Broadcom unveils integrated 3G chip, Shares rise
Posted on Mon, 15 Oct 2007 13:23:14 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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NEW YORK (Reuters) - Broadcom Corp said on Monday it had developed an integrated
third-generation (3G) high-speed wireless cell phone chip ahead of bigger rivals
Texas Instruments Inc and Qualcomm Inc , sending Broadcom shares up as much as 3
percent.
Shares of Texas Instruments and Qualcomm both fell about 2 percent after
Broadcom said it developed a single chip with a baseband -- the cell phone's
main processor -- and a radio receiver as well as FM radio and Bluetooth, a
short-range technology used for wirelessly linking handsets to headsets.
Stifel Nicolaus analyst Cody Acree raised his price target for Broadcom stock to
$48 from $40, saying the new chip helped legitimize efforts by Broadcom, a small
wireless player, to increase its share of the mobile phone chip market.
"This solution is the first of its kind at the 3G level," and appears to put it
"at least several months" ahead of rivals such as Texas Instruments, Acree said
in a note to clients.
Broadcom said the chip, which could put it up to two years ahead of rivals, was
now available for customer testing. It said it expects the first phones using
the chips to come on the market in 2009.
Broadcom said the chip would cost $23 at high volumes, a price allowing it to
"substantially" undercut rival offerings requiring multiple chips.
Stifel's Acree said the chip posed a competitive threat to other wireless chip
makers including Infineon Technologies AG and privately held rivals NXP and
Freescale.
CHIP LEAD
Specifically, Acree said he expects Broadcom to use the chip to compete better
against Qualcomm in South Korea, where large Qualcomm customers Samsung
Electronics and LG Electronics are based.
Broadcom had already started to shift the balance of power away from bigger
rivals such as Texas Instruments when Nokia Oyj announced it would buy chips
from Broadcom as well as Infineon and TI, Nokia's biggest existing supplier.
On Oct 7 Broadcom said Samsung, the world's second-biggest mobile phone maker,
had started to ship high-speed wireless phones using Broadcom chips.
In comparison to TI and Qualcomm, which each had about 20 percent of the 2006
mobile phone chip market, Broadcom had a 1.4 percent share, according to data
from researcher iSuppli.
Broadcom said the chip should help the company achieve its target of increasing
its share of the cell phone chip market to 10 percent to 15 percent by the end
of 2009.
"We are very much on track to deliver on our stated goal," Yossi Cohen, Broadcom
president of mobile platforms, told analysts on a conference call.
Broadcom and Qualcomm have been fighting increasingly bitter legal battles with
one case that Qualcomm is appealing involving a government ban on the U.S.
import of some phones with Qualcomm chips found to infringe a Broadcom patent.
Shares of Broadcom were up $1.15, or 2.9 percent, at $41.18 while Qualcomm stock
was down 78 cents, or 1.9 percent, at $41.38 on Nasdaq . TI shares were down 84
cents, or 2.4 percent, at $34.55 on New York Stock Exchange.
(Reporting by Sinead Carew)
© Copyright 2007 Reuters.
Posted on Mon, 15 Oct 2007 13:23:14 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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