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


To: hpeace who wrote (11404)12/16/1997 3:21:00 AM
From: Kai-Uwe  Respond to of 97611
 
Steve:

Hope you had a good holiday! Great foresight on the puts! Here's some general market info, with more to come...

Also, happy holidays and a successful and peaceful 1998 to you!

K.

SNAPSHOT/December: What In The World Is Going On With the Computer Business?
08:16am EST 15-Dec-97 Bear Stearns (Neff,Andy / Wu,Shaw)

Let's Take A Trip Around The World
It depends on where you look, but we think that computer demand
overall will be fine next year - i.e., grow 15%-20% -- with
continued growth in the U.S. and a pickup in Europe offsetting
the weakness we expect to see in Asia/ Pacific. Let's take a
look at the trends by region (going in descending order according
to share of the world:

U.S. (38% of 1996 global sales): We expect to see continued
strength in the U.S. owing to gains in servers and a possible
pickup in notebooks. We would anticipate continued gains from
consumer in view of lower prices. Compaq, Dell and H-P are
showing the strongest momentum in the U.S.

Europe (24% of sales): As we have noted before, Europe has
underinvested in information technology, resulting in a decline
in worldwide share from 30% in 1994 to 24% in 1996, but there
have been clear signs of an upturn in the second largest market.
To us, it appears that the spending was showing up first in PCs
and networks and moving upstream to PC servers --- and we would
expect to see it spill over into high-end systems next. Compaq
is number one in Europe; IBM, Dell or a "local hero" usually take
the next few positions. We think that Sun's business should also
strengthen here.

Japan (16% of revenues): The Japanese PC market has declined this
year - around 10% or so - owing to a number of factors. These
factors include a VAT tax increase in 1Q97 which led to an
acceleration in spending and a falloff after that; the moratorium
in the aggressive pricing that we saw in 1996; a shift by NEC to
the Wintel standard in 3Q97 which has created some confusion.
However, these factors are diminishing and we are seeing signs of
a pickup - although Japan faces a very tough comparison against
1Q97. NEC and Fujitsu are the major players in this market; the
U.S. vendors have not gained much share. While IBM leads among
U.S. vendors, Compaq is targeting this market in 1998.

Asia/Pacific (11% of sales): We clearly anticipate a slowdown in
demand from these markets, but the rate of growth in Asia/Pacific
had already slowed to around 20% before the currency crises
emerged owing to existing problems in Korea. There are no clear
market share leaders in the region; in many cases, a "local hero"
is the largest player.
Our premise is not to be unconcerned about developments in Asia,
but to highlight that the PC industry has grown 15%-20% over the
past six years in the face of rolling slowdowns in different
parts of the world at various points including the U.S. and
Europe during that period

BRAND NEWS
Computer demand remained strong in November in both
corporate - driven by server and desktop -- and consumer in view
of lower prices.

The Big Four (IBM, Compaq, Dell, H-P) gained share in 3Q97,
gaining 44% compared to 16% for the overall market and 7% for the
rest (excluding those four).

While there is investor anxiety over channel inventory, we
think the larger issue is the gains by Compaq, IBM and H-P in
shrinking their inventory overhang. At the same time, the
indirect vendors are still transitioning to build-to-order
models.

Compaq - with a third of the server market and 19% of the
desktop market -- continued to see strong growth in business and
consumer. H-P also saw continued momentum in both corporate and
consumer. IBM seems on track with gains in business, but has
lagged because of its weakness in consumer. At the same time,
Dell's momentum remained strong with new products and new
services along with leverage on its internet site.

Stock Picks: Who Benefits From Trends
We would continue to focus on those companies that are positioned
to benefit from the major trends discussed here. Our
recommendations include:
PCs: Compaq Computer (CPQ-56), Dell Computer (DELL-88);
and Apple Computer (AAPL-14) (as a turnaround)

Server/Enterprise Hardware: Hewlett Packard (HWP-61); IBM
(IBM-100), and Sun Microsystems (SUNW-36);

Storage: Quantum (QNTM-19);

Semiconductors (PC related): Intel (INTC-70) and Adaptec
(ADPT-36).

Merced Means More Market to Meander In
We realize that we have to get through 1998 to get to the launch
of Merced - the first chip in Intel's 64-bit processor family --
in 1999. (In fact, we still have to get through 1997!)
However, we believe that the computer industry is on the verge of
major restructuring as they get ready for this new chip. From
our perspective, the key is that it will enable Intel and its
customers to address the high end of the computer industry which
today is a $70 billion market (and would translate to around $8-
$10 billion of potential incremental revenues for Intel).
The launch of this chip will break the "glass ceiling" for Intel
chips (and for their OEMs) at the workstation level and put the
whole Enterprise up for grabs, which would be a major positive
development for Compaq and Dell in particular.

Disk Drives: Waiting For the Consolidation
There are too many disk drive companies making too many disk
drives. We need to see real structural change in the industry
which will mean that certain vendors will exit.

However, we would not expect to see that occur in the March
quarter because most of the players are watching each other
waiting for the other to pull back.

We're not giving up entirely yet: we still have Quantum rated as
a Buy, since the disk drive business is more like its night job -
- it makes its money in the DLT (digital linear tape) business,
which accounts for all of its profits today and almost 80% next
year.

Why Demand Should Remain Strong
In the near-term, we believe that the conditions remain ripe for
continued unit growth in all ends of the industry owing to
several factors:

These factors include (1) new Intel product cycles in desktop,
consumer, server, and notebook product lines, (2) elasticity from
lower prices and better price/ performance for microprocessors,
disk drives, and DRAMs and (3) demand from the business segment
to build powerful "industrial strength" networks. We also expect
two major operating system upgrades: Windows98 in 2Q98 and
Windows NT 5.0 in late 1998 to help drive demand.

Ten Factors Driving Demand Into 1998
Here are the major factors that we believe will lead to 15%-20%
unit growth in 1997 and 1998:
1. Operating system upgrade cycles
2. MMX technology on Pentium and Pentium II
3. Replacement demand
4. Intranets/Internet
5. Portable computers
6. Workstations
7. 100 Mb Ethernet, 56 Kb Technology/ more bandwidth
8. Convergence products: DVD, digital cameras, video
conferencing
9. Systems integration, outsourcing
10. Europe: signs of a turn

Long-Term Growth Should Continue: The Electronic Enterprise
From a macro perspective, we believe that unit demand for
computers may be stronger than expected over the next 5-10 years
because replacement cycles and the growth of the installed base
should spur demand as the application of Moore's law results in
computers that are faster, smaller, cheaper, more powerful and
easier to use.

As we have noted before, we believe that many analysts view that
the computer industry is on the verge of "saturation" because
they compare it to the TV or VCR. These comparisons are not
valid in our view because of the completely distinct dynamics of
the computer business.

The functionality of a TV or VCR has not changed significantly in
the last 10 years. A computer -- in contrast -- is constantly
evolving and becomes "obsolete" within a few months because of
the constant gains in semiconductor process technology along with
advances in software and communications.

Key points to remember:
1. 97% of people in the world do not have a computer.
2. 20%-35% of PCs have to be replaced each year.

Five Important Trends For Long-Term Demand
1. Merging of computing and communications
2. IT spending as a tool to increase competitiveness and spur
productivity
3. Bottleneck elimination: any gain leads to new needs to
upgrade other hardware
4. Advances in semiconductor process technology along the lines
of Moore's law
5. Obsolescence and replacement demand stimulate increasingly
large waves of demand



To: hpeace who wrote (11404)12/16/1997 3:23:00 AM
From: Kai-Uwe  Respond to of 97611
 
More info... This is the Cowen post (which I trust a lot more than
the other garbage that's out there).

K.

CPQ: OUTLOOK REMAINS POSITIVE POST VISIT; REITERATE STRONG BUY
08:43am EST 15-Dec-97 Cowen & Co. (CHU, RICHARD)

====================================================================
Quarterly EPS
EPS Rev CYPE Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4
F96 1.71A 0.32 0.30 0.48 0.63
F97E 2.70 no 20.7X 0.53A 0.60A 0.71A 0.85
F98E 3.50 16X 0.70 0.80 0.90 1.10
F99E 4.35 12.8X
==========================================================================

Key Points:

1. Confident on Q4 ests; apt reserve conservatively going into Q1.

2. Good progress on ODM deployment.

3. Maintain 98-99 estimates predicated on +24%/+23% revenue growth, which
have upside.

Bottom line - The global PC business will continue to consolidate and CPQ
will be a major driver and beneficiary of this consolidation. Recent
nervousness over the short-term picture presents a compelling entry
opportunity since we expect 25%/annum EPS growth over the next several
years; return to recent highs would drive 35% upside near term.

1. Tone of business remains strong; especially in for enterprise
commercial NT sector; Q4 look solid -- With less than 3 weeks to go in Q4,
we emerged from our visit to CPQ last Friday feeling very confident that it
is in strong shape to meet/exceed consensus Q4 EPS expectations. We
continue to look for Q4 revenue of $7.68B (+29% Y/Y) and EPS of $0.85,
these assuming combined gross margin of 26.8%, down fractionally from the
27.4% GM posted in Q3.

* Actual Q4 P&L is likely to depend on conservatively management
positions it self, i.e., how aggressively cushions and reserves going into
the new year, given the prevailing macro uncertainties in Asia and in view
of the usually seasonally weaker Q1. Specifically, we expect that
reserves in the form of larger than normal revenue-contra item deductions
could be taken along several fronts: a) receivables reserves, to cover
potential credit problems with Asian intermediaries, and b) the usual
contra items covering promotional allowances.

* In the meantime, all else being equal, CPQ should benefit from lower
component prices; we gather that ASP's in Q4 appear to be flattening out
(attributable primarily to mix - with the sub $1000 PCs evidently a bigger
factor in the back-to-school market than for the Christmas season). Our
most recent model has been predicated on unit growth of 58% and revenue
growth of 33% (33% for CPQ only, 29% for CPQ+TDM) --- we think this spread
could be perhaps 5-10% points narrower with an ASP erosion in Q4 of more
like 10% Y/Y rather than 15%.

2. Compaq continues to see strong global demand: Demand is strong in the
US, recovering robustly in Europe, and good in Latin America (Mexico and
rest of LA very solid, except for Brazil weak); there are no surprises in
Asia (8-9% of sales) although management is cognizant of potential risks in
the region. In addition, it is fully hedged on currencies in Asia near-
term, and expects hedge profits to exceed translation losses.

3. Inventories on track to hit 15X in Q4; channel stocks should decline
from Q3, how much remains to be seen -- Compaq asserts it is on track to
deliver a 15X internal inventory turn at year-end, up from 10-12X at mid
year. It continues to target an improvement to the 25X by the end of 1998
and 30x in 1999 as the ODM model is deployed more fully. Exiting Q3,
channel inventories were 5-6 weeks; we expect these levels to decline
sequentially by the end of December; how much obviously remains dependent
on the level of sales-out over the remaining weeks, although it seems
unlikely (though we don't rule out) that channel stocks get down to the 2-
3 week level hoped for earlier in the year by management. So-called "buy-
ins" with the channels have been at normal levels and have been restricted
to non-BTO options products (memories, monitors) accompanying either
product phase-outs/transitions or other build-to-forecast variances.
Compaq's CFO categorically denied that buy-ins on CPU desktops/CPU products
have occurred. In the meantime, while portables continue to be a relative
point of under performance with aggressive pricing pressures continuing
from Toshiba, Compaq has successfully reduced internal inventories of
portables (predominantly, not yet on BTO) to less than 8 days, compared
with dramatically higher levels earlier in the year.

4. Big commercial enterprise NT backlog needs to be met -- Since the ODM
(Optimized Distribution) Model is still in a roll-up phase, we would not be
look at a more modest reduction in channel stocks as disconcerting.
European commercial products are now 100% on BTO and the US is approaching
the same, pending the cutover of Portables. CTO operations in Houston
(along with 4 other global configuration sites including Australia) are now
up and running, although the volume levels that we saw were still nominal,
dealing primarily with small volume web-generated orders. Management
indicates that enterprise demand for commercial NT installations (both
server and client) has been extremely strong going into the calendar year-
end and that the commercial sales-out picture at year-end appears to be in
part constraint by the ability of the channel to meet this backlog with
trained NT support/installation people.

5. Maintaining 1998-99 P&L thinking - Fundamentally, we continue to
believe that CPQ is strongly poised to benefit from global consolidation of
the PC business, even as it drives its aspirations into the enterprise
markets. We have previously outlined 1998-99 EPS projections of
respectively $3.50 and $4.15, predicated on revenue growth to $31B and $38B
and operating margins of 12.6% and 12.9% as the enterprise business mix
richens and as Compaq derives increased benefits from its reengineered ODM
model.



To: hpeace who wrote (11404)12/16/1997 3:24:00 AM
From: Kai-Uwe  Respond to of 97611
 
And finally the Robertson Stephens snippet...

K.

Overview on PC and Semiconductor Memory Coverage Given Slowing PC Demand
09:14am EST 15-Dec-97 BancAmerica ROBERTSON STEPHENS (Niles, Daniel)

Lowering Ratings on Compaq, Dell, Intel, Micron Technology & Texas Instruments
Maintain Ratings on Micron Electronics, Cypress and Rambus

KEY POINTS:

Compaq (LTA), Micron Electronics (LTA) & Dell (MP)
We are officially lowering the ratings Compaq from Buy to Long-Term Attractive
and Dell from Long-Term Attractive to Market Performer but maintain our Micron
Electronics Rating of Long-Term Attractive. We believe that deceleration of PC
growth rates into 1998 and the lack of visibility especially entering the March
quarter is going to make this an especially tough sector to make money in until
the second half of 1998 when Microsoft introduces NT5.0 in Q3:98. Although the
introduction of Win98 looks like it may be in Q1 instead of Q2, we do not
believe that this will provide enough of a boost to the PC sector given its
evolutionary nature. Although rapidly declining component costs should provide
a benefit to the near-term margins (much like in 1996), we believe that rapidly
slowing PC demand for the industry may bring the price competition seen only so
far in the portable PC sector to the desktop for Compaq and Dell in 1998. We
lowered our worldwide PC unit forecasts for 1998 from 18% to 15% on December
9th and believe now that this is probably at the high end of a 13-15% range.
The good news is that in terms of revenue exposure to Asia Pacific and Japan,
Compaq is at 9%, Dell is at 6% and Micron is at less than 5%. However, we
believe that the US will also see a slowing of domestic growth as US exports
begin to slow since of the approximately $1 trillion in US exports, $200
billion goes to Southeast Asia.

Investment Conclusion: We continue to believe that Compaq and Dell will gain
market share in 1998 and that our earnings are probably accurate for 1998 and
even a little low for Q4:1997 due to better margins. However, we also believe
that the upside to a $4.00 EPS for both companies that most of us thought was
possible as late as October is gone and that the multiple that investors are
willing to pay will likely decline along with growth rates. We believe
downside risk is at least 20% for Compaq to $45 (13x CY98 EPS of $3.35) and 30%
for Dell to $60 (18x CY98 EPS of $3.40). We maintain our Long-Term Attractive
rating on Micron Electronics due to its attractive price to sales ratio of 0.5x
versus an industry average of 1.5x including a troubled Gateway at 0.8x.
Current industry trends will probably make recovery from recently problems more
difficult however.

Intel (LTA)
We are officially lowering the rating on Intel from Buy to Long-Term
Attractive. On the positive side: 1) they continue to distance themselves from
AMD on the high end, and 2) their cost reductions as they transition to 0.25u
is happening faster than expected. Unfortunately, a reduction in overall PC
demand will affect them more directly than anyone else given 90% microprocessor
market share. Compaq and Dell can gain share while we believe Intel cannot.
Normal seasonality over the last 3 years has resulted in Q1 North America PC
unit demand being down 12% sequentially (40% market share) while Japanese unit
demand (10% market share) has acted as an offset increasing 21% sequentially
due to the end of their fiscal year end. Given that the Japanese economy seems
to be reentering a recession, this will probably not occur in the upcoming
March quarter. Potential tax breaks may reignite the economy but increased
competitiveness by the Koreans given the currency declines of the Won versus
the Yen will probably mitigate this effect. Potential processor price cuts may
have to be more severe than expected to spur PC demand and to fend off more
competition at the sub $1,000 price point by AMD, Cyrix and Centaur.

Investment Conclusion: We believe that slowing PC unit growth will result in
slowing processor growth and revenue growth from Intel. We believe that even
our recently reduced estimates may turn out to be high including our Q4:97 EPS
estimate of $0.89. Using a trailing sales figure given our lack of forward
visibility, we believe downside risk is 20% to $55 or 4x trailing sales.

Texas Instruments (LTA) and Micron (MP)
We are officially lowering the ratings on Texas Instruments to Long-Term
Attractive and Micron Technology from Buy to Market Performer. We started to
become more cautious on these stocks earlier in the quarter as we reduced
estimates but kept our Buy rating given the potential for a collapse in one of
the big 3 Korean memory vendors, especially Hyundai given the relationship with
the now bankrupt Halla Group. Given the recent IMF bailout of Korea, we are
increasingly pessimistic that there is the potential for a collapse and a
dramatic reduction in memory capacity anytime soon. In addition, the near 70%
increase in the Won from about 1000 in mid November to about 1700 today will
probably continue to pressure memory prices which are denominated in dollars.
The Koreans have in effect seen nearly a 30% DRAM price increase in Won over
the last month Although dollar denominated pricing has declined about 25%. In
addition, both companies are further behind in their conversion to 64 Meg
product relative to their Asian counterparts. As a result they are not able to
benefit from the price difference of $20 for a 64 Meg device versus below $3
for a 16 Meg. Additionally, Texas Instruments has the potential of slower
near-term growth in their DSP business due to 1) a prolongment of over capacity
issues in the mass storage end market due to the slowdown in PC growth, 2)
slower wireless end market growth given that 40% of subscriber growth next year
was projected to be powered by Asia, and 3) excess inventory in the networking
industry entering 1998.

Investment Conclusion: On Micron we see 25% downside risk to a stock price of
$17 based on a trailing price to sales multiple of 1.0x which was the bottom
during the last cycle in 1996. On Texas Instruments, we feel that the DSP
business will be the fastest growing sector in the semiconductor industry over
the next ten years and as a result its valuation should have good support at
current levels with a downside risk of only 15% to 1.5x sales or approximately
$35. The ratings change is due more to the uncertainty surrounding the DRAM
business and that the stock probably wont be able to appreciate in the near-
term with that cloud overhead.

Cypress (Buy)
We are actually very interested in the stock at current levels and therefore
maintain our Buy Rating. We thought we would comment of Cypress given their
exposure to the memory market through their SRAM business. We believe that
there is virtually no stock price risk given a valuation of 1.6x price to
trailing sales, which was the bottom in 1996 and twice in 1990. This a great
stock for value oriented investors at these levels given that all three times
the stock appreciated to over 2.3x trailing sales (the 10 year mean) in the
following 12 months. Near-term fundamentals may be difficult but the stock
reflects this and is probably a good trade from these levels. For those with
long memories, you may recall that the trailing price-to-sales ratio did reach
1.1x in 1992 but this included problems with a since sold microprocessor
subsidiary called Ross in addition to problems with SRAMs.

Rambus (LTA)
We maintain our Long-Term Attractive rating based on continuing progress in the
development of Direct RDRAM. Rambus continues to progress along the path of
becoming the main memory PC standard in 1999. Rambus has now 13 of the top 13
DRAM manufacturers as licensees. In addition, Intel has working prototype
silicon of the Direct Rambus chipset and performance seems to be quite good at
about 1 GHz versus initial expectations of closer to 800 MHz. Despite many
press releases by would be competitors, there is yet no working silicon
alternative to the Rambus standard. The only risk currently is to royalty
revenues in early 1998 if the pricing on Rambus DRAMs decrease more quickly
given the pricing of standard DRAMs. We believe that the current rating is
appropriate given the valuation and that the upside to our estimates occurs
only in 1999 as Rambus DRAMs start to be used in PC main memory. The stock
price will most likely fluctuate in its usual broad range in the meantime.