Any reason to believe either of the following had something to do with the run?
In a reversal, Samsung increases capital spending
By Jack Robertson
SEOUL, South Korea (ChipWire/EBN) -- Moving back to an aggressive spending program, Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. said it plans to double its capital expenditures this year, scrapping an earlier plan to keep costs down.
The memory-chip giant has boosted this year's capital budget to $1.8 billion, from about $900 million last year.
News of the spending increase concerned some industry watchers, who noted that DRAM prices are falling again amid a global oversupply of certain devices. They believe that Samsung specifically is battling Micron Technology Inc. for market-share leadership.
"These giants are positioning themselves now, no matter how bloody the process, to be market leaders whenever DRAMs turn around," said analyst Bill McClean of IC Insights Inc. in Scottsdale, Ariz.
Not so, according to Avo Kanadjian, vice president of memory marketing for Samsung Semiconductor Inc. in San Jose. The spending increase "merely returns Samsung to traditional capital-spending levels of a little over $2 billion annually in the several years before 1998," Kanadjian said. "Because of the Asian financial crisis, last year's sharp reduction in capital spending was abnormal."
Samsung's original 1999 budget had appropriated $1 billion for capital spending, and the company upped the ante another 20% in February, before settling on the final number this month.
Kanadjian said the increased funds will be used to build Line 9 in Kiheung, South Korea, as well as to upgrade other existing fab lines.
Line 9 will start production late in the third quarter with a capacity of 16,000 eight-inch wafers per month, using 0.18-micron processing, according to Gurinder Kalra, an analyst with Morgan Stanley Dean Witter in Hong Kong. A major share of the expenditures, he said, will go for production of next-generation devices, particularly 128- and 256-megabit chips and Direct Rambus DRAMs.
"We aren't adding capacity just in mainstream DRAMs, which are already in oversupply," Kanadjian said.
Samsung has already expanded its fab in Austin, Tex. When the facility is operating at full strength in several months, its total capacity will double to 25,000 wafer starts per month, according to a spokesman for the fab.
Morgan Stanley estimates that Samsung will produce 260 million 64-Mbit DRAMs and 45 million 128-Mbit devices in 1999. Only Micron and the merged Hyundai-LG Semicon company will be in the same DRAM league, said Mark Edelstone, an analyst at Morgan Stanley in San Francisco.
"These three firms will control 75% of the global DRAM market by the end of the year, changing the entire shape of the market," he said.
The recent price drop for 64-Mbit SDRAMs hasn't affected Samsung as much as it has some competitors, Kanadjian said, adding that his company is still strong in older DRAM types, such as EDO and 16-Mbit chips, which are enjoying price gains.
Asia to Lead Expansion in Semiconductor Equipment Sales in 1999
Singapore, May 7 (Bloomberg) -- Asia will lead the expansion of the semiconductor equipment market, pulling it out of last year's slump as orders pick up with the region's economic recovery, an industry group said. ''Asia will grow more rapidly than the rest of the world with the faster-than-anticipated recovery,'' said Paul Davis, vice president of Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International, a trade group based in Mountain View, California. ''We're looking at Korea and Taiwan growing more rapidly than the U.S. or Japan in the near future.''
The group, commonly known as SEMI, expects global semiconductor equipment sales to see ''low single-digit'' growth in 1999 from $22 billion last year. It expects to match 1997's peak of $27.5 billion in sales and forecast revenue to reach $40 billion by 2002.
Growth in the semiconductor equipment industry is crucial because it's a leading indicator of semiconductor production. Asian countries such as Taiwan, South Korea and Singapore count semiconductor products among their key exports.
Of these countries, Taiwan is expected to lead the next phase of expansion as its chip making plants anticipate stronger demand. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and United Microelectronics Corp. in Taiwan, the two biggest chip foundries, will spend a total of NT$54 billion ($1.6 billion) in investments this year. ''Taiwan will probably have the highest near-term growth rate,'' Davis said. ''Taiwan is developing the foundry model and is really becoming a real key player in the semiconductor industry.''
The industry is also expected to gain from the use of semiconductors extending from personal computers to mobile phones and networking products. U.S.-based Kulicke and Soffa Industries Inc. and ESEC Holding AG in Switzerland are among the world's biggest equipment makers. ''It's historically been largely driven by the PCs,'' he said. ''Now, there's just a plethora of new applications that are driving the semiconductor industry.'' |