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Strategies & Market Trends : Trader J's Inner Circle -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Canuck Dave who wrote (20052)9/4/1999 10:10:00 PM
From: LTK007  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 56535
 
this bugger has been on my watch list for sometime,its worth a look--- I am putting on my possible future biggie list.

<< I.D.E.A. Global Focus Sep 3 1999 5:05PM CST
Archives...

Amkor sizzles in semi sector

Amkor Technology is playing to win in the semiconductor industry. It's betting a new technology will
become an indispensable component of portable devices -- and so should you.

IDEAglobal.com thinks Amkor [AMKR] will find success in a recovering industry. The stock should rise
to $22 in the next week from $20 at Friday's close. Within one to two months, we see it reaching $30.

Amkor Technology packages and tests semiconductor equipment produced by other semiconductor
companies. Contracting companies like Amkor for assembly is increasingly popular in the semiconductor
industry. It saves larger companies the expense of developing their own resources for these extremely
complex tasks.

Amkor has begun manufacturing its own new technologies that could impact everything from telephones
to video game systems. Micro-boards, which are small frames that hold computer chips, can be used in
portable technologies such as mobile phones. They have the potential to help decrease the size and
power needs of these devices.

'It's a new field,' Salomon Smith Barney analyst Jonathan Joseph told IDEAglobal.com. 'No one else is
really working in it, so Amkor's the industry leader in micro-boards. And the high profit margins for the
boards are attractive.'

The stock climbed 10% Friday after Joseph released a report on it. On the strength of the micro-board
technology and more orders received for the third quarter of 1999 than expected, the analyst raised his
estimated earnings per share for 1999 to 65 cents from 63 cents.

The semiconductor industry is always volatile but does seems to have turned for the better. A report on
Friday showed the average price of high-capacity computer chips rising 17 cents over the past month. It's
a sure sign demand is up.

One year ago, things didn't look so good. Demand from Asia was low and the dollar was strong. Amkor's
stock was at $3.69 on September 3 1998.

The resurgence of the Asian economies and the weaker dollar is helping the industry. US semiconductor
goods have become cheaper abroad as the greenback has fallen against other currencies.

New technologies are also poised to boost the industry. A move to copper as the standard for
connections in computer chips is creating the need for new processing technologies provided by
semiconductor companies. And the development of 300mm wafers that hold more computer chips than
current wafers should force computer companies to buy more new products from the semiconductor
industry.

I.D.E.A. : Fri Sep 3 21:48:18 1999 [GMT] >>

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To: Canuck Dave who wrote (20052)9/6/1999 10:56:00 PM
From: Nicole Bourgault  Respond to of 56535
 
Canuck,

If the preone is good, I consider 1 easy point and should touch 1 1/2, so not, it will drop in any event of at least 1. By expecting good fresh news on him tomorrow morning. Do not forget that I am a newbie.

Nicole