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Intel upbeat on annual margin target
Intel has affirmed its profit-margin target for 2008, reassuring investors concerned about falling memory chip prices and the impact of a weak US economy, sending its stock up eight per cent.
San Francisco: Intel has affirmed its profit-margin target for 2008, reassuring investors concerned about falling memory chip prices and the impact of a weak US economy, sending its stock up eight per cent.
The world's largest maker of semiconductors reported a fall in first-quarter net income to $1.44 billion, or 25 cents per share, from $1.64 billion, or 28 cents a share, a year ago.
Revenue rose to $9.67 billion from $8.85 billion, slightly better than Wall Street expectations.
With both Intel and rival Advanced Micro Devices issuing results warnings in the first quarter, fears had been mounting about PC sales with the US economy possibly in a recession.
Intel's report on Tuesday went a long way toward easing those worries.
The earnings per share met Wall Street's average target, according to Reuters Estimates, but it was the profit margin outlook and revenue growth that boosted the stock.
"Revenue and gross margin guidance is more important than ever with Intel," said Justin McNichols, a portfolio manager at Osborne Partners Capital Management.
Full-year gross margin guidance of 57 per cent, plus or minus a few points, caught the eyes of many Intel watchers.
"The concern was that the memory business was dragging down the gross margins, which would drag down earnings," said Doug Freedman, an analyst at American Technology Research. "The general consensus was that it would be more like 56 per cent."
Intel had set the same margin target in January, then in March scaled back first-quarter margin expectations to 54 per cent, plus or minus a point.
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