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Technology Stocks : Cymer (CYMI) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ScotMcI who wrote (22540)7/14/1999 5:40:00 PM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25960
 
Another Fab.............
eetimes.com

1st Silicon exec ready to spend $500M

By Will Wade
EE Times
(07/14/99, 3:24 p.m. EDT)

SAN FRANCISCO — Claudio Loddo could be the most popular guy at this
year's Semicon West. As chief executive of 1st Silicon (Malaysia) Sdn
Berhad, a Borneo-based pure-play foundry that is to turn out its first wafers
next year, Loddo has been wandering the halls of the equipment industry's
largest trade show, checkbook in hand and ready to buy.

"We plan to spend about $500 million on equipment before we open," Loddo
said. "We'll be spending more as we get closer to opening, but we're ready to
place orders now. I'll spend at least $500,000 before the end of the year."
And after last year's disastrous sales results in the slumping chip-gear
business, anyone who expects to actually place an order is every equipment
guy's best friend.

Loddo's project is currently a half-built shell, but he said it
will become a watertight building by the end of the year,
and he will spend next year filling it with high-tech
semiconductor manufacturing equipment and testing the
process. He expects 1st Silicon to ramp into full
production with 0.25-micron technology by the end of
2000.

That's not bad, since a year ago the site was a 97-acre
swath of jungle and reclaimed land on the less-than-highly-developed island
of Borneo. In a region known mainly for timber exports, orangutan and
barely-reformed headhunters, Loddo wants to open a state-of-the-art fab. So
far, he's succeeded in attracting 42 core technical employees, with
semiconductor experience ranging from one year to more than two decades.

"It's a quality-of-life decision," he said. While young Westerners may not
want to relocate to the jungle, Loddo said he's been very successful in
recruiting mid-career executives who want to live the easy life. "Some people
are more attracted to living here than in Singapore, but if they miss the city,
it's just an hour's flight to Singapore or Kuala Lumpur. It's a choice you have
to make."

The fab is located just a few minutes outside Kuching, a city in the Malaysian
state of Sarawak, which, along with the neighboring state of Sabah take up
the northern third of Borneo. The two are often referred to as East Malaysia,
in contrast with the more-developed Malaysian mainland on the nearby
Malay peninsula. The Malaysian government, after more than three decades
as a force in back-end assembly, is making a play to increase its presence in
front-end chip production as well. Besides 1st Silicon, the country is also
promoting a second fab project on the mainland, called Silterra, which is on a
similar schedule but is about six months behind the Kuching project.

Kuching is an interesting mix of old and new, with a few modern hotels
springing up to support growing commercial interests. Only a few miles
outside of town are traditional longhouses, home to a tribal lifestyle that has
changed little over the past few centuries.

Allen Sangco, executive support officer and a native of California, says he
lives in the most expensive, most exclusive housing area in Kuching, where
he rents a luxury apartment for just $500 a month. For another $100 per
month, he has complete maid service, including laundry and cooking. "It's
almost like living a colonial lifestyle," he said. "I could never live like this in
the United States."

While 1st Silicon will begin operating next year with 0.25-micron technology,
it will eventually shift to 0.18-micron and then 0.13-micron technology. Loddo
said the fab will also adopt copper-interconnect technology at some point.
While conceding that 1st Silicon is far behind foundry leaders UMC Group
and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd., he said there will still be
plenty of demand for his services.

"We will be ramping at the exact right time," Loddo said. "All the market
reports I have seen are predicting a capacity crunch next year, so there will
be plenty of people who will need us. I've heard that some Taiwanese
fabless companies now can't get their orders filled with the big Taiwanese
foundries, so we should have plenty of business."

The foundry has also struck a technology-transfer agreement with Sharp
Corp., and will implement that company's manufacturing process. Sharp has
also signed to be 1st Silicon's first customer, and Loddo said the Japanese
company will utilize more than 20 percent of the fab's total capacity. Besides
fabless companies, he also expects a growing trend of major chip companies
shifting some production from their own fabs to pure-play foundries. "I
recently heard of one foundry that had to turn down an order from a major
chip company to deliver 15,000 wafers per month," he said. "There will be
plenty of business for us when we are ready."



To: ScotMcI who wrote (22540)7/15/1999 3:24:00 PM
From: ScotMcI  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 25960
 
You folks who follow the entire sector: how is Cymer's price performing in relation to the whole semi equipment industry? Is it just now catching up, or has Cymer been rising in parallel with everything else?

Also, where has Cymer been in the rankings of big movers on the NASDAQ in the last few days? Is it in the top 10?

Just curious (and too lazy to figure out where to discover this stuff for myself :-).