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Technology Stocks : Atmel - the trend is about to change -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mang Cheng who wrote (8557)7/2/1998 11:09:00 PM
From: Jim Lou  Respond to of 13565
 
Not far from topic -- from NN thread:

Atml chips are in mobil phones, that's why I post this. Sorry, couldn't retrieve the url of this post for some reason.

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From tomorrow's Financial Times :

<<<
FRIDAY JULY 3 1998 Telecoms
UK operator's shares jump
Figures for growth exceed analysts most optimistic expectations and lift share prices in
the sector, reports Alan Cane

Shares in the UK's principal telecommunications operators rose to record levels
yesterday on expectations that growth in mobile phones and data communications will
exceed the most optimistic predictions.

Figures from mobile operators indicated that half the population will have a mobile
phone by 2002, two years earlier than expected. At present, 16 per cent of people in
the UK have a mobile phone.

Shares in Orange, the youngest of the UK's four mobile operators, broke œ7 for the first
time before settling back at 680p, a rise of 5 per cent on the day, after it announced a
net increase of 132,000 subscribers in the past quarter.

The market had expected 125,000 net additions. Orange has 1.45m subscribers.

Vodafone, the largest UK cellular operator, closed at 819p, 23p ahead after touching
849p at one point.

It reinforced its market leading position, adding a net increase of 206,000 subscribers in
the past three months.

It has 3.64m customers in the UK, almost 500,000 more than Cellnet, the second
largest operator, which added 79,000 subscribers in the period for a total of 3.16m.

Cellnet has been struggling with management and systems problems in the past few
months, including the lack of a pre-pay tariff.

Analysts believe that under new management the worst is over and that subscriber
numbers will grow.

British Telecommunications has a 60 per cent stake in Cellnet.

Its shares closed 20p up at 765p, but analysts believe this is as much because of its
potential in the booming data communications market as its cellular interests.

One-2-One moved into operating profit in April and seems to be on track to move into
profit by the end of 1999.

The company has recovered sharply from slow growth caused by management errors. It
added a net 160,000 customers last quarter to reach a total of 1.36m subscribers.

One-2-One and Orange, operate systems designed for residential customers while
Vodafone and Cellnet were established primarily for business customers.

Analysts yesterday agreed that the market was accelerating. John Tysoe, mobile phone
specialist at Soci‚t‚ Gen‚rale Strauss Turnbull, said that evidence from Scandinavia
showed that once penetration reached 15 per cent to 16 per cent, it accelerated to the
50 per cent point, which is roughly the degree of penetration achieved by fixed wire
telephones.

James Ross, telecoms analyst with ABN Amro, said mobile share prices were justified
by the potential of convergence between mobile and fixed wire telephony.

The price of fixed wire companies such as Energis and BT were justified by the growing
demand for data communicatio>>>>