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To: Jong Hyun Yoo who wrote (2928)6/15/1999 5:58:00 AM
From: Duker  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5867
 
NEC Sees Return to Profitability
This Year for Its Chip Business


[Interesting article ... --Duker]

By JAMES PARADISE
Dow Jones Newswires

TOKYO -- NEC Corp. said Monday it expects its semiconductor business to return to the black this fiscal year, helped by strong demand for logic devices and better profitability from higher value-added products.

However, Keiichi Shimakura, associate senior vice president for NEC, also said that the company is concerned about another drop in dynamic random access memory prices in recent months. "Now is a very crucial time," he said. "The issue is how to compensate for the price erosion in DRAMs with other semiconductor products, such as logic."

Mr. Shimakura didn't say how much money NEC hopes to make from its semiconductor business this fiscal year, nor did he say how much money the company lost in that area in the last fiscal year, which ended March 31.

The company said last month that its electron-device division, which includes the semiconductor business, had a group operating loss of 51.91 billion yen, or $440 million, last fiscal year. For this year through March 2000, NEC forecast an electron-device-division operating profit of 35 billion yen.

Overall group operating profit will amount to 120 billion yen this fiscal year, after a 98% decline last year to 3.14 billion yen.

Mr. Shimakura said that since March, conditions in the semiconductor industry had changed "very dramatically." Demand, he said, has been buoyant for logic products, in part because of strong sales of mobile phones and an increase in demand for consumer-electronic products in general in Asia.

"Our wafer lines are almost full," he said. "In some areas, such as for leading-edge products, there are capacity shortages."

As one step in its efforts to meet demand, Mr. Shimakura said NEC will move forward the start of mass production of logic products at a new line in Yamagata to around October. NEC had previously planned to open the line early next year.

In the DRAM area, NEC plans to boost production of higher-value added products such as 128-megabit synchronous DRAMs and Direct Rambus DRAMs. Output of 128-megabit synchronous DRAMs is planned to double to two million units per month in September this year from one million units in March at a plant in Hiroshima and then to double again to four million units per month in March 2000 as production from the United Kingdom is added.

Production of 128-megabit and 144-megabit Direct Rambus DRAMs in Hiroshima, Kyushu and the U.K. is planned to rise to 200,000 units per month in September, from 100,000 units in March, and then to rise to two million units per month in March 2000.

NEC's system-on-a-chip production, where logic and memory are together on a single chip, is forecast to rise to 250 billion yen in the current fiscal year, from 200 billion yen last fiscal year, and then to rise to 500 billion yen in the fiscal year ending in March 2002.

Mr. Shimakura said that NEC might outsource some of its lower-end chip production but added that the majority of chip products will still come from NEC in the future. "Our target is to provide total solutions to our customers," Mr. Shimakura said.

NEC's expectations for improvement in its semiconductor business this fiscal year, despite caution on prices, comes as others in the industry echo other industry projections of an increase in demand. Last week, the Semiconductor Industry Association forecast that global semiconductor sales will grow 12.1% in 1999 to $140.8 billion, in what would be the first increase in four years.



To: Jong Hyun Yoo who wrote (2928)6/15/1999 8:59:00 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5867
 
Asia-Pacific PC Market Sets Record in Q1 1999, IDC Says
June 15, 1999 (HONG KONG) -- The Asia/Pacific personal computer market, excluding Japan, posted its highest quarterly shipments ever in the first quarter of 1999, International Data Corp. said.




Total regional PC shipments amounted to 2.95 million units in the first quarter, almost 25 percent higher than the same period one year earlier and more than 2 percent higher than the fourth quarter of 1998.

The annual growth rate in the first quarter of 1999 was the highest figure produced since the second quarter of 1996, when the market generated more than 30 percent annual growth.

The first quarter of 1999 marked the first quarter in more than three years that every Asian country market IDC tracks enjoyed positive annual growth. Market gains seen in key countries such as China, Australia, India and Taiwan.

As a consequence of the strong first quarter results, IDC increased its regional forecast in 1999 to 12.9 million units shipped for more than 23 percent annual growth.

"After two very tumultuous years, the regional PC market appears to be firmly planted on the path of recovery," said Brian Kornegay, research manager at IDC Asia/Pacific. "Obstacles such as political uncertainties in India and precarious China-U.S. relations remain, but IDC expects the regional PC market's momentum to continue."

IBM maintained its lead in the regional PC market in the first quarter, with unit shipments of approximately 259,000, an increase of 49 percent when compared to the year-earlier quarter. The company performed well in most regional markets, but its growth was boosted to the greatest extent by success in Korea, Australia and Taiwan.

Compaq Computer Corp. maintained its second place position in the first quarter of 1999 with 223,400 unit shipments, 7.5 percent more than it shipped in the year-ago period.

Legend Group remained in the third place position with unit shipments surging 70.4 percent compared to the year-ago period for 5.9 percent market share. However, it recorded the only negative sequential growth rate among the top 5 vendors, with unit shipments down by 12 percent over the fourth quarter of 1998.

Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. held the fourth place position with a 5.9 percent market share, followed by Hewlett-Packard Co. with 151,100 unit shipments and a market share of 5.1 percent.

Once again, China played an integral role in supporting the region's growth as its market expanded. At 35 percent of the regional market, China is now more than twice the size of the next closest Asian market -- Australia.

First quarter PC shipments in China amounted to more than 1 million units for a 22.1 percent increase from the year-ago quarter. The other country markets that rounded out the top five in the first quarter included Australia, Korea, India and Taiwan, respectively.