Scot - Re: "Morgan Stanley's Mark Edelstone raised price targets on 8 semi stocks yesterday, including INTC. Does anyone know if AMD was included, "
Last year, Edelstone had a target price of $60 for AMD in 1998 as well as a $4.00 EPS for 1998.
Let's say AMD will "miss the numbers".
Paul {================================} 08:01am EDT 12-Sep-97 Morgan Stanley\DW (Edelstone, Mark (415) 576-2381) AMD ADVANCED MICRO DEVICES: UPGRADING TO STRONG BUY; MEETINGS WITH AMD... Advanced Micro Devices (AMD): Upgrading To Strong Buy; Meetings... Mark Edelstone/John Cross/Louis Gerhardy (415) 576-2381/2382/2391 Industry: Semiconductors Date: September 12, 1997 Type: Recommendation Change ______________________________________________________________________ Rating: Strong Buy Price: 34 1/8 52-wk Range: $49-$13 Price Target: 60 ______________________________________________________________________ FY Ends ----EPS---- Rel. P/E Decembe Curr Prior P/E (S&P 400) Pr/Bk r 96A ($0.64) NM NM 2.3x 97E $0.55 62.1x NM 2.2x 98E $4.00 8.5x 40% 1.8x ______________________________________________________________________ Qtrly ---- 1Q ---- ---- 2Q ---- ---- 3Q ---- ---- 4Q ---- EPS Curr Prior Curr Prior Curr Prior Curr Prior 96A $0.10 ($0.33) ($0.26) ($0.15) 97E $0.09A $0.07A $(0.03) $0.42 98E $0.64 $1.02 $1.06 $1.28 ______________________________________________________________________ 5 Yr. EPS Growth: 20% Debt to Equity: 34.6% Dividend: None Mkt Cap./Rev: 126% Shares Outst.: 147.9 MM Mkt Cap.: $5,048 MM ______________________________________________________________________ DETAILS Following meetings with members of Advanced Micro Devices' (AMD) management team, we are comfortable with our expectations for the K6 microprocessor (MPU) product ramp. Although lower-than-expected yields during the company's aggressive production ramp has prevented AMD from maximizing its upside production potential in the current quarter, we still expect the company to triple its unit shipments in the third quarter and double them again in the fourth quarter. Based on the stock's low valuation parameters and our expectations for significant earnings leverage as the K6 product cycle unfolds during the next four to six quarters, we have upgraded our rating on AMD to Strong Buy from Outperform. Our 12-month stock-price target remains $60, and we expect AMD to find solid support in the low 30s. K6 Demand Is Strong And Unit Shipments Should Increase Significantly Before The End Of The Year... AMD shipped 370,000 K6 MPUs in the second quarter for $100 million, and based on strong demand and an aggressive production ramp, we believe the company will triple its unit shipments in the current quarter and double them again in the fourth quarter. Based on these unit assumptions, we expect AMD's MPU revenues to increase to $190 million and $340 million in the third and fourth quarters, respectively. We believe overall demand for K6 is strong, and Acer, DEC, Fujitsu/ICL, IBM, Siemens Nixdorf, and Vobis have announced products that use K6. We expect additional top-20 OEMs to make K6 product announcements before the end of the year, and based on AMD's current production run rate of around 150,000 units per week, we believe the company should be able to produce enough units to meet our fourth-quarter expectations. ...And AMD Should Enjoy Significant Earnings Leverage As Its K6 Shipments Increase Due to the fixed-cost nature of its business model and the significant amount of overhead associated with Fab 25 in Austin, Texas, AMD's MPU operations have been losing money since the second half of 1995. Although we expect AMD's MPU average selling prices to be pressured by competition from Intel, we believe K6's small die size will generate attractive margins as soon as Fab 25's production ramp stabilizes and start up costs are normalized, which should happen before the end of the year. We currently expect AMD's MPU business to turn profitable in the fourth quarter, and based on our expectations for MPU revenues of around $2.2 billion in 1998, AMD should enjoy significant margin expansion and earnings leverage as the K6 product cycle unfolds next year. We Believe The Upcoming Transition To 0.25-Micron Production Is The Primary Risk To 1998 Estimates... Although the success of AMD's flash memory, PLD, and communications product lines are clearly important to the company's ability to maximize earnings next year, we believe our 1998 earnings estimate of $4.00 per share (versus a consensus estimate of $2.48) is highly dependent on the success of K6. In order for AMD to meet our 1998 earnings estimate and validate our investment thesis on the stock, we believe the company must execute the transition to its 0.25-micron process technology on a timely basis. All of AMD's K6 production currently uses a 0.35-micron process, however, the company is currently sampling K6s manufactured with its 0.25-micron process. Although AMD is probably one to two quarters behind Intel, we expect volume production of its 0.25-micron process technology to commence soon, with initial shipments of 300 MHz K6s towards the end of the fourth quarter. We currently expect AMD to have completed the transition to its 0.25-micron process technology around the middle of next year, and as the transition unfolds, the company should be able to more than double its production and enjoy more than a 50% decrease in its K6 unit cost. In addition, AMD should be able to increase the performance and functionality of its K6 product family with its 0.25- micron production. We believe AMD will be able to produce 15 million K6s next year, however, a relatively smooth transition to its 0.25- micron process technology is key to our 1998 earnings estimate, and it is an integral part of our investment thesis on the stock. _And Multiple Expansion Should Occur As The K6 Cycle Unfolds-- Upgrading AMD To A Strong Buy Despite AMD's inability to maximize its K6 opportunity in the current quarter, we believe a healthy demand profile and the company's ongoing manufacturing improvements will still support significant operating leverage and explosive earnings growth as the product cycle unfolds throughout next year. Based on our 1998 estimates for AMD and our calendar 1998 estimates for more than four dozen semiconductor companies, AMD is trading around a 60% discount to the price-to- earnings (P/E), price-to-sales (P/S), and price-to-book value (P/BV) multiples of the average semiconductor stock. AMD's stock has performed very well since 1991 when its MPU business was performing well, and we believe the stock will enjoy a strong advance and multiple expansion as the K6 ramp unfolds and AMD's earning power expands. Based on current valuations and our expectations for a strong K6 product cycle, we have upgraded our rating on AMD to Strong Buy from Outperform, and our 12-month stock price target of $60 suggests the stock should be fairly valued at a 25%-30% discount to the 1998E P/E and P/S multiples for the average semiconductor stock. Since the level of profitability within the MPU business is significantly greater than most other product lines in the overall semiconductor industry, we believe our projected valuation parameters will prove to be conservative if AMD brings a competitive K7 MPU to market in early 1999. We expect AMD to find solid support in the low 30s, and we believe the more than 20% decline in the stock versus a relatively unchanged stock market since AMD announced that IBM would use its K6 MPU on August 18 has already discounted the company's negative third- quarter earnings surprise. |