Technology: Semiconductors
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Technology: Semiconductors

Christopher Danely repeats in first place. Clients say the ­JPMorgan Securities analyst, who is based in San Francisco, provides an “in-depth understanding of the companies he covers” and “conveys his views in a straightforward manner.”

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Christopher Danely


Christopher Danely­JPMorgan


SECOND TEAM


Timothy Luke Barclays


THIRD TEAM


Glen Yeung ­Citi


RUNNERS-UP


James Covello Goldman Sachs; Uche Orji UBS


Christopher Danely repeats in first place. Clients say the ­JPMorgan Securities analyst, who is based in San Francisco, provides an “in-depth understanding of the companies he covers” and “conveys his views in a straightforward manner.” Danely, 37, down­graded the entire sector to neutral in December, citing slowing demand, and by mid-­September it had ­fallen 21.7 percent. “That was probably my best call — to stay out of the space,” he says. In January, Danely urged clients to sell Intel Corp. because “earnings and margins were peaking.” Shares of the ­Santa ­Clara, ­California–based chip ­maker dropped from $24.22 at the time of Danely’s downgrade to $20.16 in mid-­September. Timothy Luke, who moved to Barclays Capital after its parent acquired Lehman Brothers last month, jumps from ­runner-up to second place. “His approach is to be ­very thorough and to produce detailed com­pany reports,” says one buy-­sider. In March improved profit margins prompted Luke to reiterate his buy recommendation on Cypress Semiconductor, a San Jose, ­California–based producer of programmable chips for touch screens, at $20.34. As of mid-­September the share price had surged 37.3 percent, to $27.92. Glen Yeung of ­Citi holds steady in third place, thanks in part to the San ­Francisco–based analyst’s “strong modeling skills and good industry contacts,” according to one investor. In November, Yeung issued a contrarian buy recommendation on San ­Jose–based Altera Corp., which designs and manufactures programmable logic devices, calling the stock a ­value at $18.79. In mid-­September it was up 9.4 percent, to $20.55.


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