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Technology Stocks : Dell Technologies Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: stockman_scott who wrote (64896)9/10/1998 10:39:00 PM
From: kemble s. matter  Respond to of 176387
 
Scott,
Hi!! Thanks for the kind words...would you believe some current Dell shareholders called me in the middle of this post you sent me??..They just sold their home and are moving south...have another fine place...retired...Asked a stupid question...yep, they thought I'd say so...all the money from the house....instead of breakfast.....MORE DELL in the morning...

Best, kemble



To: stockman_scott who wrote (64896)9/10/1998 11:40:00 PM
From: VICTORIA GATE, MD  Respond to of 176387
 
64388

09/10 17:58 Dell <DELL.O> says Q3 "great" despite world's woes

DALLAS, Sept 10 (Reuters) - Dell Computer Corp <DELL.O> Chairman Michael
Dell said on Thursday his company was having a "great" third quarter in spite of
economic and financial turmoil around the world.

"The third quarter is going great and there is no change in our outlook from what we
said at the end of the second quarter," Dell told reporters in Dallas, where he spoke at
an economic forum.

He did not give further details, but said he did not expect economic crisis in Asia and
turmoil in the world's financial markets to drag down his company's growth.

"It is true that some of these markets might be in a period of economic contraction, but
that doesn't mean Dell can't grow even in that period," he said.

Dell has consistently exceeded expectations for its growth and its founder and chief
executive said Thursday he expected the company to continue to outpace the market
and pick up market share from its competitors.

He said the industry has shown annual percentage growth rates in the mid-teens and that
those rates should continue for at least the next three to five years.

"I don't think the personal computer industry is impervious to economic turmoil but I
think companies and organizations are using computers as a way of getting ahead and
driving productivity so in some senses this is not discretionary spending," he said.

Dell also said consumer demand was being fuelled by the increasing popularity of the
internet, a steady decline in the price of components and new technological advances.

"When you get new features and functions, computing finds its way into places it has
never been before: small and mid-sized business, emerging markets, countries that
haven't had as much technology as they might have in the future," he said.