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To: Jimbo Cobb who wrote (24877)4/23/1998 6:18:00 PM
From: robbie  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
Notes from today's meeting from the Yahoo CPQ thread:

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Notes from the annual meeting hobiecat_97
Apr 23 1998
3:10PM EDT

Yes, I attended the annual meeting. I only live about 12 miles
from CPQs headquarters so I took in the event. I own quite a
few stocks but this is the first annual meeting Ive ever attended. It was defintely worth my time. I'll include some
notes on what interested me and will be happy to answer questions
to the best of my ability. I might add that I missed the first
few minutes. It was very crowded and I add trouble finding a
seat. Now for the good stuff: Management reported that they
have 7 billion cash on had. This compares to 6.76 billion
in 97 4.08 billion in 96 only 863 million in 95 and 586 million
in 94. They are spending 100 million for our dividends. Digital
will cost 4.8 billion. They announced the stock repurchase
aggreement for up to 100 million shares with a final cost unknown
I think they said that this is only the 2nd time they have
had a repurchase but I could be wrong about that. They did
say that the last time they bought stock it cost them an average
of only 2 dollars a share adjusted for all the splits since
then. They implied that they thought buying the stock was a
good deal at this time.
Regarding inventories and the new channel model: They
stated that inventories were reduced the first quarter but
they still had work to do in this area. They implied or actually
stated (Im not sure which) that the 2nd quarters EPS would
be still impacted by the ongoing inventory reduction. I believe
Eckhard stated they had reduced inventories by 300 million.
I was surprised to learn that the first quarters consumer
markets in North America were very strong. Up 82% on unit basis
up 42% on revenues with a gross margin of 45%.
Overall sales were up 23% Unit growth 43%. North America
up 26% overall. Europe up 22% but 33% in local currency.
Asia pacific up 5% flat in the fourth quarter (I guess these
figures are for all of 97). Latin America up 44% and Japan up
3%. Now most of their sales are in NA and Europe. They really
just have a small Asian prescene relatively speaking.
Regarding the question and answer session: Most of the
questions were disappointing in their relevance. Some of them
were angry, challenging or rude in nature. Yes, the stock is
down temporarily but its about 75% higher than this time last
year. What do people expect? For example someone asked why
CPQ spent 5 million to have the Houston Rockets stadium
named the Compaq center. The answer is to advertise the Compaq
name to end users. Another very angry black minister raged
about the lack of an African-American on the board. Management
stated that they tried to represent the best interests of
the stockholders in selecting board members. Several people
just told Eckhard how angry they were about the stock price.
One good questioner asked why they couldnt duplicate Dell
and achieve its more favorable pe. Eckhard stated that they
couldn't just abandon their distribution model and end business
relationships that they have had for years that this would wreck
the company. I also gathered that they feel Dell will eventually
be trapped by their model and that the recent Acquistion of
Tandem and Digital are designed to make CPQ a full service
company.
Overall I left the meeting feeling real positive about
my investment. I think they have temporarily been hammered
down by the costs of the change to their new inventory readjustment and the acquistion of Digital and Tandems. I think
the next quarter or twos eps will disappoint but then I think
were taking the elevator up. It seems like now is the time
to buy while the stock is depressed
Hope this helped.
ÿ
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To: Jimbo Cobb who wrote (24877)4/23/1998 10:53:00 PM
From: Night Writer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
Mark,
What do you think of this? "European style" expiration sounds a little tough to me.
NW
Subj: Amex To Launch Options Trading On The Computer Hardware...
Date: 98-04-23 11:27:19 EDT

Amex To Launch Options Trading On The Computer Hardware Index

-- New Investment Tool Offers Tailored Exposure to Computer Hardware Stocks --

NEW YORK, April 23 /PRNewswire/ -- The American Stock Exchange today announced it will trade options on The Computer Hardware Index beginning Monday, April 27. Listed under the ticker symbol HWI, the new equity index is comprised of ten actively-traded companies involved in designing and manufacturing computer hardware, including desktop PCs, workstations and client/server systems.

"Options on The Computer Hardware Index provide individual and institutional investors with tailored exposure to a sub-sector of technology that has grown increasingly competitive," said Joseph B. Stefanelli, executive vice president for derivative securities at the Amex. "HWI focuses on a basket of stocks that are household names in technology and among the most liquid stocks in the world."

The Computer Hardware Index consists of the following ten stocks:

(AAPL) Apple Computer, Inc. (IBM) International Business Machines, Corp.

(CPQ) Compaq Computer, Corp. (MUEI)Micron Electronics, Inc.

(DELL) Dell Computer Corp. (SGI) Silicon Graphics, Inc.

(DEC) Digital Equipment Corp.(SRA) Stratus Computer, Inc.

(GTW) Gateway 2000, Inc. (SUNW)Sun Microsystems, Inc.

The specialist unit for HWI options will be Susquehanna Investment Group.

The Computer Hardware Index is "equal-dollar weighted" to ensure that each of its component securities is represented in approximate equal dollar value. Adjustments to the index are made quarterly in order to ensure that each component stock continues to represent approximate equal market value. HWI options feature "European style" expiration and cash settlement, meaning that options may be exercised only on the last business day prior to expiration.

The Amex trades options on 29 broad-based and sector indexes and 924 stocks -- including 408 over-the-counter stocks and 92 American Depositary Receipts (ADRs)-- and 108 Long-term Equity AnticiPation Securities(R) (LEAPS(R)). In addition, the Amex is a leader in listing warrants on foreign currencies and indexes as well as hybrid instruments and other structured products.

Visit Amex. web site located at amex.com

SOURCE American Stock Exchange

CO: Computer Hardware Index

ST: New York

IN: CPR

SU:

04/23/98 11:22 EDT prnewswire.com