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Technology Stocks : Semi-Equips - Buy when BLOOD is running in the streets!
LRCX 164.68+6.2%Dec 18 3:59 PM EST

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To: Katherine Derbyshire who wrote (6732)8/18/1998 9:51:00 PM
From: Ramsey Su  Read Replies (2) of 10921
 
Katherine,

is this a hint that DRAM supply is still exceeding demand despite the round of cut backs and shut downs?

Ramsey

TOKYO (Nikkei)-Toshiba Corp. will reduce production of its mainline
64-megabit DRAMs, company sources said Tuesday.

The electronics maker will scale back the proportion of dynamic
memories to 50% of its total memory chip output, from 80% at present.

Resources devoted to DRAM production will be reallocated to
higher-margin products such as flash memory to raise profit.

Toshiba initially planned to make 8 million 64M DRAMs in fiscal 1998,
but has trimmed that target to 7 million.

In fiscal 1997, its memory production accounted for 80% (200 billion
yen ) of overall chip production worth 250 billion yen.

By fiscal 2000, DRAM production will fall to half of an overall chip
production target value of 300 billion yen.

Toshiba hopes to make up for the cut in DRAM production by producing
more high-density flash memories. From 1999, the firm will make 64M
flash memories at its Yokkaichi plant and at a plant in Virginia built
jointly with International Business Machines Corp.

Output of flash memory chips is expected to grow to 3 million by fiscal
2000, at an estimated investment cost of 20 billion yen.

(The Nihon Keizai Shimbun Wednesday morning edition)
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