The Wall Street Transcript Publishes                          Semiconductor Management Performance                          Report
                           PR Newswire - November 30, 1999 16:00
                           NEW YORK, Nov. 30 /PRNewswire/ -- Three leading analysts and six                          Semiconductor CEOs examine the Semiconductor sector in the latest                          issue of The Wall Street Transcript (212-952-7433) or                          twst.com 
                           In a vital review of this sector for investors and industry                          professionals, this valuable 56-page report features: 
                           1) The TWST confidential Off The Record survey (7,000 words) of                          management performance at 21 Semiconductor firms asked market                          insiders about the ability of management teams to create shareholder                          value. In a sector where many management teams are praised for their                          vision, some CEOs are criticized, while others receive top marks for                          their efforts. 
                           W.J. Sanders III, Chairman & CEO of Advanced Micro Devices (NYSE:                          AMD), is criticized by an industry analyst, "There are some negative                          things that deserve pointing out at AMD. The biggest problem at                          AMD is that they're managing by semantics - fractional management,                          micro-management overall." 
                           Analog Devices (NYSE: ADI), led by Chairman Ray Stata and Jerald G.                          Fishman, President & CEO, is forging an identity, according to this                          specialist. "Analog Devices is basically focused on execution. It's a                          smaller version of Texas Instruments in the eyes of many investors,                          but it's very quietly forging an identity of its own. It's moving away                          from butting heads with Texas Instruments, which used to happen a                          couple of years ago, and is beginning to come into its own as a                          company focused on some high volume markets -- motor control,                          electromechanical sensors, and the like." 
                           James C. Morgan, Chairman & CEO of Applied Materials (Nasdaq:                          AMAT), is highlighted by a Wall Streeter. "Jim Morgan is a visionary                          who is very highly regarded by the industry. He's been around,                          leading Applied Materials, since its sales were $20 or $30 million. Now                          they're at $4 billion. They hope to be a $10 billion company by 2003 or                          2004, and it looks like they're halfway there already. If the industry                          growth estimates are correct, we're going to see 50% growth in the                          year 2001." 
                           Astute acquisitions by Atmel (Nasdaq: ATML), headed by George                          Perlegos, Chairman, President & CEO, states a sell sider, "Atmel has                          done an excellent job of repositioning themselves from a commodity                          memory supplier to more of a value-added solutions provider. They've                          made some very astute acquisitions over the last year or two, which                          have positioned them really well in the red hot wireless                          communications space." 
                           Performance well ahead of plan at Conexant Systems (Nasdaq: CNXT),                          led by Chairman & CEO Dwight W. Decker, concludes a specialist,                          "Conexant Systems was a spin-off of Rockwell Semiconductor. It's the                          largest pure play communications IC company, with a broad portfolio                          of offerings compared to many of the competitors, which have only                          one or two product lines. The other thing that is most interesting is                          their fundamental performance to date. The stock was spun out at                          about $9 or $10 and is trading today at about $50 or $55. That's over a                          one-year period, approximately 11 months. So the fundamental                          performance has been well ahead of plan, guided by Dwight Decker                          and his team." 
                           Andrew S. Grove, Chairman of Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), and Craig R.                          Barrett, President & CEO, are singled out by an analyst, "Andy Grove,                          the Chairman of Intel, is definitely one outstanding guy! He's been a                          leader for a long time and has led the company through good times                          and bad times." 
                           To read a free interview excerpt in which Craig Barrett is evaluated see                          archive.twst.com 
                           Kevin N. Kalkhoven, Co-Chairman & CEO of JDS Uniphase (Nasdaq:                          JDSU), and Jozef Straus, Co-Chairman, President & COO, are                          commended for a great job by a money manager. "The guys at JDS                          have done a really great job of corporate engineering. They've gone                          out and acquired a lot of key technology in just the right area, and                          built a company that's incredibly well positioned in one of the best                          marketplaces. So here is an example of where we can track exactly what                          management has done and attribute it directly to management." 
                           Linear Technology (Nasdaq: LLTC), headed by Robert Swanson Jr.,                          Chairman & CEO, and President Clive B. Davies, needs to figure out                          where its going, states a pro, "Linear's execution is phenomenal!                          Longer term, this management needs to ask itself, 'What do we want to                          be when we grow up?' It's a standard analog company selling catalog                          analog parts. It's done a great job, just absolutely marvelous! But the                          company is now large enough that it has to expand beyond this                          business, and we don't see anything coming out of them that gives us                          a clue as to what they want to be." 
                           Wilfred J. Corrigan, Chairman & CEO of LSI Logic (NYSE: LSI) is                          singled out by a Wall Streeter, "LSI Logic has a couple of things going                          for them. The first thing is that they had enough guts to build a fab at                          the bottom of the last cycle." 
                           John F. Gifford, Chairman, President & CEO of Maxim (Nasdaq:                          MXIM), runs a tight ship, in the opinion of this specialist, "Maxim did                          well in having the vision to focus on the RF marketplace and the fiber                          optics marketplace about three years ago, while everybody else is                          going there right now. And John Gifford runs a tight ship. He's very,                          very cost-conscious and very, very focused on bringing everything                          down to the bottom line. 
                           Raymond D. Zinn, Chairman, President & CEO of Micrel (Nasdaq:                          MCRL), focuses on the basics, states a sell sider, "They provide                          best-of-class analog products for the power management sector, but                          have recently moved beyond that. The biggest capability of Ray Zinn,                          the CEO, is targeting high growth end- markets up to two years before                          those markets start to become ripe for growth and investing money                          there. That's probably his best attribute." 
                           James V. Diller, Chairman of PMC-Sierra (Nasdaq: PMCS), and Robert                          L. Bailey, President & CEO, are commended by a pro for being                          visionaries, "PMC- Sierra really stands out in the communication                          space as kind of the most visionary in terms of a future product                          roadmap and the best in terms of current execution. PMC-Sierra has                          been the best performing stock, and it's because of the CEO, because                          of the management team." 
                           David A. Norbury of RF Micro Devices (Nasdaq: RFMD) understands                          his business, claims a Wall Streeter, "Dave Norbury at RF Micro                          Devices is an extremely good team player and is very well liked by the                          investment community as being the person who understands his                          business." 
                           David D. Lee, Chairman, President & CEO of Silicon Image (Nasdaq:                          SIMG) is highlighted by an industry expert, "What's great about the                          management there is basically how they have maneuvered into                          becoming a pretty important player in determining what technology                          that market moves into." 
                           A sellsider singles out Morris Chang, Chairman & President of Taiwan                          Semiconductor (NYSE: TSM), "Morris Chang, Chairman of Taiwan                          Semiconductor, is a standout. He is one of those visionary titans that's                          basically revolutionized the industry." 
                           Willem P. Roselandts, President & CEO of Xilinx (Nasdaq: XLNX), is                          highlighted by a Wall Streeter, "Xilinx has done a wonderful job!                          Willem Roselandts has engineered one of the best turnarounds in the                          semiconductor business after a period of underperformance where                          their product execution was underperforming quite badly." 
                           Firms reviewed in Off The Record include: 
                           Advanced Micro Devices, Analog Devices, Applied Micro Circuits,                          Applied Materials, Atmel, Conexant, Cypress, Intel, JDS Uniphase,                          Linear Technology, LSI Logic, Maxim, Micrel, National Semiconductor,                          Power Integrations, RF Micro Devices, Silicon Image, Taiwan                          Semiconductor, Texas Instruments, Vitesse Semiconductor and Xilinx. 
                           This 56-page Semiconductor Issue also includes: 
                           2) Semiconductor Industry -- In an in-depth Analyst Roundtable (9,000                          words), Jonathan Joseph of Salomon Smith Barney, Daniel Myers of                          Lehman Brothers and Joseph Osha of Merrill Lynch examine inventory                          levels, pricing trends, Taiwan earthquake impact, chip shortages,                          capacity additions, 
                           Japan/Korea market outlook, capital spending trends,                          System-on-a-chip market, stock valuations, the outlook for the sector                          and specific stock recommendations. 
                           For a free interview excerpt in which Myers explains why he feels there                          is more time in the up-cycle for semiconductors see                          archive.twst.com 
                           For a list of the extensive collection of Semiconductor analyst and                          CEO interviews available see twst.com 
                           For a free interview excerpt in which Myers explains at length why he                          selects Conexant as his Single Best Idea see                          archive.twst.com 
                           3) Six extensive (average 2,500 words) CEO Interviews with top                          management from the following sector firms discussing their future                          plans and outlook for their firm and the Semiconductor sector: 
                           TelCom Semiconductor, Actel, Mattson Technology, Maker                          Communications, Ibis Technology, GaSonics International. 
                           To obtain a copy of this insightful 56-page report, see                          twst.com or call 212-952-7433. This special                          section is also included in the TECHNOLOGY Sector of TWST Online                          at twst.com 
                           The Wall Street Transcript is a premier weekly investment publication                          interviewing market professionals for serious investors for over 35                          years. Available at twst.com TWST Online provides free                          Interview excerpts. For highlights, recent recommendations by                          analysts and money managers and business news, visit                          twst.com 
                           Do a free search of the extensive TWST Archives at                          archive.twst.com 
                           The Wall Street Transcript does not endorse the views of any                          interviewee nor does it make stock recommendations. 
                           SOURCE Wall Street Transcript 
                           /CONTACT: Peter McLaughlin of The Wall Street Transcript,                          212-952-7433/ 
                           /Web site: twst.com 
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