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


To: Night Writer who wrote (35962)11/6/1998 3:05:00 PM
From: Elwood P. Dowd  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 97611
 
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."



To: Night Writer who wrote (35962)11/6/1998 3:10:00 PM
From: Elwood P. Dowd  Respond to of 97611
 
"Dithering," By Penelope Patsuris.................................... Compliments of Forbes and the Dell thread

As the personal computer industry continues to
mature, the number of key players is
shrinking. Just as the American auto industry
was reduced to three giant companies from
more than 40 in the thirties, the PC industry is now
heading down the same path. The surviving players
will no doubt emerge from the ranks of IBM,
Compaq, Dell Computer, Hewlett-Packard,
Gateway, Micron, Packard Bell and Acer. The big
question now is which of these businesses will
come out on top as the industry further solidifies in
the coming years. Houston, Tex.-based Compaq
Computer wants that top spot, but the race is far
from over.

Compaq's Chairman Eckhard Pfieffer has been
making headway recently in his bid to make the PC
maker more of a market force. His goal of making
Compaq (CPQ) a $50 billion company by 2000 is
within reach. Despite the dual challenges of
absorbing the $9.6 billion Digital Equipment
acquisition--completed last June--and fending off
Dell Computer's direct PC sales model, Compaq
Chief Financial Officer Earl Mason cites a run rate
poised to put the company at annual revenues of
$38 billion by the end of this year, well beyond
analysts' $32 billion estimates.

Sales growth is important, but this alone isn't
enough. By combining two companies with
revenues of $24.6 billion (Compaq) and $13 billion
(DEC), and throwing in some economies of scale,
reaching annual sales of $38 billion isn't that
difficult. On the surface, Pfieffer appears to be
making progress, but a closer look at Compaq's
operations reveals a world-class company still very
much in turmoil, and by no means out of the woods.
Operating revenue for the six months ending June
30 is up 6.8%, to $732 million, according to the
most recent 10-Q filed with the SEC. But by
Compaq's own admission, taking Digital
Equipment's performance out of that equation
actually leaves the operating figure down 3.7%. This
is not a good sign considering the number of units
shipped was up by 24.9% during that same time
period.

A close look at Compaq's
operations reveals a
world-class company still very
much in turmoil

The company's gross margin is also falling, down to
18.5% of sales from 27.4%, as a result of falling
market prices and an increase in Compaq's
promotonal sales pricing. While CFO Mason
attributes the margin squeeze and a bump in the
cost of sales to "the integration of DEC," he's
contradicted by the financial notes in Compaq's
second-quarter report. In note 14, the company
states that both these declines are due to
"significant pricing and promotion actions taken." In
other words, drastic price cuts necessitated by an
industry growing increasingly competitive and
commoditized.

Compaq's struggle in the consumer PC market,
especially with the threat posed by Dell's direct
sales model, is well documented. While Dell's
direct sales have been growing like gangbusters for
years, Compaq didn't have any meaningful
direct-to-consumer online or phone order sales
efforts until last summer. Now that Compaq is
gunning to become an information technology
provider along the lines of IBM, with a full spectrum
of products and services from $650 hand-held
computers to $2 million fail-safe servers, its
business has become more complicated. According
to Mason, 15% of revenues come from consumer
PCs, with 35% coming from high-volume PC sales
to businesses and 50% from the enterprise market,
which consists of workstations, servers and
information technology services. However with this
increase in product lines and their respective
revenue streams comes a proportionate increase in
the number of fires that need to be put out. The
addition of DEC's salespeople, for instance,
presents the challenge of getting separate forces on
the same compensation plan--potentially a big
hindrance to productivity until it is resolved.

Part of the company's problem, says DataQuest
analyst Kimball Brown, is that "Compaq is so intent
on capturing market share that it's giving away price
to boost the number of units it sells." According to
DataQuest, Compaq's third-quarter worldwide
market share was 14.2%, well ahead of Dell's 5.9%.
The reason Compaq is still coming up short? It's
focusing on the low-end market, which has lower
margins, while Dell is appealing to more of a
high-end user and therefore generating better
margins. While Compaq campaigns to position
itself as the premier maker of sub-$1,000 Presario
PCs, Brown wonders what that achievement is
really worth, aside from some bragging rights.

Compaq's margins are shrinking, despite the fact
the company is making sizable inroads toward
increased efficiency and the expansion of direct
sales. During Compaq's darkest hour in late 1997 it
had 10 weeks or so of unsold inventory sitting on
resellers' shelves, collecting dust and losing market
value at a pace of about 1% a week, according to
SoundView Technology Group analyst Mark
Specker. He estimates that the company lost about
$3 billion in sales during this year's first half. This
practice is known within the industry as "channel
stuffing," the benefit of which is inflated revenues,
since they're recorded not when a sale is made to a
consumer, but when product is shipped to a retail
sales channel. After two years of promising to
straighten out the problem, Compaq has succeeded
in getting channel inventory down to a more optimal
three weeks by drastically cutting shipments and
even closing one factory for a couple of weeks.

According to ING Baring, Furman Selz analyst
Robert Cihra, Compaq has also gained some
ground by increasing the number of PCs it builds to
order--albeit these are resellers' orders and not the
consumers'--but he says they're generally closer to
the mark than factory forecasts.



To: Night Writer who wrote (35962)11/6/1998 5:40:00 PM
From: Elwood P. Dowd  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 97611
 
Just noticed that CPQ FINALLY hit 32, the high for the day, very near 4pm or in after hours, and closed right there! Very encouraging!!! El