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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Moderated Thread - please read rules before posting -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: foundation who wrote (26544)9/7/2002 1:26:49 AM
From: q1000  Respond to of 196568
 
Deleted - out of order



To: foundation who wrote (26544)9/7/2002 1:27:27 AM
From: q1000  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 196568
 
Thornley At SSB - Part 1
Tony Thornley
SSB Tech 2002 Industry Conference

September 4, 2002
veracast.com

[Slides were not available in the webcast but were referenced often by Thornley. This is not a transcript but my notes on what I thought was important but in most cases Thornley’s words are used. I have not corrected his grammar, particularly his preference for plural subjects with singular verbs and for contractions. His review of the June quarter numbers has generally been skipped.]

We are putting a lot of assets into expanding the CDMA market. We are doing that in many different ways. We are helping existing CDMA operators. We are working with potential new operators. We have made a little bit of investing in companies around the technology in order to make sure that the services are available for the operators. We look at ourselves as a solutions provider to the CDMA market.

What’s becoming much more important as we look forward is the replacement market. There’s a lot of focus on subscriber growth and the fact that subscriber growth in the wireless market as a whole has been slowing, particularly in the U.S. From our point of view, that is important but really only a very small fraction of the total story. The most important part of our business, in fact, is how quickly we can drive the replacement of the devices, which drives our royalties revenues, our chip revenues and, in the future I think, our services because in the future services will abound as devices abound. The services themselves is the third leg of the stool and that will start contributing more of our revenue in the future, particularly the BREW platform which we have had considerable success. [Thornley is reading old Gregg Powers posts!]

We are looking at developing new businesses in the wireless space. We are putting a considerable amount of investment into that. That will probably pay off in the longer run. ..

In terms of the handset market for this year, our estimate has been 80 to 85 million shipments of CDMA handsets worldwide for calendar ’02. We have had that projection for quite a while. I think as a whole the analyst community has been somewhat below those estimates but we continue to see strong demand and that’s reflected in our chip business where we saw 16 million shipments of our MSMs, which is our phone chip, in the June quarter and we projected somewhere between 18 to 19 million shipments in the current September quarter. So we are seeing increasing demand, which is consistent with our view of the market.

The U.S. market, with the launch of third-generation systems by Verizon and Sprint, looks very healthy and we expect to see a lot of that replacement business driving the market into the 40 to 42 million range. These numbers are part of the 85 million figure - the high end of the projections - the 30 million is Asia, Korea and Japan mainly – the markets are very healthy. Latin America has been the slowest of all of the markets but even there we are seeing growth. ..

There has been a lot of focus in the media about delays in the third-generation networks but really that is associated with wideband CDMA into GSM networks. In terms of existing CDMA operators, the vast majority are quickly upgrading to third-generation technology. This is giving them increased capacity for voice but it is also allowing them to launch a lot of new services. If you look at the list here [slide], most of the operators’ financial performance, particularly of those who have been in operations for a while in third-generation, is improving considerably. ..

Very importantly, I think, looking forward, is the introduction of the next generation of systems – what we call 1xEV-DO networks or really high speed networks, which is the promise of third-generation – has been launched already in Korea. Those networks will be close to nationwide by the end of the year. Verizon is currently doing trials of that same technology here in the U.S. – you see trials going on in D.C. and there’s another trial about to start in San Diego. We hope to see this technology launched in the U.S. market next year – on a commercial basis. KDDI in Japan has also announced that it plans to launch this technology in 2003.

South Korea is really an indicative market of what’s going on in the leading edge of the wireless space. Here, you have a market that is well-penetrated with subscribers, over 30 million, in fact it’s about 31 million, subscribers out of a population of 47 million – pretty high penetration. Yet the phone market there is extremely healthy. This year we expect to see shipments of devices in the 13 to 14 million range. We expect to see the number of 1x subscribers at around 15 million by the end of the year – and you can see that at the end of last year that was around 4 [million]. So the conversion of existing users to new devices and new services and new capabilities is, in fact, making that market very strong and this is despite the fact that in Korea the government introduced subsidy bans in March of this year, which means that the subscriber is essentially paying the full manufactured price of the phone. This has not slowed the market – it did actually in April but since then we’ve seen the business return to prior pre-subsidy-ban levels. The demand for these new devices is very strong.

Japan is the next leading indicator where KDDI launched its third-generation service in April of this year. Since then they have converted about 1.5 million of their subscribers to 1x - to third-generation. They expect that by March of next year, 7 million of their subscribers will be on third-generation systems. They are migrating them very quickly. They are the first to have introduced position location services on a nationwide basis and this is using Qualcomm’s position location technology – gpsOne – this is another service where we are providing technology that is generating revenues for the operators and we will share in some of that revenue. They also launched BREW services this year – actually launched them over a period of time so we’ll see more impact of BREW. But the combination of BREW and gpsOne has meant that KDDI’s financial status has improved, its market share has improved and this is in a market where DoCoMo has dominated the market. It is interesting to compare the KDDI performance with DoCoMo which introduced WCDMA late last year and today has 120,000 subscribers. They have been going very slowing because the technology just isn’t mature yet.

In U.S. the Verizon and Sprint launches combined with the introduction of color screens on phones and the wide array of services that are coming with this, the very strong advertising campaign is very good for our business. I think that the potential of the Christmas selling season is very good for CDMA operators. In the U.S. market, gpsOne service is being introduced to satisfy the FCC requirements for e911 service – that’s being paced by the local authorities upgrading their systems to be able to cope with the e911 wireless call. But looking forward, I think we’re going to see a lot of position location based services on a commercial basis that will drive the market. Other operators launching 1x – Alltel, U.S. Cellular, Leap – are all in various stages of upgrading their networks.

China is a subject that is very important to our business. The China market is actually a driver of Asia market as a whole and, in the longer run, the worldwide market; because it is such a large market, it drives influence over other markets and it also drives scale. [Regarding Unicom] .., in the first half of this year there was some disappointment in the financial markets about the progress of the CDMA subscriber growth. From our perspective, thought, that was very expected. To launch a nationwide time in the time that Unicom did last year was remarkable. Certainly, it was to be expected that there would be a need for the fine-tuning of the network. Because they introduced slightly different technology in the phone, with a SIM card which hadn’t been introduced anywhere else, the availability of phones was an issue. However, over the last couple of months, we have seen a lot of those problems put behind them; we’ve been helping a lot in getting their network fine tuned. As a result of that, the subscriber growth has begun to pick up. As of the middle of August, they had over 2 million subscribers on the CDMA network and they were adding at 15,000 [a day] and most recently we have heard higher numbers than that. We have been consistently saying 3 to 4 million subscribers this year in China. Unicom has been saying sometimes larger numbers than that [7 million], sometimes around the 4 million. We are very comfortable about our forecasts.

Looking into next year most importantly, Unicom is investing most of its assets into CDMA and we expect to see accelerating growth from the China market. We also have seen very good signs that the new operators that will come into the China market – today there are only 2 - will be using CDMA technology. One of the manufacturers in China announced that they are going to manufacture equipment at 450 MHz, which is a band that we’ve been promoting on a global scale. This is just going to expand the availability of CDMA around the world and particularly in China.

India - also a very important market for us in terms of large scale growth. This year it’s been in development. The changing of the regulations to allow limited mobility has meant that the CDMA market has been expanded considerably. Reliance is our particular partner – we’ve been working very closely with them.. We have not funded our investment yet but expect that we will over coming months. They are at the stage of actually building their network. The plan is to launch up to about 500 towns in commercial service by March of next year. So this is on a very large scale. Reliance has talked about a target of 35 million subscribers by 2005.



To: foundation who wrote (26544)9/7/2002 1:29:37 AM
From: q1000  Respond to of 196568
 
Thornley at SSB - Part 2

Of course, Reliance is not the only operator in India who’s launching CDMA. BSML, the Government operator, is also expanding CDMA service. Tarta is launching in a number of circles and in fact we saw the announcement by [inaudible] Telecom of the first 1x third-generation network just recently being launched in India.

We expect to see both China and India being very significant drivers of growth going into ‘03.

Latin America has been troubled by the economy in most of the markets but the subscriber growth has continued in CDMA. There are approximately 14 million subscribers in that market currently. There is activity going on again to upgrade the networks to 1x for voice capacity and also at the high end. But most importantly the growth is going to come from the lower end and low cost devices are an extremely important element of growth for CDMA. CDMA has succeeded in the developed world today. In the developing world, the cost of CDMA phone has been higher than GSM – and really that has been the only thing that has been a competitive advantage left for GSM – the device has been lower priced. But, looking forward, with the introduction of our new chipset – the 6000-based chipset, we expect to see CDMA devices in the market below $70 next year – so really very competitive at the low end as well as the high end.

In Europe, with WCDMA being delayed – not having matured as we have been saying for some considerable time, the CDMA market in Europe is developing slowly. However, the good news is that our chipset is clearly taking the lead in terms of its capabilities and operators in Europe are recognizing the value of Qualcomm technology in deploying their networks. I think what’s going to happen is that WCDMA is going to be rolled out from a network point of view in ’03 and then in ‘04 and ‘05 we’re going to start seeing subscriber growth – and I would say 10 to 15 million is kind of where we’ve been looking at significant volume for 2004. I hope that we would begin to see that kind of level of investment in WCDMA. We are working very hard at the standards level and, of course, the operators and manufacturers, to make sure all of the interoperability issues are resolved as quickly as possible. There’s nothing fundamentally wrong with WCDMA but just simply that it does take a given amount of time to stabilize any kind of technology.

We have been trying to get cdma2000 also into Europe through out investment in Inquam and there is a network launch in Romania, with plans to launch in other markets in Western Europe but I think that will be relatively small in comparison to the WCDMA market for us in the long term in Europe.

TDMA operators are converting to CDMA2000, most notably recently BellSouth announced conversion of their TDMA networks in Ecuador and Panama and we expect to see more of their markets converted over the coming months.

This is a list of our strategic investments that we have made in order to ensure the growth of CDMA. Given the amount of time, I won’t go into these but you may have questions.

Our chips business is doing extremely well. Its market share is gaining; we have gotten Motorola as a customer for 1x which we really didn’t have for 95A. We have not seen effective competition, with the exception perhaps of Nokia in this market but their share has been relatively small.

We’re introducing a wide array of new chips this year – with multimode capability, high end, low end, medium - lots of integrated services. The chipsets have all of this integrated capability which is designed for wireless devices. No other supplier has anything close to this level of capability; and this is extremely important in terms of costs of devices and power requirements. This puts us in a very strong position, not only in CDMA2000 market, but also in WCDMA market because everybody else is playing catch-up.

gpsOne is an investment we made in a company, SnapTrack, in 2000 which has paid off very well… gpsOne is being rolled out in Korea, Japan, U.S. gpsOne is technology that will be adopted, I think, by GSM operations in Europe and elsewhere. Position location, we think, is a big driver of third-generation services.

In terms of BREW, this map shows the agreements that we have signed. Most recently, we signed a definitive agreement with China Unicom, which is very significant, as part of Unicom’s plan to grow its subscriber base in CDMA with new services differentiated from its competition. Wherever BREW has been launched, the operator has prospered. This is shown by KTFreetel who was the first to launch BREW in March of this year. Since that time, you can see that the ARPU resulting from the services on BREW has driven their ARPU up to significantly higher levels than they had in their second-generation systems which were purely voice. You can also say that the introduction of color screens has been very important in enabling these services. So it’s really the confluence of the third-generation systems and the device capabilities and the BREW download capabilities which is providing for a large market of applications which is making all this come together and driving success for operators.

Clearly, we have a very strong balance sheet – which is something that we value very highly. Our cash position at $2.6 billion is something that we think is extremely important – to have a liquid position, especially at this time in the market. We’re generating over $1 billion a year of operating cash flow. We are investing this year a little less than that in strategic investments. As you may have noticed on the chart, we had $800 million in commitment going forward; we will be funding those commitments over the next year or so. Looking to the future though, we expect to be very strongly free cash flow positive and so we are looking at the options in terms of the future as to what we do with that cash but right now we think that having the strong cash position is the right place to be.

Q&A


(Questions not completely audible, especially to this hearing-impaired, earphones ready listener; the bolded questions below are cryptic headings based upon Thornley’s repeat of the question)

Update on 6200 chip (GSM/WCDMA) and 6300 chip (GSM/1x)?
We brought forward the introduction of the 6200 by the quarter. That is the chip that we built into prototype phones that are being used in testing WCDMA networks currently by most of the operators, most of the manufacturers in Europe. In fact, we have been producing a significant number of those phones as test equipment - and we are actually selling those phones for the test equipment so we’re actually generating some revenue from that. But more importantly, we are using them to accelerate the introduction of WCDMA in terms of interoperability. It is positioning us very well in Europe and the European operators are beginning to prescribe to their manufacturers that they should be using our chip which, of course, is very good for our long term share.

GSM1x?

We have not yet seen anybody actually place orders for GSM1x systems, that is, cdma2000 air interface but with a GSM core network. We did demonstrate this year, starting at the GSM show in Cannes in February, the capability to do that without changing any of the GSM network elements. So it really is a real alternative to WCDMA. However, Europe – you mentioned KPN considering this - Europe generally has been keen on having just one implementation - because of the roaming issue. However, our new chip with the new multimode capability will allow for operators to, in fact, implement different technology – different versions of CDMA – and be able to provide their customers devices that are capable of roaming across all technologies so it becomes much less of an issue.

So we do expect that GSM1x will be very important from a roaming point of view; from a device point of view and going forward we expect to see systems launched with GSM1x, probably initially in Asia and then later maybe in Europe.

What held up our investment in Reliance and what is the relationship today?
The investment commitment that we made was contingent upon them actually placing orders for equipment at a given point in time. For a number of reasons, particularly the unfortunate death of founder of Reliance amongst other things, that was delayed. So that is what has caused us to be remove the commitment as a firm commitment from our list of financial commitments. However, our relationship today with Reliance today is good. We’re still supporting them. We’re actually providing a lot of technical support to them and helping them launch their network as quickly as possible. We do expect that we will make that investment here in the not to distant future as they launch their network.

December quarter?
Normally, December is slightly down because of seasonality. What do we expect to see this year? Well, in fact, from a chip point of view, that’s generally the case because of the Christmas selling season. So deliveries tend to peak in September time-frame so that manufacturers have the phones to the operators for the Christmas selling season. In terms of this year, I think that some of the forces that you see in the other markets that are not particularly Christmas driven and those are the ones that are beginning to grow, such as China and India, it may well be that we will not see that seasonality this year.

Top 5 manufacturers?
The top manufactures today in terms of volume of CDMA handsets are Samsung, Motorola, LG, Toshiba, Sony – probably those 5. Nokia is kind of just on the edge of that list.

Size of 450 MHz Market?
The 450 market we haven’t exactly sized per se. But I think in China – they use a different standard band which 4.5 MHz each way, it’s a relatively small piece of spectrum relative to what’s available at 800 or 1900 or 2.1GHz, but it certainly does have very good propagation characteristics for rural markets. So you expect to see it deployed to satisfy the rural markets first and foremost. In that sense perhaps it’s not going to be quite as big as the other bands. However, we do see the potential for it to be launched on a global basis so it could be quite a significant piece in the long run - hard to say just exactly what the numbers are will be though.

Driver of revenues?
The first driver of revenues for us is technology licensing. So the gpsOne technology from SnapTrack is licensed to various companies - that’s not a major source of revenue for us. It is a source but it’s not going to be big. The more significant source of revenue is going to come from BREW services that are built on gpsOne technology and that will be the economics of BREW, which is largely a revenue sharing with the application developer and I expect to see that grow substantially over the coming year.

Is BREW an alternative to JAVA or is JAVA a complement to BREW?
BREW is definitely a complement to JAVA. BREW is a capability to download applications and those applications can be written in C/C++ or they can be written in JAVA. JAVA works just as well on top of BREW as it does in native mode. [Previously, they have said that you might want a non-BREW JAVA for more complicated graphics applications??]. We see BREW opening up the market for developers in all languages. In fact, we see, though, that C/C++ has a lot of advantages in terms of the speed of processing and that, in terms of small devices with relatively limited processing power and memory, there’s a significant advantage in C/C++ today.

Q-Chat?
Q-Chat is a service that we actually developed initially for the Government under contract. We have sold that on a somewhat exclusive basis to Nextel. Actually, the arrangement with Nextel is that we will co-market Q-Chat on CDMA around the world. We have done a lot of business development on that. We expect commercial services to be launched in ’03 with Q-Chat. We think that is a very important element in the growth of voices services, particularly in enterprise market around the world.

Q-Chat and Sprint and Verizon?
Because of our arrangement with Nextel, Q-Chat itself will not be available to Verizon and Sprint. There are alternatives that Verizon and Sprint are looking at; we don’t think those are as good as Q-Chat, however.

QSI going forward?
We have the $800 million or so of commitments and we are going to fund those over the next year or so. Why’s isn’t that a recurring thing? What we have been doing over the last number of years is, in fact, fighting a battle to establish CDMA as the technology of choice against GSM in many markets and we found it necessary to invest in operators to enable that in some markets.

In fact, some of the investments – if you look at Pegaso and you look at Vesper - those investments go all the way back to when we were in the infrastructure business. We invested initially, as vendor financing, to get the infrastructure business going. Once we sold that business to Ericsson, then the shift was looking at protecting CDMA.

But we do not expect, as we look forward, that that’s going to be necessary in the future. We see the need to invest in operators declining as we look forward. We still have that $800 million commitment. We probably will make some new commitments but we expect those to be declining over time and so 2004 and 2005 should be substantially lower investment in those carriers. The Reliance commitment was $200 million.

I should also add that we expect to see cash coming in from those investments as we exit. Pegaso in Mexico is the first major one that we are looking to exit. The deal with Telefonica has been approved by the regulators so we expect to see that closing here very soon. We should be getting somewhere in the range of $4-500 million back from that investment.

[Thornley did not answer the question which I gather was why QSI should not be included in pro forma calculations since it is a core part of Qualcomm’s promotion of CDMA.]

What’s the status of EV-DV and explain Qualcomm’s apparent reluctance to be a leader in that space?
DV is in a sense an evolution of 1x as it’s currently in the market but with higher speed data, supposedly in the order of data optimized or EV-DO - so it’s combining 1x today with EV-DO. And that’s really the reason that Qualcomm has not been a particularly strong advocate because we see it as being the existing capabilities and yet a completely new development for the industry, which is a very big investment for the industry which we don’t necessary see a big payoff from. So that’s why we have not been particularly strong on it although we do expect, as we currently see it, that DV will be developed starting with, starting development on the chipset, and we expect to see it roll out, maybe in 2005. But we’ll see how that develops.



To: foundation who wrote (26544)9/7/2002 1:30:10 AM
From: q1000  Respond to of 196568
 
SG Cowen Conference - Part 1

SG Cowen 30th Annual Fall Technology Conference
Tony Thornley

September 05, 2002
visualwebcaster.com

[This presentation was in the form of a Q&A interview. I could neither hear the woman’s name or her questions very well. The questions below are mostly in the nature of headings, largely based upon Thornley’s answer. I agree with the posts that the Real Player was much clearer than the Windows Media – dramatically better for reasons that I cannot understand.]

Update on CDMA subscribers worldwide?
As of June, which is the most recently reported data that came out of CDG, there were 127 million subscribers globally… The business of Qualcomm is driven very much by replacement rates rather than new subscribers although new subscribers is a portion of it. If you look at the market this year, we are estimating that to be, on a calendar year basis, about 80 to 85 million. If you take the higher end of that range, then that breaks: about 42 million North America, 30 million in Asia split between Japan, Korea and China, a few in other countries, 10 million in Latin America and about 3 million in the rest of the world.

How many of those are 1x and what are the expectations this year?
The 1x subscriber base is a little bit difficult to get your handle on because not everybody is reporting it. CDMA phones are migrating to 1x on a very rapid basis because 1x gives more capability to the operator in terms of capacity; it also gives the capability for higher speed data and therefore new data services but the incremental expense for migrating to 1x is very low. So the migration is happening very rapidly. In terms of the base as a whole, we are shipping this quarter 15 million of the 18 to 19 million subscriber chips that we are shipping would be 1x. By the end of the year, I think, going into the first quarter of next year, it’ll be 100% 1x.

Explain why your China estimates are more conservative than Unicom’s? Expectations?
China Unicom said in its second quarter release that they planned to upgrade by the end of this year to 1x… They said today that the public company was about 1.7 million subscribers as of August and 2.3 million as a whole. They have been ramping up in the last month quite rapidly – our intelligence says they are adding something like 30,000 subscribers a day. Going at that pace, they certainly can exceed the 3 to 4 million subscribers that we have been estimating. They’ve been working with an internal target 7 million. I think they believe that they can get there but that it’s going to be a little difficult to do. I think that, looking into next year, they have not said what their target is but they did earlier say that they were trying to get to 50 million subscribers in a 3-year timeframe. So they are going to be looking for considerably more subscriber adds next year than they had this year.

Penetration of 1x [hard to hear but must relate to Korea]?
By end of the year, the estimate is that roughly half of the subscribers will be 1x subscribers. The Korean market is migrating very rapidly to 1x. It’s being driven by color screens and new applications. That certainly is, we think, a leading indicator of what’s going to happen in the other markets; it’s certainly also happening in Japan and it’s going to translate into the U.S. So it’s been a very successful market for us this year – even though there have been subsidy bans. The consumers are paying the full price for the phone and in August we’re are seeing something that is close to 1-1/2 million phones shipped in that market.

How has 1x done so far in U.S.?
It’s a little early to say. Verizon launched their 1x network on a regional – they are not complete across the country yet but they did launch in the major markets and they’re covering more than half of the population. But they didn’t make a major advertising campaign associated with that. They have launched their Express Network. They have a couple of phones only - one color phone and one black and white phone. So it has been a fairly muted launch. I think they plan a much bigger launch with new phones for the Christmas selling season. That’s going to be associated with the BREW software platform for delivering applications, which they adopted and made available in May of this year but that I think it’s going to be promoted for the Christmas selling system with new applications.

Sprint – really all we’ve got is anecdotal evidence. From what we understand, the network is performing very well. There is shortages of some of the high-end phones, which has been disappointing to the market. But they have a good range of phones. I think that Sprint is going to be quite successful in the Christmas selling system also.

Update on India?
India has been a very small market today. The CDMA infrastructure is being rolled out. The biggest operator is Reliance. Reliance has a plan to launch in over 500 towns in India by March of next year. They’re going very rapidly, which is Reliance’s style. They are planning to launch a few markets in commercial service this year – at the end of the calendar year. They are going to be buying phones, which will drive growth in our business, in the December quarter. Our chip shipments will grow as a result of that. Reliance believes they can get a significant number of subscribers very rapidly, with some promotional schemes, introduction schemes – when we’re talking “substantial,” I mean in the millions of subscribers quite quickly. So it will become an important market for us in ‘03.

Update on Europe?
Europe is essentially zero. We have a small amount of cdma2000 1x in Romania; there’s a little bit in Russia. But otherwise WCDMA has been very slow. It just a matter that it takes a long time to introduce a new technology. It’s an experience that we’ve had already in CDMA. We knew that it was going to take a long time with WCDMA. It’s the same with GPRS; it’s the same with any radio technology. It takes time to mature.

We are working very closely with the European operators and the European manufacturers, in fact, all of the infrastructure manufacturers, to do interoperability testing to try to get WCDMA mature as quickly as possible. We’re selling test equipment using our chip and a phone that we developed to test infrastructure equipment, particularly interoperability issues. So we are making a lot of progress but we still don’t think it’s going to be significant to the financial aspect of our business until 2004; we will see some contribution in ’03 though.

How many BREW customers?
KTFreetel was the first to adopt. They started out with BREW phones in November of last year. As of going, they’re going to be close to 2 million subscribers – they’ll probably 2 million subscribers by the end of September. They have had a very good experience with that. Their ARPUs have increased substantially. Their overall financial performance has been quite dramatically improved as a result of launching these BREW services. They’ve take a very aggressive attitude about launching as many applications as they possibly can get. They are adding to their applications catalog on a daily basis. The BREW downloads of those applications is growing rapidly. Overall the experience has been a very good indicator and in fact is helping us sell BREW into other carriers, mostly notably Unicom recently decided to adopt that.

Verizon adopted BREW and launched BREW service in May of this year but didn’t promote it. BREW has prospered in Korea because of the color screens; in Korea, 70% of the phones shipped this year will have color screens. I think that’s what we’re going to see that around the world – a rapid migration to color screens, a very rapid migration. That really makes the applications on the phones much more exciting. In the U.S. with Verizon’s it’s been a little slower; they’ve not done the advertising. But I think they’re going to have a very good suite of applications before Christmas.

KDDI actually emphasized position location services and has launched our other technology, gpsOne – enhanced GPS for accurate position location - and they’ve launched a lot of applications associated with that. That’s been very popular – over 2 million of KDDI’s 10 million subscribers have gpsOne capability. So gpsOne combined with BREW is what we are working with Unicom on to launch in China. We have trials going on in Latin America. There’s a whole lot of interest in it.

I think the significant thing - Sprint didn’t go with BREW; they went with their own proprietary downloading system. I think that they have experienced some of the issues that we expected in terms of – it just takes longer to do it that way. BREW enables you to put applications across multiple, many phones, using our chipset, very easily. It works on all of the phones whereas in the case of Sprint they’ve had to do modifications for each phone which slows you down. The applicators actually run slower in Sprint than in the Verizon BREW application. I think that’s going to be a factor.

Last quarter had upside surprise; are gross margins sustainable?

We did have a very good quarter for chips. We had a unit record shipment quarter with MSMs – we had over 16 million chips. We actually had a very good quarter for our infrastructure chips as well, which usually represents about 10 to 15% of the chip revenue and the higher end of that in the quarter and that’s a higher margin that the MSM. So that did improve our gross margins in the June quarter. We don’t expect that to be as strong in the September quarter.

From an operating margin point of view after R&D and SG&A expenses, we achieved 29% operating margins in the chip business in June [quarter]; we have guided that we probably wouldn’t do better in September [quarter] even though our anticipation is 18 to 19 million MSMs in this quarter - because of lower CSM infrastructure chips and also a little bit because the software licenses that go with each family of chips to each manufacturer – that also contributed to June quarter. Looking forward, the operating margin in the chip business is very much associated with volume. Expenses will grow much less rapidly than revenue moving forward.



To: foundation who wrote (26544)9/7/2002 1:30:24 AM
From: q1000  Respond to of 196568
 
Cowen Conference - Part 2

September and December quarters?
That’s driven by Christmas selling season in certain markets. This year we would expect to see something of the same. Maybe with Verizon launching a little later in the year that we’ll see some benefit in the December quarter from that. What I have been saying though is that the ramp in China and the ramp in India are going to affect the December quarter and that that will offset any seasonality. The real question is, from our perspective, how good is the Christmas selling season. We are very optimistic about it as I’ve said in the U.S. but how good it is will affect our March quarter. We do have a seasonality there where usually the March quarter down. So we might see, we probably will see a typical March quarter – down sequentially from December. But December should be flat to better than what I expect in September.

September?

I would not be too concerned about the month of September. September is not necessarily the biggest month in Christmas selling season. So that wouldn’t worry me too much. Looking out to November, Thanksgiving and on into December is really the key month for sales for the March quarter.

Are there enough handsets for Christmas selling season?
A good point – when we talk to operators around the world that’s their complaint. It’s not that they have too much inventory but there’s a shortage of certain models. Sprint with the Samsung high-end phone they have had difficulties getting supplies. In Latin America, even though that’s a tough market, they’re complaining that they can’t get some models. Unicom says could do better than 30M a day if it had more supply of certain models. It’s definitely a factor but the manufacturers are working very hard on that and certainly the demand that we are seeing reflects that.

Q3 launches?
Right - particularly the Verizon portfolio of phones to compete with Sprint. Sprint launched 7 new models and I think we’re going to see a similar kind of thing from Verizon.

Glut of 1x chipsets?
It is really difficult to measure the number of phones that are out there which actually have 1x chip in them. Most of the operators are not reporting that. So we’ve stopped trying to answer that question but rather look at the overall market and put 1x and 95A together. If you look at it that way, then the number of chips shipped in the June quarter are roughly equal to the number of phones that shipped. So there was no bulge in inventory in the June quarter. Definitely, we expect that with some 18 to 19 million MSM shipping this quarter, that there will be an inventory build of some 2 or 3 million this quarter but that is typical for the seasonality. So again when you look at it on a macro basis, you talk to operators and manufacturers, you don’t find any specific issues of inventories. We are not seeing it in terms of order demand in our chip business.

Low-end phones?
We are introducing a chip that is absolutely designed for the low-end phone. We are working in conjunction with manufacturers to get a $70 below priced handset for the operators in the developing markets in ‘03. - the MSM6000.

Investment strategy going forward and addressing some of the concerns about that?
When you look at the investments that we have made, you wouldn’t say that in the big picture sense the investments have driven a whole lot of the market growth. We invested in operators back in the ‘90s when we were in the infrastructure business – particularly in Mexico and Brazil. Once we got into that position, there were some events that happened around those markets which caused us to continue to invest. And those events were, in the case of Mexico, Pegaso that we invested in was going to be acquired by AT&T Wireless – that plan was to transition the technology to TDMA. So we invested and we brought Sprint in as an investor. In Brazil, we took a license back in ‘98 to sell infrastructure. That company ran into trouble financially last year. We decided that strategically - the Brazilian market is actually a battlefront with GSM. We’ve got a split today between CDMA and TDMA and TDMA is at the end of its life. So the operators looking at which way to go. The only advantage left, particularly in Latin America, for GSM today is the price of the low-end phone. That’s why we are so focused on the low-end phone prices for those markets. We decided that we had to maintain the footprint of Vesper which is in 2/3rds of the country.

Looking forward, this year we will be investing something in excess of $800 million, mainly across those but also a 450 MHz operator in Europe – Inquam. Looking forward – ‘03, we have commitments - around $800 million, excluding Reliance, our partner in India. Those will get funded mostly in ‘03, including Reliance. So we expect to be investing around the same amount – $800 [million] to a billion dollars in those existing commitments next year. But in ’04 as a result of a transition in ‘03 we don’t expect to be making a lot of new commitments. So from ‘04 on we think that our investments in operators will diminish quite dramatically. And going forward we won’t be any longer making those investments.

Growth of wireless market in ‘03?

I don’t really have a particular view on the overall market. Qualitatively, I’d say that the GSM market is driven by the upgrade to GPRS. Certainly, you look at ATT Wireless which is launching GPRS, they are marketing services that are somewhat similar to what Sprint and Verizon are marketing but the performance of those applications is going to be inferior. I think that’s going to be recognized in the market. I think that GPRS is a much tougher sell than the CDMA operators have. However, that upgrade - color screens available in GPRS phones - that’s probably what drives the market. There isn’t really a lot of growth in the markets that have driven GSM before – China may be still a little bit with China Mobile but China Unicom is really on the side of CDMA.

From a CDMA point of view, though, ’03 looks to be a very good year. The growth in units is going to be in China/India markets. Korea, Japan, U.S. are going to be slower growth. I don’t think there’s going to be a lot of new operators. It’s going to be Sprint, Verizon - how many people are going to upgrade, what’s the churn going to be, etc. to drive the U.S. markets. I don’t think it’s necessarily going to grow that much. Korea is very high replacement this year and it’s probably going to be similar next year. Japan maybe can grow some more relative to those because KDDI is a small fraction of the total. In fact, DoCoMo could gear up its WCDMA in ’03 so that could contribute as well, but more from the royalty point of view than the chip revenue.

Shares of Qualcomm as good investment?
We are a good investment because we have the ability to grow and I think the potential for the CDMA market is very substantial. Clearly, the introduction of WCDMA into the GSM market is an important element of that growth story. And that’s why we’re putting so much effort into our WCDMA chips business, such that we can help that market mature quickly. But when you look to ’04 and ’05, I think there is tremendous growth in Europe and other markets.

In the meantime, the success in China is having a big influence on other markets, particularly in Asia. I think you going to see the Korean experience, the Japanese experience translate to other markets. So there a lot of potential for growth just in base business. Then, on top of that, I do think that replacement rates will accelerate globally, which drives our business. The introduction of BREW is a revenue driver for us; it’s a new source of revenue. It’s very small this year, but looking into ’03/’04, it’s going to be growing and that contributes. So I think the fundamental strengths of our business look very good into the future.



To: foundation who wrote (26544)9/7/2002 1:30:39 AM
From: q1000  Respond to of 196568
 
Europe - Comments and Speculation

Commentary in Light of Thornley’s Presentations
Europe

As a student of Qualcomm conference calls for many years and of nuances in the changes in tone about discussions of business issues, I detect a major change in Qualcomm’s assessment of WCDMA and of its prospects in Europe generally.

Thornley’s statement that it merely takes time to stabilize any new technology and, “There’s nothing fundamentally wrong with WCDMA,” is the most positive statement I have heard about WCDMA out of the mouths of QCOM executives. A year and a half ago, Dr. Jacobs said it would be 2004-2005 before we would see meaningful volumes of WCDMA handsets, which he said meant 10 million units. Now Thornley is saying 10 to 15 million units for 2004, with WCDMA network rollouts in 2003. Thornley also said that some of the operators were beginning to prescribe to manufacturers that they should use Qualcomm chipsets. If all of the interoperability tweaking is such a pacing issue, I would expect some manufactures to decide that the best approach, at least at the outset, is to use all Qualcomm CSM and MSM chipsets. Thornley said, “our chipset is clearly taking the lead in terms of its capabilities and operators in Europe are recognizing the value of Qualcomm technology in deploying their networks.” I can only imagine the private frustrations that carriers must have towards the WCDMA purveyors with all of the missed timelines, undisclosed problems and surprising extra costs (Qualcomm is not one of that group).

Thornley stressed how closely Qualcomm was working with the European operators and manufacturers – including all the infrastructure manufacturers - and how many resources Qualcomm was devoting to the task. He said, “So we are making a lot of progress” even though it would not be financially significant until 2004. In the concluding Cowen question about whether Qualcomm shares were a good investment, the first specific that Thornley mentioned was WCDMA – Qualcomm was “putting so much effort into our WCDMA chips business” and “when you look to ’04 and ’05, I think there is tremendous growth in Europe and other markets.”

I have long harbored the hope that Europe would abandon WCDMA and adopt 1x and was preparing to watch carefully the tea leaves through the end of the year (in last November’s analysts conference, Dr. Jacobs said something to the effect that the carriers would wait another year to see if the WCDMA manufacturers had solved the problems). I interpret Thornley’s upbeat comments regarding WCDMA, devoid of the usual litany of specific problems with WCDMA, as meaning that Qualcomm has concluded that the WCDMA problems will largely be solved within the next 12 months, at least in networks where Qualcomm chips are used, and that Qualcomm will have the leading chipset position in Europe in the 2003-2005 timeframe.

Thornley talked about 1x being launched in the 450 MHz band in Western Europe although he did not think that market would be large compared to WCDMA.

Although it was a tag-on to his discussion of GSM1x in Asia, Thornley said that GSM1x would be important for roaming. He did not refute an apparent statement by the person asking the question that KPN was considering GSM1x currently and spoke of GSM1x systems launched “probably initially in Asia and then later maybe in Europe.” At the same point, in the context of a statement regarding Europe wanting a single technology due to the importance of roaming across national boundaries, Thornley also mentioned that the new multi-mode capabilities may make that less of an issue since single handsets with different versions of CDMA could allow roaming.

The Europeans have to be impressed with BREW’s performance in Korea and Japan. I have been shocked by the news this week that programmers may have to make special JAVA software adjustments for the screens of each different handset and PDA offered by the same carrier and may also have to make adjustments between carriers. See Post 26545. With so many countries and carriers in Europe and so much roaming, I would expect the European carriers to want the simplicity and speed of implementation of the BREW solution. I have thought that position location would be a major driver of 3G in the U.S. but it would seem to be even more attractive in Europe where there are so many languages and major cities in which to become lost within short distances. Thornley thought that Qualcomm’s gpsOne technology would be adopted by GSM operators in Europe and that an important source of Qualcomm revenues would come from BREW services that are built on gpsOne technology.

Instead of being the company excluded from discussions of CDMA a couple of years ago, Qualcomm apparently has impressed European operators and infrastructure manufactures with its products and expertise and is at the center of the WCDMA implementation activity. Although it has happened gradually and through hard work on the part of Qualcomm’s people, I sense that a quantum shift in European attitudes toward Qualcomm has taken place in the past two years ago.

I am now hoping that Thornley is correct on the timetable and that WCDMA rolls out without further delays. The analysts would then start putting significant WCDMA numbers back into their estimates for 12-18 months from now. Over time Qualcomm may be able to multimode WCDMA into insignificance, with the major Asian, Latin American and North American players adopting 1x or GSM1x.



To: foundation who wrote (26544)9/7/2002 1:31:06 AM
From: q1000  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 196568
 
Sprint; China - More Comments and Speculation

A BREWless Sprint
I have had a Sprint cellphone for several years despite irritating dead spots (e.g. upper deck of the Bay Bridge west of Yerba Buena and on the top of Fell Street in S.F.). The homogenous Sprint CDMA system appealed to me intellectually and I planned to upgrade my Kyocera 2255 (1x voice) to a high-end PDA with keyboard, color and gpsOne. Now I am rethinking my upgrade path and may switch to Verizon in a couple of months when they presumably will expand their offers of color 1x devices. Why?

I think Sprint has made two major mistakes in failing to adopt BREW and in failing to pursue 1xEV-DO. I have disliked my experience with JAVA on the PC (it always seems to hang) and detest having to deal with PC problems and with slow programs. If each program has to be specially designed for each screen and each carrier, two things will happen. First, programs written in JAVA will be slower to be approved by Sprint. Second, there will be JAVA crashes. On the first point, Thornley suggested that Sprint was already having problems – “it just takes longer to do it that way” – since modifications of the software had to be made for each phone. Thornley also said that applications run slower on Sprint’s JAVA than on Verizon’s BREW platform.

Maybe the problems will become apparent to Sprint quickly and it will switch and adopt BREW.

Thornley’s comments in the Cowen conference on 1xEV-DV, which Sprint has said it finds more attractive that 1xEV-D0, seem telling. I expect that Verizon may offer 1xEV-D0 in large cities next year whereas Thornley does not see 1xEV-DV until 2005. At that time, if I understand Thornley correctly, 1xEV-DV would not offer me any more data speed than I would have 2 years sooner with 1xEV-DO if I switch to Verizon and would offer the same voice quality. Moreover, I would expect Qualcomm to make major improvements in 1xEV-DO by 2005.

China
In the Cowen call, Thornley said (although it was a bit difficult to hear) “our intelligence says they [China Unicom] are adding something like 30,000 subscribers a day.” Even if that only happens 5 days a week, at that rate Unicom could add about 2.5 million subs by the end of the year, giving them about 5 million subscribers. Since the market has in the past seemed skeptical of Qualcomm’s 3-4 million Unicom subscriber figure, this should get people excited. Thornley also emphasized China in his comments about the December quarter being better than one would normally expected after the Christmas-selling-influenced September quarter for chipset sales.

Thornley also said that Qualcomm had seen good signs that “the new operators that will come into the China market * * * will be using CDMA technology.”



To: foundation who wrote (26544)9/15/2002 10:50:44 PM
From: waitwatchwander  Respond to of 196568
 
J2ME: Life after WAP?

philstar.com

By Jacob Christfort
The Philippine STAR 09/16/2002


The first incarnation of the wireless Internet – commonly known as WAP (Wireless Application Protocol) – was largely scorned by consumers. While WAP as a technology got the blame, the real culprit was the underling slow, clunky second-generation networks combined with inexperienced mobile operators that forced users into "walled gardens" of inferiorly designed applications and menu trees.

So, how will Java 2 Micro Edition help? Given the limitations on network speed and connectivity for mobile networks, the key benefit of J2ME is the opportunity to write client-side applications that run in the device independent of network connectivity and speed.

Apart from the obvious end-user benefits, the ability to run J2ME applications on cheaper 2.5 G networks also means operators will not have to spend billions of dollars to immediately create the much-hyped 3G infrastructure.

Qualcomm’s BREW is similar to J2ME technology. But whereas BREW is very focused on particular chipsets, J2ME promises the true "write once and run everywhere" ability on mobile handsets.

How far along are we with J2ME? At this point, experiences are promising. In Japan, NTT DoCoMo launched a Java implementation in some handset called "i-appli" that enables, for example, game providers to build fast and interactive games that run as a seamless part of the handset. In the United States, we already have seen the first commercially available J2ME handset from Nextel Communications Inc.

Problem with J2ME

However, the problem with J2ME today is it is good for little else than games and other consumer applications. Because the more powerful aspects of Java have been stripped away with J2ME, it becomes extremely difficult to connect to heavyweight, back-end resources, such as corporate databases, or interface with more complex aspects of mobile networks, such as messaging systems.

In effect, J2ME is in danger of becoming a mostly device-side technology, creating an unmanageable mess of disconnected islands of data and applications reminiscent of the PC. And while circumstances have turned most people into skilled "PC operators," it is unlikely that time-crunched mobile users will have similar patience.

How can we save J2ME from this danger? I found an inspirational answer to this question while watching a space adventure movie recently. In the movie, a very large and powerful starship was equipped with small, one-man ships that enabled the crew to make quick and inexpensive expeditions from the mother ship. These small ships would leverage the mother ship for any complex, resource-intensive task, such as firing a laser gun at a threatening object. In effect, the smaller ships had the power to remotely control the mother ship’s resources, giving them the virtual power of that ship, while being infinitely smaller and nimbler. These small ships would be relatively simple and inexpensive to make and maintain, yet they were as powerful as the biggest ship.

Answer to J2ME

What is the answer to J2ME? At Oracle, we believe the answer lies in an applications server that acts as the mother ship and lends its virtual power to the tiny, nimble J2ME devices. Oracle has done this with its Oracle 9i application server. We also have created a J2ME software developers’ kit so programmers can create tiny J2ME applications that use the mobile network to effect dramatic processing on the backend as seamlessly as if it were done on the device. Examples include carrier- and device-independent messaging, complex rules-based alert generation, searching through corporate databases, and even synchronization of targeted sets of data down to the tiny device for local real-time use.

I’d like to think that the possibilities enabled by this approach are as endless as the universe. Accordingly, as the power of corporate servers grows, mobile devices will be able to leverage this power seamlessly without gradually turning into mini-PCs – or space monsters.

* * *

The author is Oracle Corp.’s chief technology officer and vice president for product development of the company’s mobile products and services division, where he is responsible for product development of the wireless option of Oracle 9i application server (Oracle9i AS) and other mobile online services.

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