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Politics : Formerly About Applied Materials -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Gottfried who wrote (31130)6/23/1999 12:40:00 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 70976
 
TSC is of no value IMHO. Cramer simply jumps on the stocks which appear to be moving. He used to look at fundamentals; now he appears to be a pure momentum player. What a waste of time and schooling!

Just my .02

BK

BTW, a month ago I would have been happy to see AMAT in the mid-50's after we had drifted down to the low 40's. Now I am disappointed AMAT cannot pierce its old high. What a difference a month makes:-)

BTW2, The SOX appears to be holding up relatively well despite weakness in the broader market.



To: Gottfried who wrote (31130)6/23/1999 12:51:00 PM
From: w0z  Respond to of 70976
 
Gottfried, I think INTC is a major player in FLASH memory...but not DRAM.



To: Gottfried who wrote (31130)6/23/1999 2:37:00 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 70976
 
Semiconductor Summer Looking Bright

Salomon Smith Barney
Friday, June 18, 1999

--SUMMARY:----Semiconductors
*A survey of distributors and discussions with a great number of
managements suggests to us order rates remain strong and that the outlook for the summer months will likely be more positive than the seasonal norm.

*We also believe most of the companies in our coverage will beat analysts estimates for June, particularly the broad-based and communications device names and that analysts have yet to significantly raise estimates on multi-market suppliers.

--OPINION:-------------------------------------------------------
Continuing up cyclical curve. The semiconductor industry continues to
accelerate upward in a classically cyclical fashion. Industry data is
showing that. SIA semiconductor shipments grew 7% year over year in April (the latest data available), with forecasts for growth this year being revised upward. But we are also seeing the impact on the company level: order rates are rising, which is putting a pinch on capacity and availability, resulting in stretching lead times.

Distributors also seeing pickup. Checks with a half dozen North American component distributors and independent sales reps reveal the following data points:

1. Component bookings are quite strong, and the current backlog trends
are leading most salespeople to expect a better-than-normal summer season.
2. Lead times on selected devices (e.g., analog 'Op Amps', tantalum
capacitors, sole-sourced communications ICs) have been lengthening, and we have isolated reports of delivery lead times jumping to 16-20 or even 30 weeks.
3. Pricing in general is firmer (excluding DRAM), and prices are rising in selected segments such as SRAMs, EPROM, Flash and commodity analog chips.
4. We believe the direct (i.e., not distribution) channel is more robust than distribution, although some distributors are stronger than others. Thus, mixed reports from suppliers like Marshall Industries are not necessarily representative of the larger trends.
5. Meanwhile, DRAM price declines have accelerated over the last several days, after several weeks of relative stability. Pricing for bellwether 64Mb components fell into the $4.40-4.60 range yesterday, down from $4.90 at the end of last week, a hefty 10% week-over-week decline. One broker even relayed a story of being undercut in a sale of a substantial amount of product which he was offering for $4.35. Pricing for 128Mb product has also trended down of late landing in the $18-20 range, down from $22-23 of two weeks ago. We remain cautious on the DRAM environment and Micron Technology.

Strong summer ahead. These data points plus commentary from the component suppliers themselves lead us to believe that the June quarter results will be above expectations, and that published estimates for the second half of 1999 and 2000 will be raised. We believe the summer will be stronger than the seasonal norm.

We believe non-PC component companies are the main beneficiary of these trends, including broad-based and communications-focused component suppliers.





To: Gottfried who wrote (31130)6/24/1999 3:54:00 AM
From: FLSTF97  Respond to of 70976
 
Last time I checked, INTC was in the flash business, but I'm not aware of any major price drop in that product. I believe there was some threat from one of the Asian manufacturers (Samsung maybe) that they were planning to do to flash what they have done to DRAM. (I guess they just don't get it.)