t From the Wireless-Device Boom
Eric Jhonsa
November 10, 2009 

From the Reagan Administration onward, almost every boom within the tech sector 
has done wonders for a handful of chip companies that were able to take 
advantage of it. 

The PC industry boom propelled Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), AMD, and Micron Technology 
(NYSE: MU), among others. The cell phone boom, meanwhile, boosted the likes of 
Qualcomm (Nasdaq: QCOM), Texas Instruments, and RF Micro Devices (Nasdaq: 
RFMD). 

Right now, I believe we're in the midst of another such boom. But since it cuts 
across two well-established tech industries -- PCs and cell phones -- the 
market doesn't look at it as such. 

Namely, it's a boom in portable, Internet-connected devices -- products that 
can do things like browse the Web and stream quality video, but are also small 
and light enough to be carried around on a daily basis. 

Smartphones such as Apple's iPhone and Research In Motion's BlackBerries 
qualify here, as do netbook PCs. 
And so do some other devices, such as the iPod Touch, Amazon.com's Kindle 
e-Reader, and the much-rumored Apple tablet. 

Look at the spectacular unit shipment growth seen in smartphones, netbooks, and 
e-readers, and it becomes clear that a boom is well under way. 

So, which chip companies serving this market stand out? I think they break down 
into four different segments.  

Horsepower

These are the companies making the chips that provide the raw computing and 
graphics power needed to run these devices. 

Intel, with its Atom processor line, has to be near the top of the list. The 
company's efforts to create a low-power chip that can handle basic PC tasks 
have translated into a dominance of the netbook market that I don't see it 
relinquishing anytime soon. And before all is said and done, the Atom might 
find its way into some smartphones. 

Qualcomm is another name to watch. Already the undisputed leader in the market 
for the baseband processors that power cell phones and wireless data modems, 
Qualcomm is trying to up the ante with its Snapdragon processor line. By 
combining 3G communications features with enough processing power to challenge 
Intel's Atom, Snapdragon is beginning to find a home in both smartphones and 
higher-end netbooks. And since Snapdragon chips carry higher price tags than 
less powerful baseband processors, they should help offset the pricing pressure 
that Qualcomm is seeing in the latter area.  

Nvidia (Nasdaq: NVDA) might be a diamond in the rough. The company's Tegra 
processor combines a healthy dose of traditional processing power with 
market-leading graphics capabilities. The Tegra is already being used in 
Microsoft's Zune HD media player, and it's reportedly going to power a line of 
HTC smartphones and the successor to the Nintendo DS. With the market focusing 
on Nvidia's troubles in the PC graphics market, the Tegra could give the 
company an unexpected boost.  

Storage

All of these wireless devices need space to store everything from videos to 
apps to e-books. 
That's good news for flash memory giant SanDisk (Nasdaq: SNDK), as it recovers 
from an epic crash in memory prices that's accompanied the recession. In 
addition to being a leading vendor of the memory cards and embedded flash 
modules that are going into so many smartphones, SanDisk is working to become a 
leading vendor of the flash memory-based solid-state drives (SSDs) increasingly 
used in netbooks. And even if a particular device uses flash memory from a 
rival, the device's adoption helps SanDisk by boosting flash memory prices. I'm 
not as high on Micron, because of its heavy exposure to a PC memory market 
that's going nowhere fast, but the company's attempts to expand its flash 
memory business, courtesy of its IM Flash joint venture with Intel, could help 
its growth prospects a little. As might the company's mobile DRAM business, 
with smartphones gobbling up increasing amounts of the relatively expensive 
memory.  

Analog

Keeping down the power consumption of these portable devices, with their 
processors and massive displays, is quite the challenge, and it requires a 
number of complex, high-margin analog chips. National Semiconductor, which gets 
30% of its revenue from mobile devices and is seeing healthy adoption of its 
analog chips for smartphones, would be one way to play this trend. But 
investors who are looking for more of a "pure play" in this space, and are 
willing to assume more risk as well, might want to look at Advanced Analogic 
Technologies. Advanced Analogic gets the lion's share of its revenue from the 
cell-phone market, with manufacturers like Samsung and LG using the company's 
chips in a variety of high-end phones.  

Conglomerates

These are companies that develop chips for a variety of applications. Broadcom 
(Nasdaq: BRCM) is probably the most intriguing name here. The company has 
become a leader in the Bluetooth and Wi-Fi chip markets, and its "combo chips," 
which feature some combination of Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, GPS, and FM Radio 
technology, have been adopted by Apple and other smartphone makers. In 
addition, Broadcom has a growing baseband processor business that's picked up 
design wins with Nokia and Samsung. Broadcom's archrival, Marvell Technology, 
is also a big player in Wi-Fi, and has come out with its own combo chip 
products. In addition, the company has an application processor business that 
makes chips for smartphones, and it just announced a new processor for the 
e-reader market that should bring down prices for next-generation products. 
Marvell is also seeing booming sales of controller chips for SSDs, though I 
think this is offset by the fact that the company is also a leading maker of 
controllers for the hard drives that SSDs replace. Unlike the PC boom, which 
gave us Intel, it doesn't look as if the portable device boom will give us a 
single name that we'll all remember as its biggest winner. But it will leave 
some established chip names much better off.

Sent from my AXIS Worry Free BlackBerry® smartphone

------------------------------------

http://www.egovindonesia.com/Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/egov-indonesia/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/egov-indonesia/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Kirim email ke