Technology Stocks | Qualcomm Moderated Thread - please read rules before posting


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To: carranza2 who wrote (87768)12/1/2009 2:56:41 PM
From: pyslent   of 117537
 
"Personally, I have never had the need to use the web and talk at the same time."

It's rare that I ever need to, but it's certainly annoying when I do need to look something up and have to hang up my call and call back. I do think about the limitation every time I finish a long phone call and suddenly get a flood of emails on my phone that couldn't get through because I was talking on it.

Is it worth switching to AT&T over? Not for me, but it's a nice feature to tout.

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To: Art Bechhoefer who wrote (87764)12/1/2009 4:19:19 PM
From: ihavenoidea   of 117537
 
apple is going the way of nokia. i.

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To: engineer who wrote (87754)12/1/2009 4:55:12 PM
From: Jim Mullens1 Recommendation   of 117537
 
delete- see next post

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To: waitwatchwander who wrote (87753)12/1/2009 4:56:56 PM
From: Jim Mullens   of 117537
 
Trevor, re: EPS increase from normalized inventories.

From my data, FY09 channel inventory averaged 14.7 weeks vs FY08 at 18.4 weeks reflecting 80% of normal. Q’s projection is 14 weeks v 17.5 weeks normal reflecting 82% of normal. It appears that FY09 MSM units were off about 40 M resulting from lower channel inventories. For FY10 Merrill is estimating 370M MSMs (et all) with GS deriving 364M from Q’s guidance. MSM units of about 450M + would be required to return to normalcy for the full 4 quarters per my calculations, however a more gradual build may be more likely. 450M MSMs would add about $0.17 using QCTs operating margin estimated at 23.5% (Q’s guidance which again appears conservative).

This is from the GS report (which BTW sees 20% upside to their 12 mo $54 trgt)

Qualcomm’s guidance is predicated on channel inventories remaining at around 14 weeks
in FY10, below its historical range of 15-20 weeks over the last 8 years (Exhibit 1). We
believe Qualcomm’s conservatism is driven by the fact that channel inventories remained
at 14 weeks during the last 2 quarters, below its original guidance at the beginning of the
year for a return toward normalized levels. However, we believe the aggregate inventory
weeks numbers mask divergent underlying trends: inventories did increase in North
America back toward normalized levels, but declined in China following the 3G channel fill
in CQ2. As the situation in China and the rest of the world normalizes, we expect a return
to the normal channel inventory range on a global basis, similar to the pattern that already
took place in North America.

As noted before, there are many areas for potential EPS increase in addition to the channel inventory returning to normal-

+ Higher handset replacement rate

+ Chipset market share gains-

+ Royalty rate-

+ Higher QCT margin

+ Higher SG&A / R&D savings (guidance- 4% increase)

Perhaps now that the EU antitrust / anticompetitive issue is finally behind us Q management can finally lift the lid without fear of “anticompetitive” bellyaching----- won’t be so bashful about reflecting on all of their market broadening achievements and potential further triumphs .

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To: Jim Mullens who wrote (87774)12/1/2009 5:41:51 PM
From: Art Bechhoefer   of 117537
 
With QCOM well positioned in China, especially with regard to TD-SCDMA, and with the EC investigation of anticompetitive practices ended, and with QCOM still rolling in cash, I would expect an increase in the dividend, perhaps to $0.80 annual rate.

Art

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To: Art Bechhoefer who wrote (87775)12/1/2009 5:51:40 PM
From: SirWalterRalegh2 Recommendations   of 117537
 


The bigger question is when.

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To: Art Bechhoefer who wrote (87775)12/1/2009 6:27:15 PM
From: ryhack   of 117537
 
Art,

Regarding an $0.80 annual dividend rate...

I certainly wouldn't complain about bumping up the divvy to 20 cents a quarter, but my sense is that Qualcomm's Board will increase the dividend a penny a year for years to come. They seem very conservative with the company's cash hoard and Bill Keitel explained the significant tax hit if they brought back the $10 billion sitting offshore. In my mind, only some U.S. government "repatriation of profits" plan with a favorable tax rate would be enough to change the status quo. Hopefully, I'm wrong and the recent 4G licenses with Nokia, Samsung and LG among others will give Q comfort in bumping up the dividend at the Annual Shareholder Meeting in March. Final thought about my anticipation of a penny increase per year: Its not like it used to be, but it'll do! Ryhack

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From: caymanbreeze12/1/2009 8:03:09 PM
1 Recommendation   of 117537
 
What's the future of Nokia?
It's the largest cell phone maker in the world, with the largest share of any smartphone vendor in the world. Yet I increasingly look at Nokia's products and listen to its strategy wondering if the company can remain relevant in a mobile world that's changed drastically over the last two years. I'm not talking about a Nokia deathwatch, or whether the company will remain in business -- that's foolish. Of course Nokia is going to stick around; it's what it's going to look like that concerns me. A future of selling low-end phones into emerging markets with some minor services might be profitable, but it's not a direction that leads to industry relevance or influence.

First, I'm confused by Nokia's platform strategy. There's been a lot of chatter about Maemo being the future, and while it might be a strategic direction, it's nowhere near ready for primetime now. Chris Ziegler suggested to me the other day that "Maemo 6 (or 7) in an X6 form factor with a more cohesive Ovi strategy could be killer." Perhaps, but right now Maemo feels very immature and unfinished. In fact, it feels like what it is: an OS designed for Nokia's Internet Tablet MIDs. On a phone like the N900 it's just too kludgey for the mainstream market. That leaves Symbian-based S60, which was totally innovative in 2002 but now looks creaky and has fragmented into multiple versions, leaving a very confused developer market. Sure, Nokia supports Flash and Silverlight with Qt somehow tying all this diversity into some unified grand theory, but it's enough complexity to make most developers look elsewhere -- and that's exactly what's happened. Without a clear platform strategy, it's going to be difficult for Nokia to get the developer mindshare required to stay relevant to the mass market.

Second, Nokia's services strategy is as muddled as the fruit in Don Draper's Old Fashioned. Ovi sounded good when it was announced but it's now gone through so many iterations, with different services added, dropped, and changed that it's hard to know what's in and what's out. Comes With Music has been reported as having as few as 107,000 users worldwide, and Nokia's put off bringing it to the US this year, leading me to wonder what kind of future it has as a service. The N-Gage project not only resulted in two failed phone designs but the service itself is on its deathbed.

Third, Nokia's most recent hardware designs are baffling. Nokia's had some great phones. The 8860 defined fashion and technology in its time, the Matrix-inspired Nokia 7710 was the first phone with a WAP browser, and the N95 was a marvel of technology. Recent designs, however, have been a strange mix of checklist features that simply add up to a poor user experience. Last year's N97 flagship was an exercise in how not to create a touchscreen phone, complete with an odd three row keyboard Nokia failed to lead a changed market and has been forced into reacting to competitors instead of driving its own vision of the future.
featuring a space bar mysteriously moved right of center. The N900 feels more like a science experiment to me than a product that's designed for mainstream users -- although, to be fair, Nokia does position it as an enthusiast device. I used to feel Nokia's hardware designs defined cool, but these days they just remind me of an aging movie starlet trying to re-capture some former beauty.

Finally, Nokia's greatly in decline in the US / North American market and in dire need of a successful product strategy and launch. With no US carriers supporting its flagship and most profitable devices, Nokia's share in the US is in huge decline, and only the most devout users are willing to pay over $500 for unlocked devices to use on T-Mobile or AT&T. There's more to the world than the US and North America, but if you're going to remain cutting-edge and relevant it's not a market that can be ignored.

Tossing around ideas about this column on gdgt last week, my good friend Peter Rojas said, "Nokia has a classic innovator's dilemma: they're so big and (at least to-date) have been so dominant that it's been hard for them to create innovative new products which might cannibalize their existing product lines." I think it's more than that. Nokia failed to lead a changed market and has been forced into reacting to competitors instead of driving its own vision of the future. As smartphones left the realm of the enthusiast and became mass-market in terms of adoption and feature use, Nokia fell behind.

Now, I don't think that's fatal or long term, and I don't believe Nokia is going out of business. But I do question the company's position in the market and ability to lead without a major change in direction and strategy -- especially in the US and North America. Truth be told, Nokia now reminds me a lot of Apple back in 1996, losing relevance and market share in places that matter but with huge potential to leverage core assets and a terrific brand with millions of loyal fans. And as Apple did in its day, Nokia must now either try to decisively seize back its leadership position -- or lose it entirely.






engadget.com 

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To: Art Bechhoefer who wrote (87775)12/1/2009 8:05:01 PM
From: hedgefund6 Recommendations   of 117537
 
A dividend increase would reward those of us who have patiently waited for better days plus it would allow some of us greying shareholders to hold the stock for both a reasonable dividend plus capital appreciation. C'mon Keitel, loosen up that fat purse.....HF

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To: pyslent who wrote (87771)12/1/2009 9:11:18 PM
From: Maurice Winn2 Recommendations   of 117537
 
Web access and talking simultaneously are essential and can be done via Skype and presumably via "normal" voice too. I'm often checking web sites while talking to people - need to see what's going on somewhere to discuss something right then.

<"Personally, I have never had the need to use the web and talk at the same time."

It's rare that I ever need to, but it's certainly annoying when I do need to look something up and have to hang up my call and call back
>

Right now, sitting at a cafe with my cute little 7 hour battery life EeePC on Kordia's wifi, kordiametrowifi.co.nz  provided by RoamAD whose assets were sold to xiocom.com  I can talk on Skype over a video link and access the internet sites I want.

It costs nearly nothing as it runs on megabytes, not time.

We, [Zenbu], bought another little EeePC a week ago with 8.5 hours battery life and Windows7. Cost [retail] was NZ$499 plus 12.5% GST which was about NZ$560 = US$400

With Snapdragon, Android and more improvements to come, life is getting better and better, faster and faster, cheaper and cheaper.

Mqurice

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