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  • Nokia sucks more air out of handsets

    Posted Jul 17 2008, 05:52 AM by Douglas McIntyre Rating:

    Nokia had a stronger second quarter than most people expected. According to The Wall Street Journal, "Nokia said sales rose to €13.15 billion from €12.59 billion. Analysts expected sales of €12.86 billion."

    Just as important, Nokia's global market share rose to 40% from 39% last year and the company shipped 122 million handsets. A great deal of the improvement came due to sales of units in India and China.

    This is not exactly good news for companies like Motorola, RIM, and Apple. The US and EU are becoming modest to zero growth markets for handsets. Improving prospects in the areas where they market most of their products won't be of any help this year.   Read More...

  • Handset stocks at risk in a recession

    Posted Feb 07 2008, 12:45 PM by Kim Peterson Rating:

    Handset companies who do business in North America will be hit hard in a recession, Citi analyst Jim Suva said in a note this morning. Suva takes a close look at Brightpoint, Motorola, Palm and Research in Motion, and calls out the latter as the stock that could "see the greatest damage to share price."

    Suva writes that Research in Motion "faces double-barreled risk," according to Barron's, because of its strong presence in North America and its high P/E multiple (currently at 45.20). The stock could drop to $63 in a worst-case, global recession. RIMM shares closed today at $84.68.

    Embattled Palm is very exposed in North America, and Suva thinks a recession could push shares down to $3 or $4 a share. Palm closed today at $5.99.   Read More...

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  • Goodbye Moto

    Posted Nov 20 2007, 11:32 AM by Robert Walberg Rating:

    Like the song says, "some say love is a Razr that leaves your soul to bleed." Well, my soul has bled waiting for Motorola's stock to turn around.  I can't wait any longer -- I'm not Job, after all.

    Motorola has been screwing up for so long, it even gets it wrong when it gets it right. Last quarter the company delivered another lousy set of sales and earnings numbers, yet it guided fiscal fourth-quarter earnings to a range of 13 to 14 cents a share -- a few pennies above The Street's consensus.  Normally, guiding estimates higher would be perceived as a good thing, and it was at first as the stock edged higher on the news.  However, in offering up hope for the fourth quarter and the upcoming year, CEO Ed Zander might have won himself a new contract. And that's bad news.  

    You see one of the reasons I bought Motorola's stock down at its lows was in anticipation of a new management team.  Typically when a struggling company finally ousts its old CEO in favor of someone new and full of promise, the underlying stock tends to rally. Until recently, Zander's ouster was all but certain. But in light of the company's modest progress off a terrible set of numbers, Zander might just hang around.  Let's face it, he did take all the credit for the Razr so there might be a board member or two who thinks he's on the verge of another one-hit wonder.   Read More...

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