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Technology Stocks : Intel Corporation (INTC) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ian Davidson who wrote (45602)1/15/1998 12:37:00 AM
From: Paul Engel  Respond to of 186894
 
Ian - Re: "But sadly enough, in hindsight, you were bang-on the mark."

Thanks for reminding me! I'd completely forgotten that post. I must try and dig it up!

Paul



To: Ian Davidson who wrote (45602)1/15/1998 12:43:00 AM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
Ian - Here is that "prediction" I made a few weeks ago about Intel's Earnings and Analysts' Reactions"

(Note - this was originally posted in late December, 1997)

Pancho Villa - Re: "...what is your opinion on the likelihood INTC may see
$65"

This will depend on Intel's Q497 earnings report and subsequent
"guidance".

The obvious applies here - missing their "estimates" by more than 3 or 4%
will signal to the analyst community that Intel is headed for immediate
bankruptcy, that every computer sold from here to eternity will now be priced
at less than $999, not including a 25 cent mail in coupon from AMD/Intel.

On the other hand, if Intel hits their estimate, the analyst community will
report that Intel's ability to exceed forecasts has evaporated and that Intel is
heading for immediate bankruptcy.

Now, on the off-chance that Intel EXCEEDS their forecast, the analyst
community will attribute this to a one-time event due to a temporary yield
glitch at AMD (which has subsequently been corrected) and that Intel's sales
will henceforth nosedive in the face of REAL competition from AMD and
Intel will be headed for immedaite bankruptcy.

If Intel says that S.E. Asia may cause some uncertainty in the near future,
analysts will attribute that to mean that ALL of Intel's CPUs are sold in S.E.
Asia, that sales will subsequently be headed to near zero, and that Intel will
be headed for immediate bankruptcy.

On the other hand, if Intel states that S.E. Asia doesn't appear to be a
significant problem, analysts will accuse Intel of a concerted cover-up,
attrubute Intel to be overly dependent on the higher-priced non-existant
business PC sales, re-iterate that all PCs will sell for less than $999 and that
Intel has no future and that the $1+ Billion dollars they earn is irrelevant since
"AMD's losses in Q497 will probably be less than anticipated and AMD is
on track to significantly increase market share at the expense of Intel in
1998 ".

So, the likelihood of Intel's stock hitting $65 is quite good, no matter what
happens in the next few weeks.