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Strategies & Market Trends : Range Bound & Undervalued Quality Stocks -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: BWAC who wrote (4777)9/7/2001 11:56:36 AM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5499
 
It's The Economy, Stupid
internetstockreport.com
September 7, 2001 - Intel's news last night wasn't bad, all things
considered.

The problem is that this downturn may not be about technology earnings
anymore.

As we said two days ago, the market has been spending the last month
pricing in a decline in consumer confidence and spending. And yesterday,
the market took another beating when the NAPM services index came in way
under estimates. At 45.5, the broad service economy, which has been the
main engine of jobs growth for 20 years, may be entering its first
contraction in four decades. The market took another blow this morning
with a much weaker than expected August unemployment report. The story
isn't about the recession in technology and manufacturing anymore. The
market's biggest fear has been that that weakness might spread, and that
fear may well be borne out.

What does this mean for Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) and other technology stocks?
Put another way, if the consumer stops spending, what does that mean for
the highly-vaunted Pentium IV-Windows XP rollout that many are hoping will
boost technology spending?

It's not about technology earnings anymore. It's about pricing in the
first global recession in 50 years, and what that could mean: a
slower-than-expected recovery. Expecting the debt-laden U.S. consumer to
hold up the world once again is asking a little much. A period of slow
growth and contraction seems inevitable at this point. At the least, it
seems likely that things will get worse before they get better.

But Intel's update last night wasn't bad. The company could show
sequential revenue growth this quarter if September turns out as expected.
However, there is some evidence that back-to-school PC sales have been
weaker than expected. As expected, the price war with AMD is crimping
margins, and it's anyone's guess when pricing power will return. The one
negative is that Intel declined to give guidance on 2002 CapEx spending -
that uncertainty could hurt chip equipment companies.

But the problem with Intel remains its valuation. At 51 times estimates,
Intel trades at about twice its long-term growth rate. And a look at
Intel's chart (see below) suggests that the stock could get cheaper, with
a clear breakdown out of a 5-month trading range. That breakdown appears
to give Intel downside potential to $20, with the caveat that the stock
recently had a false breakout to the upside. A close above $27.50 would
cast doubt on the bearish scenario.

The good news is that this market is very oversold, and could bounce as
soon as today or Monday. It would be nice to see a good retest of the
April lows first, at 1619-1639 on the Nasdaq, 1080-1100 on the S&P, and
9400 on the Dow. If the market doesn't put in a good test of those levels
before bouncing, the odds are that any bounce will be a weak one until
that retest comes.