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For
the chip and PC hardware sectors, encouraging news came later in the week from chip giant
Intel, who told investors at its first mid-quarter conference call that Intel would not
revise the revenue and gross margin guidance previously given last April. "The second
quarter is shaping up as we expected," said Intel CFO Andy Bryant.
Prior to Intel's mid-quarter financial update, several Wall Street analysts were very
skeptical and predicted that Intel would lower its revenue guidance.
Mr. Jonathan Joseph
at Salomon Smith Barney, was the only Wall Street analyst who correctly predicted that
Intel's mid-quarter financial update on June 8 would be a "non-event". He has
currently set a 12-month price target for Intel shares at $40.
Despite positive news from tech- bellwether Intel, tech
stocks were sold off on Friday as Juniper Networks
announced that its revenue for the second quarter would
be one-third less than the original guidance of
$300-$330 million. After a rather rough week
ending June 8, the NASDAQ still managed to close up
65.66 points or 3.05 percent from the previous week's
closing of 2149.44.
Based upon
our market sentiment charts showing a continuous strong
up-trend for both the NASDAQ market and Intel, we
forecast that the NASDAQ will continue to move up higher
near-term with a target of 3000 by September
2001. We believe that Intel's share price could
break the resistance level of $33 near-term. Intel's
share price may break the second resistance level of $38
by September 2001 if the company can deliver any
encouraging news at its next mid-quarter financial
update.
From our viewpoint, information provided by companies at
this week's mid-quarter financial updates was rather
contradictory to each other. For starters, Intel told
investors that it would not revise the revenue and gross
margin guidance previously given last April and that the
second quarter is shaping up as they expected, while HP
executives said its business downtrend continues and the
company has no "crystal ball" to predict its
bottom.
Xilinx, the No.1 maker of programmable logic
chips used in networking equipment, said that it sees a
considerable slowdown in product cancellations and
delays, while Juniper Networks, the networking equipment
maker specializing in core routers, revised its outlook
for its second quarter results and announced job
cut-backs.
Our
analytical approach is to find the commonality among the information provided by these
companies. First, we looked at Intel's statement saying that its second quarter is shaping
up as they expected. This statement is substantiated by comments given by Mr. Hector Ruiz,
Chief Operating Officer of Advanced Micro Devices [NYSE:AMD], the No.2 microprocessor chip
maker, who also said that the sluggish global personal computer market would return to
normal in the fourth quarter of this year.
Second, Ms. Laura
Conigliaro, analyst at
Goldman Sachs, said this week that her recent checks with a large U.S. distributor
suggested that the U.S. (server) business was stabilizing |