Rambus chips will reach between 250 million and 350 million
Toshiba to Triple High-Speed Memory Chip Production (Update3) By Minoru Matsutani
Tokyo, Feb. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Toshiba Corp., the world's No. 2 chipmaker, plans to triple production of high-speed memory chips to meet demand for more powerful computers based on Intel Corp.'s recently announced Pentium 4 processor.
Toshiba said it will more than triple production by September of dynamic random access memory chips based on technology from Rambus Inc. The chips, which are designed to transfer data at twice the speed of benchmark DRAMs, will make up 60 percent of Toshiba's total memory chip output, from 20 percent currently.
After losses in the year ended March 1999 on falling prices of 64 megabit DRAMs caused by global overproduction, Japanese chipmakers are aiming to make memory chips that run at higher speeds and earn more profit. Toshiba is betting that growing Internet traffic will boost demand for computer servers that need faster DRAMs.
``Toshiba's strategy is right because demand for high-speed computers will certainly rise,'' said Michito Kimura, an analyst at market researcher IDC Japan. ``The risk, though, is that nobody knows how long the global slowdown in PC demand will last.''
Toshiba's DRAMs are ``mostly'' for Sony Corp.'s game console PlayStation 2 now, and the production increase is mainly meant for computers, Toshiba spokesman Kenichi Sugiyama said.
California-based Rambus has created a high-speed memory chip design, which it has licensed to chipmakers around the world in return for royalties.
Samsung
While Toshiba is tripling its output of the chips, it's still far behind the main backer of the technology, Samsung Electronics Co. in Korea, the world's largest memory chipmaker.
Samsung said it produced about 30 million Rambus chips last year, giving it a 65 percent market share, and plans to increase its output to between 120 million and 180 million 128 megabit- equivalent chips. The company expects Rambus chips to occupy about 10 percent of the DRAM market this year.
``We are getting increased orders for Rambus chips from Intel, our main customer after the launch of the Pentium 4 processor, and we aim to capture 40 percent of the market this year,'' said Cho Sungin, a Samsung spokeswoman.
The market for Rambus chips will reach between 250 million and 350 million 128 megabit equivalents this year, according to Samsung.
Intel
Intel is increasing demand for Rambus DRAMs, the only memory chips that work with the Pentium 4 processor. The world's biggest chipmaker, which introduced the chip last November, buys Rambus DRAMs and sells modules containing Pentium 4 processors and memory chips to computer makers.
Toshiba said it will raise production of its Rambus DRAMs to 8 million units of 128-megabit-equivalent chips a month by September from 2.3 million currently. Subsequently, it will halve the monthly production of low-speed DRAMs to about 5 million units by September, Sugiyama said. The production shift will cost Toshiba ``a negligible amount,'' he added.
NEC will increase monthly production of Rambus DRAMs to 5 million in September from 2 million now, the Nihon Keizai newspaper said, without citing sources. The company could not be reached immediately for comment.
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