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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: t2 who wrote (20528)4/14/1999 4:08:00 PM
From: RTev  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
 
MSFT will be the stock to own but short term, we could have problems.

I agree. I sold a bunch of MSFT the other day at 93 1/4 (after trying valiantly to get that elusive 95), but am very comfortable keeping the rest (which is still the vast majority of my portfolio) for the long term. But I don't envy you or anyone trying to figure out what will happen to this stock in the next six months. What will happen in the next week after Apple announces tonight what they're already telegraphing as a very good quarterly report? Are we going to see "sky is falling" stories about consumer Windows because the iMac is selling so well? Maybe.

Long term, though, sentiment will swing greatly toward Microsoft. As the Fortune article points out, Microsoft now has a business that is diversified enough to let it ride out and even flourish in a much different market than the PC-dominated 90s. Its web properties are finally gaining strength. Windows CE seems to be finding its way into enough devices that it will be a significant player in the device market even if it never becomes the dominant platform. And -- something not mentioned in Fortune -- Microsoft has made significant investments (Comcast, RoadRunner, Qwest, Rhythms NetConnections, and Microsoft's own WebTV) in the broadband area to give itself a prominent role as the internet moves to its next dimension.

But now that I've said some nice things, I'll add my wildly unpopular take on the trial. If Microsoft loses or settles and accepts some significant change in the consumer Windows business, then the potential value in these future technologies will become more quickly apparent. I'm confident that the company would shift focus quickly and successfully. If, on the other hand, they win or drag it out for years with appeals, the necessary shifts will come more slowly and more painfully for everyone involved -- including the shareholders.



To: t2 who wrote (20528)4/14/1999 4:51:00 PM
From: RTev  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
 
I just ran across an article that I missed last week that gives a good glimpse at the future of Windows CE.

Bsquare riding high on success of Windows CE
seattletimes.com

Highlights:

As manufacturers roll out a dizzying array of new electronic
devices - from television set-top boxes to hand-held computers,
many of them running on CE - Bsquare is growing like crazy. The
company, which has 40 job openings, has mushroomed from the
three founders into a corporation with 300 employees in Bellevue
and 15 others in its new Munich and Tokyo subsidiaries.
...
"They're riding a wave that looks like it's going to be huge,"
Michael Kwatinetz, a high-tech analyst at Credit Suisse First
Boston, says of Bsquare.

The company's sales increased from $14.4 million in 1997 to
$24.6 million in 1998. March was the company's first $3 million
month.