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Technology Stocks : Compaq -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Elwood P. Dowd who wrote (93765)11/15/2001 2:37:01 PM
From: Night Writer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
Kumar is looking for attention again with stupid remarks.
NW
Hewlett-Packard earnings may doom computer union

Nov 14, 2001 (The Dallas Morning News - Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service via
COMTEX) -- Hewlett-Packard Co.'s fourth-quarter earnings report on Wednesday,
which trumpeted a greater-than-expected profit, could actually work against the
company's efforts to persuade investors to approve its proposed merger with
Houston-based Compaq Computer Corp., analysts said.

The technology company based in Palo Alto, Calif., said its printer business was
much stronger than analysts had expected, while its technology services saw
steady demand.

But the weak point was its sales of personal computers, servers and storage
devices, which together dropped 31 percent from a year ago.

That detail will leave investors questioning whether Hewlett-Packard should
merge with a company that makes the very products it has the most trouble
selling, said Shebly Seyrafi, enterprise hardware analyst for A.G. Edwards.

"There's one school of thought that says that if H-P is reporting good results,
that means management is doing a good job, so maybe the merger will go through,"
Seyrafi said. "But the other school of thought, the one I believe, is that the
value of H-P is a lot larger on the printer side than on the computing side, so
merging with Compaq is going the wrong way."

However, Hewlett-Packard chief executive Carly Fiorina told analysts in a
Wednesday conference call that she still has confidence in the merger, which was
announced in September.

"We remain convinced this merger will occur," she said.

Hewlett-Packard said Wednesday it earned $97 million, or 5 cents a share, in the
fourth quarter. That's an 89 percent drop from last year's fourth-quarter
earnings of $922 million, or 45 cents a share.

Leaving out fourth-quarter charges not related to operating costs, including a
$282 million charge related to 6,000 job cuts, Hewlett-Packard earned $361
million, or 19 cents per share, on revenue of $10.9 billion, down from $13.3
billion a year ago.

Analysts had expected earnings of 8 cents a share on revenue of $9.9 billion,
according to a consensus compiled by Thomson Financial/First Call.

The earnings were announced before New York Stock Exchange trading opened
Wednesday. Both Hewlett-Packard and Compaq shares rose sharply as soon as
trading opened. Hewlett-Packard shares closed up $1.85 at $22.08, and Compaq
shares rose $1.20 to close at $10.

But Hewlett-Packard still has a long road ahead in its merger plans. The company
is expected to file its merger information with the government in the next few
days, with a shareholder vote on the deal to follow in the next few months.

The upcoming vote got much more complicated last week, when family members of
Hewlett-Packard co-founder William Hewlett, who died in January, said they would
vote against the deal. The family and a charitable foundation that Hewlett
established represent about 5 percent of the company's shares.

The charity foundation established by co-founder David Packard, who died in
1996, has not weighed in with its opinion. That foundation owns more than 10
percent of Hewlett-Packard's shares, so its decision is crucial, said Ashok
Kumar, an analyst at U.S. Bancorp Piper Jaffray.

"If the Packard Foundation votes against it, there's not a chance in hell the
deal will go through," he said.

A separate foundation run by Packard's son, David W. Packard, owns 1.3 percent
of Hewlett-Packard's shares. Packard, who has no control over the Packard
Foundation, said last week that he is against the merger.

Fiorina said Wednesday that she has been meeting with representatives of the
Packard Foundation and remains confident that shareholders will approve the
merger. The foundation probably won't decide how it will vote until next month
or January, she said.

If the merger falls through, Compaq, beleaguered by slow PC sales, would find
itself in a tough situation, Kumar said.

"I don't see how Compaq could survive if the merger doesn't go through," he
said.

---


By Crayton Harrison
The Dallas Morning News
CONTACT: Visit The Dallas Morning News on the World Wide Web at http:/
www.dallasnews.com/



To: Elwood P. Dowd who wrote (93765)11/15/2001 2:43:06 PM
From: Night Writer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
Compaq deal seen more likely after HP results

(Adds closing share prices, paragraphs 6, 11)
By Peter Henderson
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov 14 (Reuters) - Hewlett-Packard Co.
<HWP.N> met its quarterly forecast for the first time in more
than a year with results announced on Wednesday, raising
confidence Chief Executive Carly Fiorina could muster the votes
to pull off a merger with Compaq Computer Corp. <CPQ.N>.
Fourth-quarter net profit fell nearly 90 percent and
Fiorina said she did not count on an economic recovery next
year, but HP's printer sales were relatively strong and both
consumer and business revenues rose from three months earlier.
Tough cost cutting led management to meet its own estimates
for the first time since August 2000, giving Fiorina new
leverage in the high-profile battle over the merger, which pits
the most powerful businesswoman in America against the normally
silent "royal families" of Silicon Valley.
"Despite the actions by some individuals, I think it's way
too early to conclude that this merger will not occur," Fiorina
said, referring to a rebellion against the merger by Hewlett
and Packard family members.
"We remain convinced this merger will occur," she said,
adding HP was talking with and would continue to engage the
Packard foundation, which holds a majority of founding family
shares and which has said it would consider fourth-quarter
results while deciding which way to vote.
Hewlett-Packard stock jumped 9.14 percent, or $1.85, to
$22.08 and was the fourth most active issue on the New York
Stock Exchange for the day. Compaq gained $1.20, or 13.64
percent, to $10.00, and was the most active stock.
Hewlett-Packard earned $361 million, or 19 cents per share,
from continuing operations, down from $841 million, or 41 cents
per share, a year earlier. Sales fell to $10.9 billion in the
quarter from $13.3 billion a year ago.
Wall Street analysts on average had expected earnings of 8
cents per share and sales of $9.9 billion, according to
research firm Thomson Financial/First Call.
"They delivered better-than-expected revenue results and
better-than-expected earnings results so this would tend to
increase shareholder confidence in the management team. So it
is a positive that they got this done this way -- a positive
for the merger," said Buckingham Research analyst Jay Stevens.
"Obviously a stronger stock price is going to make it
easier to deal with some of the questions surrounding the
merger," said Noel DeDora, a portfolio manager at Fremont
Investment Advisors.
The spread between Compaq's share price and the price
implied of the all-stock, $23.7 billion deal, narrowed to
around 40 percent from more than 50, indicating broad, but
diminishing, skepticism the deal would go through. The value on
the deal has risen close to its original $25 billion level.
HP net profit, including charges and one-time items,
dropped to $97 million, or 5 cents per share, from $922
million, or 45 cents per diluted share, in the year-earlier
quarter. The fourth-quarter results included a $282 million
pre-tax restructuring charge.

TWO SURPRISES
"There are really two big surprises in our results. The
revenue line and the expense reductions. We beat expectations
on both fronts. The revenue jump was very much as we predicted,
but others, based upon what was going on around us, pulled
back," Chief Financial Officer Bob Wayman said in a telephone
interview.
"We are very pleased to be able to, through this quarter,
demonstrate that some of the uncertainties that people had
worried about have been, at least for now, addressed."
Fiorina said that the business was beginning to show signs
of seasonality, despite the continuing difficult environment, a
sign of economic normality analysts have been looking for.
Among its main units, HP printing and imaging sales rose 16
percent sequentially but fell 9 percent from a year earlier and
the operating profit margin rose from the previous quarter.
Services showed mixed results with revenue up 2 percent
from the previous quarter, hit by declining consulting revenue,
which HP blamed on the weak economy, and boosted by outsourcing
contracts to run corporations systems rose.
Sales of the top high-end Unix computer, Superdome, were
strong, although lower end server sales dropped.
Long term, HP planned on making an 8-10 percent profit
margin for the larger enterprise systems, compared to a bare 3
percent margin on personal computers, executives said, but HP's
personal computer division continued to lose money, despite
improvement from the previous quarter, Wayman said.
Personal computers are one of the main points of contention
between management and opponents of the Compaq deal, who say HP
does not need a big, low-margin PC business.

PACKARD VOTE
After Hewlett and Packard family members with less than 10
percent of HP stock publicly opposed the merger last week, many
analysts saw merger hopes tied to support from a Packard family
trust with just over 10 percent of shares.
The David and Lucile Packard Foundation has hired
consultant Booz-Allen to evaluate the deal and has said it
would closely monitor the fourth-quarter results.
Fiorina said executives had spoken with and would continue
to speak with the Packard foundation but that a decision seemed
unlikely before December or January.
Hewlett-Packard said it expected fiscal first-quarter
revenues to fall slightly from the fourth quarter.
First-quarter margins and expenses would be flat compared with
the fourth quarter, it said.
"The outlook for the first quarter of fiscal 2002 is
generally in line with our current estimate with the
expectation of a slight decline in sequential revenue due to
normal seasonal factors," Merrill Lynch analyst Tom Kraemer
said in a research note.
(additional reporting by Caroline Humer in New York)
((San Francisco Bureau 415 677-2578,
peter.henderson@reuters.com))

REUTERS
*** end of story ***