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Politics : Formerly About Applied Materials -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Stefan who wrote (28736)3/2/1999 7:11:00 PM
From: Henry Eichorszt  Respond to of 70976
 
Industry Analysis

Mar 02, 1999

Semiconductors:Intel's Weakness Drags Down Shares of Chip Equipment
Stocks
Director of Online Research: Dave Sterman
Just two weeks ago, chip equipment stocks rallied on news that the
long-moribund sector may finally head upward. Shares of industry leader
Applied Materials (NASDAQ:AMAT - news) soared to $68 on news that the
company would post earnings for the January quarter that were twice
expected levels. Most impressively, orders for new equipment surged 50%
sequentially to $1.029 billion.

Orders placed by Japanese and European customers nearly doubled from
October levels. On a call with analysts, management predicted that
orders would rise yet again in the current quarter on a sequential
basis.

Though the shares traded for just $22 three months ago, Morgan Stanley's
Jay Deahna predicted that AMAT would soon hit $86. DLJ's Robert Maire
figures the stock would top $90 later this year. Following suit,
virtually every other analyst that follows the company boosted ratings
and estimates aggressively. Of the 26 analysts that follow the firm, 22
now rate the stock a 'Buy' or a 'Strong Buy.'

The industry's second leading player, Lam Research (NASDAQ:LRCX - news)
has also witnessed a breathtaking rebound in its stock price. Lam's
stock surged from $9 to $38 in just ten weeks before a recent retreat.

Now, just two weeks later, shares of AMAT and Lam have slid more than
20%. Blame it on Intel (NASDAQ:INTC - news) and Compaq Computer (NYSE:
CPQ - news) . Analysts that follow those firms are hinting of a massive
slowdown in PC sales. Which begs the question: Does slowing demand for
computers put the kibosh on the nascent upturn for chip equipment firms?
'If there's a slowdown in PC unit sales growth, it means any recovery in
chip equipment stocks will be slower than expected,' says Prudential's
John Pitzer.

Looking past this week's sentiments though, a strong case can still be
made for chip equipment stocks. Several analysts cite a strong December
quarter as the basis for ratings upgrades at Lam Research. 'Bookings in
the quarter were 10% above the high end of our expectations,' wrote S.G.
Cowen's Min Pang in a recent note.

What's more, 'following a painful restructuring, including a 37%
reduction in force over the past two quarters and extensive cost cuts,
it is a much leaner company,' Pang added.

As for those weakening PC sales, investors may be too hasty in their
retreat. 'February is typically a slower month for personal computer
unit growth,' says BT Alex. Brown's Erika Klauer. She adds that Applied
Materials' January quarterly sales of $742 million were well ahead of
her $635 million estimate.

Lastly, the book-to-bill ratio for all chips sold in North America rose
9% sequentially, marking the first gain in 15 months. Even if the woes
in the PC segment worsen, demand for chips for all other kinds of
devices, from cell phones to automotive electronics, is expected to
surge throughout the year.

Bottom Line:

A PC-related sell-off in chip stocks has created bargains in the shares
of chip-equipment stocks.

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To: Stefan who wrote (28736)3/3/1999 1:15:00 AM
From: Jeffrey D  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 70976
 
Stefan:<<So you trust ainalists? If so then good luck to you. You'll need it.

Better look at the big picture, not only at AMAT.>>

Well, no, I don't necessarily trust analysts but in comparing them to you I would trust them with my money and my life. Just what is the "big picture" in your humble opinion? Jeff