SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (163154)3/7/2003 9:53:55 AM
From: brian1501  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574854
 
Yes, from the Queen of the right.........any respect I had for the twit was lost when I saw her on the Bill Maher show. I am afraid your queen has gone hollywood.

Whatever, it doesn't change the facts though.

Brian



To: tejek who wrote (163154)3/7/2003 10:41:41 AM
From: Alighieri  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1574854
 
In the week before Mohammed's capture, they were all reading from the same hymnal. Bernie Sanders, socialist congressman from Vermont said: "The man who killed 3,000 innocent Americans, his name is not Saddam Hussein. His name is Osama bin Laden." Rep. Dennis Kucinich, Democratic presidential candidate and strange-looking little man , said: "Iraq was not responsible for the attack on the World Trade Center or the Pentagon."

Soon liberals will be asking why we're even questioning Mohammed. As Bill Clinton would say: Khalid Shaikh Mohammed didn't kill 3,100 people on Sept. 11; Osama bin Laden did.
=========================================================
Coulter's self confidence must be pretty low if she feels the need to resort to name calling and exaggeration. She is making a lot of money off the fools who buy her garbage. In the end, Anne is our friend (so is Sean and Rush).

Al



To: tejek who wrote (163154)3/7/2003 4:57:21 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574854
 
Intel's flash price hike backfires, analysts say

By Elinor Mills Abreu

SAN FRANCISCO, March 7 (Reuters) - Chipmaker Intel Corp. <INTC.O> will likely have to back down and cut prices for flash memory used in cell phones and other portable devices after a recent price hike backfired, dragging down sales and prompting a slide in its share price, analysts said on Friday.

Intel's stock dropped more than 4 percent in heavy Nasdaq trading to close at $16.01 on Friday, a day after the Santa Clara, California company said its first-quarter revenue would be flat to down slightly and cited disappointing flash memory sales.

Although Intel Chief Financial Officer Andy Bryant said the world's largest maker of microchips would "stay the course" on its costly flash memory price hikes, analysts called that a high-stakes gambit.

Intel raised flash prices by 20 percent to 40 percent in January.

With Intel losing business to rivals such as Advanced Micro Devices Inc. <AMD.N>, several analysts said they expected Intel to climb down, essentially admitting it had misjudged the flash memory market, which accounts for just under 10 percent of its sales.

FLASH MEMORY SALES A SURPRISE

"The extent to which flash revenues have declined surprised us," said Merrill Lynch microchip industry analyst Joe Osha in a report titled, "So much for the flash price hike."

Osha said Intel's strategy of increasing prices for flash memory -- a type of computer memory popular in cell phones and other electronics -- may have sent business to rivals and hurt its market share in its older flash memory products.

Other analysts said Intel's decision to try to ride out the unpopular price hikes could be a mistake given indications that competitors like AMD and STMicroelectronics <STM.PA> were grabbing market share.

"If management has overestimated demand and/or underestimated the ability of its competitors to provide product, then current weakness may persist, and it will need to rescind its price increase to recover lost business. Frankly, we believe this to be the case," Dan Scovel of Needham & Co. wrote in a research note.

"We believe Intel will need to restore prices to previous levels sometime over the next few weeks, and it will take at least a couple of quarters to recover lost market share," Scovel predicted.

Jonathan Joseph, semiconductor analyst at Salomon Smith Barney unit, said part of the problem was that Intel's flash memory production lines have been running at low levels relative to capacity.

"The smart thing to do would be to cut prices and try to fill up their fabs," said Joseph, who added that he expects Intel to hold prices through the second quarter and possibly cut them later in the year.

REVENUE FLAT TO DOWN SLIGHTLY

Intel on Thursday narrowed its expected revenue range to $6.6 billion to $6.8 billion from a previous forecast of $6.5 billion to $7.0 billion. A year earlier, revenue was $6.8 billion.

Analysts, on average, had forecast revenue of $6.75 billion, in a range of $6.6 billion to $6.85 billion, and earnings per share of 12 cents, according to tracking service Thomson First Call.

Intel also said first-quarter gross margins would be slightly below the midpoint range of 50 percent, plus or minus a couple of percentage points, due to higher-than-expected flash inventory reserves.

"Intel is playing a game of chicken with its customers, seeing if they can hold the price increase they sent through. If they are successful, it signals positive things for the entire sector," Jon Najarian, chief market strategist with PTI Securities, an options and equity futures brokerage firm.

"However, the wild card is Samsung , as they have gone from the No. 9 flash memory producer to No. 2 faster than anyone predicted," he said, referring to Korea's Samsung Electronics

Co. Ltd. <05930.KS>.

Najarian said he expected Intel's shares to trade with less volatility as the market comes to grips with the implications

of its mid-quarter update.

"The unknown is always what Wall Street fears, and once something can be quantified, the volatility must drop and in Intel's case, that is precisely what I'm watching today," he said.

(Additional reporting by Dan Sorid in New York and Doris Frankel in Chicago.)

03/07/03 16:06 ET

Copyright 2003 Reuters Limited.