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Technology Stocks : Dell Technologies Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rusty Johnson who wrote (115382)4/8/1999 10:34:00 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 176387
 
The Street.com on the DELL Meeting....FYI....

<<Dell's Analyst Day Focuses on Everything but PCs

By Eric Moskowitz
Senior Writer

If Dell (DELL:Nasdaq) truly wants to become a global player, it's going to
need some help, according to analysts attending Dell's 4 1/2-hour-long
financial analyst day in New York Thursday.

That help is expected to come from none other than IBM (IBM:NYSE), which
recently signed a five-year, $16 billion product agreement with Dell and is
widely expected to be its global services partner of the 21st century,
according to Ashok Kumar, PC analyst at Piper Jaffray. "A long-term
licensing agreement to pair IBM's global services with Dell's PC division
would be a long-term catalyst for Dell," says Kumar, who rates the stock a
buy and has done no underwriting for the Austin, Texas-based company.

After years of super-fast growth, Dell fans howled with despair at the
company's fourth-quarter results, announced in February, which showed only
a 38% growth rate vs. the company's two-year average of 56%. The stock fell
30%. Analysts and money managers went into this New York conference
expecting some reassurance. Of course, many analysts counted on Dell to use
this event to boost morale: The stock has shot up 20% over the last two
weeks in anticipation of the meeting, recovering two-thirds of what it had
lost after the company reported fourth-quarter earnings. Dell's stock ended
down 1 7/16, or 3.1%, at 45 Thursday.

The global plans had analysts wondering which other candidates could become
a Dell partner. One surprise candidate being thrown around by analysts as a
global services partner Thursday was the Texas-based electronic services
and technical consulting firm EDS (EDS:NYSE). Dell already uses EDS for
high-end services support.

"The real purpose of the meeting was to divert attention away from the
company's core corporate desktop business," says Goldman Sachs analyst Rick
Schutte, who rates Dell a buy and has done no recent Dell underwriting.
Schutte points out the corporate desktop space is saturated right now, and
growth and margin levels will need to be maintained by aggressively
competing in the server and storage spaces.

CFO Tom Meredith said the company had 300 storage customers at the end of
the fourth quarter and were looking to double that amount in its first
fiscal quarter, which ends April 30. Analysts joked that Meredith was saved
for last at the conference so analysts wouldn't bolt out the door.

A combination of servers and storage gives Dell a chance to diversify its
high-end business, says Randy Befumo, an analyst at Legg Mason Fund Adviser
who is also a researcher for two Legg Mason funds, Value Trust and Special
Investment Trust that have significant holdings in Dell.

In terms of first-quarter earnings, which will be announced in mid-May,
Goldman's Schutte noted that according to Meredith, Dell expected to earn
$1.4 billion to $2 billion from services, or anywhere from 8% to 11% of the
company's $18.2 billion in annual revenues last year. This meant that the
company will be more geared to services, says Amir Ahari, senior analyst at
International Data, who was at the event.

That's a timely approach as computer prices are still heading down.
Analysts also heard that Dell will continue to "tiptoe" around the
sub-$1,000 issue, preferring not "to embrace the $499 to $699 price
points," says Kumar. Dell's ASP, or average selling price, is still above
$2,300 per PC, the highest in the industry.

Still, if the consumer PC prices remain in the $500 to $700 range, that
could send ASPs lower at a more rapid clip. Says Befumo: "The ASP decline appears to be getting pretty significant.">>
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