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To: Gregg Powers who wrote (11455)6/12/1998 6:16:00 PM
From: w molloy  Respond to of 152472
 
Well pardon me, Gregg, for daring to support Tero, and only on one point. God help me if I supported two...

Yes I did read your post, thank you. You clearly didn't pay too much attention to mine, since I was writing about LSI Logic, not DSP.

>> Tero's point was that QC's royalty demand is an unfair impediment
>> to W-CDMA and has impaired the commercial deployment of IS-95.
>> My point was that almost sixty companies including Lucent, Nec,
>> Motorola, Nokia, Samsung, LG Electronics and on and on and on
>> (basically everyone but Ericsson) found it economic to
>> purchase an IS-95 license and agree to QC's royalty rates.

While not prohibitive, the royalty rates are not exactly low.
Who says that Samsung, LG, Uniden, Denso et al are happy paying these rates?

Regarding Ericsson, the economy of IS-95A is plain, especially when they consider their GSM cash cow.

I ask a simple question about LSI and VLSI's chipsets and you blow my head off. Well several expletives come to mind...!

I'll be more specific.
What is QCOM's pricing structure TODAY regarding their ASIC/component business. (Do they offer OEM's a discount on components if the ASIC is purchased?). Will this structure change when other vendors come on-line.

w.!



To: Gregg Powers who wrote (11455)6/12/1998 8:50:00 PM
From: 2brasil  Respond to of 152472
 


++OT Wall Street awaits summer rally, seen weathering Asian storm

(Updates to close)

By Pierre Belec

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Wall Street summer forecast: rising stocks that will weather the Asian storm clouds.

Investors are turning their thoughts to the prospect of a summer rally, something that has reappeared with unusual regularity
since 1964.

The experts say the odds are good that the rally will be explosive rather than a disappointing wet firecracker, thanks to the
Asians and a strong U.S. econony.

They are betting that as much as the Asians hate their own disintegrating stock markets, that's how much they love the
rock-solid U.S. stocks.

The worse the situation gets in the Pacific Rim, the more attractive the United States will be to global investors looking for
shelter.

The Asians have two other choices -- stuff their money in bank accounts or mattresses.

Other factors are expected to boost stocks on Wall Street.

The Asian mess will discourage the Federal Reserve from raising short-term interest rates, thereby offsetting some of the drag
on U.S. corporate earnings from shrinking sales in the Pac Rim.

The latest flare-up in Asia was on the minds of investors this week, as they pushed the 30-year Treasury bond to the lowest
level in 30 years at 5.65 percent.

Even Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan was exuberant about the economy, describing it as the best he has seen in 50 years.
There are few signs that the good times will end soon.

The buoyant economy will again work its magic on the stock market, Peter Canelo, U.S. equity strategist at Morgan Stanley
Dean Witter, said.

''The economy is doing great,'' he said. ''The Federal Reserve is out of the interest-rate-raising picture and this all sounds like a
good environment for the stock market.

He said personal consumption is growing while capital spending and residential construction are rising, painting a positive
picture for an economy that is consumer-driven.

Sales of new homes surged to a record high in April as low interest rates and rising incomes stoked demand in the sizzling
housing market.

Canelo said the housing boom will give new legs to this aging economic boom.

''The housing demand will make for a stronger economy,'' he said. ''Under the normal cyclical pattern that follows large drops
in interest rates, people who buy houses eventually go out to acquire washing machines, furniture ... and we'll again see this year
that consumers are still alive and well.''

Investors are also looking beyond the earnings valley and they expect corporate earnings to improve later in the year.

Analysts forecast an increase of 4.9 percent in second- quarter earnings, which is up slightly from a first-quarter gain of 4
percent.

But their estimates are brighter for the second half, with earnings expected to jump 13 percent in the third quarter and 18
percent in the fourth quarter.

Some experts believe the stock market will first have to overcome anxieties over eroding earnings before launching into a
summer rally.

''Since (corporate earnings warnings) began early, maybe the disappointments will end sooner than they have in recent
quarters,'' said Greg Smith, chief investment strategist for Prudential Securities.

How much stock should investors put in a summer rally?

To some people, it's just another Wall Street theory, that includes the Hemline Market Indicator, which says that when short
skirts are in vogue, the stock market will be bullish, while long-length skirts bring bear markets.

According to the Stock Traders' Almanac, the summer rally -- defined as from the lowest close in May or June to the highest
finish in July, August or September -- has averaged 9.4 percent over the past 33 years.

The summer of 1997 brought one of the more spectacular gains for stocks. The Dow set an early low watermark of 7,085 on
May 7, and then zoomed to a high of 8,259 on Sept. 6, a gain of 16 percent.

While the economy is benefiting from a strong dollar, the experts said there will be a downside to a high-flying currency, which
will cut into the earnings of U.S. multinational companies.

For the week, the Dow Jones industrial average was off 202.77 points at 8,834.94, and the Nasdaq composite index lost
37.87 to 1,745.05.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index was off 15.02 at 1,098.84 and the NYSE composite index was off 8.70 at 566.67 for the
week. The American Stock Exchange index was off 15.72 at 697.40.

(Questions or comments can be addressed t