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Microcap & Penny Stocks : GTCI - get in before the news hits -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Yongzhi Yang who wrote (605)2/15/1999 1:32:00 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1541
 
News February 13, 00:32 Eastern Time
Feb. 12, 1999 (Electronic Engineering Times - CMP via COMTEX) -- Beijing - Joint ventures and government policies designed to spur competition and investment have boosted prospects for mobile-phone and chip-set makers here. Indeed, Chinese investment in Global System for Mobile communications (GSM) is so brisk that the government has moved to license newcomers to the bustling market.
Mobile services now exceed fixed-line service in China, so network operators see it as an important revenue generator.
IN fact, mobile phones have become one of the most important sectors of the Chinese telecom industry, analysts said. Cellular-phone use grew by more than 11.3 million, to nearly 25 million users, in 1998, according to the Ministry of Information Industry (MII) statistics.
Most new subscribers used GSM handsets, the ministry said.
The growth of local wireless networks is likely to make China an important market for DSP and mixed-signal ICs. Competition among chip and product designers like Texas Instruments, Analog Devices, Lucent Technologies and Siemens is already heating up, observers said.
Analysts said the average demand for wireless appliances over the next two years could include 17 million GSM switches, 900,000 basestations and 15 million handsets. "The telecom network of China, particularly GSM mobile networks, has been growing very fast in past years," said Xie Linzhen, vice director of MII's Department of Electronic and IT
Product Management. The "Chinese mobile network is the third largest in the world, and the Chinese GSM network owns one-fourth of the global users."
Xie predicted annual growth for GSM will be as high as 13 million users in the next five years, pushing China ahead of Japan as the second-largest market behind the United States.
Private analysts forecast even greater GSM usage, predicting there will be as many as 50 million customers by 2000, and more than 200 million by 2010.
The GSM market boom has attracted so many investors the government had to step in last month. MII decreed that as of Jan. 21, all new GSM projects would require its approval. The ministry will then take the request to the State Planning and Developing Committee for further review. "We hope this new policy will let Chinese and foreign firms make money from the mobile industry by avoiding overinvestment," said Xie, the MII vice director. Another goal was to boost the competitive chances of Chinese companies. Besides assembly,
many local companies and research institutions began evaluating GSM technology several years ago. The first Chinese GSM switch, basestation and handsets appeared late last year. China's mobile-communications market began skyrocketing after China Telecom, which held a virtual monopoly until 1994, launched cellular-phone service in Canton, Shanghai and Beijing. That network was based on an analog 900-MHz system, with Motorola's expensive TACS handsets initially dominating.
To break China Telecom's monopoly, the State Council of China issued a second telecom license in 1994 to China Unicom, a joint venture among several ministries and state-owned firms. China Unicom opted for the European GSM standard in 1995, quickly grabbing customers from its rival. China Telecom responded by launching its own, larger GSM network across China. As competition and technology development grew, prices dropped, service improved and more subscribers signed up.
Before this year, overseas vendors like Ericsson, Motorola and Nokia controlled 80 percent of the handset market, with the remainder split among Philips, Sony, NEC, Alcatel, Siemens, Nortel, Mitsubishi and others. Together, these firms have 13 manufacturing plants to make mobile-phone equipment for China. MII estimated these plants could produce 8 million handsets annually. Local plants have become increasingly important to overseas companies as the government
cracks down on smuggling and foreign-currency rules. Such measures, along with new mobile telecommunications policies, have raised the value of manufacturing plants run by joint ventures or as wholly owned subsidiaries.
Shenzhen Huawei Technology Co. Ltd. has emerged as one of the largest telecom equipment suppliers in China. Huawei launched its GSM efforts in 1997, completing trial production by the end of 1998. It invested about $25 million in a production line in Shenzhen, outside Hong
Kong, and expects to produce 4 million GSM switches and 50,000 carrier-band basestations there. Revenue for these components is expected to reach $1.25 billion. Elsewhere, Datang Telecom (Beijing) and Guangzhou JinPeng Group, near Shenzhen, formed a strategic alliance with Motorola Inc. on GSM and next-generation mobile systems. Datang and Motorola have cooperated on research and other areas for several years. Late last month, JinPeng and Motorola set up a joint venture called JinPeng Mobile Telecom System Co. Ltd.
JinPeng is contributing its mobile switch technology and intellectual-property rights, while Motorola has invested $29 million. The partners will develop and produce GSM and next-generation equipment.
Another Motorola partner, Eastcom Co. Ltd. (Hangzhou), has also invested in a U.S. joint venture based in Irvine, Calif., to develop GSM handsets based on a Lucent Technologies chip set. Fan Liming, chief engineer for Eastcom's GSM project, said the company would
produce about 500,000 handsets this year and 700,000 in 2000.
Shenzhen, the boom town across the border from Hong Kong, is quickly becoming the hub of GSM development in China. Shenzhen HB Electronics Ltd., one of the largest cordless-phone makers in Asia, has invested heavily in GSM technology and produces thousands of handsets for the European market each year.
Another local company, China Kejian Co. Ltd., launched its GSM handset in December. It cooperated with IBM subsidiary Commquest to develop its handset, which it expects to produce at the rate of 50,000 a month. These and other GSM equipment makers boost government hopes that domestic production will eventually break the grip of overseas manufacturers.
Emerging third-generation (3G) wireless phones could threaten the spread of GSM technology in China, but larger coverage areas and technical progress are expected to extend GSM's life cycle here. Nevertheless, four narrowband-CDMA (code division multiple access)
trial systems are operating in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Xian. Many observers view the trials as the beginning of a 3G market here.
Industry executives predict China's transition to 3G could be difficult. As CDMA tests continue, companies fear that patent holder Qualcomm Inc. (San Diego) will charge high royalties to license the technology. "All CDMA business [is] delayed in China," said Fan of
Eastcom
chris



To: Yongzhi Yang who wrote (605)2/15/1999 2:14:00 PM
From: stowaway  Respond to of 1541
 
Yongzhi Yang, that was a GREAT reply to ztect. I'm just a lurker and have been watching GTCI for some time.

I must say however that you and ztect seem to bring out (the best in each other) bottom line info on both sides of the equation. Best to both of you and prosperity to all. stowaway.



To: Yongzhi Yang who wrote (605)2/15/1999 2:25:00 PM
From: ztect  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1541
 
Yang....Look I finally agree with you on something you wrote ..Hooray...

"...Look at this example. Taiwan used to make cheap cloths, etc for US market. When they become more developed and the labor cost increased (and during the same period, they become a true democratic society) , those cheap labor job left Taiwan went to places like the mainland. Did Taiwan's development stop ? NO. They are making more advanced goods like computer parts now. The same thing is happening China. As eastern coast develops, cheap labor job left the area (to Vietnam and western China), but it didn't stop the development of the eastern coast. These areas are making TVs, DVDs, cellular phones, computers parts and computers, etc. (China just recently started exporting computers and airplanes.)..."

The above is true...same can be said for Korea, Japan, Germany and United States....However aside from Korea..most of these countries had their industrial eras a lot longer ago...

PLUS.....and if you don't mind ...a "few" questions........

Again what are the real and disposable incomes of the still small middle class?

And what is being done to diminish what appears to be a widening gap between the haves and have nots?

Furthermore...what other providers are there of ISP services to those of GTCI...and is , in essence, a still state controlled telecom agency still the most reliable one to invest in...or are there other solely and exclusively non-state owned businesses in which to invest?

What is the impact of break-up of state controlled services on the industry's abilities to expand and extend services just out of the show case cities? What is he impact of such a break up on quote un-quote exclusive agreements done with private companies?

What is the status of the current telephony broad band infra-structure beyond the show case cities? IS the expansion of such a system going to occur through foreign investment or through state subsidies? Does broad band even exist?

How would you compare the economic impact of Germany absorbing what was a third world economy East Germany into an unified nation and the huge costs of infra-structure for Germany with a China that had very little or no infra-structure in place out of the show case cities and was until very recently largely an agrarian society?

Did you grow up in one of the show case cities in the East and are you from a privileged upbringing relative to the vast majority of the Chinese who are NOT in the show case cities?

How do you jibe the claims of the WSRG news release regarding y2k software....and the ability to generate any real revenue from this product due to the admiringly small market of computers (no more than what were extent in China prior to the early Pentium chips...which by your own figures and a few logical deductions can't be more than several hundred thousand PC's)?

Don't you agree that a news release with exaggerated claims does more of a disservice to the company than a service?

Plus what do you think of the Microsoft suit...that admits that though production of pirated software is down....piracy of software continues according to this news report quite widely.

cbs.marketwatch.com

"...Despite the relatively small damages ordered by the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate Court, the ruling may set a precedent for other software piracy cases in China, where most computers operate on pirated software...."

Wouldn't this piracy also undermine any y2k sales?

Thus Yang...disregarding any earning projections put forth in a news letter that didn't even assess the market (2.1 mil computers even if all attached via the same service if attached at all to the Internet which is high ) for either the ISP and especially not for the y2k product....

What do you see as the projected current EARNINGS for this company based on its current permeation in a very small albeit growing market?

How many of this limited number of computers both in terms of actual number and especially as a percent of the population are actually connected through an ISP to the Internet?

Don't you feel that the uncertainty of the China telecom's future is also a large uncertainty as to this company GTCi's immediate future?

How long term is your INVESTMENT in this company?

What are your projections for real growth? Are these projections based merely on speculation and the belief that this company will grow as the use of computers and Internet usage grows in China? Or do you have any real knowledge of the financial health, or lack of, of this particular company based upon the review of at least the 15s211 ?
Any clue what is exactly meant by "exclusive agency/licensing agreement" and what this does or does not preclude other companies from forming an association with China telecom? Plus what exactly are the FINANCIAL terms of any of these "exclusive" agreements?

How many shares are authorized? Outstanding? In the float?
Who are the insiders? I.e.. those that own over 10%?
By GTCI?...or any of its partners....Plus did any one call WSRG to find the exact terms of compensation for the report not disclosed?

How long have you been investing? Were you at all involved in Hong Kong's markets before coming here as a student? Did you come here first as a student? Or Dissident? Or other? And is this therefore, your first taste of free-market capitalism?

Again..like I said...just a "few" questions...

ztect