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Technology Stocks : MEMC INT'L. (WFR -NYSE) The Sleeping Giant?

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To: All Mtn Ski who wrote (4448)8/11/1999 12:36:00 PM
From: Ian@SI  Read Replies (2) of 4697
 
I'm starting to believe that prices just might go up sooner rather than later....

200mm Wafer Input Hits All-Time High; Concern Over Short Supply Grows
August 11, 1999 (TOKYO) -- Input of 200mm wafers at semiconductor makers
worldwide hit an all-time high in April for the second consecutive month, according to a
Nikkei Market Access survey.

At the same time, wafer supplies are becoming tight.

Contrary to the rebounding wafer input, wafer makers' production capacity has been
declining because of manpower shortages and intensifying requirements for precision
technology. Shipments have reached the limit of the output at present.

The 200mm wafer input slumped in 1998 after achieving a new high in October 1997.
Wafer makers then engaged in price competition to keep their production lines
operating. Wafer prices dropped about 40 percent in 1998.

Restructuring spread among wafer makers from the second half of 1998 to early 1999
to tackle the deteriorating business results. Also, intensifying market requirements for
wafer flatness to cope with process technology innovations have reduced wafer yields.

Wafer input recovered in 1999 thanks to growing demand for LSIs for use in mobile
telephones and other products. However, production capacity of wafers has been
declining because wafer makers can increase neither manpower nor manufacturing
equipment. Wafer makers cannot afford to invest, and the prospect of improvement in
production capacity is still uncertain.

Worldwide concerns about the shortage of wafers and semiconductor chips will grow
until wafer makers have started their next round of investments. Appropriate allocation
of wafers on a worldwide basis will become necessary to cope with the problem that
the production of microprocessors will cause a shortage of wafers for other
semiconductor chips.

The shortage of wafers with a diameter of 150mm or less is more serious. Production
lines that can handle these wafers are being phased out. In addition, to raise profitability,
wafer makers are transferring manpower to production lines that can handle larger
wafers.

The prices of small wafers are rising in some regions. In the wake of that, negotiations
already have started to raise the prices of 200mm wafers.

(Nikkei Market Access)
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