Pip Coburn, technology strategist at UBS Warburg, nicely sums up the situation. "The challenge is discriminating between companies with broken fundamentals and stocks that have been crushed, but where you can look out and have a sense of where the company will be several years out," he says. "I wish there were more of those."
To help you pick through the rubble, we took a close look at the 20 largest tech companies by market value. You'll find our comments -- and recommendations -- sorted into five categories: hardware, software, semiconductors, services and wireless communications. Our assessment of these stocks started with the premise that an investor is willing to hold the stocks for at least two years -- these are no short-term calls. There's more information on the companies in the table below.
Hardware
First to Rebound?
Soundview's Arnie Berman argues that when the IT spending logjam breaks, the first checks will be written to hardware companies. His theory is that IT departments have postponed buying even the most basic items, and that these items -- PCs, servers, printers and switches -- can often be purchased at the departmental level without executive approval. (The same isn't true of other tech products, such as servers and enterprise software.) While Berman may be right, we fear many hardware companies will be hampered by sluggish PC demand -- and we doubt corporate IT spending will recover even modestly before 2003.
Even so, we're bullish on several companies in this category -- and the one we're most enthusiastic about is Dell Computer. None of Dell's rivals have figured out how to effectively compete with Dell's direct-sales model. Indeed, the company's success was the obvious driver behind Hewlett-Packard's merger with Compaq. Dell continues to gain market share in the U.S. and abroad, it has a solid balance sheet with about $8 billion in cash, and it's zeroing in on potentially large new product areas.
The one catch? Valuation. The stock trades for 30 times expected earnings for the January 2003 fiscal year. And PC demand is hardly robust. Microsoft recently said it expects PC unit growth of 5% or less for its own fiscal year ending June 2003. That suggests Dell's growth -- the Street expects 13% higher revenue in the January 2004 fiscal year -- must be driven by market share gains and expansion into new markets.
Still, we tend to side with the bulls, who expect Dell to grow by applying its direct-sales model to additional technology products. Steve Milunovich, tech strategist at Merrill Lynch, says he's bullish on Dell "not so much for its PC business, but rather for its ability to move up into routers and storage and servers." The company also seems to be making plans to attack the printer market, where it currently has no products of its own. Bob Rezaee, a portfolio manager at Montgomery Asset Management, sums it up: "Dell benefits from the commoditization of technology."
On Hewlett-Packard, our gut instinct was that the Compaq merger was a bad idea, destined to create the next Unisys, a big, sleepy, low-growth tech company. Nonetheless, the stock is statistically cheap -- far cheaper than the other large- cap tech companies we looked at for this story. At a recent 12.92, H-P now trades for about 0.5 times expected revenues for the October 2003 fiscal year, and under 10 times projected fiscal 2003 earnings. Goldman's Conigliaro calls it "dirt cheap, the cheapest computer company by far."
There are reasons for the low valuation, of course. Integration problems have slowed some H-P segments; the company still must prove it can wring the expected savings out of the merger. And the stock has been hurt by speculation about Dell entering the printer business.
While H-P faces big challenges in PCs and other computing segments, it remains the premier manufacturer of printers. Dell is more likely to partner with Lexmark or Canon than it is to make its own printers; H-P bulls see little chance of significant near-term impact on H-P's printer business. H-P's imaging segment reported just shy of $5 billion in revenue for the latest quarter; given a $20 billion run rate, we think the current market value of $37 billion would almost be reasonable for the printer business alone. By contrast, rival Lexmark trades for about 1.2 times expected 2003 revenues.
"Everyone hates [H-P Chief Executive] Carly [Fiorina], but she's not evil incarnate," says Soundview's Arnie Berman. If this company can ultimately generate revenues equal to the combined results of H-P and Compaq for 2000, he notes, and can realize the expense synergies management has promised, the company could eventually earn $2.20 a share. "Now, the market does not believe that," Berman adds, "but the stock clearly trades for a low multiple [based on its] earnings potential. It can certainly move higher."
Sun Microsystems, once the dot in dot-com, is now the dot in dot-bomb. Trading today for under $4 a share, the stock is down more than 70% this year, and over 90% from its 2000 peak. Having dominated the server market for Internet startups, telecom companies and financial-services firms, Sun has been hammered by the swoon in tech spending in those sectors and by increased competition. Kevin Landis, portfolio manager with the San Jose, Calif.-based FirstHand Funds, says the server business has become a "food fight," with IBM and H-P trying to under-cut Sun's prices. "And it's working," he says. "I'm worried about them."
He's not the only one. Montgomery Asset Management's Rezaee thinks Sun has been too slow to cut costs. "In the latest quarter, Sun had roughly $3 billion in revenue," he says. "I don't understand how you can have $3 billion in revenue and not be profitable. They're trying to fight too many battles -- proprietary chips, their own operating system, the software -- you can't be everything to everyone. Their business model was not designed for standards-based pricing and gross margins. The environment just doesn't favor Sun."
We admire Sun CEO Scott McNeally's shoot-from-the-hip style. But given the troubled backdrop -- and shares trading for 30 times expected June 2003 fiscal year earnings -- we would avoid Sun for now. |