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Technology Stocks : Varian Semiconductor Equipment Associates -- VSEA -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (1249)1/4/2001 1:06:47 PM
From: ima_posta2  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1929
 
Brian, although J. Tracy O'Rourke the Chairman of VSEA was not deposed yesterday,
the first two NVLS employees have now been noticed for deposition for their involvement in the heinous crimes associated with the Varian (VAR & VSEA), Susan B. Felch and George Zdasiuk SLAPP!

Deposition schedules for Mr. Ron Powell and his former underling Jim Fair will be published here as soon as confirmed. Both high level NVLS managers are expected to testify truthfully and completely!



To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (1249)1/5/2001 2:55:44 PM
From: Red Heeler  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1929
 
Companies behind microchip makers hurting even more

Reuters Company News - January 05, 2001 14:07

By Daniel Sorid

NEW YORK, Jan 5 (Reuters) - Dick Aurelio's humongous ion-spitting machines look nothing like laptop computers, but investors, bracing for a crash landing in the technology sector, are treating them alike.

Aurelio is the chief executive of Gloucester, Mass.-based Varian Semiconductor Equipment Inc. , the market leader in ion implanters, machines the size of two-car garages that are used by virtually every maker of microchips.

Implanters shoot beams of ions into silicon wafers, forming the minuscule switches called transistors that allow microchips to process complex instructions.

"The industry, in the long term, is a terrific industry from both a business and investor standpoint," Aurelio said.

Others, however, are having short-term jitters.

Positioned at the beginning of a long production chain that puts microchips into mobile phones and computers, and then into the hands of consumers, Varian and its peers have been beaten up particularly hard by investors.

Investors are taking pot shots not only at the major equipment makers, such as Applied Materials Inc. and KLA-Tencor Corp. , but also the smaller companies whose sometimes strange-looking products are nevertheless vital to the chipmaking industry.

For instance, shares of Rudolph Technologies , a Flanders, N.J.-based company whose products ensure materials deposited on silicon are not too thick or too thin, have fallen to about half of last year's high.

Westwood, Mass.-based ADE Corp. , whose systems check for problems at various stages of chip production, traded at $15-1/2 on Thursday, off a 52-week high of $27.

Microchip makers such as Intel Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. also have been ailing as consumers cut back on electronics expenditures. But the companies that make equipment for chipmakers have been hit even harder.

That, analysts said, can be attributed to the feast-or-famine nature of their business.

While chipmakers still sell their wares even during slow times, the semiconductor equipment makers can go bone dry as chip makers cancel or put off expensive capital equipment orders.

It is a three-year cycle usually, Aurelio said, with sales of equipment picking up as chipmakers ramp up production to satisfy technology hungry consumers. Eventually, chip makers decide that the market is flooded and halt their spending on equipment -- until the cycle picks up again.

Last year, semiconductor equipment makers saw their sales jump 76.1 percent, according to a report from The Information Network, a market research firm. But this year, some analysts predict that growth, if there is growth at all, will be in the single digits.

"This is a bloodshed time for equipment makers," Nikolay Tishchenko, an analyst with ABN Amro, said.

WILD STOCK SWINGS

Semiconductor, or microchip, makers and technology companies in general have seen their valuations sink recently, as dot-com euphoria melted away and consumers showed their anxiety about an uncertain economy by spending less.

The Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index has lost half its value since March highs, and the tech-laden Nasdaq exchange has been in freefall mode.

But semiconductor equipment makers, coming off a strong two years, have underperformed even the chipmakers. The Standard & Poors semiconductor equipment index has underperformed the Philadelphia chipmaker index by 22 percent over the last year.

The S&P index includes the major equipment makers, such as Applied Materials, KLA-Tencor, and Novellus Systems Inc. .

Smaller equipment makers like Varian, however, have not been spared. Varian's stock is at nearly one-third of its March value.

Another smaller equipment maker, Kalispell, Mont.-based Semitool Inc. , whose devices prepare the surface of silicon wafers for semiconductor production, has seen its stock swing wildly and is now valued at about half its March high.

And Therma-Wave Inc. , a maker of laser-based testers of ion implantation, traded above $40 in March, but on Friday closed at $15.

Varian's Aurelio, however, insists that investors should look past cyclical downturns and see a much brighter bigger picture.

"Our customers are depending on how many Gameboys and PCs and cell phones are going to be bought. Long term, there's going to be more of that stuff," Aurelio said.

Varian has seen 22 percent average sales growth over its lifetime, he said. Of course, that often came from strong growth one year and a major decline the next, he added.

Analysts seem to agree with Aurelio's perspective.

Semiconductor equipment makers' sales may end up growing, albeit at a lower rate, in 2001, according to several analyst forecasts. Long-term, many of these companies will survive the rollercoaster and end up even stronger.

"Unit volume for semiconductors is always increasing," Elliot Rogers, an analyst with CS First Boston, said. Demand for products like Varian's ion implanters "increases and semiconductor technology increases."



To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (1249)1/6/2001 2:14:18 PM
From: ima_posta2  Respond to of 1929
 
Brian, I'm upset about losing $$$$$ on VSEA too! But just imagine what is going to happen when the VSEA employees noticed for deposition being to testify about Varian's heinous and fascist acts. Just imagine Brian how bad it might be. Remember when VSEA traded at over $73 a share!
Yea, I should have sold too!



To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (1249)1/10/2001 8:38:01 AM
From: BMcV  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1929
 
Brian,

Do you know what the revenue estimates were?

biz.yahoo.com

"Varian Semiconductor Equipment Associates Comments On Fiscal 2001
First Quarter Results and Anticipated
Outlook

GLOUCESTER, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 10, 2001--Varian Semiconductor Equipment Associates, Inc.
(NASDAQ:VSEA - news) today announced that it expects to report fiscal first quarter 2001 revenues in the range of
$223 to $228 million.

In addition, the company advised that it continues to make improvements in its gross margin and to carefully
manage its operating expenses.

As a result of the uncertain general economic outlook, the company also advised that visibility into the coming
quarters of fiscal 2001 is less clear than it had been earlier in the first fiscal quarter. Therefore, the company's
guidance for the balance of fiscal 2001 is being updated.

``We have recently received requests from a few customers to delay some deliveries. These requests, combined
with general market uncertainty, have caused us to update our guidance for the rest of fiscal 2001,'' said Richard
A. Aurelio, Varian Semiconductor's president and chief executive officer. ``We now expect our annual revenue
growth to be in line with the revised industry's growth projections of approximately 10 percent year over year,
while our recurring net income is expected to grow by 15 to 25 percent.''

Aurelio also commented, ``As indicated previously, we expect selling, general and administrative expenses to be
approximately 12 to 13 percent of revenue, and we will continue to increase our investment in research and
development. We remain optimistic about the long-term outlook for growth in ion implantation and the continued
shift to single wafer processing. Our leadership in technology and customer satisfaction as well as gains in market
share should all contribute to long-term revenue growth, as the increasing information content of chips requires the
highly sophisticated processing offered by our VIISta single wafer common platform.''

Varian Semiconductor will issue results for its first quarter of fiscal 2001, which ended December 29, 2000, after
the close of the market on January 25, 2001."



To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (1249)1/10/2001 9:10:48 AM
From: dantecristo  Respond to of 1929
 
Brian, this doesn't look good for VSEA. I sure hope Aurelio doesn't hang up his cell phone when he reads this! (tee, hee)
Published in the San Jose Mercury News 01/09/01:
Semiconductor industry's outlook for the year is bleak...The reason for the slump is simple: Amid a slowing economy and high energy prices, people aren't buying personal computers and cell phones as fast as they used to, and companies are slowing purchases of networking and Internet equipment. All of those devices use chips, and the downturn suggests more bad news to come in the broader technology industry. ...”

www0.mercurycenter.com