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Wednesday, 11/05/2003 8:38:47 PM

Wednesday, November 05, 2003 8:38:47 PM

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Qualcomm Quarterly Profit Jumps 53 Pct
Wednesday November 5, 5:55 pm ET
By Yukari Iwatani


CHICAGO (Reuters) - Qualcomm Inc. (NasdaqNM:QCOM - News) on Wednesday posted a 53 percent increase in fiscal fourth-quarter profit, helped by a tax benefit in its investment unit and strong demand for its wireless chips that allow users to surf the Web at high speeds.


The company, which sells mobile phone chips and licenses wireless technology, also forecast fiscal first-quarter earnings higher than analysts' estimates on slightly stronger than expected chip shipments.

Qualcomm owns most of the patents to CDMA, or Code Division Multiple Access, the world's second-most widely used wireless technology standard. CDMA phones are used by more than 164 million subscribers in countries such as the United States, Korea, China, India and Japan.

Qualcomm has outperformed other telecoms equipment companies by licensing its technology and supplying about 90 percent of the chips for CDMA phones.

The company, which receives royalties based on a percentage of the sale price of every CDMA phone sold, had said in September it was seeing an increase in the average selling price of CDMA phones compared with the previous quarter.

Ed Snyder, principal at independent research firm Charter Research, said Qualcomm was also likely to be benefiting from strong demand in India where Reliance Infocomm, a unit of the powerful Reliance (Bombay:RELI.BO - News) group, recently started operating a CDMA network.

"The second shoe (in Asia) is dropping now," he said.

San Diego-based Qualcomm reported a net profit of $291 million, or 35 cents a diluted share, for its fiscal fourth quarter ended Sept. 28, compared with $190 million, or 23 cents a share, a year ago.

Net profit was significantly higher than its forecast of 19 cents to 21 cents because its tax rate dropped to 6 percent from the usual 30 percent range as a result of losses related to Brazilian investments and operations, the company said.

Excluding investments and amortization of goodwill, the company posted a profit of 29 cents, compared with 31 cents a year ago. Revenue in the quarter was $908.8 million, compared with $873.9 million a year ago. Excluding its strategic investment unit, revenue was $870.4 million.

The company had expected to earn 27 cents to 29 cents a share, excluding investments, on revenue growth of 2 percent to 6 percent.

Still, Shawn Campbell, principal with Campbell Asset Management, took a cautious view.

"There was a lot of noise earlier this year about other companies entering the handset and chipset business ... I'd like to hear what they are seeing there."

Qualcomm has been seeing increasing competition from the likes of STMicroelectronics (Paris:STM.PA - News) and Texas Instruments Inc. (NYSE:TXN - News). The world's largest cell phone maker, Nokia (NOK1V.HE), which does not use Qualcomm's chips, has also been gaining share in the CDMA market.

Qualcomm said it expects earnings per share, excluding investments, of about 37 cents to 40 cents in the fiscal first quarter as revenue decreases about 1 percent to 6 percent from a year ago and increases 16 percent to 22 percent from the fourth quarter.

For fiscal 2004, Qualcomm expects earnings, excluding investments, of $1.37 to $1.43 a share on revenue growth of 5 percent to 9 percent.

(Additional reporting by Jessica Hall in Philadelphia)

Comment: Typical quick newswire reporting. Competition from STM? And the "cautious view," saying there is a risk from other companies entering the handset business (which QCOM sold years ago to Kyocera, so FUD)?




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