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Technology Stocks : Motorola (MOT) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: slacker711 who wrote (3167)7/31/2008 9:06:08 AM
From: John Hayman  Respond to of 3436
 
Wow....what a surprise. I was not expecting them to improve this early.

Can they keep it up though?

John
go MOT



To: slacker711 who wrote (3167)7/31/2008 3:21:44 PM
From: Eric L  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3436
 
Motorola Second-Quarter Financial Results

Moto Retains the #3 Slot in Handsets ...

... by shipping 28.1 million units while it was widely assumed that LG, who sold 27.7 million phones had bumped them into 4th.

>> Phone shipments fell 21 percent to 28.1 million units last quarter, a smaller drop than some analysts had predicted. ``It's starting to stabilize,'' Mark Sue of RBC Capital Markets told Bloomberg Radio. ``It's not getting any worse.'' The New York-based analyst has a ``sector perform'' rating for the stock. Motorola was projected to ship 26.1 million phones last quarter, according to the average estimate of six analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. The company kept its spot as the world's No. 3 mobile-phone maker, ahead of LG Electronics Inc., whose shipments soared 45 percent to 27.7 million units last quarter. The loss for Motorola's mobile-phone business widened to $346 million from $332 million a year earlier. Sales at the unit fell 22 percent to $3.3 billion. ###

tinyurl.com

Moto Loses Share ...

... and while they held onto the #3 slot in unit sales and share, they lost share QoQ amd YoY to Nokia, Samsubg, LG, RIM and HTC:

Global Mobile Handset Shipments and Marketshare (Strategy Anaalytics)

Global Handset Units (Millions)        Q2 '07  2007  Q1 '08 Q2 '08
------------------------------------------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Nokia 100.8 437.1 115.5 122.0
Samsung 37.4 161.1 46.3 45.7
Motorola 35.5 159.0 27.4 28.1
LG Electronics 19.1 80.5 24.4 27.7
Sony Ericsson 24.9 103.4 22.3 24.4
Others 41.3 181.5 46.5 48.7
------------------------------------------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Total 259.0 1122.6 282.4 296.6
========================================== ====== ====== ====== ======
·
Global Handset Marketshare % Q2 '07 2007 Q1 '08 Q2 '08
------------------------------------------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Nokia 38.9% 38.9% 40.9% 41.1%
Samsung 14.4% 14.4% 16.4% 15.4%
Motorola 13.7% 14.2% 9.7% 9.5%
LG Electronics 7.4% 7.2% 8.6% 9.3%
Sony Ericsson 9.6% 9.2% 7.9% 8.2%
Others 15.9% 16.2% 16.5% 16.4%
------------------------------------------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Total 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
========================================== ====== ====== ====== ======
Total Growth YoY 11.5% 12.0% 14.3% 14.5%

Neil Mawston, Director at Strategy Analytics, stated, "Motorola exceeded expectations and held off LG to maintain the third spot in our global vendor rankings during the second quarter of 2008. Motorola's decline in shipments, at minus 21 percent annually, was its slowest rate since Q1 2007. These represent tentative signs of recovery and if Motorola can slash costs and refresh its handset portfolio over the coming months, then a return to profitability in 2009 is possible."

Shipments, and Market Share, Q2 2008 (IDC)

Vendor                 Q2'08     Q2'08      Q2'07       Q2'07   2Q08/2Q07
Shipments Share Shipments Share Growth
========= ===== ========= ===== =====
Nokia 122.0m 39.9% 100.8m 38.0% 21.0%
Samsung 45.7m 14.9% 37.4m 14.1% 22.2%
Motorola 28.1m 9.2% 35.5m 13.4% -20.8%
LG Electronics 27.7m 9.1% 19.1m 7.2% 45.0%
Sony Ericsson 24.4m 8.0% 24.9m 9.4% -2.0%
Others 58.1m 19.0% 47.7m 18.0% 21.8%
------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Total 306.0m 100.0% 265.4m 100.0% 15.3%

Motorola weathered another quarter of challenges, with another top executive leaving the company, no new leader for its Mobile Devices division despite several names being rumored to take the position, and another quarter of operating losses. Still, Motorola recorded a slight increase in shipments from the previous quarter, enough to stay ahead of LG Electronics for the No. 3 spot worldwide. New to the company's portfolio were a series of feature phones, including the ROKR E8, two new MING devices, and several new 3G devices. [IDC] ###

>> Motorola To Announce Numerous New Models Late This Year of Which Half Will Be UMTS

Brad Reese
07/31/2008

networkworld.com

RBC Capital Markets on Motorola's 2008 2nd Quarter Financial Results

According to RBC Capital Markets, after releasing 2008 2nd Quarter financial results, Motorola plans to announce numerous new models late this year of which half will be UMTS.

RBC Capital Markets Managing Director - Mark Sue commented to yours truly:

• "Things are starting to stabilize for the beleaguered wireless company and Motorola shipped 28M mobile devices units suggesting the company maintained global market share at ~9.5%."

• "The stock is cheap, in our view, trading at just 0.4x our CY09E revenues net cash and with Motorola having reached break-even, near term focused investors may drive the shares to our new price target of $10."

• "Revenues during the quarter were $8.1B vs. expectations of $7.5B with better trends from Home & Networks Mobility."

• "Motorola, despite the risks and the costs, is continuing with its planned separation scheduled now for 3Q09."

• "We're not sure what the two separate companies will be called however."

• "In terms of the outlook, Motorola is looking for slightly down sequential Mobile Devices revenues in a product transition quarter with modest share loss; ASPs should be stable at $119."

• "Motorola is guiding to continuing operations profit of $0.00-$0.02 in 3Q08 and $0.06-$0.08 in FY08."

• "The loss on the mobile devices segment narrowed from $347M to $340M with further cost cutting planned."

• "Motorola plans to announce numerous new models late this year of which half will be UMTS."

• "More touch and smartphones are slated for the holidays as well."

• "People are still buying RAZRs and MOT sold 3M units during the quarter and 1M RAZR2s."

• "The W Series hit 12M units while ROKR was 1M."

• "North America was 48% for devices; Latin America was 27%, while Asia Pacific and EMEA remain challenged at 14% and 11% respectively."

• "Home and Networks Mobility revenues were strong at $2.7B and operating margins of 9.1%."

• "Enterprise Mobility Solutions were $2.0B with healthy operating margins of 18.6%."

• "Overall GMs were 28.8% and further mobile devices enhancements may enable gross margins to improve modestly by year end."

• "Overall operating margins were 1.0%; device operating margins narrowed from -10.5% to -10.2%."

• "Global unit growth remains healthy with at least 10% YoY growth endorsed by Nokia, Samsung and now Motorola."

• "And Motorola's channel inventories remain low heading into the back half."

• "Challenges remain and Motorola will soon split off its handset division from the other segments, which are showing stable and cushioning financials."

• "Increased execution risk keeps us at Sector Perform." ###

Motorola Q2 Results (SEC Exhibit: Edgar)

tinyurl.com

Company Highlights from Above

• Second-quarter sales of $8.1 billion

• Second-quarter results exceed expectations

• Positive operating cash flow of $204 million; ended the quarter with a net cash position of $3.6 billion

• Home and Networks Mobility sales growth of 7 percent and operating earnings growth of 28 percent as compared to the second quarter of last year

• Enterprise Mobility Solutions sales growth of 6 percent and operating earnings growth of 24 percent as compared to the second quarter of last year

• Mobile Devices segment sales were $3.3 billion

Mobile Devices highlights:

• Mobile Devices segment sales were $3.3 billion, down 22 percent compared to the year-ago quarter. The segment reported an operating loss of $346 million, compared to an operating loss of $332 million in the year-ago quarter.

• Shipped 28.1 million handsets, and maintained its share of the global handset market [Actually lost share maeginally QoQ]

• Launched ten new products to key markets around the globe, which included new 3G devices and the ROKR E8 that strengthened our music franchise with its innovative, ModeShift™ morphing technology

• Refreshed the highly successful MING series, which has already sold 8 million handsets, by launching three touch screen handsets — MING A1600 and MING A1800, as well as the MOTO A810

• Continued market share leadership in North America, with strong performance from W755

• Continued strength in Latin America, maintaining a leading market position due to the strong performance within our music portfolio

• Earlier this week began shipping the MOTOZINE ZN5, a superior imaging experience developed collaboratively with Kodak, which enables consumers to easily shoot, edit and share their pictures ###

- Eric -



To: slacker711 who wrote (3167)8/4/2008 2:00:10 PM
From: slacker711  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3436
 
Motorola's New Cellphone CEO: No Big Product Changes For A Year (MOT)

alleyinsider.com

Dan Frommer | August 4, 2008 1:00 PM

sanjay-jha.jpgMotorola's shareholders already love Sanjay Jha, the company's new cellphone division CEO: Shares are up 10.4% today to $9.73. So what's his plan to turn around Motorola's troubled gadget business?

Nothing big yet: Three hours into his new job, Jha said on a conference call that his first plans are a 90-day review of the business and hiring deputies to help with areas he's less familiar with.

As far as Motorola's cellphones themselves go, Jha says he might yank some pending projects, but doesn't expect to make major changes to the roadmap until the second half of next year. Few specifics there, either. He notes that Motorola will need to make up for lost share in the 3G market and work on its distribution network, and that it'll keep its newish strategy of using chipsets from multiple sources.

What we do know: Jha has a lot riding on Motorola's success. His base pay -- $1.2 million, with a bonus target "not less than" $2.4 million -- is nothing to sneeze at. But 95% of his compensation package is equity awards, of which 60% are options that'll pay out only if Motorola's stock increases.

LIVE notes:

12:02 Waiting for call to begin. Note Jha's salary -- no less than $1.2 million, plus $2.4 million bonus and lots of stock -- on Motorola's 8-K.

12:04 Call to begin.

12:05 Co-CEO Greg Brown joins. Annoucing Jha's appointment. Effective immediately. Greg will continue to lead home and networks mobility, enterprise mobility businesses. Conducted a robust search process, considered a number of candidates. Sanjay "ideal person" to take it to the next level. "Unmatched technical expertise," strong carrier relationships.

12:07 Sanjay will also help retain and attract talent to help strengthen team. Now have right leader in place.

12:08 Sanjay takes over call. Canned intro: MOT has strong tradition of innovation and design, history... etc. Greg has put solid foundation in place, taken key steps toward enhancing product portfolio. Look forward to building upon changes, solid progress achieved under his leadership.

12:10 Q&A to begin.

12:10 DB: What do you see as near-term tasks in getting division in right direction? Roadmap? Change in strategy? Due diligence: Spent quite a bit of time with Greg, some of the board members. Because of secrecy, wasn't able to meet with much of leadership team, but have worked with them for years and have always have had a broad perspective, has one of the most talented engineering and business teams. Chipset roadmap: Continue the path that Greg put in place, multi-source chipset strategy. Understand QCOM roadmap, and will work with team to decide which is right way forward. Multi-source is right thing. Perspective is going to launching products quickly and effectively. Need to rationalize how much work we do. First 90 days will make some of those decisions.

12:13 BofA: Perspective on carriers, distributors, to get any feedback on how the channel might think of change? Clue us in on restrictions on Sanjay... anything needs to get done for legal hangups? One call with one carrier this morning. As you could imagine, limited time to reach out to carriers. Feedback so far has been positive, working relationship with all the carriers in U.S., Europe, Asia, so anticipating that will hit the ground running, build on relationship that already exists. Normal confidentiality clauses, some concern about being able to hire people from Qualcomm, and can't discuss any confidential agreement, but will be very mindful of some of those issues. Heading to Schaumburg later this evening.

12:15 UBS: Assumption that maybe Sanjay wouldn't lead mobile devices if not properly capitalized. Any color on capital structure? Plans on relocating to Libertyville? GBrown: As we get more involved in separation analysis, have 250 people working on it, preparing to be able to be in a position where separation could occur in Q3 of next year. Sanjay: Family is based in San Diego, working through practicalities, don't think I can give you a timeline, intention is to spend vast majority of time in Chicago.

12:17 Merrill analyst: Want to congratulate you on courage! What are weak parts and strong parts? Outside of hardware and semis, what do you think MOT needs to work on? I think the courage required here is less than you think. Clearly we need to make a decision on software platform strategies very, very quickly, and move forward aggressively. Having whole supply chain being as efficient as possibly can. Whole UI design, form factor design, addressing which market going to focus on. Feature phone market? How do we get distribution to be one of the best? One of our competitors has one of the better distribution channel in the world. Marketing and delivering value prop. to consumers.

12:20 MOT different than QCOM. Challenges different than QCOM. Top 2 or 3 things that have to be changed? How do you expect to go about tackling them? First thing we need to do is make sure that through the year we deliver lots of new products to marketplace. Plans for 25% larger number of new products in 2009. All of them based on multi-source chipset strategy. 3G is going to be very important. Market share we have in 3G is below. Plan is to improve that share. As you think a lot of other things, technology is clearly going to be always important, compelling form factors, carrier relationships, distro channel, going to be very focused on that. Make some strategic hires in area I recognize I don't have experience.

12:22 Are all plans and projects that have been on table going to get reviewed again? I think that as you would recognize that short term things can't really be affected really dramatically. Between here and middle of next year not much opportunity to significantly impact. Can change, but most likely impact toward second half of 2009 and further out.

12:24 UI across devices? MOT still important to have broad portfolio or narrowing focus on specific types of devices, geographies? Change in 2nd half of 2009 is with respect to product roadmap. In next 90 days will move forward and make changes in other aspects. Coming in with some biases: Bias is that keeping broad product portfolio, geo is right idea. But will evaluate over next 90 days. Open to that possibility, but would be surprised. How long have your talks been on with Motorola? Worked closely with Mot for last 4 years, so have pretty good relationship of processes here. Been discussing this probably since somewhere late June. 20th - 25th of June.

12:27 Call ends.