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Exclusive Focus Stock Report
InterDigital Communications Corp. (Nasdaq:IDCC)
Map
of this 100 page exclusive report
Introduction
InterDigital
Communications Corp (IDCC) Deserves Your Attention Now
Updated August
4, 2003
- InterDigital has what we judge to be the most
positive risk
to reward ratios among wireless communications
firms. The company's financial fundamentals are extraordinarily strong:
- Liquidity Heading toward becoming the
"cash cow" of the wireless industry, this mid-cap company
in mid-2003 had more than $100 million in cash reserves and is positioned
to finish 2004 with an amazing $400+ million in cash. That translates
to over $7 a share in cash! (See "Enviable
Liquidity")
- Earnings are
positive now and are set to explode upward in 2004 and beyond. Management
expects earnings to sky rocket to as much as an annualized $300 beginning
in 2005 ($5 per share). (See: "Earnings
Growth")
- Share price
targets
Based on what appears to be reachable revenue goals, by the end of
2004, the share price could conservatively rise to $40 (based on earnings
of $2 per share and a moderate PE of 20). Following Nokia's request
for arbitration of its royalties to InterDigital, most of the analysts
following InterDigital are indicating 12 month share price targets
of $25 or more per share. (See "Valuation
Outlook"
and "Analyst
Reports."
- Nokia Arbitration Bottom line:
In July,, 2003, Nokia has delayed (for up to a year), but NOT BYPASSED,
payments of hundreds of million of dollars to InterDigital for 2G
and 2.5G handsets and infrastructure. Wall Street has reatly overreacted
by dropping IDCC shares 40% to mid-teen levels. WirelessLedger.com
believes that this oversold condition will be corrected in the near
term. InterDigital retains the distinction of having the best risk
to reward ratio (minus 10% risk to plus 200% reward potential) in
the wireless industry. (See "Nokia
Invokes Arbitration: 2G Royalty Obligation to IDCC")
- .On March 17, 2003, the Company announced successful
settlement of a patent infringement lawsuit it had brought against Ericsson
Telecommunications Co. (Ericy) of Sweden. Management claims that the
$50+ million settlement payable to InterDigital also establishes 2G
(g) and 2.5G (g) licensing terms not only for Ericsson but for market-leading
Nokia and Samsung as well. These two firms will owe InterDigital accrued
royalties for 2002 of $120 million and forward royalties (2003 on) of
$100 million annually. This amount does not include additional royalties
for 3G (g) cell phones and infrastructure because rates have not yet
been determined. (See "Watershed
Event: Ericsson-InterDigital Settlement.")
- The Company has a track record for very careful
stewardship of its resources. Management has a reputation for integrity,
carefully avoiding "hype" and often exceeding investor expectations.
(See "InterDigitals
Management" and "30
Year Evolution of InterDigitals Business Model.")
Positioned at the very heart of wireless, InterDigital has the technology
and patents essential in all five modes of the new 3G third generation
(g)
standards. (see: Understanding
the Standards-Setting Process.
)
- Mobile subscribers worldwide today total more
than a billion. Industry analysts predict that this number will double
by the end of 2006. In several countries, mobile devices already outnumber
wireline phones. In the worlds largest market, China, wireline
will be completely bypassed by wireless devices. (See 3G:
Fact or Fiction)
- InterDigital has a major "anchor relationship"
with Infineon Technologies (IFX), one of the worlds leading wireless
communications chip companies. InterDigital will develop a major portion
of Infineons next generation integrated circuit (chip). (See
"Chip
Development Partnership with Infineon.")
- InterDigital is an attractive takeover
candidate. Some observers believe that the
Company has already refused a buyout offer at $50 per share. With an
expecting a 2004 cash position of almost a half billion dollars, plus
rapidly increasing royalty revenue, potential suitors like Qualcomm,
Microsoft, Intel, Cisco and others would probably have to offer a minimum
of $100 per share simply to begin merger or buyout discussions. (See
InterDigitals "Acquisition
Potential")
- WirelessLedger understands that royalty rate discussions
between Nokia and InterDigital were progressing well at mid-management
level following the Company's successful March setlement with Ericsson.
However Nokia's top brass, experiencing a bad quarter financially, realized
that Nokia would be paying InterDigital a hundred million dollars annually
in 2G and 2.5G royalties and they balked. By invoking the binding arbitration
clause in its licensing contract with IDCC, Nokia has seized on a way
to delay a $200 million payment otherwise due now and also to buy time
for some hard nosed bargaining. (See: "Nokia
Invokes Arbitration: 2G Royalty Obligation to IDCC")
If an investor is looking for a small to mid-cap company
at the heart of the wireless telecommunications revolution, with an extraordinarily
strong cash position and rapidly increasing earnings, InterDigital has
one of the very best "risk
to reward ratios" in the industry.
Next: Wireless Industry
Outlook
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of this Focus Stock Report on InterDigital Communications
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Focus Stock: InterDigital report provided that credit is given to WirelessLedger.com
and copyright notice is provided. Copyright 2003 by WirelessLedger.com
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