SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : The Final Frontier - Online Remote Trading

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: TFF who started this subject7/29/2003 6:24:24 PM
From: Don Green   of 12617
 
DRAM futures trading stages a comeback
By Crista Souza, EBN
July 29, 2003 (4:04 p.m. EST)
URL: eetimes.com

SAN MATEO, Calif. — A renegade band of semiconductor industry veterans is trying its hand at selling commodities futures. Not oil, coffee beans, or pork bellies, but DRAM.

Calling itself Semiconductor Futures Exchange Inc. (SFX), the self-financed operation is offering its internally developed software as a platform for DRAM price hedging, and claims it is not affiliated with any chip manufacturer or distributor.

The concept is not new. Organizations with more financial muscle and proven track records in futures trading have tried it, none with success. Yet, SFX hopes its first-hand knowledge of the chip market will lend credibility to the enterprise.

Modeled after marketplaces like the Chicago Merchantile Exchange, but set up as an industry-specific exchange, SFX aims to give OEMs, EMS providers, distributors, and brokers a tool to manage price risk by buying and selling DRAM inventory on speculation.

"A planner can assure himself guaranteed cost of components at a future point six months from now, and need not be concerned about fluctuations," said Jackson Cole, chairman of San Francisco-based SFX and a former executive of memory chip and module supplier Quadrant Components Inc.

The exchange can also serve as an inventory management tool, though it's not intended to take the place of the spot market or act as a venue for trading parts for immediate delivery, said Lee Hagelshaw, a technology attorney and president and chief executive of SFX.

"Instead of holding physical inventory, a company can hold a contract to buy a certain number of parts at a certain price at some future date," Hagelshaw said. "If they don't need the inventory, they can sell the contract before it comes due."

The process, he said, could help smooth out the DRAM market's characteristic volatility by giving buyers better control of inventory, and chip suppliers better insight into future production needs.

However, one manufacturer said that's not the way DRAM suppliers operate. "We typically don't adjust production based on market needs from a cost perspective," said a spokesman for Micron Technology Inc. (Boise, Idaho). "We generally run at 100 percent capacity to keep our fixed cost down."

Production-level adjustments occur by other means, the most common being technology transitions, he said.

SFX is in discussions with several leading chip makers and distributors, according to company executives.

Under U.S. securities laws, participation in the exchange is limited to qualified members of the semiconductor industry. "John Doe off the street can't come in and speculate," Cole said.

A similar venture centered in Asia, called Semicon Exchange Pte. Ltd., is expected to begin trading DRAM futures later this year, mainly targeting institutional and private investors. SemiconX has the backing of the Singapore Exchange and funding from the Singapore government, according to Kamil Alsagoff, vice president of North America sales for SemiconX (Fremont, Calif.).

SFX plans to broaden its platform to support other types of commodity semiconductors, such as EEPROM and SRAM, when the industry becomes more comfortable with the concept of trading futures. DRAM was chosen as the starting point, Hagelshaw said, because it is well specified by part number and type.

Though it has never been successfully demonstrated, the idea of trading DRAM futures has been around for more than 20 years. New ventures spring up sporadically, irrespective of market cycles, observers said.

"It's such a logical idea — in theory, it's brilliant, but it just doesn't work," said Grant Johnson, an independent analyst in San Diego. "DRAM is a natural candidate for futures trading, because it's the most commodity-like of all semiconductors, but it's not a pure commodity."

DRAM is still too varied to benchmark and track, analysts said, noting that multiple types of DRAM are in mainstream use at any given time.

"You can have a standard density, a standard type, and a standard configuration, but you can have infinite combinations of those," said Sherry Garber, an analyst at Semico Research Corp., Phoenix. "There are continual shifting demand issues, there has been a lot of supplier consolidation, and there have been a lot of changes in terms of the manufacturers who use DRAM. It's unpredictable."
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext