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.
Non-Tech : The Critical Investing Workshop -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dealer who wrote (28368)8/9/2000 5:52:44 PM
From: Voltaire  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35685
 
This is huge. NEC will be next and we should have a 25 to 30 pt. day.

Check out paragraph SEVEN.

NEC Aims to Regain DRAM Share via Speed, Not Price (Update2)
By Minoru Matsutani

Tokyo, Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) -- NEC Corp., the world's fourth- largest memory chipmaker, aims to compete with top-ranked rivals through superior technology, not low prices, NEC Electron Devices Deputy President Keiichi Shimakura told Bloomberg News.

Last year, the Tokyo-based company had an 8.8 percent market share in the memory chip market, according to Dataquest Inc. Korean and U.S. rivals have eroded NEC's share for years by competing on cost.

During the last decade, Korea's Samsung Electronics and Hyundai Electronics Industries Co. overtook Japanese rivals as the world's largest memory chipmakers, largely through investments in cost reduction and development of new products. NEC will need to spend billions of dollars on new factories and technology if it wants to reclaim its earlier position.

``NEC chose the technology route probably because the company has no chance to beat foreign rivals'' by offering lower prices, said Yukari Yamada, an analyst at Dataquest. Still, NEC may have trouble competing because competitors also aim to produce faster chips, she added.

While Fujitsu Ltd. and other Japanese chipmakers are shrinking their DRAM operations, NEC is committed to the business, Shimakura said.

Core Strategy

NEC and Hitachi Ltd., Japan's third-biggest chipmaker, last December set up a joint venture to develop and design DRAMs. Although analysts say the two should make DRAMs together to lower production costs per unit, NEC's focus is on making faster memory chips rather than cutting costs by boosting production volume.

``Producing fast DRAMs is our core strategy,'' Shimakura said, adding that NEC may adopt a Rambus Inc. memory design to achieve its aim.

Mountain View, California-based Rambus has licensed its high- bandwidth design to all of the top-ranked memory chipmakers, including Samsung, Hyundai and Micron Technology Inc. of the U.S. Rambus memory chips enable computers to process data faster than is possible with mainstream DRAMs. However, production costs for the Rambus standard have made it prohibitively expensive, and the market share for such chips is currently less than 5 percent.

Samsung is the world's biggest DRAM maker, with a 21 percent market share in 1999, according to Dataquest. Hyundai Electronics Industries Co. is the second with 19 percent and Micron is the third, accounting for 14 percent, according to Dataquest.

NEC will spend 600 billion yen ($5.5 billion) over the next three years on overseas acquisitions, said NEC President Koji Nishigaki last month. Shimakura said NEC would like to acquire some companies with technology that enables the company to make faster chips, mainly system chips that combine memory and processing functions on a single piece of silicon.

NEC shares fell 85 yen, or 3 percent, to 2,740.



Volts