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Technology Stocks : Intel Corporation (INTC) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Paul Engel who wrote (66533)10/13/1998 10:59:00 PM
From: Joey Smith  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
Here is a slightly more bullish take on the CC.
joey

news.com

Intel bests earnings
estimates
By Dawn Kawamoto
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
October 13, 1998, 5:00 p.m. PT

update Intel today leapt past Wall Street estimates
for its third-quarter earnings, driven by a healthy
pace for worldwide PC sales.

In looking at the coming fourth quarter, several
analysts remain bullish on the company.

Intel executives said they expect fourth-quarter
revenue to rise slightly above those posted for the
most recent quarter, but some analysts suspect the
chip giant may be conservative with its forecast.

"I think they were sandbagging a bit. They exited
the quarter with such a huge momentum trend line
that I think their estimate was conservative," said
Charles Boucher, an analyst with Donaldson,
Lufkin & Jenrette.

He added that analysts likely will be raising their
Intel earnings estimates tomorrow, giving some
bounce to the stock.

"Intel's stock has not been trading at a valuation
that reflects its growth level," he said.


David Wu, an analyst with ABN AMRO said
computer makers that purchase Intel's chips
continue to report
that their distribution
channels are pretty
lean--hence demand
for chips will likely
continue. He said the
market would not be
flooded as a result.

Indeed.

"The biggest
challenge we're facing
as this quarter begins
is being able to
produce enough parts
to meet our
customers needs,"
Intel chief financial
officer Andy Bryant
said in a conference
call.

The chip giant's
revenues reached a
record $6.7 billion for the quarter, a 9 percent
increase over year-ago figures. Last month, Intel
announced that its revised revenue outlook for the
third quarter would be 8 to 10 percent higher
sequentially, compared with its previous predication
that numbers would remain flat.

Intel isn't the only one riding the wave of strong PC
sales. Advanced Micro Devices also reported
better than expected third quarter results and
record revenues earlier this month.

Intel posted net profits
of $1.6 billion, or 89
cents a share, for the
quarter, basically the
same as figures of a year
ago. Analysts had
expected the chipmaker
to post earnings of 80
cents a share, according
to First Call.

"We are pleased with our overall performance in
the last quarter," said Craig R. Barrett, president
and chief executive officer, in a statement. "We had
growth across nearly all of our geographies and
product lines, including strong microprocessor
sales. In the third quarter, the PC industry
recovered from its inventory problems and is
benefiting from strong seasonal demand."

Unit shipments of microprocessor, chipset,
motherboard, flash memory and Fast Ethernet
connections, hubs and switches were up in the third
quarter compared with the previous quarter. But
shipments of embedded processor and
microcontroller units were down sequentially.

Intel executives said sales of its new Pentium II
Xeon processors were strong, as were sales of its
Celeron processors 333 MHz and 300 MHz.

While some analysts expected Intel to perform
even better than last month's upwardly revised
estimates, Intel managed to blow past even the
highest estimates. Ashok Kumar, an analyst with
Piper Jaffray, had pegged earnings at 84 cents per
share prior to the earnings release today.

Intel is an investor in CNET: The Computer
Network, publisher of News.com.