SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Paul Engel who wrote (75004)10/11/1999 3:57:00 PM
From: Jim McMannis  Respond to of 1574021
 
DRAM Sold Out, OEMs Put
On Allocation
(10/11/99, 6:33 a.m. ET)
By Jack Robertson, Electronic Buyers' News

For the first time in recent memory,
DRAM from most major vendors has
been placed on allocation, a clear sign
to customers that the four-year era of
ample supply and swooning prices
has for now drawn to a close.

Micron Technology Inc. last week broke the
ice by uttering the "A" word, telling Wall
Street investors that it is sold out of DRAM
for the fourth quarter. And a number of other
DRAM producers have placed OEM
customers on allocation following the market's
sudden U-turn from the oversupply situation
that just this summer fed rivers of low-cost
chips into the OEM channel.

Of the leading DRAM makers polled by EBN,
only Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., the largest
global producer, shied away from claims of
allocated supply.

Avo Kanadjian, senior vice president of
memory marketing at the company's U.S.
subsidiary, Samsung Semiconductor Inc., San
Jose, said the sudden tight supply has spooked
the market so much that using the term
allocation "only can increase the panic."
Kanadjian said the DRAM market is under
pressure from so many conflicting factors that
at present, "it is difficult to get a clear picture."

Nevertheless, during a conference call last
week to financial analysts to report its
quarterly earnings, Don Baldwin, vice
president of Micron Technology, Boise,
Idaho, said the company "is on allocation
across the board on all its memory
productsÑ128-Mbit and 64-Mbit DRAMs,
flash, and SRAMs. We're forced to turn away
a large amount of business, and most of the
other DRAM manufacturers are doing the
same."

As the shortage continues, contract OEM
prices are rising and are now above $10 for
mainstay 8 X 8 64-Mbit DRAMs, up from $9
just a week ago and $4.50 in July.
Spot-market prices have gone out of sight,
although they have begun to level off at $19 to
$20 for those 64-Mbit configurations in
highest demand.

Lisa Dreher, memory product manager at
Kingston Technology Co., a Fountain Valley,
Calif., module maker, said, "DRAM allocation
is likely to be short-lived as manufacturers
ramp to full capacity and complete die shrinks.
However, looking ahead, we may see some
real allocation in the DRAM market next
year."

For PC OEMs used to stuffing their boxes
with DRAM capacities that would have
required a second mortgage during the pre-glut
years, the lack of fourth-quarter availability
represents a marked change, even if suppliers
did serve some advance notice.

"We were warning our customers for two
months that the industry would be on
allocation in the fourth quarter because of
demand rapidly closing the gap with supply,"
said Jamie Stitt, manager of DRAM marketing
at Toshiba America Electronic Components
Inc., Irvine, Calif. "We're not surprised, and
expect allocations to continue into the first
quarter of 2000."

Jim Sogas, director of business operations at
the DRAM division of Hitachi Semiconductor
(America) Inc. in San Jose, said the current
DRAM shortage should continue for another
month before the industry is in full allocation
mode. "But regardless of what you call it, the
OEM customers know they're now on
allocation," he said. "Every DRAM product
across the board is sold out." '

-----

DRAM on allocation and NO RAMBUS! What is Mikey D gonna do? LOL