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Strategies & Market Trends : Sonki's Links List -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ANANT who wrote (129)6/6/1998 7:11:00 PM
From: Sonki  Read Replies (8) | Respond to of 395
 
news.com

must read : re sunw etc. also has side links on what to expect
on Monday intel ftc

thx. for article on health.

My son said that Probems w. robots doing surgery is that u can't sue robots.

pls. read my article re: ibm servers on this link.
Message 4753364
===============================================================
incase the other link disappears ... here is the story for the above link.
Sun rises beyond slump
By Jeff Pelline
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
June 5, 1998, 4:00 a.m. PT

special report The Sun also rises--Sun
Microsystems, that is.

Two months ago, the company was in a slump on
Wall Street. Analysts questioned the effectiveness
of its Java strategy, the viability of network
computers was in doubt, and competitors such as
Hewlett-Packard were threatening Sun in the server
business. Wall Street also was worried about the
impact of the Asian economic slump on Sun's
business.

These concerns still exist, but the company is
enjoying a resurgence in the stock market. Sun
shares now are trading higher, and
many analysts are upgrading their
recommendations on the stock,
which is being buoyed by positive
response to a corporate
reorganization, sales growth of
Sun's high-end products, and the
delay of Intel's Merced processor.

"Apart from Asia, the result of Sun's momentum
seems very much intact," said Laura Conigliaro, an
industry analyst for Goldman Sachs. "It continues to
plod ahead in key markets, where it still is the
company to catch."

Added C.B. Lee, an analyst with Sutro & Co.: "Sun
has been doing well. They have moved beyond being
just a Unix box vendor. Now you find Sears, Home
Depot, Federal Express, even Safeway, using Sun
products. These are not engineering-driven
companies."

Sun got a psychological boost last month when the
U.S. Department of Justice and 20 state attorneys
general filed suit against
Microsoft, alleging monopolist
practices. Sun, which had helped
lead the campaign against the
software giant, applauded the legal action, saying:
"Microsoft could use its monopoly over the gateway
to the digital economy--the PC--to stifle competition
and innovation in sectors like telecommunications
and TV broadcasting."

Microsoft has denied any wrongdoing.

It's still debatable whether Sun's business will benefit
from the latest suits, however. Microsoft's Windows
NT--which poses a growing threat to Sun
workstations--is not part of the legal action, although
analysts have speculated that regulators are focusing
on NT as part of their ongoing investigation.

On another front, Sun's earnings will be boosted by
Intel's announcement last week to delay by six
months shipment of the
Merced processor,
which competes
directly with
comparable systems
from Sun. Intel's
problems prompted
Morgan Stanley Dean
Witter analyst Thomas
Kraemer to upgrade
Sun's stock to an
"outperform" from a
"strong buy," because
he thinks the company will benefit from Intel's woes.

In the meantime, Sun continues to bolster its product
line. Last month, the company announced a new
version of its Ultra 60 workstation that uses a faster
360-MHz chip. This week, Sun said that shipments
of its high-end "Starfire" server continue to grow,
and that it already has shipped more than 500 of the
systems.

Many analysts also praise April's corporate
reorganization at Sun, arguing that it will sharpen the
company's focus. The new structure focuses on
unifying the company under divisions, rather than
under separate operating companies.

Despite the improvements, Sun still faces many
challenges. For example, its Java programming
language has not caught on as quickly as many
analysts or users had expected, and a legal battle
with Microsoft that focuses on Java licensing is still
pending.

The company also continues to face pricing pressure
in its low-end Unix business, a trend that could cut
into profit margins. And while the network computer
is not a major factor in Sun's business, that
technology has not gained acceptance as rapidly as
predicted.

As for the roll-out of new products and services by
Sun's competitors, "The company expects
[competitive] pressure to continue and intensify
throughout the remainder of fiscal 1998 and into
fiscal 1999," Sun said in a regulatory filing last
month.