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Technology Stocks : 3Com Corporation (COMS) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: opalapril who wrote (29764)4/18/1999 6:19:00 PM
From: jim bender  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 45548
 
Compaq Is Stunned by Resignation
Of Chairman, CEO Eckhard Pfeiffer

An INTERACTIVE JOURNAL News Roundup

HOUSTON -- Without notice and with little explanation, Compaq
Computer Corp. President and Chief Executive Officer Eckhard Pfeiffer
resigned Sunday along with the company's chief financial officer.

The company's board formed an interim chief executive's office to handle
day-to-day operations of the world's largest supplier of computer systems.

Also resigning Sunday was Earl Mason,
Compaq's chief financial officer. Compaq
treasurer Ben Wells will take on Mr. Mason's
duties at least on an interim basis.

Among the leading makers of personal
computers and software in the U.S., Compaq
has been under tremendous pressure from
stockholders since it surprised Wall Street on
April 9 by announcing its first-quarter earnings
would be half of what analysts expected.

Compaq shares, which traded as high as $51.25 earlier this year, dropped
23% on April 12, the first day of trading after the announcement. Compaq
closed Friday at $23.625.

"Compaq has the best team anywhere in the industry -- we have the
people necessary to make the right changes that will reinforce our industry
leadership," said chairman Benjamin M. Rosen, who will serve as acting
CEO. "We have re-energized this company before, and working together,
we will do it again."

Mr. Rosen described Mr. Pfeiffer's tenure at Compaq as one of "stunning
growth" and that everyone at the company owed him a "debt of gratitude."

Mr. Pfeiffer said that the company had grown enormously in his 16 years
at the helm, and that Compaq would continue to excel under Mr. Rosen's
leadership.

On April 9 when Compaq warned about the shortfall in its earnings, some
analysts questioned the PC maker's ability to manage competition while
melding operations with Digital Equipment Corp.

Compaq, which in February warned of slackening demand for its PCs,
said that heightened competition and disappointing sales of its
most-profitable computers will result in net income of about $250 million,
or 15 cents a share, for the quarter, Compaq said. That was well below
the already-lowered consensus estimate of $560 million, or 32 cents a
share, held by Wall Street analysts. Revenue was projected at $9.4 billion,
$100 million to $400 million below analysts' projections.

Compaq's disclosure shocked many analysts who had come to believe that
the company's income was on track, and several pointed to the integration
of Digital Equipment, which Compaq acquired in June. "The company has
overstated the DEC synergies," said analyst Ashok Kumar of US Bancorp
Piper Jaffray Inc.

"Compaq said there was lower demand; everything we see says different,"
said analyst Charles R. Wolf of Warburg Dillon Read. Indeed, a day
before Compaq's announcement, rival Dell called PC demand healthy,
across all geographic, product and customer segments.

Instead, said Mr. Wolf, "there are two issues here: integrating DEC and
the misguided steps the company took last fall" to sell directly to
businesses. He said he believes Compaq's need to add dealer incentives
for products intended to be sold directly has contributed to margin
declines.

The timing of this latest problem couldn't have been worse for Mr. Pfeiffer,
who was struggling to turn around the Houston PC maker's fortunes for
better than a year.



To: opalapril who wrote (29764)4/19/1999 4:25:00 AM
From: Tim McGee  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 45548
 
I think Ericb has a much better relationship with 3Com board. I think this says something about the quality of 3Com board vs. Compaq. Hopefully the 3Com board gets a collective fire under it to act more quickly to produce a strategy to return the value of the stock to more reasonable levels.

Tim