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To: Mang Cheng who wrote (14327)3/6/1998 7:53:00 PM
From: jim bender  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 45548
 
Compaq issues warning

PC maker joins the growing list of high
tech firms to warn about 1Q

March 6, 1998: 6:53 p.m. ET

Intel issues
profit warning
- March 4,
1998

PC makers
hold heads
high - March
5, 1998

Intel

Compaq

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - Compaq
Computer Corp. Friday became the latest
high tech bellwether to warn about first
quarter profits, telling investors it now
expects results to be roughly break-even on
relatively flat sales.
The announcement, delivered after the
end of New York Stock Exchange trading,
marked the third time in three days a
major technology company warned it
would fall short of expectations.

PC business headed for a slowdown?

Industry analysts said Compaq's
warning, coming on the heels of similar
statements from Intel Corp. and Motorola
Inc. earlier this year, provides strong
evidence that the worldwide computer
industry, one of the engines of economic
growth, is facing fundamentally lower
demand.
"There is real trouble in the sector," said
John Rossi, managing director at
investment bank BancAmerica Robertson
Stephens. "We're looking at a pretty tepid
market this year."
Demand from Asia has collapsed amid
the region's economic troubles, corporate
buyers are putting off purchases until
Microsoft Corp. releases a new operating
system late this year, and corporate
technology departments are throwing all
their money at fixing their Year 2000
glitches, Rossi said.
That caught Compaq by surprise, which
had dropped prices and pushed lots of PCs
to resellers and distributors late in the year.
But the resellers are still burning off old
inventory and are not buying any more.

Compaq shares drop in after hours trade

In after-hours trade, Compaq fell 2-3/8
to 25-1/4 while International Business
Machines Corp. dropped 1-5/8 to 96-1/2
and Dell Computer Corp. tumbled 6 to
132-1/2. Dell's quote is before a 2-for-1
stock split that is slated to take effect on
Monday.
Compaq, the world's largest supplier of
personal computers, had been expected to
post a profit of 35 cents a share for the
quarter, according to First Call.
Earl Mason, Compaq's senior vice
president and chief financial officer, said
the shortfall was primarily associated with
the North American commercial market,
where Compaq plans additional price cuts
to meet very competitive conditions.
"We looked closely at our market and
business plan once it became clear that
sales out of our North American
commercial channels were not meeting our
expectations," said Eckhard Pfeiffer,
Compaq's president and chief executive
officer. "We are putting in place price
reductions and aggressive promotions in
the first and second quarter to reduce these
channel inventories and accelerate the
implementation of our Optimized
Distribution Model."

Compaq trying to be more like Dell

Compaq has been struggling to reduce its
inventory levels to better compete with
more nimble rivals like Dell Computer
Corp. (DELL) and Gateway 2000 Inc.
(GTW). Industry estimates put Compaq's
inventory levels at around six weeks of
sales. Compaq has been trying to cut that
in half to three weeks through its
Optimized Distribution Model (ODM)
program.
"With these actions, we are attempting
to achieve channel inventories that
support ODM by the end of the second
quarter," said Pfeiffer. "Our outlook for the
second quarter is cautious as we continue to
assess the North American commercial
market environment."
Earlier this week Compaq announced
price cuts on its Armada notebook
computers.
On Wednesday, chip giant Intel Corp.
(INTC) stunned investors by warning its
first quarter sales would be about $5.85
billion, or about 10 percent below the
fourth quarter's level. The bombshell
sparked a sharp decline in Intel's stock
price and other tech stocks as well.

Motorola feeling the pinch in Asia

On Thursday, Motorola said
first-quarter profits will fall well below
expectations because of economic turmoil
in Asia. The company elaborated on its
forecast Friday, telling analysts
first-quarter earnings will be at least 25
percent lower than Wall Street had
expected.
Prior to Thursday evening's
announcement, analysts had a consensus
estimate for Motorola of 47 cents a share
for the current quarter, ending March 31,
compared with 53 cents in the year-earlier
period. But analysts were guided lower by
company officials during a conference call
Friday morning.
Compaq reported a profit of $387
million or 27 cents a share in the year-ago
quarter on sales of $4.8 billion.
-- by staff and wires

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To: Mang Cheng who wrote (14327)3/7/1998 3:53:00 PM
From: Wigglesworth  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 45548
 
Sweaty Palms

zdnet.com