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To: djane who wrote (3594)3/24/1999 2:26:00 PM
From: Sawtooth  Respond to of 29987
 
I like your style of thinking, djane. I guess G* can't qualify as an internet stock quite yet. I heard the definition of an internet stock isn't based on the industry the company's in; it's based on how fast the stock price has gone up!

Regards.



To: djane who wrote (3594)3/25/1999 12:50:00 AM
From: djane  Respond to of 29987
 
[China] Foreign Mobile Telecoms Move to "Restricted" from "Permitted" Status

chinaonline.com

(3/24/1999) The authority to approve foreign mobile telephone
companies to do business in China has been shifted from
local and provincial governments to the central government in
Beijing, said Wang Jianzhang, a deputy director of the
Ministry of Information Industry, according to the March 24
Hua Sheng Bao (Hua Sheng Overseas Chinese Newspaper).

In addition, any joint ventures that have already been approved
by local governments will be "reviewed and verified" by the
central government, Wang said.

The State Council, China's cabinet, changed the approval
policy to encourage technology transfers and to promote
domestic products, Wang said.

The central government has included the mobile telecom
sector in its "guidance plan" as another way to strengthen
control over the sector. Only products listed in the guidance
plan can be officially licensed and imported.

The directive moves mobile telecom operations to the
"restricted" category of foreign investment, Wang said.
Formerly such operations were in the "permitted" category. It
is this change that prohibits local officials from approving any
joint-venture mobile phone operations.

The number of mobile phone users in China reached 24.9
million in 1998, and the county's output of mobile phone
handsets reached 10 million units. In 1999, estimates put the
number of new mobile phone users at 14.7 million and
handset production is expected to range from 13 million to 15
million.

Currently, wholly foreign-funded and joint-venture enterprises
supply almost all mobile telecom switching devices and
handsets to the Chinese market. This is particularly true of
the handset market. Motorola, Nokia and Ericsson alone
account for 70% of China's handset output, while the
remainder is divided between Matsushita (Beijing) and
Siemens (Shanghai).

Formerly, China's mobile telecom industrial policy was
"sacrificing market share for technology." But Wang said that
the speed of technology transfer has not been fast enough for
the government. He said China has only one type of
commercialized handset, which was jointly developed by a
Chinese research institute and Xiahua Company. The
company will produce 20,000 handsets this year.



© ChinaOnline 1998.




To: djane who wrote (3594)3/25/1999 12:53:00 AM
From: djane  Respond to of 29987
 
European mobile firms face new challenge in China

Wednesday March 24, 5:42 am Eastern Time

By Matt Pottinger

BEIJING, March 24 (Reuters) - After storming to a
commanding lead in China, European mobile phone companies
like Ericsson and Nokia could face a tough challenge if China
follows through with plans to open the door wide to U.S. cellular technology.

Nokia and Ericsson , however, do not appear unduly concerned, and analysts said it would take
time for CDMA technology to prove itself in the market.

In a sudden shift, China has signalled it will allow Chinese telecommunications firms to build
CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access) networks, industry players said. The U.S.-developed
technology is now limited to trials in four cities.

China's market for mobile network equipment and handsets, worth billions of dollars annually,
has been dominated by GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) technology from
Finland's Nokia and Sweden's Ericsson.

Beijing now appears ready to back its small telecommunications firm, China Unicom, to build
CDMA networks to compete with the state-owned virtual monopoly China Telecom, Unicom
officials and foreign executives said.

''It's not good news, of course, if it happens,'' said Ericsson senior vice-president Jan Malm in
Beijing.

Andrew Page, head of Nokia's corporate planning in China declined to comment on the impact
of such a shift.

''It's still speculation. We can't really comment about that until there's some form of government
announcement,'' he said.

Neither of the Nordic companies make CDMA network equipment although Nokia does make
CDMA handsets for the U.S. market.

The stakes in the Chinese market are huge.

In 1998, China overtook the United States as Ericsson's largest market, with more than $2.8
billion in sales. For Nokia, China last year represented its second largest market, with 13 percent
of total sales, or $2 billion.

China has more than 23 million mobile phone subscribers, and the Ministry of Information
Industry projects nearly 40 million by the end of the year.

In a recent interview, before China's apparent policy shift, Page said: ''We have global growth
targets of 25 to 35 percent and we have similiar targets for China as well,'' in 1999.

Companies that would benefit from the expansion of CDMA include U.S. equipment suppliers
Motorola (NYSE:MOT - news), Lucent Technologies (NYSE:LU - news) as well as Qualcomm
Inc (Nasdaq:QCOM - news), which stands to earn hefty royalties on the technology.

Canada's Nortel (Toronto:NTL.TO - news) and South Korea's Samsung [SAGR.CN] are also
CDMA equipment providers and are likely to benefit.

They argue the technology makes more efficient use of scarce airwaves than GSM and has
superior voice quality.

But Ericsson and industry analysts said CDMA could have a difficult time cracking China's
market, even if it is given Beijing's official blessing.

''It looks very late to introduce a new standard,'' said Ericsson's Malm.

Even under an aggressive expansion plan, he said it could take years for CDMA networks to
become as ubiquitous as GSM, which is more attractive to consumers who want the ability to use
their telephones in other cities.

''We have a very strong case with GSM. We think we will be able to compete,'' he said.

Duncan Clark, a partner at telecom consultancy BDA Associates in China, called Unicom's plans
to gain two million CDMA subscribers this year ''crazy.''

''Where are they going to get the expertise and the people to deploy it?'' he asked, citing the time
and capital needed to order, install and perfect the networks.

''Commercially, I don't see the value in it,'' he said.

Its real worth is as a political gift from Premier Zhu Rongji to Washington, which is fuming over a
$57 billion trade deficit with China last year. Zhu, who is said to back the CDMA plan, is due to
travel to the United States in April.

''It's a box with lots of wrapping paper, but you open it up and nothing's inside,'' Clark said.

Copyright © 1999 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.



To: djane who wrote (3594)3/25/1999 12:59:00 AM
From: djane  Respond to of 29987
 
Battle for China mobile phone market heats up

By William Kazer
SHANGHAI, March 24 (Reuters) - The battle for China's
mobile phone market is about to get a bit more bruising as U.S.
and European telecom giants square off in a multi-billion
dollar contest over rival technology.
In an abrupt policy reversal, China has signalled it will
expand tests of CDMA technology, developed in the United
States, alongside the widely used GSM standard favoured by
European equipment makers, industry officials say.
So far, the world's fastest growing mobile phone market has
been dominated by Sweden's Ericsson LMEb.ST and Finland's
Nokia NOKAV.HE, which have invested heavily in GSM, or Global
System for Mobile Communications.
But China's tests of CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access)
will give a boost to U.S. equipment suppliers Motorola MOT.N,
Lucent Technologies LU.N as well as Qualcomm Inc QCOM.O,
which stands to earn hefty royalties on the technology.
Canada's Nortel NTL.TO and South Korea's Samsung
1/8SAGR.CN 3/8 are also CDMA equipment providers and are likely to
benefit.
"It is their first toehold in enemy territory," a
China-based consultant said of the CDMA suppliers on Wednesday.
This is a high stakes contest.
China does not allow foreign companies to run networks so
the competition in has been in the sale of equipment.
"It is a battle worth billions of dollars," said another
foreign analyst who follows the telecommunications market.
China had some 23 million mobile telephone users last year,
adding 10 million in 1998 alone.
Beijing once turned to mobile phones as a quick fix for a
sagging fixed line system, but they have taken on a life of
their own.
Millions of dollars have been poured into advertising as
China's most glamorous movie stars and top pop singers lend
their names to the feverish marketing battle.
And, as living standards rise, upwardly mobile Chinese are
flocking to this market, which now boasts the largest GSM
network in the world.
The competition has already pushed the cost of a mobile
phone as low as 1,300 yuan ($157). Not long ago, they were
nearly 10 times that price.
Proponents of CDMA say that by letting the market choose
the best technology, consumers will benefit.
But the Ministry of Information Industry, which supervises
the sector, has been less enthusiastic as its main operating
company, China Telecom, has spent heavily on GSM.
The move to broaden tests of CDMA stems from a proposal by
China's upstart telecommunications firm China Unicom, formed to
compete with China Telecom.
A Unicom official told Reuters: "This system (CDMA) will be
adopted although we don't know which company will work with
us."
Analysts said this would push equipment prices down further
but would not squeeze Ericsson or Nokia out of the market.
"This won't kill off GSM which already has a huge lead,"
said another Western analyst. "They just will have 70 percent
of a big and expanding pie instead of 100 percent."
But European equipment companies are concerned.
"There is still a huge market," said Lars Edvardsson, vice
president at Ericsson in Hong Kong.
"It remains to be seen how much they (Chinese authorities)
build out their systems, but it is a concern for us," he said.
The timing of Beijing's decision is curious. Only recently,
China said it would end the CDMA trials in several cities.
But China is eager to join the World Trade Organisation and
remove U.S. resistance to its 13-year effort.
It also probably reflects high-level unhappiness with the
Ministry of Information Industry, which has widely been accused
of being partial to China Telecom, industry analysts said.
($1 = 8.28 yuan)
REUTERS
Rtr 02:59 03-24-99

Copyright 1999, Reuters News Service





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To: djane who wrote (3594)3/25/1999 1:02:00 AM
From: djane  Respond to of 29987
 
China, in About-Face, Proposes Reforms in Effort to Join WTO (via qcom thread)


WSJ article from 3/25/99 on China wanting to join WTO

March 25, 1999

By IAN JOHNSON and LESLIE CHANG
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

China has promised the most wide-ranging package of economic reforms in its
13-year effort to join the World Trade Organization.

In meetings with trade negotiators over the past two weeks, China has
proposed opening formerly closed industries, including telecommunications,
insurance and banking, according to people close to the talks. It has also
promised to lift an informal "buy local" order given to several ministries and to
allow foreign companies to import and distribute more foreign products.
Agricultural tariffs are also due to be lowered, import quotas expanded and
bans on some products -- notably U.S. citrus fruit and wheat -- partially lifted.

Officials caution that the promised reforms are far from being done deals. One
hurdle is time: Although China must also reach agreement with other trading
partners, U.S. and Chinese negotiators want to strike at least a preliminary deal
before Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji goes to Washington on April 8. If there is
no deal in time for Mr. Zhu to make a triumphant U.S. tour, some negotiators
fear, China may lose interest. Another obstacle is that a deal the countries'
leaders strike must be ratified by their legislatures, an especially dicey proposal
in Washington, where an angry Congress may kill any deal struck with a
country that is increasingly seen as hostile to the U.S. And sticking points
remain, among them Chinese protectionism in an agricultural sector that still
employs close to 900 million of this country's 1.2 billion people.

An About-Face

But China's proposals represent an about-face from just a few months ago,
when talks were stalemated and China seemed years away from joining the
WTO, the body that devises world trading rules. "Things are moving ahead
much more dramatically than at any time in the past," says a Western diplomat
based in Beijing. "If this goes through, the change in the business environment
here in half a dozen years would be significant." Most of the proposed changes
would be phased in by 2005, giving Chinese companies a chance to become
competitive.

The reforms would be welcome news for foreign companies in China, which
have complained about increasing protectionism and slender profits. After an
initial rush of euphoria earlier this decade, when China's economy seemed
destined to open quickly and grow at double-digit rates, some foreign
companies are leaving China and others are scaling back operations.

Some of the most significant changes involve telecommunications, an industry
long closed to most foreign investment. Over the past two years, Beijing's
bureaucrats have ordered power and telecom companies to buy local products
and threatened to close down foreign joint ventures in telephone operating
companies. According to negotiators, China has now proposed lifting its ban on
foreign investment in telephone companies. Foreigners would be allowed a 35%
stake in phone companies, although U.S. negotiators are still pushing for 51%.

In the past, some companies like Sprint Corp. evaded the ban on foreign
investment by setting up complicated joint ventures that allowed them effective
control, a gray-area investment that was technically illegal but tolerated by
investment-hungry officials. China proposes that such deals wouldn't be
allowed in the future but that existing ventures would be protected, although
foreign companies would probably have to reduce their stakes to 35%. Mr. Zhu
has also told Western negotiators that "buy local" orders have been rescinded
and that China will adhere to the International Telecom Agreement by 2005,
which calls for ending import tariffs on telecom equipment.

Cellular-Phone Standards

China has also recently pushed forward with CDMA, a U.S. cellular-phone
standard it had previously restricted but which could be worth billions of
dollars in sales to foreign -- especially U.S. -- companies. Already,
foreign-equipment manufacturers in Beijing say they have started to receive
orders for CDMA equipment, which is made by Lucent Technologies Inc.,
Motorola Inc. and Qualcomm Inc. of the U.S., Samsung and Hyundai of
South Korea, and Matsushita of Japan. Most Chinese mobile-phone users rely
on a European-devised standard, GSM, but the country now plans to increase
the number of CDMA users to 40 million by 2005 from about 800,000
currently, says Jay Hu with the U.S. Information Technology Office in Beijing.

Although not directly tied to the WTO, which usually deals in overarching
principles rather than specific trade spats, the CDMA issue highlights China's
determination to end its telecom monopoly. CDMA will be offered by China
Unicom, a small company that was supposed to challenge the state monopoly,
China Telecom, but which has been too heavily restricted to mount a serious
threat. Now, China says it may divide China Telecom into four companies.
That, combined with a decision to allow Unicom to offer CDMA technology,
signals that the government wants to break up China Telecom's monopoly.

The proposed reforms also promise a dramatic change in financial services. In
the past, Beijing has doled out banking and insurance licenses piecemeal, often
giving a license to a company in order to cement ties with its home country.
Those licenses also severely limit the type of business to be done. Foreign
banks that currently hold a local-currency license, for example, are restricted to
taking loans and deposits from joint-ventures or foreign firms, leaving off-limits
the much larger base of Chinese companies and individuals. Insurance
companies, meanwhile, are restricted to doing business in the single city of
Shanghai.

The new rules would open up wider chunks of the Chinese market, but with a
catch: As the market opens to them, foreign companies would have to take
Chinese partners. Foreign banks would be permitted to take up to 50% equity
stakes in joint-venture banks that would be allowed to offer full-service retail
banking. Insurance companies likewise, would be able to offer nationwide
service in 50-50 joint ventures with Chinese counterparts.

Concerns Over Vagueness

While foreign investors applaud the new measures, they warn that the promises
are vague enough to be hewed down later. For example, insurance company
executives worry that they might be required to apply for licenses for each
additional city, considerably slowing expansion plans. Executives also complain
about being slowed down through forced marriages to Chinese partners. "In
terms of Chinese partners, there's not a lot of pickings out there," says one
U.S. insurance executive.

Overall, though, the improved climate is starting to bear fruit in some sectors
of the economy. For example, China has begun relaxing restrictions on grain
import quotas, once tightly held by a handful of state trading firms. "The
government is now giving [import and export] licenses to private companies,"
says Phil Laney, China director for the American Soybean Association in
Beijing. "They're finally saying they are going to let the state trading system
break down."

Longer term, officials and business executives say, a deal could radically
change China's business environment. Says a Beijing-based diplomat: "To put it
simply, China is going to be a more normal country for foreign business."

-- Josh Cherin of Dow Jones Newswires contributed to this article.

Copyright © 1999 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.



To: djane who wrote (3594)3/25/1999 1:04:00 AM
From: djane  Respond to of 29987
 
China to accept US mobile phone standard

ft.com

By James Kynge in Beijing

China is planning to offer a key trade concession to Washington by opening its domestic
market to the US mobile phone standard CDMA, raising the prospect of billions of
dollars in exports for American companies. An announcement of Beijing's plans to allow
the nationwide provision of CDMA (Code division multiple access) systems is expected
around the time that Zhu Rongji, the Chinese premier, visits the US in April.

A Chinese telecoms official cautioned, however, that the announcement could be
withheld if Mr Zhu encountered hostility in Washington.

"It depends somewhat on America's attitude. It would be very difficult to grant a
concession while they are restricting technology exports to China and accusing us of
spying," said the official. European mobile equipment manufacturers, such as Ericsson,
Nokia, and Siemens, which produce the GSM standard that currently dominates
China's mobile market, stand to lose if permission for CDMA is granted.

Under the plan, China Unicom, the country's second state-owned carrier, would be
awarded China's first nationwide CDMA licence this year, the official said.

The company has drawn up an ambitious schedule that envisages 40m subscribers by
2003 - requiring capital investment in excess of $10bn.

Since China does not make CDMA technology, US equipment suppliers such as
Motorola, Lucent Technologies and Nortel, as well as Samsung, the Korean
manufacturer, would see their sales soar in the world's fastest-growing mobile telephone
market. China's mobile subscriber base, currently at around 25m, is growing at a rate of
1m a month. Another beneficiary would be Qualcomm, which developed the technology
on which CDMA is based.

"We are talking in terms of building the biggest CDMA market in the world," said one
Unicom executive who recently visited a Lucent Technologies outlet in China with a
view to buying equipment. From a domestic point of view, the adoption of CDMA
makes sense on a number of levels, Chinese officials said.

First, it could help reduce friction over China's trade surplus with the US, which climbed
to $57bn last year.

Second, it could provide a much-needed boost to domestic demand, and third, it would
allow Unicom to provide some real competition to China Telecom, an inefficient
leviathan known to have incurred the criticism of Mr Zhu.



To: djane who wrote (3594)3/25/1999 1:11:00 AM
From: djane  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 29987
 
WSJ: Ericsson Expected To Announce Deal With Qualcomm

Qualcomm Inc.
Dow Jones Newswires -- March 25, 1999

From Thursday's Wall Street Journal By Quentin Hardy

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Telefon AB L.M. Ericsson of Sweden is expected to announce a deal
Thursday with Qualcomm Inc. of San Diego that will resolve a long-running dispute over the future of
wireless communications.

People familiar with the deal said Ericsson will purchase a significant portion of Qualcomm's business,
including rights to develop future kinds of digital wireless communications called CDMA. CDMA,
which stands for code division multiple access, is the backbone of so-called third-generation wireless
communications, which will allow for high-speed data and video in addition to standard wireless voice
communication.

Such an agreement could allow the two companies to enter into each other's core businesses, with
potential rewards for both. Once a vocal opponent of CDMA, Ericsson has come to embrace a
version of CDMA for future wireless communications. Earlier this year, Irwin M. Jacobs, chairman
and chief executive of Qualcomm, had a series of discussions with Sven-Christer Nilsson, president
of Ericsson, about ways the two parties could use each other's core technologies.

Officials at both companies declined to comment. But the people familiar with the situation said
Ericsson, the world's third-largest maker of wireless phones, plans to announce it will develop a
version of CDMA that can accommodate the world's three major wireless technologies. Besides the
current form of CDMA, these are GSM, or global system for mobile communications and TDMA,
which stands for time division multiple access.

Qualcomm is the best-known backer of CDMA. However, Ericsson filed suit in 1996, alleging that
Qualcomm's CDMA technology violated Ericsson patents. The case was expected to come to trial in
April in federal court in Marshall, Texas.

The deal Thursday would bring peace between the two chief combatants in a fight over the approved
technical specifications of the third-generation, or 3G, phones.

But some proposed 3G specifications could make obsolete several billion dollars of existing CDMA
systems, while others would jeopardize the installed base of GSM equipment.

Officials from both the European community and the Clinton administration, prompted by their
respective European and U.S. companies, recently have clashed over the specifications. In January,
several U.S. officials, including Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and Federal Communications
Commission Chairman William Kennard, sent a letter to European Commissioner for Industrial
Affairs Martin Bangemann expressing concern that Europe would adopt a single, exclusive standard
for 3G.

Instead of a single standard that favors one company over another, Ericsson and Qualcomm
executives say, regulators are likely to recommend multiple standards that allow existing GSM or
CDMA networks to migrate to 3G, with all using a common radio interface similar to CDMA.

"There will be a family of standards. That's how it will come down," said Keith Shank, director of
strategic marketing for Ericsson, earlier this year.

Copyright © 1999 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.