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To: The Duke of URLĀ© who wrote (169012)8/3/2002 12:58:40 PM
From: Joseph Pareti  Respond to of 186894
 
Palmisano Defends IBM's $3 Billion Microchip Plant 08.02.02
NEWS BRIEFS HPCwire
==============================================================================

International Business Machines Corp. Chief Executive Samuel Palmisano on
defended IBM's new $3 billion microchip plant, saying that investment is the
key to IBM's growth.

"We understand it is an economic downturn and whereas people would not
encourage us to invest in this environment, we see the long-term opportunity
in the industry," Palmisano said at a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the East
Fishkill plant.

Palmisano said the plant and the deal to buy PricewaterhouseCoopers Consulting
are important to the future of the Armonk, New York-based computer maker.

IBM on Tuesday said it would buy PricewaterhouseCoopers Consulting for $3.5
billion, expanding its services business in the company's largest acquisition
ever.

The East Fishkill plant, which is due to start producing chips in the first
quarter of 2003, is IBM's first 300 millimeter semiconductor plant, which uses
dinner plate sized wafers to print semiconductors. That is in contrast to less
efficient salad plate sized wafers that are the current standard.

IBM's plant, which is the size of several football fields, was announced in
the fall of 2000 and at $3 billion, is IBM's largest single capital
investment. The plant's opening comes at a time when the semiconductor
industry is in a severe downturn. Some Wall Street analysts have criticized
the move.

Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi said recently in a research note
that the cost of IBM's plant could weigh on future earnings if demand for
chips doesn't pick up.

John Kelly, head of IBM's technology operations, said that demand for
manufacturing microchips with the latest technologies remains strong. The
advanced technology factory at IBM's Burlington, Vermont location is running
at full capacity, Kelly said.

The fully-automated plant will make microchips that are used in high-
performance computers and in the telecommunications sector. It will also be
IBM's primary production facility for microchips used in popular gaming
systems made by companies like Nintendo and Sony Corp. For instance, Kelly
said IBM would make the chips for Sony's next-generation PlayStation 3 at the
facility.