SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Intel Corporation (INTC) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Paul Engel who wrote (63968)9/4/1998 5:38:00 PM
From: Joey Smith  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Paul, All: Things are looking up for 2H.

joey

PC demand drives second
half
By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
September 4, 1998, 10:30 a.m. PT

update As the stock market continues to slide,
rising PC demand is setting the stage for a
stronger-than-expected second half for Intel and
other PC-centric companies.

Two analysts, Mark Edelstone of Morgan Stanley
Dean Witter Discover and Ashok Kumar of Piper
Jaffray raised their earnings estimates on Intel for
the third quarter and for the year due to growing
PC demand.

Edelstone raised his
third-quarter estimates
from 73 cents a share to
79 cents a share while
Kumar raised his
estimate to 80 cents a
share. Earnings will
surge again in the fourth
quarter when more of
the higher margin Xeon
processors come to
market. For the year, Edelstone predicted the
company will report $3.15 in earnings per share
while Kumar sees a $3.13 total.

"It's just growth in the market," said Edelstone.
"The big inventory correction is over." In the end,
yearly PC unit growth for 1998 will be in the low to
mid-teens.

"We believe Intel and other well-positioned
PC-based semiconductor companies are in the
process of enjoying a solid increase in demand," he
added.

Intel, of course, will not be the only beneficiary of
this trend. Rival Advanced Micro Devices will see
its market share climb to around 16 to 17 percent,
Edelstone added. Gateway, meanwhile, is enjoying
unit growth in the forty percent range, according to
Ted Waitt, Gateway chairman.

The revised earnings projections are the latest
pieces of evidence for a fairly good second half.
Memory prices have been stable for five weeks,
according to Danny Lam, a principal with
Fisher-Holstein, a consulting firm, which indicates
that the surplus of memory chips has dried up.

Another bit of evidence: Memory has been going
up drastically in New Zealand, he said. New
Zealand has no domestic DRAM business and has
traditionally been the place where Korean
manufacturers have dumped their surpluses.
Shortages there, therefore, can be interpreted as a
sign of recovery.

If a recovery truly is in swing, Lam predicted
tangible financial results of it will roll out over
successive quarters. If sales are increasing today,
most of the effect will be seen in the December
quarter financials. In turn, a pick up in sales would
then inspire these companies to purchase
semiconductor manufacturing equipment by
January. Equipment manufacturers, which have
been battered of late, would then show an earnings
surprise by the middle of 1999, assuming all goes
well.

Hard-drive prices have been stable or have
increased, Lam added, while PC monitor prices are
expected to begin to rise in October.

Intel's growth in earnings will largely come as a
result of volume. Kumar said that Intel will likely
ship 23.5 million chips in the third quarter. The
company is expected to cut prices on desktop
processors in September and October, sources
said. No new desktop processors, however, are
expected until 1999.

The new Celeron chip will cut into revenue, Kumar
added, but the effect of the lower-priced chip line
will be offset by increased sales in server
processors.

The latest versions of Celeron sell for between $60
to $100 less than Pentium IIs running at the same
speed. The Xeon processor for servers, however,
sells in the $1,000-plus range. As long as Intel can
sell one Xeon for every 30 Celeron chips, the effect
of Celeron's lower prices will be neutralized. In the
end, Intel's total average selling price will come to
$208.

Intel is an investor in CNET: The Computer
Network.