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Technology Stocks : Compaq -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: CGarcia who wrote (33134)9/18/1998 10:36:00 PM
From: Elwood P. Dowd  Respond to of 97611
 
PC FORECAST: THE BIG GET BIGGER
By Corey Grice
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
September 18, 1998, 5:35 p.m. PT

Current trends in the PC market point to a seemingly
inevitable conclusion: The big will get only bigger.

With PC prices down and industry growth relatively
flat, manufacturers are increasingly relying on server
sales to increase market share and maintain profits.
And the main beneficiaries will be the Big Four of PC
manufacturers--Compaq Computer, IBM, Dell
Computer, and Hewlett-Packard.

"The PC market on average looks like it's doing
poorly because the only
vendors that are doing
well are the four big
guys," said Mark
Specker, an analyst with
SoundView Financial
Group. "They're
destroying their
competition."

Specker said that, of the
big four, IBM is growing at
about 1-1/2 times the
market average. Dell is on
the high end of that
spectrum, growing
somewhere between four
and six times the market
average.

"The biggest difference is that [the top four] are
growing way, way, way faster than the average of the
market," Specker said. "No one else is really
growing. Packard Bell NEC is really giving it up. Acer,
losing. AST, losing. Most of the European vendors
are losing. Siemens may be an exception."

Because the top companies are so entrenched in the
server business, NationsBanc Montgomery Securities
analyst Kurt King said he doubts that "any other PC
vendor will ever get more than a 5 percent market
share in servers."

That bodes well for Compaq, which counts on servers
for about 50 percent of its sales, and Dell, the
hard-charging rival that is quickly moving into the
higher-performance market.

Servers and high-end workstations historically have
higher profit margins than consumer desktop models
and the public's demand for low-cost, sub-$1,000
units only makes servers more important. Most
analysts are forecasting flat to modest revenues this
year for the industry with unit growth being wiped out
by falling average selling prices.

King, speaking at the annual NationsBanc
Montgomery Securities investment conference in San
Francisco, also said corporate management and
expanding worldwide market share will play a vital
role in determining the haves and have-nots in the
computing space.

Compaq and Dell, for instance, have consistently
grown faster than the industry average and therefore
been spared some of the recent market gyrations.
Analysts say their success appears to be mostly
attributable to strong management.

"In explaining the performance of these stocks, a
statistical analysis shows that company-specific
factors matter far more than industry-specific factors,"
King said.







































































To: CGarcia who wrote (33134)9/18/1998 10:52:00 PM
From: Night Writer  Respond to of 97611
 
How long until compaq shows the money? Your estimate is as good as mine. A lot of folks are saying 4th qt. I think next year is the acid test.
NW