I think there won't be any surprises, although there are some worries about a slowdown in sales in China," said South China Securities analyst Cici Lam.

Still, she said, Legend's sales showed no signs of slowing.

Legend shares have slid recently, partly on concerns that China's PC demand could show signs of cooling off, fears over foreign-brand encroachment and expectations that for once Legend will only meet - not beat - earnings estimates.

On Friday, Legend fell 1.92 per cent to close at HK$5.10, almost half its 52-week high of HK$10.15 and 27 per cent below a peak of HK$6.95 reached in early March.

ING Barings predicted China's PC market would grow at 25 per cent to 35 per cent annually over the next few years, a sharp contrast to softness in the United States, which research firm International Data Corp recently forecast would this year show its first year on year decline in PC sales.

IDC also slashed its global PC sales growth forecast to 5.8 per cent from 10.3 per cent.

Credit Suisse First Boston (CSFB) said a recent survey of China's PC market indicated weakness in the consumer segment, with commercial demand remaining strong.

Kirk Yang, head of Asia hardware and components research at CSFB, noted that two Taiwanese component suppliers with China exposure, Silicon Integrated System and Elitegroup Computer, had seen slowdowns recently.

But Mr Yang also said, "since the second half of May, we think the weakness has stabilised".

As for the spectre of intensifying competition from overseas brands, he said: "Foreign competition, while heating up, is likely to put more pressure on the smaller China PC companies, but not Legend, in our view."

Mr Yang said company-watchers expected to hear about the state of PC demand in China from Legend management during Wednesday's earnings announcement.

Last month, Legend chief executive Yang Yuanqing acknowledged that the four million PC sales target the company had set for the year to March next year "is quite a big challenge".

Mr Yang said Legend's domestic fate depended on whether the economic malaise affecting the US reached China.

One analyst called Legend's expectations "a little bit aggressive because of increasing competition among the Western PC makers".

He expected Legend to ship 3.8 million PCs this year.



To: ms.smartest.person who wrote (1476)6/25/2001 2:31:37 PM
From: ms.smartest.person  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2248
 
CyberWorks, Telstra Venture Seeks Singapore Telecom License
By Cathy Chan

Hong Kong, June 21 (Bloomberg) -- Reach Ltd., one of Asia's biggest providers of wholesale long-distance voice and data phone services, applied for a Singapore license as part of plans to rely less on Hong Kong and Australia for sales.

The company, owned by Pacific Century CyberWorks Ltd. and Telstra Corp., will probably soon receive a permit to sell international voice and data transmission to local companies, said Dulcie Chan, a spokeswoman for Singapore's Info- Communications Development Authority.

Reach aims to reduce reliance on CyberWorks and Telstra, which are expected to give Reach 90 percent of their wholesale business this year providing about 35 percent of the joint venture's sales, according to a company document.

``They need to diversify risk and exposure to certain markets,'' said Bill Sung, a fund manager at CDC IXIS Asset Management Asia Ltd., which owns Telstra and CyberWorks stocks. ``Both Telstra and CyberWorks may experience slowing growth.''

A license in Singapore, with only 3.9 million residents and $3.3 billion in annual telecom sales, may be the first step to permits in Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines. Reach wants 25 percent of Asia's wholesale phone traffic by 2005, and may also invest in Japan, Korea, Taiwan and China.

The company borrowed $1.5 billion in December to expand a network that includes stakes in more than 50 phone cable systems, including control of Asia Pacific Cable Network 2 project.

``Singapore is a question mark and its outgoing traffic isn't huge,'' Sung said. ``I'd be concerned if they're putting too much investment in this.''

Singapore

On June 15, there were 29 so-called facilities-based operators in Singapore, including a venture between Telstra and Keppel Telecommunications & Transportation Ltd., according to the regulator's Web site. Licensees pay an annual fee of 1 percent of sales and post a bond equal to 5 percent of planned investment.

``While the market is in early stage of deregulation, there are other companies vying for market share, aside from CyberWorks,'' said Billy Chan, who manages more than $4 billion in Asia ex-Japan for Invesco Asia Ltd.

The Singapore government is processing Reach's application, under which the company may also have requested the right to provide leased-line and mobile phone services, said Chan, the spokeswoman for the regulator.

Reach wouldn't comment on the license application. ```It's commercially sensitive,'' said Craig Leeson, a company spokesman.

Sliding

Telstra, Australia's largest phone company, halved its forecast profit growth for the year through June because of slowing economic growth and increased competition at home. Prices for leased lines to China are also falling, CDC's Sung said.

Wholesale prices may slide by half worldwide in the next two years as new cables laid by Global Crossing and Level 3 Communications Inc. come on line, creating an oversupply of broadband capacity, analysts said.

Reach was formed in February after CyberWorks, controlled by Richard Li, the son of billionaire Li Ka-shing, bought Cable & Wireless HKT Ltd., Hong Kong's largest phone company. Reach told bankers its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization to rise about threefold to $1.4 billion in 2007.

CyberWorks shares fell 3.1 percent yesterday to HK$2.35. The stock, once an Internet darling, has slumped 85 percent in the past 12 months. Telstra shares rose 0.6 percent to A$5.48.