PART 2....
continued from "Dithering"
Up against it
Mason says that between 25% and 30% of Compaq's revenues are now derived from direct sales, up from 0% just a year ago. These sales are through Compaq's web site, telephone orders via its call center, as well as through its new "Built for You" in-store kiosk program. Compaq now has about 1,000 of these booths in stores nationwide, where consumers can order custom-built machines directly from the company. The units are delivered in about five days. The retailer gets a smaller cut than it does from regular retail, and Compaq hopes these kiosks will boost both volume and the average price of PCs sold. Compaq believes that consumers generally make higher-priced purchases when given the chance to configure their own systems. Mason estimates he'll have some 4,000 of these kiosks installed by mid-1999.
With the help of this kind of progress, "The gap in price difference between Dell and Compaq was 25% a couple of years ago," says Cihra, "but now it's down to 10%. Still, as long as Compaq continues to use resellers, complete parity on price will be impossible."
Compaq is expected to look to its enterprise division, which has significantly higher margins, to drive company growth. "Our forecast indicates that enterprise will make up 60% of our revenue stream by 2000," says Mason, up from what Cihra says was 41% in 1997. To that end, Compaq picked up Tandem Computers for about $3 billion in stock last year to give it a high-end enterprise presence, and DEC to give it midrange products as well as an IT services arm.
The trouble is, in the server market, which accounts for a big chunk of enterprise sales, revenues for both these companies have been flat. For Tandem, the problem is that most companies can do without the expensive, fail-safe machines it makes, whereas DEC has been hindered by its struggle to push Alpha chip-based servers in a world dominated by UNIX and Intel systems. According to DataQuest's Brown, the combined revenues of all three companies were $2.59 billion in the first half of 1996; $3.23 billion in the first half of 1997, and $2.8 billion in the first half of 1998. Compare that with say, Sun, which logged revenues of $800 million for the first half of 1996, followed by $1.47 billion in 1997's corresponding period and $2.13 billion in the period after that. Now Dell with its direct sales is edging into the server market, more than doubling its sales from $80 million in the first half of 1996 to $280 million in the same period of 1997 and $590 million for 1998's first half.
"The gap in price difference between Dell and Compaq was 25% a couple of years ago, but
now it's down to 10%."
Compaq's problems are many, and their solution will require an extraordinary, if not impossible, feat. Still, the fact is that Compaq is the solid leader in sales of both consumer PCs and enterprise servers and will likely remain as such for the foreseeable future despite its competitors' impressive growth rates. After all, a company Compaq's size can't be expected to match those numbers.
Yet other concerns linger. Last June, Compaq announced that it would lay off some 17,000 employees between June 1998 and 1999. Yet, to date, only 6,000 have received walking papers, leaving another 11,000 to walk the hallways waiting for the ax to fall, and creating the challenge of having fewer salespeople to generate even more revenue.
Other issues are less quantifiable. Many expect Compaq to succeed with the sales and marketing of the high-performance Alpha chip where DEC failed, exploiting the delay of Intel's high-performance Merced chip. But with or without the delay of its latest release, Intel's stranglehold on the processor sector will be tough to shake.
In evaluating the various challenges facing the world's third-largest computer company, the trick is to determine at what point Compaq's shares cease to offer investors growth opportunity. "A lot has to happen for Compaq to get where it wants to be," admits Credit Suisse First Boston Michael Kwatinetz. He downgraded the stock, which closed on Wednesday at $31.50, from a "strong buy" to a "buy" following the DEC announcement last January. "We're willing to own it, but only at the right price. As [the stock] gets to the mid-to-high thirties we advise clients to be cautious because at that point most of the upside is already in the stock, so there isn't much left for investors."
ING Baring Furman Selz is looking for a 39% bump in 1999 revenues, to $43 billion, and for earnings to rebound from 1998's estimated $0.48 a share to $1.75 in 1999, if Compaq can indeed keep all of these plates spinning. The coming year will make or break Compaq. "How well it transitions to become an enterprise company offering a full spectrum of products and services like IBM and Sun, with the cost structure of a PC company," says Kwatinetz, "depends on their execution versus that of their opponents." |