Intel shares hit dotcom-era highs on robust data center
demand
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[January 26, 2018]
By Supantha Mukherjee and Sonam Rai
(Reuters) - Intel Inc's shares rose 6
percent on Friday to levels last seen during the dotcom boom 17 years
ago, after strong results offered the clearest sign yet that its
years-long effort to shift away from a slowing PC business was paying
off.
Investors were also comforted by Intel's assurances that it does not
expect any material impact from the recent disclosure of security flaws
Spectre and Meltdown in billions of its chips.
The Santa Clara-based company helped found the personal computer
industry and became one of the world's biggest chipmaker on the back of
growing demand for PCs. But, in the last few years, falling PC demand
has pushed Intel to focus on making chips for data centers to offset
revenue loss.
Revenue from the company's higher-margin data center business jumped
about 20 percent to $5.58 billion.
"Intel is successfully navigating the transition from a PC-centric to
data-centric company – specifically, Intel's data-centric businesses now
comprise about 47 percent of revenue," Credit Suisse analyst John Pitzer
said.
Pitzer upgraded the stock to "outperform" from "neutral."
The business is showing no signs of slowing down - Intel forecast its
data centric unit to grow mid-teens and PC centric business in the low
single digits this year, projecting overall revenue growth of 4 percent
to $65 billion.
"While we believe near term PC unit declines have been impacted by a
lengthening in the PC refresh cycle, we view this lengthening as slowing
over time, lessening the deleterious impact on overall company growth,"
Susquehanna Financial Group analyst Christopher Rolland said.
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An Intel WLAN wifi component inside a laptop is seen in this
illustration photo June 21, 2017. REUTERS/Thomas
White/Illustration/File Photo
Analysts said Intel will benefit this year from higher demand for gaming
computers, memory chip ramp and increased modem sales to Apple Inc's iPhones.
Modem sales increased 26 percent year-over-year, which we attribute largely to
the iPhone refresh, Oppenheimer analyst Rick Schafer said.
Intel has been increasingly displacing Qualcomm as Apple's key modem supplier
after its relationship with the iPhone maker soured last year over chip prices.
At least seven brokerages raised their price targets on the stock. Their median
price target was $51.
Of the 39 brokerages covering the stock, 23 rate it as "buy" or higher, 11
"hold" and five "sell" or lower.
The company's shares were trading at $48 before the opening bell. The stock has
gained 20 percent in the last 12 months, compared with a 40 percent gain in the
Philadelphia Semiconductor index.
(Reporting by Supantha Mukherjee and Sonam Rai in Bengaluru; Editing by
Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)
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