Showing posts with label samsung. Show all posts
Showing posts with label samsung. Show all posts

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Nokia May Be at the 'Last Chance Saloon'

The ills of the once dominant Finnish mobile phone maker Nokia ADR (NYSE: NOK) are many and, to some extent, getting worse. The company may be at 'The Last Chance Saloon.' The bartender is Steve Ballmer of Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT). He is pouring Nokia not the Finnish traditional 'long drink', but what he hopes is a nice, smooth and profitable drink of Windows 8 for smartphones.

Windows 8 had better be all that Microsoft has promised for Nokia's sake. It sold fewer of its flagship Lumia smartphones in the third quarter than Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) did of its new iPhone 5 in its opening weekend!

Poor Sales and Market Share Trend Continues

Nokia's smartphone sales in the third quarter amounted to just 6.3 million units. There were 2.9 million Lumias sold in the quarter, down from 4 million the previous quarter. In the important U.S. market, sales amounted to a mere 300,000 smartphones. That is down about 50% from the previous quarter. In addition, revenues in China fell 80% year-on-year. Much of the blame lies with the fact that consumers globally were waiting for the Lumia smartphones that run on the new Windows 8.

Right now the Windows operating system accounts for only 4% of the global smartphone market, badly trailing Apple's iOS and the Android operating system from Google (Nasdaq: GOOG). Samsung's new Galaxy III runs on Android. That's just another reason it wasn't a great shock that Nokia was bumped out of the top 5 smartphone makers in the third quarter. That was the first time that happened since researchers at IDC began compiling such data in 2004.

Sales are unlikely to improve as much as initially expected in the short term either. This quarter is traditionally the strongest for sales of phones due to the holiday season. However, for Nokia, the flagship 920 Lumia smartphone will not be available for several more weeks. It will also be available only through one carrier, AT&T. This combination will likely hold back sales despite Nokia's market-leading mapping and photo technology.

Carriers Want an Alternative

There is one huge positive in the corner of Nokia and Microsoft though. The telecom carriers such as AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon (NYSE: VZ) want a viable third choice to the current duopoly of Apple and Google.

Verizon's CEO, Lowell McAdam, told the Financial Times recently that “the carriers are beginning to coalesce around the need for a third ecosystem. It'll between [Blackberry maker] RIM (Research in Motion) and Microsoft, and I expect Microsoft to come out victorious.”

He may be right about Microsoft beating out RIM. According to the consumer research firm Kantar Worldwide, in Europe, Windows will overtake RIM's operating system by the end of the year. Nokia's entry-level smartphone Lumia 610 seems to be winning over cost-conscious consumers there. In a first for Windows, it now has more than 10% of the market in Italy.

The Future

Europe could prove to be very fertile ground for Nokia and Microsoft since more than 50% of European consumers have yet to purchase their first smartphone and still have older phones. The brand these consumers is most familiar with is Nokia.

Another plus is that the launch of Windows 8 should give an impetus to developers to build applications and content that is currently lacking on Windows phones. The myriad of apps and content is a huge selling point for Apple.

But getting that content is a slow process and Nokia may not have the luxury of waiting too long. It is burning through its cash position rather rapidly thanks to its continuing operating losses. Standard and Poor's has forecast that, by year's end, Nokia will be down to 3 billion euros in cash. Some credit analysts even doubt whether the company can make a 1.25 billion euro bond repayment in April 2014.

So the Windows 8 effect had better kick in and fast. The next six to nine months will be critical to the fate of Nokia.

This article was originally published on the Motley Fool Blog Network. Make sure to read all of my articles for the Motley Fool at http://beta.fool.com/tdalmoe/.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Can Apple Replicate Its Success in Emerging Markets?

The success of the iPhone from Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) in the United States is well known to nearly every investor. The iPhone and the iPad are the reasons why the stock has performed so well for so long. But what about the future? At least as far as the smartphone market goes, the future seems to lie in the emerging markets and cheaper smartphones.

The number of entry-level smartphones, according to Deliotte, sold this year (mainly in emerging markets) is expected to soar to 300 million units. This will more than double the total number in use globally to in excess of 500 million units.

Emerging markets, especially China, are key to Apple's future growth. It is expected that in excess of 150 million smartphones will be sold in China alone this year. Apple's CEO Tim Cook has said numerous times that demand there is “mind-boggling”. China, which has surpassed the United States as the world's biggest smartphone market, is already Apple's second-largest market after the U.S. Some analysts are worried that it may be losing its touch in China since its revenues in the region for the second quarter fell by 28 percent to $5.7 billion. The same quarter in 2011 had seen revenues jump sixfold. On the bright side, iPhone sales in the quarter still doubled year-on-year.

The main reason for the drop in Apple's China region revenues is simply competition for market share in the world's biggest smartphone market. The company's main competitor right now has to be Samsung with its Android-powered phones. Android is the smartphone operating system developed by Google (Nasdaq: GOOG). Samsung's smartphones currently have 30 percent of the Chinese market compared to only 10 percent for Apple. That is due to Samsung's strong retail presence in the country, even in the hinterlands.

In fact, Android phones have been so successful in China and other emerging markets that it led analyst Benedict Evans of Enders Analysis to recently tell the Financial Times that “It is very clear that Android is hoovering up market share in emerging markets”. This includes India where Apple is actually struggling, selling less phones there than in Norway. Its market share there is about 3 percent, versus 45 percent for Android-powered phones.

Apple has more to worry about than Samsung too. Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) and its partner Nokia ADR (NYSE: NOK) are placing a definite emphasis on China and other emerging markets as a growth engine. Microsoft believes that the only reason Android is so successful in China is that it happens to be on the cheaper smartphones. It and Nokia plan to match the low prices ($100-$150) while at the same time offering users a better experience with its Windows-powered phones such as Nokia's Lumia, a prototype of which was spotted in China this week.

The major plus for Microsoft's push into emerging markets with its phones later this year is that Nokia, unlike in the United States, has an almost unmatched reputation in the emerging world for producing quality products. But in China, Microsoft is covering its bases by also partnering with Samsung, HTC and ZTE.
Will Apple decide to compete on the low-end of the smartphone market? They may have to do something as the developed markets where they are so successful are becoming saturated. Most likely Apple will decide to the lower the price of their older 3G iPhone in order to make it more affordable to people in emerging markets. If they do this, these phones should sell well due to Apple's reputation. And don't forget that in China later this year Apple will, for the first time, release Siri in Mandarin.   This article was originally written for the Motley Fool Blog Network. Please read all of my articles for the Motley Fool at http://blog.fool.com/tdalmoe/.

Thursday, July 19, 2012

ASML and the Next Generation of Chips


One of the companies that is often pointed to in the technology sector as a bellwether as the world's top chip equipment maker is the Dutch company, ASML Holding NV ADR (Nasdaq: ASML). It not long ago gave a rather upbeat forward assessment of its business (thanks to smartphones and tablets) and now more good news is flowing for ASML shareholders.

The world's biggest semiconductor manufacturer Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), and one of ASML's largest customers, agreed to invest $4.1 billion into the company. Intel is putting $1 billion towards ASML's research and development costs as well as buying a 15 percent stake in the company for $3.1 billion.

Intel's major investment into ASML may soon be followed up by other sizable investments from other of the company's major customers. These customers include Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing ADR (NYSE: TSM) and Korea's Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. (NASDAQOTH: SSNLF.PK). It has been reported that ASML has asked its three biggest customers, accounting for 41 percent of its revenues, to help fund its R&D in exchange for up to 25 percent of the company.

Why would these three semiconductor companies be so anxious to help out ASML? Because they are very concerned about maintaining the progress in chip miniaturization over the coming years.

In particular, the money from Intel, Samsung and TSM will help ASML accelerate the development of the next step beyond laser technology, extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) lithography. This is a new process that is seen as key to producing smaller chips. It requires a vacuum inside the machine and mirrors instead of lenses to focus the light on the silicon. ASML is seen as the leader in the field and it believes that the new technology will be able to be used for mass production of chips below 20 nanometers beginning in early 2013. The research money should allow it to break the 10 nanometer barrier later this decade.

In addition, the money injections will be used to help with the development of equipment that can handle larger-sized circular wafers from which chips are cut. The next generation 450 millimeter diameter wafers will contain roughly double the amount of chips as existing 300 millimeter wafers. Development of this technology should result in cost savings for chip makers of 30-40 percent.

From ASML's viewpoint, these investments will be key to it remaining number one in semiconductor equipment and ahead of its Japanese rival Nikon Corporation ADR (NASDAQOTH: NINOY.PK). That company is also working on EUV lithography technology and has ASML a bit worried. But the good news here is that it is believed Nikon is at least two years behind ASML in developing EUV technology with its version of EUV technology not coming onstream until at least 2015. And this cash injection by Intel and the other major chip makers into ASML is sure to put Nikon even more behind the proverbial eight ball.

This development and advancement in chip manufacturing technology bodes well long-term for users of tech gadgets such as smartphones and tablets too since production costs for such gadgets will be much lower. Nomura's global technology specialist, Richard Windsor, even told Reuters that “We're talking about $50 tablets”.

But the real winner here is ASML and its shareholders as it has basically cemented its place as the number one semiconductor equipment for the next decade.

This article was originally written for the Motley Fool Blog Network. Don't miss my daily articles for the Motley Fool at http://blogs.foool.com/tdalmoe/.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Nokia's Last Hope: Lumia

Mobile phone manufacturer Nokia ADR (NYSE: NOK) is no longer Finland's most valuable company as measured by market capitalization. The latest fall in Nokia's share value came after the company announced a surprise profit warning and technical glitches associated with its new Lumia phones.

Lumia is the first Windows-based phone that came as a result of the collaboration between Nokia and Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT). It was jointly launched in the US by Nokia, Microsoft and AT&T (NYSE: T). The problem – it it had difficulty connecting to the internet on AT&T's LTE 4G network – came to light soon after the Lumia 900 phone went on sale in the US.

Even more surprising than the technical problems with its new phone was the surprise profit warning. Nokia warned that its low-end phone division – which had always enjoyed great success in the emerging markets – was losing market share much faster than expected. Sales in this division sank 35 percent in the first quarter to about $3 billion.

Low-end phones, which make up 30 percent of Nokia's sales, lost market share to both Chinese manufacturers and devices using the Android operating system from Google (Nasdaq: GOOG). The loss of market share, particularly to Samsung's Android devices, is in large part due to the fact that Nokia is dumping its current operating system, Symbian, rendering those phones obsolete in a few short years.

These recent events just continue to emphasize the fact that Nokia has been left behind in the smartphone race in the last few years. Nokia's decline has left its shareholders smarting. Its stock sank by a fifth just last week after the bad news, leaving it down 90 percent from its peak since the iPhone from Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) was launched in 2007.

Perhaps the last hope for the company lies in its tie-up Microsoft and the resulting Lumia phones. It has not been an auspicious start for Lumia, however. Even ignoring the technical glitches, initial sales (launched in November globally) of the Lumia range of phones have been disappointing. In the first quarter of 2012, only 2 million Lumia phones were sold. In comparison, Apple sold 37 million iPhones during the same period.

It remains to be seen whether the Lumia 900, with its very reasonable $99 price tag here in the US, will sell. Nokia has even been forced to offer a $100 credit on phone bills to anyone who buys it before April 21 in an effort to stimulate dull US sales so far. Of course, both Microsoft and AT&T are hoping Lumia succeeds too.

The lack of success so far for Lumia certainly calls into question whether consumers really want a Windows-based smartphone. If it turns out they do not want Windows-based phones, the tie-up with Microsoft has sealed Nokia's fate as it now has no future options except producing Windows phones.

Some investors already think the company is doomed as the cost of insuring the company's debt soared to a record high, implying that Nokia's debt was already considered to be “junk” status. The company is not dead yet though and still has net cash of 4.9 billion euros. However, it did burn through 700 million euros in the first quarter and has stated that it must continue spending heavily on marketing the new Lumia phones. So Nokia shareholders should not be surprised to see the dividend eliminated soon.

If the company burns through its cash pile, it may resort to selling assets in an effort to keep afloat. These assets could include mapping technology company Navteq or perhaps even some of its intellectual property rights. But if Lumia phone sales don't pick up some time this year, Nokia itself may be up for sale to Microsoft or other bidders. That would be a sad end for a company that once dominated the mobile phone industry.

This article originally was written for the Motley Fool Blog Network. Please make sure to check out my daily articles for the Motley Fool at http://blogs.fool.com/tdalmoe/

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Apple and Google Score in the Holiday Season

The battle in the smartphone market during the Christmas season seems to have come down to a two-horse race between the iPhone from Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and smartphones with the Android operating system developed by Google (Nasdaq: GOOG).

In the third quarter of 2011, the number of Android-powered smartphones knocked the iPhone into second place overall with Korea's Samsung overtaking Apple to become the world's largest seller of smartphones.

However, analysts have expected Apple to bounce back smartly in the fourth quarter following the launch of its iPhone 4S in October. And the analysts may be right. In the U.S., the iPhone 4S has been the best selling phone in the run-up to the Christmas holiday.

The success of the iPhone and Samsung's line of Android-powered smartphones seems to have pushed aside the competitors this holiday season. Competitors such as HTC and Research in Motion (Nasdaq: RIMM) have warned of very weak holiday sales.

An analyst an Bernstein, Pierre Ferragu, said this about Apple and Android-based smartphones: “We now have a strong conviction that the two ecosystems won't leave much room for any alternatives.”

It remains to be seen though whether this will continue to be true in the months ahead.