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


To: Ian@SI who wrote (23165)10/1/1999 10:13:00 AM
From: BillyG  Respond to of 25960
 
Re-acceleration of fab spending is underway, says SEMI and analyst

By J. Robert Lineback
Semiconductor Business News
(09/30/99, 07:37:24 PM EDT)

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. -- After a summer pause in orders for chip production
equipment, bookings for wafer fab tools have started to heat up again, said
industry observers and officials during the first quarterly update conference call
hosted by Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International (SEMI) today.

The trade group's new forecast for semiconductor capital spending calls for
modest growth this year to $23 billion followed by a 21.7% increase to $28 billion
in 2000 and a 25% rise to $35 billion in 2001. The forecast shows equipment
spending by chip makers reaching $50 billion in 2004. In 1998, semiconductor
equipment sales plunged 21.4% to $22 billion from $28 billion in 1997, according
to SEMI.

During today's conference call for with the press, SEMI president Stanley Myers
said the recession-battered capital equipment industry was now returning to
"steady, slightly more robust growth" after a slowing of orders in the summer.
Even last week's powerful earthquake in Taiwan--which stopped the island's 28
fabs from producing devices due to power outages and some minor damage--is
not expected to have a significant impact on the recharged recovery.

"Structural damage to facilities there appear to have been slight and companies
are working around the clock to bring the production back online," Myers said. "It
looks like the glassware and quartzware problem are probably the biggest
problems," added Myers, referring to breakage of tubes and boats used in
high-temperature process tools (see today's story on recovery efforts).

While production gear shipments to Taiwan's fabs were interrupted in the past
week, analyst Jay Deahna of Morgan Stanley Dean Witter said chip makers
appear to be ready again to take delivery of new fab tools as they restart frontend
processing lines. Taiwan's growing chip industry has been a key driver in the 1999
recovery. About 25% of Applied Materials Inc.'s new orders for equipment came
from Taiwan in the company's last fiscal quarter, noted Deahna, who fielded
questions during SEMI's conference call this afternoon.

The Morgan Stanley analyst said semiconductor capital spending entered "the
re-acceleration phase" at the end of August and in early September. "In 1999,
based on our bottoms-up survey of chip makers around the world, we are looking
at a 13-14% increase in capital spending," Deahna said. "Our forecast for next
year is 27%."



To: Ian@SI who wrote (23165)10/3/1999 10:27:00 PM
From: Jerome  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25960
 
Easy Option play on CYMER. Buy CYMI at 33 tomorrow and if it rises at all write the Oct. 35's for at least 1 1/4 points.
With just 10 trading days left till options expire, this represents a eight percent gain. Not a whole lot to brag on, but more than just riding it up and down. Might get called out or might not. Weather you like CYMI or not its one of the better covered call writes for the money.

Jerome