Magic_Al
Member
Registered: Mar 2001
Location: NJ, USA
Posts: 17 |
Re: Re: This ain't no Party. This ain't no Disco
quote: Originally posted by jsbernstein
IMHO, comparisons to Palm are more palatable, but still not ideal, since Palm generates revenue from licensing the OS as well. Handspring lacks a comparable revenue stream, unless they charge a licensing fee for the Springboard. I don't know if they do or not, but even if they do, I'd guess (based on no research whatsoever) that it's still less revenue than Palm makes off of the OS.
There is no license fee for the Springboard. If there were, then very few companies would have supported it.
Actually it goes deeper than that. Average trading volume is somewhat off. As someone else said, institutional investment is off. That's understandable since many mutual funds require stocks to be sold if they fall below $10 a share (which is generally considered to be penny stock land). At their current share price, they could be delisted from Nasdaq.
But there is plenty of good news about Handspring. Their balance sheet gives them a lot of breathing room. Inventories are still high, but they have managed inventory flow very well. (Flow ratio = 1.24) Finally, they hold no long-term debt and actually had a warchest of over $159M on their 3/31/01 quarterly statement.
The big problem right now is the lack of positive cash flow. They obviously hope to relieve this with sales from the new units that are coming up (Treo, etc.)
They are going to have to generate enthusiasm for their products in order to raise the stock price to the point where institutions are willing to get back in. New products will help, but only good earnings over several quarters will really get the stock price back to recent levels.
--Alan--
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