Intel
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Intel reported 32 cents ($2 billion) of profit on $9.96 billion of sales on Tuesday night. While that sounds like a lot of money, it was below the 33 cents and $9.92 billion the Wall Street crowd was expecting.
That sounds like a slight miss, but that headline shortfall doesn’t begin to tell the horrific balance sheet problems building at Intel.
==> Intel reported 38% year over year growth in notebook chips, but only desktop chips sales only grew by 9%. The bread-and-butter business of desktop computers is shrinking like a prune.
==> Intel warned that its Q4 sales forecast of $10.2 to $10.8 billion makes the analyst forecast of $10.7 billion appear much too optimistic.
==> Intel used $2.5 billion in cash to repurchase 93.6 million shares of its common stock, paying an average of $26.70 a share. With Intel now trading around $23, Intel just lost close to $300 million by investing in its own stock.
==> Overhead is exploding. Marketing, general and administrative expenses (overhead) increased from $1.12 billion last year to $1.47 in Q3 of this year. That extra $350 million is pure overhead and one of those telltale sales of a company that is growing too fat for its own pants.
==> $145 million of Intel’s $2 billion of Q3 profits was from interest and “other” income. What alarms me is that this interest and “other” income grew from $63 million last year to $145 million last quarter. This almost $100 million gain of “other” income is very