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Technology Stocks : Nimbus CD International -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Carmine Cammarosano who wrote (1518)5/14/1998 10:43:00 AM
From: Jim Fraser  Respond to of 1673
 
Carmine,

This is a GROWTH stock play. In order to grow, they have to invest to handle the expanding DVD and DVD-ROM business. If Nimbus waits to make money with DVD before it expands further it will be so far behind it will never be a significant player. As you know DVD-ROM is just off the ground, no one has made big bucks in DVD ROM (or DVD) yet, it is too premature. The good news is that DVD-ROM will dwarf the DVD movie business. ( 7 million DVD-ROM drives by the end of the year vs. 1 million DVD players) Nimbus must expand its capacity worldwide (even more than it already has) to meet this up coming demand. They will make money when DVD goes main stream (this means when you own one) as most belive it will. I am pleased to see this kind of investment and hope they continue to pursue additional capacity as the DVD industry takes hold.



To: Carmine Cammarosano who wrote (1518)5/14/1998 10:51:00 AM
From: Don Dorsey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1673
 
A more important question to me is if NMBS doesn't invest in DVD will they be in business in 5 years? DVD will cannibalize much of the CD market. Without DVD NMBS is a buggy whip company.

As far as if NMBS is making money from DVD now, it is a small but rapidly growing segment of their business. This news is from December.

Following the DJ news, NMBS's EPS is being increased from .$65 to $.85 according to one analyst. This is mainly due to underestimation of the DVD demand. DVD picking up steam!

Nimbus CD, Analysts Say Early DVD Sales Are Better Than Expected

12/09/97
Dow Jones Online News
(Copyright (c) 1997, Dow Jones & Company, Inc.)

RICHMOND, Va. -(Dow Jones)- Nimbus CD International Inc. and industry analysts
Tuesday said early sales of digital versatile disc, or DVD , players and titles are well
above earlier estimates.

That's good news for Nimbus, which took a gamble on DVD at a time when many
were holding back because of uncertainty about the new technology's potential.

According to a research report from Davenport & Co., the Charlottesville, Va.-based
maker of audio compact discs, CD-ROMs and DVDs is poised for strong growth in
what the brokerage firm says is the next hot consumer product.

Nimbus Chief Financial Officer Steven Minkel said the company now estimates total
DVD sales by year's end of 600,000 units - compared with an estimate last summer of
400,000. And the number of titles available on DVD at year end will be 750, he said,
compared with an estimate last summer of 500.

Kenneth Gassman Jr., a retail analyst at Davenport, said the high-end consumer
electronics retailers he has surveyed describe DVD as their "single strongest product
category." "It's really amazing," he said. " DVD player and disc sales are exceeding
everyone's expectations. The players are easily outselling VCRs and the software is
selling well also."

Gassman added that while the strong numbers early in the Christmas shopping season
are impressive, this isn't DVD 's breakout year. "Next year will be," he predicted.

Minkel agreed. "The bigger question is what will happen next year," he said. "While
these numbers are impressive, and we think they're a sign of things to come, next year
will be when we'll see the big sales growth."

N. Douglas Adams, a Davenport analyst who specifically follows Nimbus, said in a
new research paper that DVD 's "technology rollout should begin in earnest in 1998
and last for several years. Combined with an established and well-run manufacturing
capability in compact discs (CDs), Nimbus's strategic positioning for the DVD
revolution appears to be excellent."

Fiscal 1998, which will end March 31, should be a record year for Nimbus, with 50%
earnings growth, he said. The company posted fiscal 1997 earnings - before a charge -
of $12.9 million, or 56 cents a share.

Adams attributed the projected earnings growth to efficiencies gained from
consolidating manufacturing operations earlier this year as well as to modest but
improved DVD sales.

The only speed bump he sees is DIVX, a nonstandard derivative of DVD set to be
available starting early in 1998. One attraction of the technology is that its serialized
discs and special player allow for pay-per-use discs. While that could help the rental
industry, it could cause problems for DVD .

"Market uncertainty created by the introduction of this product could slow early
consumer acceptance of DVD ," Adams said.

Today DVD is but a small part of Nimbus's operations. According to Financial Chief
Minkel, 65% of the company's output is CD-ROMs, 33% audio CDs and just 1% or
2% DVDs.

But Minkel said he sees "both the pie and DVD 's share of the pie growing over the
next year." Still, despite that - and despite the strong early sales of DVD players and
discs - the company isn't prepared to issue any projections as to how they might affect
Nimbus's near-term earnings, he said.

Minkel said Wall Street still has a lot of DVD skeptics.

"A lot of people are worried that DVD might be the next laserdisc," he said.
Those investors are a little behind the curve, he added: They don't recognize
that DVD is a technology that's starting to take root and receive wide - albeit
early - consumer acceptance.

Copyright (c) 1997 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

All Rights Reserved.