Technology Stocks | EMC How high can it go?


Previous 10 | Next 10 
To: TigerPaw who wrote (6768)6/18/1999 8:50:00 PM
From: Brian1970   of 17175
 
Here's an article with a wide perspective on the market. It doesn't mention any particular stock, but I like it because it offers a step back. I'm very bullish on EMC, and while cautious, am optimistic that the market will test new highs in the coming months.




Everything's Happened, So Market Asks
What Happens Next
By Justin Lahart
Senior Writer
6/18/99 7:05 PM ET


The inflation report came and went. The guy with the glasses
went up to the podium, spoke and shuffled away. Treasuries
put on a rally that took the yield on the long bond back
below 6%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average tacked on
365 points. Now what?

It's a difficult question to answer, and how it is answered will
determine the market's theme not just for the coming week
but beyond. There was a sense, when the bell rang to close
out the week on Friday, that Wall Street's interest-rate
obsessions were behind it. The May Consumer Price
Index had shown people that while there are some upside
risks to the economy, it's by no means running out of
control. Alan Greenspan had told the country that he and
his colleagues were going to hike rates by a quarter point
when they met on June 29 and 30 and then see.

There is general sense that earnings will begin to come to
the fore. Companies won't really start to report their
second-quarter numbers until the second week of July, but
investors are already beginning to handicap what the
numbers will look like. Generally, in these waning days of
the quarter, the forthcoming earnings have a negative effect
on the market. It is preannouncement season, the time when
companies that aren't executing go to confession.

When they do, however, you don't hear things like: "We
screwed up. Everybody else in our sector is kicking butt, but
we completely lost our competitive edge. There's nobody to
blame but management for this lousy quarter. We'll be out of
the office for the next couple of weeks because we're going
up to the Maine woods to sit in a sweat lodge, beat on
drums and work things out."

Instead, you often hear about how tough things are across
the sector. How a "slower than anticipated recovery in
several key markets -- including Brazil, Germany, Japan and
Russia -- is affecting reported results." (This from Gillette's
(G:NYSE) warning late Thursday.) Whole groups of
companies get tarred when this happens.

But Wall Street's optimism about this earnings season may
mean the market can fight its way through the
preannouncements. There is a sense that, for the first time
in a long time, earnings are going to be good. The good vibes
over the second-quarter numbers may even be a little bit
overdone, said Stanley Nabi, chief investment officer at DLJ
Investment Management.

"It has become almost an article of faith that earnings will be
very strong," he said. "I concede that earnings will be
favorable, but there will be a number of bombs."

But until the bombs fall, it looks like stocks still have some
legs. "It looks like we've got a little more to go," said Bob
Dickey, managing director of technical analysis at Dain
Rauscher Wessels in Minneapolis. "The market's rallying
ugly once again. Things are OK, a lot of the ducks are in
line, but not all of them."

Breadth is still poor, and volume remains a problem. So
while Dickey thinks the S&P 500 and the Dow may hit new
highs, he still characterizes it as "a bounce in the trading
range. You want to hope it's more, but I don't think it is."

This jibes with Nabi's sense of the market. "I'm not bearish
intermediate or long-term," he said, "but I think we're going
to have choppy markets for several months."

On the interest-rate front, there's a body who is saying it's a
little early to say that those rate-hike fears were completely
overblown. Investors reacted to Alan Greenspan's
pronouncement that the Fed didn't go into action with a
series of moves planned as an indication that a series of
hikes wouldn't happen. But that's a failure of both logic and
common sense.

Nabi points out that it would be inappropriate for Greenspan
to say he thought a series of hikes is needed. If that were
true, why not do it all at once? "The interpretation was, this
is just a flu shot," said Nabi. "I personally think if we get
close to a 4% growth rate in the second quarter, the Fed will
have no choice but to act again."

"We also worry a little bit that people have gotten too
comfortable with the idea that it's just one," said Bill Dudley,
director of U.S. economic research at Goldman Sachs.
"The market should be a little more agnostic about what the
Fed is going to do. Clearly Greenspan ruled out aggressively
tightening, but there's a long way between aggressively
tightening and just tightening once."

Not that that seems to matter at the moment. "The
information flow on data should be friendly for the next few
weeks," said Dudley. "The most likely course is that the
Treasury market will grind a bit higher," generally ignoring
the possibility of more hikes past this month.

Hardly surprising. Again and again, Wall Street has shown
itself to be a lot more like Aesop's grasshopper than his ant.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: Brian1970 who wrote (6769)6/19/1999 9:22:00 PM
From: TigerPaw   of 17175
 
optimistic that the market will test new highs in the coming months
My crystal ball is cloudy on short term. I'm staying in the market so I guess that means I'm optimistic, but mostly I'm optomistic longer term. The high bandwidth communication era has yet to kick in, it's close, and when it does I expect great things will happen. I'm bullish on EMC because a lot of storage will be needed for whatever endevour is tried and accomplished when communication finally reaches the new millenium. The next few months?, I've got my fingers crossed.
TP

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: TigerPaw who wrote (6770)6/21/1999 7:17:00 PM
From: JRI   of 17175
 
Tom Marisco, Marisco something-or-other fund, formerly manager of Janus Twenty (Thirty) gave a great, "my top idea" plug for EMC on CNBC Business Center Monday night...

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: JRI who wrote (6771)6/21/1999 7:59:00 PM
From: SJS   of 17175
 
John,

What was so great about his comments was the he said he saw the growth rate growing from EMC's stated 30%/year to something like 40 to 45%....

Hope you didn't miss THAT part!! <G>

Steve

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: JRI who wrote (6766)6/21/1999 10:40:00 PM
From: Brian Malloy   of 17175
 
Smiles all around
;-)

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

To: SJS who wrote (6772)6/21/1999 10:47:00 PM
From: Brian Malloy   of 17175
 
This will be part of the extra kicker/growth for EMC going forward. Not only is the internet growing at an exponential rate but companies must now go back and build up or contract out redundant systems. Just means even more demand/need for EMC's product.

Embarrassing sights for e-commerce
sjmercury.com 

Regards,


Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: Brian Malloy who wrote (6774)6/22/1999 12:30:00 AM
From: JRI   of 17175
 
Thanks to you and SJS for keeping the thread alive <g> How can a company of this size (and growth potential) have such a dead thread?

I know...take the easy road...tack a .com, and watch the thread and stock take off...

Cheers..

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (2)

To: JRI who wrote (6775)6/22/1999 7:15:00 AM
From: John Carragher   of 17175
 
How will this impact emc??



Tuesday June 22 1:28 AM ET

IBM To Unveil Storage Network Products

By Eric Auchard

NEW YORK (Reuters) - IBM said Tuesday it would unveil plans for a new generation of data storage
products that analysts forecast could represent the biggest chunk of new corporate technology spending
in three years.

International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE:IBM - news), the No. 2 supplier of data storage systems connected to
corporate computer systems, behind market leader EMC Corp. (NYSE:EMC - news), laid out a multiyear strategy for its new
Storage Area Network products.

SAN products allow companies to store centrally, manage and give office workers access to key business information, which is
proliferating amid exploding Internet use and cheaper disk drive technology that allows organizations to store more information
online.

In a strategy sure to confuse industry outsiders, IBM will not only make its new systems compatible with computers built by
rivals but will also sell them key technology building blocks on which its own storage products will be based.

''No other company can bring together a combination of storage, services, and servers and software to take advantage of this
important trend,'' James Vanderslice, group executive of IBM's technology business unit, said in an interview Monday.

Across the industry, computer makers are overcoming a traditional focus on selling storage systems that work only with their
own computers.

Instead, IBM and rivals like EMC, Sun Microsystems Inc. (Nasdaq:SUNW - news) and Hewlett-Packard Co. (NYSE:HWP
- news) are eying the far bigger potential market for SAN systems that work on both their own and rival computer systems.

''We are competitors and partners and customers,'' Vanderslice said of the side-by-side competition and cooperation that, at
least in the emerging stages of the market, has begun to characterize the data storage market.

The market for external data storage (equipment not built directly into computers themselves) is expected to grow to $21 billion
in 2003, up from $10.5 billion in 1998, according to a forecast by market research group Dataquest.

Within four years, SANs are expected to make up 80 percent, or $16 billion a year, of the sales of such storage equipment,
said Roger Cox, a Dataquest storage market analyst.

''Spending on data storage is going to make up such a huge portion of corporate (information technology) hardware budgets in
the future,'' Cox said. ''Upwards of 75 percent all new hardware dollars could go to storage systems within four to five years,''
he said.

In contrast to traditional computer layouts, in which centralized data storage is managed inside server computers or closely
connected to them, SANs are separate storage systems linked directly to office computer users, freeing office networks and
server computers to handle other tasks.

Earlier in the decade, IBM in effect pioneered development of SAN storage systems with ESCON, a system designed to
speed the storage of data on its S/390 line of mainframe computers.

IBM's proposed component supply arrangement builds on recent multibillion-dollar deals it struck with rivals like computer
maker Dell Computer Corp. (Nasdaq:DELL - news), storage supplier EMC Corp. and video game maker Nintendo Co.
More component supply pacts could be inked in coming weeks, Vanderslice said, declining to provide specifics.

By 2002, IBM estimates, 70 percent of all medium-size and large organizations will be using SANs to manage and share the
volumes of data created as they transform themselves into e-businesses.

At a news conference to be held at the PC Expo trade show in New York Tuesday, IBM will showcase its strategy to provide
customers with end-to-end SAN and storage systems -- providing not only the hardware but the software and services
necessary to install SANs, whether on IBM computers or other systems.

In addition to the strategy road map, IBM said it would offer SAN systems running on its line of Netfinity PC servers and other
Windows NT-based computers.

IBM said it would offer a means of offloading the process of making duplicate copies of key business data from overloaded
office networks by creating direct links between storage systems and its Tivoli system management software.

As part of its push to boost its role as a supplier of key components and not just whole computer systems, IBM will make
available SAN technology components, such as hard disks, network switching computer chips and faster microprocessors, to
other storage equipment vendors, even potential rivals.

Later this year, IBM said, it will unveil a new SAN-ready storage server system based on Seascape, the computer maker's
new open design that will underlie all future IBM storage products.





Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: John Carragher who wrote (6776)6/22/1999 7:50:00 AM
From: James   of 17175
 
John,

It's good news for EMC for two reasons.

First EMC hs shown in the past that they can compete head on with IBM - and win. Secondly, IBM's statement today is justification for the growth in the storage market that EMC has been touting for some time now.

Even keeping the same market share, not gaining any - EMC will be an incredibly larger company in 3 years than it is today.


Regards,

James

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

To: JRI who wrote (6775)6/22/1999 8:21:00 AM
From: SJS   of 17175
 
Ironically,

My stock was called last Friday. I am looking to get back in by writing juicy puts!!

Steve

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)
Previous 10 | Next 10 

Copyright © 1995-2013 Knight Sac Media. All rights reserved.