Intel found to be abusing market power in Japan

R

Rob Stow

Robert said:
You know how I hate to be tedious, but the going word is that (say) an
800Mhz P3 is all anybody would ever need. I suspect that VIA will come
up to that standard soon. Are you saying China never will (without
seizing Taiwan, of course) or that an 800Mhz P3 is inadequate to do
Chinese text?

I know a family of Hong Kong escapees that last year came to
Saskatchewan from Vancouver. They have 6 computers: a
workstation for the father to work on, a good gaming rig for the
kids, and four cheap "homework" boxes for the kids that the
father built himself. Those four have a 512 MB PC133 DIMM and an
866 MHz C3 ( fanless !) plugged into used Socket 370 motherboards
that I gave him.

They find those C3 machines to be quite adequate with Linux for
tasks like word processing, e-mailing, and web browsing - all in
Chinese. For school work the kids also boot into W2K (English).
 
R

Robert Myers

Robert Myers wrote:


I'm starting to see a distinct stock market-centric view in your posts
now. While I'm talking about the actual business of these companies.
Probably explains our inability to figure each other out. As I said as
far as I'm concerned, the stock market isn't any indicator of economics
or business.

That's your theory, and you're welcome to it. Corporate executives
these days pay attention to Wall Street, and to institutional
investors who could swing large blocs of votes at shareholders
meetings. Stock market performance is one summary measure of what
those institutional investors think.

You posted an item about regulatory action against Intel in Japan.
That's neat. How important is it? I have no basis for judging, so I
do what everybody else does: I look that the stock price. When
something really dramatic and material happens to a stock, the effects
are usually evident in the stock price. If it's not, then what
happened probably isn't that dramatic and material.
BTW, that definition of Efficient Market Theory is down below. It
sounds like a theory in the truest sense of the word, an academic
construct. It's an idealization that stock markets exactly reflect
economics, and economics are reflected in stock markets. Nothing can be
further from the truth here. Stock markets are subject to manipulation
by very rich players who are not interested in transmitting information
efficiently.

<snip>

Accurate insight into a market inefficiency is an opportunity to make
money. According to efficient market theory, it's the only
opportunity to make money. That's why I invited you to stop wasting
your apparent certainty about the importance of this particular
situation and put some money into the market. You could buy AMD or
short Intel. Manipulation only works short term, if it works at all.
Fundamentals always win over the long haul (with an appropriately
flexible definition of "fundamental").
Well of course there's a difference in interpretation of the law. How
often does an accused criminal ever admit that they are guilty? There's
never any end of excuses.

And equally, the accuser strongly believes that they are in the right.
That's why the legal system has judges to sort these interpretations
out.
Most such disagreements are worked out without going to trial.
Why is there no guarantee that AMD will prevail after a judgement from
Japan? A guilty finding in a criminal case can be used in a civil case
as irrefutable evidence.
It amounts to a finding of fact. Nothing more. You think Japanese
regulators are going to uncover enough evidence to support huge
damages without further litigation? I think it unlikely and there is
no evidence the markets disagree.
In the meantime, Intel cannot make any further contracts within that
jurisdiction that restrict AMD from doing business.
If they are enjoined by a regulator from doing so, they are enjoined
from doing so, but not as the result of litigation by AMD. Again, if
the markets expected significant action, we'd see it in trading on
Wall Street. Apparently, the judgment of the market is that it's no
big deal. You are free to disagree by laying your own bet.

If even a substantial fraction of issues just between corporations
that could be litigated actually were litigated, our courts would be
even more jammed than they are. If you are in a situation that could
lead to litigation and your attorney does not advise you to try to
find a settlement without litigating, find another attorney. That's
good advice in the US. Maybe things are different in Canada.

RM
 
Y

Yousuf Khan

George said:
It's my understanding that the military was *very* interested in using 808x
CPUs, to the extent that some of the licensees, possibly Harris IIRC, also
specialized in making "hardened" versions.

They may have become interested in using it, *after* IBM started using
them in their PCs. The IBM PC was pretty much an overnight success, and
it propelled its processor into the spotlight like it was never one
before. Prior to that, I would gather that most military projects may
have centred around Motorola 68xxx processors. Let's face it the Intel
8086 was generally considered a sad-sack processor.
You'd have to go a long ways back to find any substantial volumes of
notebooks with non-Intel chipsets though... my point being that right now,
Centrino is not making sales of chipsets that would not otherwise be made.

Wasn't ATI making an Intel P3 and later P4 laptop integrated-graphics
chipset?
AMD's "results" don't make sense to me: it's the techies who know that
Centrino doesn't mean anything... maybe self-proclaimed wannabe techies
don't know?:)

No, I'm sure most techies know that the Centrino is not really a
processor, but a platform. But that's not really important, the techies
are more impressed with the power savings.
I wouldn't call it *much* easier in Europe - one extra supplier in
Fujitsu-Siemens and even there they were playing the system down as a
"home" job.

This all should be changing relatively soon, after the JFTC gets through
with Intel. Japanese companies will be immune from Intel exclusivity
contracts from this point forward, because the JFTC will be scrutinizing
each contract individually. With their worldwide sales channels, these
Japanese companies can sell any mix of processors that they like, even
in the US. With so many Japanese brands carrying a large proportion of
AMD processors, the domestic manufacturers might have to respond in kind.

Yousuf Khan
 
Y

Yousuf Khan

George said:
I mean the supposed "success" of Centrino as a marketing exercise. IMO
people, and I'm including myself here of course, don't go out to buy and
say: "I gotta have one of them Centrino jobs"... unless maybe they're too
stupid to own a computer in the first place. Features are what sell a
system; in the case of Centrino, one of the most important features, given
that its performance is satisfactory, is the power management & battery
life which is mainly down to the Pentium M and its chipset; the NIC is a
throwaway which doesn't matter. In fact given the choice I'd avoid an
Intel-based NIC for just about any alternative.

AMD Turion will have to match the integration of Centrino in one
respect: power management. With the CPU able to send signals to the
chipset to conserve power. Easy (relatively) with one manufacturer for
both CPU & chipset, a bit harder when they're made by different people.
AMD is going to certify certain chipsets with Turion, likely this
feature is going to be required for certification.

Yousuf Khan
 
R

Robert Myers

I know a family of Hong Kong escapees that last year came to
Saskatchewan from Vancouver. They have 6 computers: a
workstation for the father to work on, a good gaming rig for the
kids, and four cheap "homework" boxes for the kids that the
father built himself. Those four have a 512 MB PC133 DIMM and an
866 MHz C3 ( fanless !) plugged into used Socket 370 motherboards
that I gave him.

They find those C3 machines to be quite adequate with Linux for
tasks like word processing, e-mailing, and web browsing - all in
Chinese. For school work the kids also boot into W2K (English).

Maybe the key word is Linux. Or maybe the boxes George has seen in
action have become heavily encumbered with bloatware.

The ratio of hype-to-reality in Via's marketing is pretty amazing, as
their processors really are uncompetitive, but it seems as if they
would do well enough to satisfy users in undemanding applications:

http://www.digit-life.com/articles2/roundupmobo/via-c3-nehemiah.html

RM
 
Y

YKhan

Robert said:
You posted an item about regulatory action against Intel in Japan.
That's neat. How important is it? I have no basis for judging, so I
do what everybody else does: I look that the stock price. When
something really dramatic and material happens to a stock, the effects
are usually evident in the stock price. If it's not, then what
happened probably isn't that dramatic and material.

I've seen very little affect AMD's stock price, it has no streaks of
dramatism at all. Companies like Rambus spike up or down based on court
rulings, but then Rambus' main business is litigation.

For example, the introduction of Hammer and Intel's problems with
manufacturing were mainly evident to us here on these newsgroups long
before AMD's institutional investors even noticed it. That may have
resulted in a long slow outperforming of the sector by AMD, but there
was no spike up, just a long steady climb.
Most such disagreements are worked out without going to trial.
Whatever.


It amounts to a finding of fact. Nothing more. You think Japanese
regulators are going to uncover enough evidence to support huge
damages without further litigation? I think it unlikely and there is
no evidence the markets disagree.

I don't know what the criteria to support "huge damages" are, but yes,
just this finding alone is enough to support some form of damages. It's
upto AMD to find out more about how long this has been happening, but
there won't be any doubt about whether this happened or not.
If they are enjoined by a regulator from doing so, they are enjoined
from doing so, but not as the result of litigation by AMD. Again, if
the markets expected significant action, we'd see it in trading on
Wall Street. Apparently, the judgment of the market is that it's no
big deal. You are free to disagree by laying your own bet.

These are perfect examples of stuff Wall Street normally misses and
then they scramble later to make up for it. WS will also require at
least a trial to begin before it starts reacting.
If even a substantial fraction of issues just between corporations
that could be litigated actually were litigated, our courts would be
even more jammed than they are. If you are in a situation that could
lead to litigation and your attorney does not advise you to try to
find a settlement without litigating, find another attorney. That's
good advice in the US. Maybe things are different in Canada.

Litigation also involves out of court settlements.

Yousuf Khan
 
G

George Macdonald

You know how I hate to be tedious, but the going word is that (say) an
800Mhz P3 is all anybody would ever need. I suspect that VIA will come
up to that standard soon. Are you saying China never will (without
seizing Taiwan, of course) or that an 800Mhz P3 is inadequate to do
Chinese text?

As far as PRChina success with product, I'm sure they can develop the
technology - I serously doubt that their system can offer the various
conduits to market that the U.S. or even Europe can take advantage of. As
an example of a country with leading edge technology which was allowed to
wither/rot on the bough, for a multitude of reasons, the U.K. auto industry
is a (stereo)typical case and that's a quasi capitalist system.
If the latter...I have a hard time imagining how that could be so. I
suspect poor programming, but I wouldn't mind being educated. I mean
*are* there tasks (other than computer games and bad programming) that
an 800 MHz PIII can't currently handle, and is this a real example?

You need to see Powerword or Foxmail doing scrolling of Chinese
characters.;-)
 
G

George Macdonald

They may have become interested in using it, *after* IBM started using
them in their PCs. The IBM PC was pretty much an overnight success, and
it propelled its processor into the spotlight like it was never one
before. Prior to that, I would gather that most military projects may
have centred around Motorola 68xxx processors. Let's face it the Intel
8086 was generally considered a sad-sack processor.

Everybody loved the 68000 but nobody used it - when you boil it down,
performance-wise it was a dog. Such a beautiful thing for an orthogonal
CISC purist but using the orthogonality killed the performance; VAX had had
similar problems... you'd think people would learn. The 68000 also didn't
have the inertia built up from the 8080/8085 in micro-controller apps:
MultiBus, STB Bus, S100 Bus etc. VersaBus and then VMEBus didn't tickle
the right price/performance sector.
Wasn't ATI making an Intel P3 and later P4 laptop integrated-graphics
chipset?

Not sure of your timeframe but I certainly never saw it... unless you mean
relatively recent efforts... which OEMs seem to be ignoring(?)... AFAICT.
No, I'm sure most techies know that the Centrino is not really a
processor, but a platform. But that's not really important, the techies
are more impressed with the power savings.

Even your average road warrior appreciates power savings for whiling away
the hours on long flights.:)
This all should be changing relatively soon, after the JFTC gets through
with Intel. Japanese companies will be immune from Intel exclusivity
contracts from this point forward, because the JFTC will be scrutinizing
each contract individually. With their worldwide sales channels, these
Japanese companies can sell any mix of processors that they like, even
in the US. With so many Japanese brands carrying a large proportion of
AMD processors, the domestic manufacturers might have to respond in kind.

Let's hope that there will be some sanity and balance and that IT "decision
maker" types will take off the blinkers... and stop listening to paid
shills like RCK. It's a "sair fecht".:)
 
K

Keith R. Williams

fammacd=! said:
I thought it was the U.S. military that insisted on the 2nd source for
x86s?

No, it was IBM. Remember, Intel was a teensy company in the early '80s
and came perilously close to the abyss. IBM was forced to invest
heavily in Intel to keep that from happening. IBM couldn't afford such
risks in any supplier (there were rules regarding the percentage of
business a company could have with IBM; IIRC 30%), so forced second
sources, of which IBM itself was later one. These rules/actions
weren't only true for Intel and the 8086. It wasn't unusual for
companies to be forced into second-source agreements to sell into IBM.
One of the first questions asked of any supplier was "who is your
second source?"
 
R

Robert Myers

I've seen very little affect AMD's stock price, it has no streaks of
dramatism at all. Companies like Rambus spike up or down based on court
rulings, but then Rambus' main business is litigation.

For example, the introduction of Hammer and Intel's problems with
manufacturing were mainly evident to us here on these newsgroups long
before AMD's institutional investors even noticed it. That may have
resulted in a long slow outperforming of the sector by AMD, but there
was no spike up, just a long steady climb.

And it's possible that those who read and post here might understand
better than markets in general what that kind of news means and what
kind of impact it might have on the business...

In contrast to the likelihood that anyone here would be able to
outguess the markets with respect to news that is purely business,
with no particular dependency on specialized technical knowledge for
interpretation.

I might add, even in the case of technical news, outguessing the
markets is possible but unlikely (on the average...that doesn't mean
individuals can't be very lucky or very unlucky in individual
transactions). Markets are pretty smart.

Rambus shows bigger price swings than AMD because it has smaller
market capitalization (1.34 billion vs. 6.37 billion). As it is, the
market cap even of AMD is tiny compared to Intel (146.46 billion), so
the fact that there was not a twitch from AMD share prices (or none
that is easily interpreted) over this particular news tells me you are
pretty far out there if you think this news is a big deal...certainly
not in a way that is going to impact Intel in any serious way.

These are perfect examples of stuff Wall Street normally misses and
then they scramble later to make up for it. WS will also require at
least a trial to begin before it starts reacting.
It just is not plausible that a technical person reading the financial
pages is going to be successful outguessing markets in a case like
this, except by pure luck.
Litigation also involves out of court settlements.
Each step AMD takes raises the stakes, and it would be taking on a
corporation with very deep pockets. The easiest settlement to get is
one that doesn't involve money changing hands. The instant you start
paying lawyers to litigate, the first money goes into the pockets of
the lawyers.

AMD might file suit, anyway? Of course they might. How would I know?
I understand AMD less well than I understand Intel, which is very big,
very rich, very arrogant, and very stubborn. All the things that make
you dislike Intel. AMD might take them on, anyway? How would I know?
Were it me, I'd avoid it if I could.

RM
 
Y

YKhan

Robert said:
And it's possible that those who read and post here might understand
better than markets in general what that kind of news means and what
kind of impact it might have on the business...

In contrast to the likelihood that anyone here would be able to
outguess the markets with respect to news that is purely business,
with no particular dependency on specialized technical knowledge for
interpretation.

I might add, even in the case of technical news, outguessing the
markets is possible but unlikely (on the average...that doesn't mean
individuals can't be very lucky or very unlucky in individual
transactions). Markets are pretty smart.

I wouldn't say that the stock markets are very smart. They're just
flocks of sheep, going wherever the shepherd leads them.

I did take my stab at stock market investing back in the Dotcom days,
like everyone else. Back then, the technological news was that AMD had
decided to start using copper interconnects in their process
technology, and that Intel was nowhere close to adopting it -- it would
take them at least six months or more to catch up. So I bought AMD as
soon as possible, armed with my technical knowledge, thinking once that
news was known, it was just going to be impossible to buy it. Well I
bought it, and it did go up, but there was no spike up because of the
news, it just went up with the sector like everybody else. Neither good
news nor bad news really affected its price severely. AMD did have at
least a six month lead on Intel in that field as I predicted, and it
did make some healthy money because of it too. But Wall Street doesn't
understand copper interconnects, nor SOI, nor 180nm to 130nm
transitions, or any of the other technological news that has come out
about it over the years.

I've decided the only knowledge that matters when playing the stock
market is not technical knowledge, but psychological knowledge.

Rambus shows bigger price swings than AMD because it has smaller
market capitalization (1.34 billion vs. 6.37 billion). As it is, the
market cap even of AMD is tiny compared to Intel (146.46 billion), so
the fact that there was not a twitch from AMD share prices (or none
that is easily interpreted) over this particular news tells me you are
pretty far out there if you think this news is a big deal...certainly
not in a way that is going to impact Intel in any serious way.

I wouldn't even say that market cap has got anything to do with it.
Some stocks are just more institutionally-driven, while others are
driven by individuals. Institutional investors barely even look at the
fundamentals of a company, they just drive it up and down whit the
sector. That's AMD.
Each step AMD takes raises the stakes, and it would be taking on a
corporation with very deep pockets. The easiest settlement to get is
one that doesn't involve money changing hands. The instant you start
paying lawyers to litigate, the first money goes into the pockets of
the lawyers.

In this case, both corporations are mult-billion dollar corps. I don't
think AMD is too worried about legal costs anymore than Intel is. The
deep pockets argument is only valid when we talk about individual
people taking on a corporation.
AMD might file suit, anyway? Of course they might. How would I know?
I understand AMD less well than I understand Intel, which is very big,
very rich, very arrogant, and very stubborn. All the things that make
you dislike Intel. AMD might take them on, anyway? How would I know?
Were it me, I'd avoid it if I could.

AMD and Intel have taken each other on quite often in the past. Neither
went bankrup because of it.

Yousuf Khan
 
R

Robert Myers

I wouldn't say that the stock markets are very smart. They're just
flocks of sheep, going wherever the shepherd leads them.

I did take my stab at stock market investing back in the Dotcom days,
like everyone else. Back then, the technological news was that AMD had
decided to start using copper interconnects in their process
technology, and that Intel was nowhere close to adopting it -- it would
take them at least six months or more to catch up. So I bought AMD as
soon as possible, armed with my technical knowledge, thinking once that
news was known, it was just going to be impossible to buy it. Well I
bought it, and it did go up, but there was no spike up because of the
news, it just went up with the sector like everybody else. Neither good
news nor bad news really affected its price severely. AMD did have at
least a six month lead on Intel in that field as I predicted, and it
did make some healthy money because of it too. But Wall Street doesn't
understand copper interconnects, nor SOI, nor 180nm to 130nm
transitions, or any of the other technological news that has come out
about it over the years.

I've decided the only knowledge that matters when playing the stock
market is not technical knowledge, but psychological knowledge.



I wouldn't even say that market cap has got anything to do with it.
Some stocks are just more institutionally-driven, while others are
driven by individuals. Institutional investors barely even look at the
fundamentals of a company, they just drive it up and down whit the
sector. That's AMD.

Yes, there is an aspect of psychology to the stock market, and the
stock market does wildly irrational things, like drive the tech sector
up to unreasonable and unsustainable levels before the internet bubble
crashed.

Securities markets measure expectations. There is no way to separate
expectations about fundamentals (how the company is going to perform
financially) from expectations about expectations (how other investors
are going to behave). I've relied on the stock price as an accurate
measure of expectations about fundamentals. You're arguing that stock
prices have nothing to do with fundamentals. I'll argue that if your
position were accurate, capital markets would be useless and
capitalism broken. And I'll stick with my position that markets
aren't expecting anything very exciting to happen as a result of
regulatory action against Intel in Japan and that the markets are more
competent than you or I to make that judgment.

RM
 
Y

YKhan

Robert said:
Securities markets measure expectations. There is no way to separate
expectations about fundamentals (how the company is going to perform
financially) from expectations about expectations (how other investors
are going to behave). I've relied on the stock price as an accurate
measure of expectations about fundamentals. You're arguing that stock
prices have nothing to do with fundamentals. I'll argue that if your
position were accurate, capital markets would be useless and
capitalism broken.

Bingo! The stock market is a gigantic Vegas-style game of chance,
masquerading as an economic indicator.
And I'll stick with my position that markets
aren't expecting anything very exciting to happen as a result of
regulatory action against Intel in Japan and that the markets are more
competent than you or I to make that judgment.

Speaking of the original subject of this thread, there's been a new
development in the anti-trust case against Intel. Intel has asked for
and obtained an extension to respond to the allegations. It was
originally supposed to respond by Mar 18th (today), but now it can
respond by Apr 1st (April Fools Day). :)

http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2005/03/18/ap1892925.html

Yousuf Khan
 
G

George Macdonald

Rambus shows bigger price swings than AMD because it has smaller
market capitalization (1.34 billion vs. 6.37 billion).

I think the reasons RMBS is so volatile are: 1) agressive VCs with lots of
(legal) insider trading; 2) publicly, it is speculatively traded by shills,
pump 'n' dumpers and ex-day traders dreaming of that elusive big kill. As
Yousuf hinted, it's an unstable company, which is run by and for lawyers
and whose only asset is IP.
As it is, the
market cap even of AMD is tiny compared to Intel (146.46 billion), so
the fact that there was not a twitch from AMD share prices (or none
that is easily interpreted) over this particular news tells me you are
pretty far out there if you think this news is a big deal...certainly
not in a way that is going to impact Intel in any serious way.

I'd say it *is* a big deal if Sony, NEC, Toshiba, Fujitsu et.al. are going
to be allowed to decide for themselves which CPU they put in their systems
for world-wide distribution. If the Intel market-assist is curtailed
because of it, so much the better - Intel will have to sweeten the pot in
other ways... like lower prices, if they still want to play.
It just is not plausible that a technical person reading the financial
pages is going to be successful outguessing markets in a case like
this, except by pure luck.

That's only because of the Wall St. gangs who are basically playing games
against each other.... "outsider" insider trading??:)
Each step AMD takes raises the stakes, and it would be taking on a
corporation with very deep pockets. The easiest settlement to get is
one that doesn't involve money changing hands. The instant you start
paying lawyers to litigate, the first money goes into the pockets of
the lawyers.

AMD might file suit, anyway? Of course they might. How would I know?
I understand AMD less well than I understand Intel, which is very big,
very rich, very arrogant, and very stubborn. All the things that make
you dislike Intel. AMD might take them on, anyway? How would I know?
Were it me, I'd avoid it if I could.

The one "worry" I have about AMD is that they are going to fritter away the
inevitable CPU gains on things like Geode and commodity prods like flash.
I don't really think they have a chance of coming out ahead with a civil
court case.
 
Y

YKhan

George said:
I think the reasons RMBS is so volatile are: 1) agressive VCs with lots of
(legal) insider trading; 2) publicly, it is speculatively traded by shills,
pump 'n' dumpers and ex-day traders dreaming of that elusive big kill. As
Yousuf hinted, it's an unstable company, which is run by and for lawyers
and whose only asset is IP.

Looks like Rambus might have engineers afterall, it's opening up a
facility in Bangalore:

http://news.com.com/Rambus+opens+design+center+in+Bangalore/2110-1006_3-5623263.html?tag=html.alert

Unless, this facility is where it's outsourced its lawyers too. :)

Yousuf Khan
 
R

Robert Myers

I think the reasons RMBS is so volatile are: 1) agressive VCs with lots of
(legal) insider trading; 2) publicly, it is speculatively traded by shills,
pump 'n' dumpers and ex-day traders dreaming of that elusive big kill. As
Yousuf hinted, it's an unstable company, which is run by and for lawyers
and whose only asset is IP.
Perfectly honest, George, the price _stability_ of _AMD_ looks
downright odd to me, but that makes me sound like a chart-reader. The
only reason I see AMD as other than a speculative play is the reason
we've already discussed: they are a necessary evil for Intel.
I'd say it *is* a big deal if Sony, NEC, Toshiba, Fujitsu et.al. are going
to be allowed to decide for themselves which CPU they put in their systems
for world-wide distribution. If the Intel market-assist is curtailed
because of it, so much the better - Intel will have to sweeten the pot in
other ways... like lower prices, if they still want to play.
It would be, and that's why I don't see anything significant happening
here. It might not affect Intel's stock, but it sure should affect
AMD's.
That's only because of the Wall St. gangs who are basically playing games
against each other.... "outsider" insider trading??:)

That's a whole different layer of indirection. Spy vs. spy vs. spy vs.
....

Even so, I'll stick with my basic position, which is that people who
work on Wall Street are not stupid (even if they used their fraternity
brothers' problem sets to get through calculus), and while they may
not have much of a grasp of carrier mobility or stretched silicon,
they can probably keep straight litigation, regulatory action, and
predatory marketing practices.
The one "worry" I have about AMD is that they are going to fritter away the
inevitable CPU gains on things like Geode and commodity prods like flash.
I don't really think they have a chance of coming out ahead with a civil
court case.

Opteron was ballsy. I didn't expect it to succeed. It wouldn't have
without IBM. Even had I been able to predict that intervention, I
still wouldn't have predicted it to succeed. So I guess it's pretty
clear my ability to predict AMD is... yet to be established. :).

RM
 
R

Robert Myers

Bingo! The stock market is a gigantic Vegas-style game of chance,
masquerading as an economic indicator.
Have you ever asked yourself what money is? If you're honest with
yourself, you should come up with an answer that isn't much more
reassuring. Capitalism is a very successful confidence game.
Speaking of the original subject of this thread, there's been a new
development in the anti-trust case against Intel. Intel has asked for
and obtained an extension to respond to the allegations. It was
originally supposed to respond by Mar 18th (today), but now it can
respond by Apr 1st (April Fools Day). :)

http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2005/03/18/ap1892925.html

You notice that they cite the news, and the stock price in context.
You may not believe it, but their readers do.

RM
 
Y

Yousuf Khan

Robert said:
Opteron was ballsy. I didn't expect it to succeed. It wouldn't have
without IBM. Even had I been able to predict that intervention, I
still wouldn't have predicted it to succeed. So I guess it's pretty
clear my ability to predict AMD is... yet to be established. :).

A lot of us in here thought Opteron was exactly the technology that was
needed by the vast majority of people, and that it was destined to
succeed. The only thing holding back absolute certainty on that
prediction was whether Intel's marketing was going to prevent that. As
it turned out, even with a two year introduction lead for the Itanium
and its mighty marketing machine, nothing was going to make Itanium fly.
People were willing to wait for Opteron, or a solution like Opteron,
rather than go for Itanium.

Yousuf Khan
 
Y

Yousuf Khan

Robert said:
Perfectly honest, George, the price _stability_ of _AMD_ looks
downright odd to me, but that makes me sound like a chart-reader. The
only reason I see AMD as other than a speculative play is the reason
we've already discussed: they are a necessary evil for Intel.

AMD is a great speculative play -- for options traders and institutions.
AMD's stock price seems to be at the mercy of big players. These guys
don't care about what AMD's business is doing.
It would be, and that's why I don't see anything significant happening
here. It might not affect Intel's stock, but it sure should affect
AMD's.

Their stock rarely moves at good or bad news from AMD. It's a
manipulated stock. Or perhaps its stock is a pawn in a larger game,
where the players are trading the whole sector, not just individual
companies.
Even so, I'll stick with my basic position, which is that people who
work on Wall Street are not stupid (even if they used their fraternity
brothers' problem sets to get through calculus), and while they may
not have much of a grasp of carrier mobility or stretched silicon,
they can probably keep straight litigation, regulatory action, and
predatory marketing practices.

Most probably they understand what litigation, regulatory action, etc.
means. That's probably why they are now secretly plotting their exit or
entry strategies for whichever way the judgement goes. They won't show
their hands right now, that's exactly what everybody would be expecting
-- they're too smart for that. That's why the "efficient market theory"
has no way in hell of ever being true -- stock markets don't reflect the
events in the life of a company, they reflect the manipulations of a few
very rich people.

Yousuf Khan
 
D

Delbert Cecchi

Robert Myers said:
I have been very slow to learn some things about life. One thing I
have learned is not to challenge how others perceive reality. Another
thing I have learned is that there is no such thing as how "everybody"
thinks.

When you say "there is not a single person..." you are either unaware
of how unlikely it is that such a statement would ever be true or you
are unaware of how unpersuasive bluster is in argumentation.

The circumstances are this: Intel believes its business practices are
legal. AMD believes otherwise. Both are presumably reading the same
law. That means there is a difference in interpretation of the law.
The two companies could agree as to specific interpretation of the law
with respect to specific business practices. _Then_ if Intel continued
with practices it has agreed are illegal, a lawsuit for AMD would be a
cake walk.

I would say that there is another interpretation....

Intel believes it can get away with certain practices. Perhaps they are
thought to be arguably legal. Or perhaps they believe they have enough
clout to defeat the lawsuits. Go look at IBM's behavior prior to the
1956 consent decree.....
 

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