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Technology Stocks : Numerical Technologies(NMTC): -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: mattie who wrote (9)8/22/2001 8:02:06 PM
From: Glenn Petersen  Respond to of 10
 
From TheStandard.com:

thestandard.com

OPINION: DONALD L. LUSKIN
Detailing With a Broad Brush
By Donald L. Luskin
Aug 22 2001 10:04 AM PDT

Numerical Technologies enables companies to use light to
manufacture semiconductor features that are smaller than
the light's own wavelength.

OPINION My favorite stock in The Luskin
Report's model portfolios is Numerical
Technologies. Now that I'm not running
Other People's Money in a mutual fund
anymore, I'm free to buy individual
stocks in my account for the first time in
almost two years. Numerical
Technologies was down sharply
yesterday, and I took the opportunity to
buy it. Here's why.

Numerical's technology is almost
unbearably compelling. When Sean
Donovan, my colleague at
MetaMarkets.com first told me about
it, he said they are in the business of
painting one-inch lines with six-inch
paintbrushes.

Sean meant that they enable the use of
light to manufacture features in
semiconductors that are smaller than the
wavelength of the light itself. They call
this "phase-shifting" -- but as far as I'm
concerned it might as well be black
magic. But what's the difference? It
works -- and they've got it patented.

Sub-wavelength features are critical for the semiconductor
industry if it wants to keep reaping the bounty of Moore's Law,
the forecast that Intel founder Gordon Moore made decades
ago that the transistor density of semiconductors would double
every eighteen months. It always has so far, and that means
that the miniaturization, speed and cost-effectiveness of
semiconductors can double every eighteen months, too. And
that steadily expands the market for semiconductors, and
makes the semiconductor industry one of the most important
manufacturing sectors in the global economy.

And one of the most viciously competitive. It's a constant race,
with Moore's law setting the pace. Faster. Cheaper. Smaller.
Sub-wavelength features make chips all three of those things.
So if a semiconductor manufacturer wants to compete, it has to
go sub-wavelength. And the state-of-the-art in
sub-wavelength is Numerical Technologies.

Numerical helps its customers right from the design phase, with
software that optimizes the design of sub-wavelength circuits.
Then all the way through process design, manufacturing and
quality control, Numerical is there with software, process
automation, equipment design and implementation consulting.
Their design customers include Cadence and Seiko. Their
photomask customers include Dupont Photomask, Photronics
and Dai Nippon. Their equipment customers include Applied
Materials, KLA-Tencor, Zygo and Lasertec. And their wafer
fab customers include twelve of the top 25 manufacturers such
as Intel, Motorola, Texas Instruments, UMC, and Fujitsu.

I know what you're thinking -- that customer list reads like a
Who's Who of the walking wounded. With customers like that,
who needs creditors? But the fact that the semiconductor
industry is in contraction is precisely what makes Numerical so
important. If the semiconductor cycle bottoms out and heads
higher, then any expansion in capacity is going to be in
sub-wavelength, at the leading edge of technology -- and
profits. But if the cycle just wallows in the trough, or gets
worse, then the industry will need sub-wavelength even more:
Capacity won't expand, but everyone will be forced to upgrade
to maintain competitive position and cut unit costs in the
inevitable price war.

That makes Numerical Technologies a recession-proof tech
stock. Numerical reported earnings for its second quarter (ended
June) last July 11. Against an industry backdrop of shocking
earnings and revenue shortfalls and downward forward
guidance, Numerical blew away the Street's estimates and then
guided even higher. Only a year since their initial public offering,
they are profitable, and they plan on getting even more
profitable. Because they supply purely intellectual property,
their gross margins are a stunning 90%. And since reporting,
they've announced two important new customers, Taiwan
Semiconductor and Qualcomm.

The Force is strong with this one. And just imagine what they
will do when they get that paintbrush of theirs even smaller.