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Technology Stocks : Spectrum Signal Processing (SSPI) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: nord who wrote (2461)4/27/1999 8:59:00 AM
From: Danny Hayden  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4400
 
F O R . I M M E D I A T E . R E L E A S E

RELEASE DATE: April 27, 1999
CONTACT: Karen Elliott, Spectrum - Investor Communications,
604-421-5422
Email: Karen_Elliott@spectrumsignal.com

SPECTRUM SIGNAL PROCESSING INC. ANNOUNCES
1999 FIRST QUARTER RESULTS

Company adjusts prior quarters' results related to acquisition

Burnaby, B.C., Canada - April 27, 1999 - Spectrum Signal Processing Inc.
(NASDAQ: SSPI / TSE:SSY), a world leader in high performance digital signal
processing (DSP) systems, announced its first quarter 1999 results today.

Sales for the first quarter ended March 31, 1999 totalled US$ 5,638,000 an
increase of 7% compared to sales of US$ 5,276,000 for the first quarter of
1998.

Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization and one-time
charges ("EBITDA" or Cash Earnings), amounted to US$315,000 for the first
quarter of 1999 or US$0.03 per share, compared to a loss of US$ 13,000 or
US$ 0.00 per share for the first quarter of 1998.

Net loss for the first quarter of 1999 was US$ 156,000 or US$ (0.02) per
share, compared to a revised net loss of the comparable quarter in 1998 of
US$ 2,284,000 or US$ (0.24). The revision arises from new guidance recently
provided by the Securities and Exchange Commission and is explained later in
this press release.

"We're pleased to see some modest year-over-year revenue growth, and a
reduction in our overall operating costs despite the acquisition of Alex
Computer Systems' assets in early 1998," said Barry Jinks, Spectrum's
President and CEO. "Although conditions in the industrial electronics
sector remain challenging, Spectrum is aggressively laying the foundations
for future growth. We're confident our strategy will pay off when the
market recovers."

In the first quarter of 1999, Spectrum recorded 10 design-ins, and 3
design-wins. Customers chose Spectrum's products for a wide range of
applications including digital radio, radar and sonar, noise cancellation
technology, and machine vision.

The 1999 first quarter net loss includes amortization of goodwill of US$
181,000 which was increased as a result of an adjustment in 1998 operating
results. Although the Company had reported its quarterly and annual results
for 1998 in accordance with established accounting practice, it is adjusting
its 1998 financial statements largely in response to new guidance recently
provided by the Securities and Exchange Commission to the accounting
profession related to the valuation of in-process research and development
(IPR&D) in purchase transactions. During the first quarter of 1998, the
Company recorded a charge of US$ 6,168,000 for IPR&D related to the purchase
of the net assets of Alex Computer Systems. Based upon adjustments to the
valuation using the new SEC valuation guidelines, the Company has adjusted
its first quarter 1998 financial statements and reduced its IPR&D charge by
US$ 3,528,000, with a corresponding increase in intangible assets. The
Company has adjusted its results for the second, third and fourth quarter
for 1998 by an additional US$ 159,000, US$ 158,000 and US$ 128,000
respectively, for additional amortization. None of the adjustments related
to Alex intangibles impact the Company's net operation cash flow.

While the Company now feels its statements are in-line with the new SEC
policy on IPR&D, the SEC is still in the process of completing a final
review of the Company's 1998 financial statements. It is uncertain when
that final review will be completed or whether the results of that review
will further affect Spectrum's 1998 results. If the SEC reduces the
one-time charge for acquired IPR&D, this would effectively increase
Spectrum's 1998 results (or reduce the Company's losses), while increasing
the amount of goodwill capitalized and increasing amortization expenses in
1998 and in future years.

Spectrum Signal Processing is a world leader in DSP system solutions, and
offers DSP software, off-the-shelf hardware, custom ASIC design and complete
custom systems. The company is ISO9001 quality certified, and can be found
on the web at spectrumsignal.com. Spectrum is located at #100 -
8525 Baxter Place, Burnaby, B.C., Canada. ph (604) 421-5422; fax (604)
421-1764.
Any statements made by the company that are not historical facts are
forward-looking statements that are pursuant to the safe harbor provisions
of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking
statements involve risks and uncertainties, including the timely development
and acceptance of new products, the impact of competitive products and
pricing, changing market conditions and the other risks detailed in the
company's prospectus and from time to time in other filings. Actual results
may differ materially from those projected. These forward-looking
statements represent the company's judgment as of the date of this release.
The company may or may not update these forward-looking statements in the
future.




To: nord who wrote (2461)4/27/1999 9:01:00 AM
From: Jane E.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4400
 
F O R . I M M E D I A T E . R E L E A S E

RELEASE DATE: April 27, 1999
CONTACT: Karen Elliott, Spectrum - Investor Communications,
604-421-5422
Email: Karen_Elliott@spectrumsignal.com

SPECTRUM SIGNAL PROCESSING INC. ANNOUNCES
1999 FIRST QUARTER RESULTS

Company adjusts prior quarters' results related to acquisition

Burnaby, B.C., Canada - April 27, 1999 - Spectrum Signal Processing Inc. (NASDAQ: SSPI / TSE:SSY), a world leader in high performance digital signal processing (DSP) systems, announced its first quarter 1999 results today.

Sales for the first quarter ended March 31, 1999 totalled US$ 5,638,000 an increase of 7% compared to sales of US$ 5,276,000 for the first quarter of 1998.

Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization and one-time charges ("EBITDA" or Cash Earnings), amounted to US$315,000 for the first quarter of 1999 or US$0.03 per share, compared to a loss of US$ 13,000 or US$ 0.00 per share for the first quarter of 1998.

Net loss for the first quarter of 1999 was US$ 156,000 or US$ (0.02) per share, compared to a revised net loss of the comparable quarter in 1998 of US$ 2,284,000 or US$ (0.24). The revision arises from new guidance recently provided by the Securities and Exchange Commission and is explained later in this press release.

"We're pleased to see some modest year-over-year revenue growth, and a
reduction in our overall operating costs despite the acquisition of Alex Computer Systems' assets in early 1998," said Barry Jinks, Spectrum's President and CEO. "Although conditions in the industrial electronics sector remain challenging, Spectrum is aggressively laying the foundations for future growth. We're confident our strategy will pay off when the market recovers."

In the first quarter of 1999, Spectrum recorded 10 design-ins, and 3
design-wins. Customers chose Spectrum's products for a wide range of
applications including digital radio, radar and sonar, noise cancellation technology, and machine vision.

The 1999 first quarter net loss includes amortization of goodwill of US$181,000 which was increased as a result of an adjustment in 1998 operating results. Although the Company had reported its quarterly and annual results for 1998 in accordance with established accounting practice, it is adjusting its 1998 financial statements largely in response to new guidance recently provided by the Securities and Exchange Commission to the accounting profession related to the valuation of in-process research and development (IPR&D) in purchase transactions. During the first quarter of 1998, the Company recorded a charge of US$ 6,168,000 for IPR&D related to the purchase of the net assets of Alex Computer Systems. Based upon adjustments to the valuation using the new SEC valuation guidelines, the Company has adjusted its first quarter 1998 financial statements and reduced its IPR&D charge by US$ 3,528,000, with a corresponding increase in intangible assets. The Company has adjusted its results for the second, third and fourth quarter for 1998 by an additional US$ 159,000, US$ 158,000 and US$ 128,000 respectively, for additional amortization. None of the adjustments related
to Alex intangibles impact the Company's net operation cash flow.

While the Company now feels its statements are in-line with the new SEC policy on IPR&D, the SEC is still in the process of completing a final review of the Company's 1998 financial statements. It is uncertain when that final review will be completed or whether the results of that review will further affect Spectrum's 1998 results. If the SEC reduces the one-time charge for acquired IPR&D, this would effectively increase Spectrum's 1998 results (or reduce the Company's losses), while increasing the amount of goodwill capitalized and increasing amortization expenses in 1998 and in future years.

Spectrum Signal Processing is a world leader in DSP system solutions, and offers DSP software, off-the-shelf hardware, custom ASIC design and complete custom systems. The company is ISO9001 quality certified, and can be found on the web at ttp://www.spectrumsignal.com. Spectrum is located at #100 -
8525 Baxter Place, Burnaby, B.C., Canada. ph (604) 421-5422; fax (604)421-1764.
Any statements made by the company that are not historical facts are
forward-looking statements that are pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, including the timely development and acceptance of new products, the impact of competitive products and pricing, changing market conditions and the other risks detailed in the company's prospectus and from time to time in other filings. Actual results may differ materially from those projected. These forward-looking statements represent the company's judgment as of the date of this release.
The company may or may not update these forward-looking statements in the future.



To: nord who wrote (2461)4/27/1999 1:15:00 PM
From: Edwin S. Fujinaka  Respond to of 4400
 
"Spectrum Signal Processing Inc. (SSPI) said it has received a contract from Analog Devices Inc. (ADI) to design and make the ADSP-21160 EZ-LAB Evaluation Board sold by ADI." from today's Dow Jones Newswire.
I missed the Conference Call this morning, but I assume it was pretty mediocre judging by the stock price performance this morning. Didn't they mention actually receiving a contract from ADI? I assume that qualifies as a "Win", but no terms of the contract were available. Still, the trailing results were not impressive. Especially if the $800,000 in sales left on the dock are considered (along with the profits on that sale).



To: nord who wrote (2461)4/27/1999 2:06:00 PM
From: Edwin S. Fujinaka  Respond to of 4400
 

More details in case this hasn't been posted already...






Spectrum Signal Processing is Selected by Analog Devices to Design Evaluation Product for Newest SHARC DSP, The ADSP-21160

BUSINESS WIRE

SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, April 27 — Spectrum Signal (NASDAQ:SSPI) (TSE:SSY.)
The Spectrum designed and manufactured evaluation board will be sold by Analog Devices directly



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Signal Processing Inc. Announces 1999 First Quarter Results

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Spectrum Signal Processing Inc. (NASDAQ:SSPI/TSE:SSY), the industry leader in high-performance DSP systems, today at DSP World Spring announced a contract with Analog Devices (NYSE:ADI) to design and manufacture the ADSP-21160 "EZ-LAB Evaluation Board" sold by ADI. Analog Devices chose Spectrum for their solid reputation as experts in DSP system design and their experience designing and manufacturing very high-performance multiprocessor systems based on the original ADSP-21060 SHARC(R) DSP.
"We required a company that could provide industry leading DSP system design expertise, product reliability and ISO 9001 quality manufacturing," says Bob Conrad, DSP Product Line Director at Analog Devices. "Because we have a strong relationship with Spectrum, we are confident they can meet these demands and are the right partner to deliver a solid, robust product that will demonstrate the performance and multi-processing capability of our DSPs and tools."
"This program supports our strategy to build Spectrum's DSP outsourcing business," said Barry Jinks, Spectrum's President and CEO, "By working closely with Analog Devices very early to develop tools supporting this new and exciting DSP chip, we will ensure our OEM customers have the fastest time to market and lowest total cost of ownership. It's a win-win-win for our customers, Analog Devices and Spectrum."
This Spectrum designed evaluation product will be the lowest cost single-chip ADSP-21160-based product available to engineers around the world, allowing Analog Devices' customers to get started on ADSP-21160 development. "We are very proud that ADI chose Spectrum to provide the development system for their newest SHARC," says Graeme Harfman, SHARC Product Line Manager at Spectrum. "Spectrum's proven quality systems and manufacturing capabilities set us apart in the DSP industry. In fact, in one year alone Spectrum manufactured over 130,000 DSP boards."
The ADSP-21160 EZ-LAB Evaluation Board is a stand-alone platform with single ADSP-21160, 512KB of 64bit SBSRAM, flash, stereo codec and a parallel port interface to a desktop PC. ADI's customers will be able to download, debug and run code from Windows95, Windows98, or Windows(R) NT desktops. The ADSP-21160 SHARC DSP itself integrates 4 Mbits of SRAM on-chip, with communication via serial and link ports.
On the heels of the EZ-LAB Evaluation Board, Spectrum will release a full line of ADSP-21160 products including PCI, VME64, CompactPCI, and PMC system solutions all sold through Spectrum and supported by APEX, Spectrum's graphical development toolset for multi-processor applications. Spectrum's APEX software tools are a perfect complement to the new SHARC DSP and are fully compatible with Analog Devices' VisualDSP(R) development tools. APEX software provides advanced software support for development, debugging, and optimization of multi-processor SHARC systems.
Spectrum is also collaborating with The MathWorks Inc. to develop a MATLAB(R) driver for the EZ-LAB. DSP development engineers will prototype their algorithms in the MATLAB environment, then target the ADSP-21160 EZ-LAB Evaluation Board. Simulated input data from MATLAB can be downloaded to the EZ-LAB board, processed with the new DSP algorithm and returned to MATLAB for comparison with the simulation results.
Spectrum Signal Processing is a world leader in DSP system solutions, and offers DSP software, off-the-shelf hardware, custom ASIC design and complete custom systems. The company is ISO9001 quality certified, and can be found on the web at spectrumsignal.com. Spectrum is located at No. 100 - 8525 Baxter Place, Burnaby, B.C., Canada. ph (604) 421-5422; fax (604) 421-1764.
SHARC, EZ-LAB and VisualDSP are a registered trademark of Analog Devices Inc. MATLAB is a registered trademark of The MathWorks Inc. Windows is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation.
Any statements made by the company that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements that are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, including the timely development and acceptance of new products, the impact of competitive products and pricing, changing market conditions and the other risks detailed in the company's prospectus and from time to time in other filings. Actual results may differ materially from those projected. These forward-looking statements represent the company's judgement as of the date of this release. The company may or may not update these forward-looking statements in the future.


Copyright 1998 Business Wire
----------------------------------------------------------------------



To: nord who wrote (2461)4/27/1999 2:20:00 PM
From: pat mudge  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4400
 
Nord --

Because of the H&Q conference, I couldn't join the CC. Could you post a summary?

TIA.

Pat