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Intel profit falls

By Scott Hillis
Reuters
Tuesday, January 16, 2007; 6:43 PM

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Intel Corp.'s (INTC.O) quarterly profit fell 40 percent amid a bruising price war with AMD and the top chipmaker's stock fell nearly 3 percent on Tuesday after it forecast gross margins would not improve this year.

Intel, which supplies processors for about three-quarters of the world's personal computers, also said it expected sales for the first quarter of between $8.7 billion and $9.3 billion, compared to the average Wall Street forecast of $8.93 billion.

Intel said gross margin would be about 49 percent in the first quarter and 50 percent for the year. Fourth-quarter gross margin was 49.6 percent, up from 49.1 percent in the third quarter but down from 61.8 percent a year earlier.

"If Intel is saying they don't expect any gross margin increase this year, that's a disappointment," said Jane Snorek, technology analyst at First American Funds in Milwaukee.

Intel shares fell 2.7 percent to $21.70 in extended trading on concerns about the outlook for its gross margin, which had improved in the past two quarters.

Chief Financial Officer Andy Bryant said fourth-quarter margins were helped by higher sales and new products, though some of that was offset by charges associated with underutilization of factories and its flash memory chip operations.

"When you look to Q1, when revenue falls you expect margins to come off a little bit. We are also getting ready to start production on the 45-nanometer process and there are extra costs associated with that," Bryant said.

Bryant was referring to the next generation of chipmaking equipment that will cost Intel billions of dollars to deploy but let it make smaller, faster chips.

Intel's fourth-quarter net profit, including special items, was $1.5 billion, or 26 cents per share, compared to $2.45 billion, or 40 cents per share, a year earlier.

Excluding restructuring charges and gains from the sale of assets, the profit was 25 cents per share, in line with the average Wall Street forecast for adjusted earnings.

Revenue was $9.69 billion, down 5 percent from $10.2 billion a year earlier, though it was ahead of the average forecast of $9.43 billion.

Santa Clara, California-based Intel has been locked in a price war with chief rival Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD.N). Over the past year, Intel shares have fallen nearly 15 percent while AMD's have lost nearly half their value.

The price war has bitten more deeply into AMD's bottom line, and the Sunnyvale, California-based company said last week its profit and revenue would fall short of analysts' estimates. Its stock is valued at 11.6 times expected 2007 profit, compared to nearly 19 times for Intel shares.

"The competitive pressures with AMD were more severe than we had thought," said JoAnne Feeney, managing director of FTN Midwest Securities. "Intel continues to struggle to regain its market share."

(Additional reporting by Michael Kahn)

© 2007 Reuters