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Technology Stocks : 3DFX -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: andrew r. chung who wrote (2901)5/3/1998 10:40:00 PM
From: Jeff Geiser  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 16960
 
From Motley Fool -- fool.com

Apologize if this was posted previously.. offers some insight into 3DFX slide.. fool.com

I will be watching from the sidelines, but believe that this stock may have "turnaround" written all over it..

May 1, 1998
"The other "story of the week" involves 3Dfx Interactive (Nasdaq: TDFX). The stock declined another three dollars this week on top of a six dollar decline the week before -- after reporting excellent earnings.

We've offered several possible explanations for the decline, but one likely set of reasoning comes from a market "insider" who sent us an email following Wednesday's Fool column. The reasoning is as follows:

3Dfx recently did a secondary offering in which the underwriters were Robertson Stephens, UBS, and Montgomery Securities. Stephens is on the block to be sold, though, meaning that many employees are looking for jobs elsewhere, and the semiconductor analyst at this company was one of the largest proponents of 3Dfx. That support is currently gone, it is thought. Next, UBS Securities is basically out of the picture due to a merger and the fact that the analyst covering 3Dfx there left for DLJ Securities. He was the second largest proponent of 3Dfx, but he's no longer in that position.

That leaves Montgomery Securities, but the 3Dfx analyst there doesn't support the stock with any serious conviction. Finally, the email that we received states, "A block of [3Dfx] stock recently came through a market maker and the instructions were to sell it with no limit. The sales drove the stock down quickly. Everyone knows that at this time there is no large house supporting the stock. That plus the imbalance of the restricted stock is causing this."

If the above does indeed represent the bulk of the explanation for the stock's decline, then it has nothing to do with the company's fundamentals and this should hopefully be a short-term blip. This might say something about the company's ability to find good uderwriters, though. What 3Dfx needs to do now is hit the road and kiss some XXX [Foolishly censored by the author] to get more investment house coverage for its stock. Arguably the stock deserves attention for what the company has accomplished. At $23 per share, 3Dfx is trading at 12 times earnings estimates while the company has grown net income (not to mention sales!) several hundred-fold each of the past three quarters.

Is this quick slide in the stock a non-event? Obviously not. It's a big event. But apparently it doesn't involve 3Dfx's business -- just the politics behind the stock. So hopefully this will, in time, be a non-event. In the meantime, this is another take on what has been an intriguing slide. At some point we'll hopefully know for certain what is behind it. "


See ya,

Geiser



To: andrew r. chung who wrote (2901)5/3/1998 10:45:00 PM
From: Andrew Fenic  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 16960
 
"read a 3D issue"?

Is that a gaming magazine? What criteria were they comparing against? The VooDoo 2 is exclusively a gaming card. It is not intended for windowed general purpose 3D applications.

My guess is the idiot publication you cite was looking at cards for general purpose 3D. Obviously VooDoo 2 isn't the choice there; Banshee might be. We'll see.

PS: Every gaming magazine raves about VooDoo2.

Andy