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Technology Stocks : ASML Holding NV -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Cary Salsberg who wrote (934)6/4/2004 9:50:03 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 43442
 
ASML seen deciding on flat screen entry soon
Friday June 4, 9:41 am ET
By Lucas van Grinsven, European Technology Correspondent

AMSTERDAM, June 4 (Reuters) - Dutch chip equipment maker ASML (Amsterdam:ASML.AS - News; NasdaqNM:ASML - News) may soon decide to jump in the booming market for thin liquid crystal displays (LCDs), sources close to the company and analysts said on Friday.

The world's largest maker of chip lithography machines which map out electronic circuits on silicon wafers, will likely decide early next month, and may make an announcement in its semi-annual results statement, sources close to ASML said.

ASML, which has only said that it is studying options to enter the LCD stepper market, declined to comment.

Analysts believe that ASML will decide to get into LCD steppers in order to take advantage of the red hot market for flat computer monitors and televisions, where shipments are rising well over 50 percent a year as consumers replace tube displays.

The biggest makers of LCD displays, Samsung Electronics (KSE:005930.KS - News) and LG.Philips LCD (KSE:066570.KS - News; Amsterdam:PHG.AS - News) which each have some 20 percent of the market, have said they will invest a total $40 billion in new production lines over the next decade.

"We expect an announcement of a possible involvement by the third quarter of 2004," JP Morgan analyst Uche Orji said.

A decision to enter the LCD market will put ASML head to head with Nikon Corp (Tokyo:7731.T - News) and Canon Inc (Tokyo:7751.T - News), the two rivals it also encounters in the chip lithography market.

Right now, these Japanese companies are the world's only LCD stepper manufacturers, essential tools which can cost more than $6 million apiece and which put millions of pixels and connecting circuits on large sheets of glass. These panes are then cut up into smaller pieces for various sizes of displays.

Sources close to ASML said it had intensified efforts to come up with an LCD stepper that stands out from those made by Nikon and Canon, much like ASML's chip systems that can be more expensive but also more productive than those of its rivals.

"Some of the firm's biggest and brightest brains are working on the LCD project," one source said, adding that key decision-making meetings were planned in coming weeks.

Another source said a go-ahead may be expected "around the middle of the year", although there was still a small possibility that management would kill the plans.

DIFFERENT STEPPER

ASML has been feeling out potential customers like Samsung, already a major buyer of ASML's chip lithography systems.

Although the basic lithography principle is similar, producing desktop-sized sheets of LCD panels is not the same as projecting chip circuits with the thickness of a few molecules on a circular silicon wafer of just 300 millimetres.

"The major challenge is handling of the large glass panes," one analyst said. But he added that ASML has an edge in its stage technology, where it scans the tiniest irregularities on the silicon surface before projecting the lithographic image.

This process helps to achieve a higher yield, or percentage of working chips. Yield is also key in LCD manufacturing, where production lines start off with yields as low as 30 percent, meaning that seven out of every 10 panes are not working well.

Some of ASML's suppliers, such as Swedish Micronic (Stockholm:MICR.ST - News), have experience in thin displays, which can accelerate ASML's entry into the market.

The Dutch company's decision to start making display lithography equipment will also hinge on its prospects for making equipment for an even newer flat panel display technology, called Organic Light Emitting Diodes (OLEDs).

The first full colour OLED displays are expected on the market by next year, and the technology has the potential to produce brighter and crisper flat displays that are cheaper to produce than LCDs.

"OLEDs could be a game changer," one source said.

Japan's Seiko Epson (Tokyo:6724.T - News) is using OLEDs as an opportunity to enter the display equipment market. Canon is working with Japan's Toshiba (Tokyo:6502.T - News) on yet another new panel, called surface conduction electron emitter (SED) display.

Spending on LCD and OLED equipment will rise at $10 billion a year between 2002 and 2006 to $59 billion, according to United States-based research group DisplaySearch. By comparison, global sales of chip equipment totalled $22.1 billion in 2003, according to Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International.



To: Cary Salsberg who wrote (934)6/21/2004 9:09:47 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 43442
 
ASML hopes for new customers in Japan
Monday June 21, 8:44 am ET

AMSTERDAM, June 21 (Reuters) - Dutch chip equipment maker ASML (Amsterdam:ASML.AS - News; NasdaqNM:ASML - News) said on Monday it could increase the number of customers in Japan from the current three, adding it would raise staff there if business went well.

"We're hoping to increase our business in Japan. We could win new customers and also expand with current clients," a spokeswoman said.

ASML's investor relations officials told Swiss investors last week that the Dutch firm might expand staffing levels in Japan.

ASML is the world's largest maker of semiconductor lithography machines which map out electronic circuits on silicon wafers. It competes with Japan's Nikon Corp (Tokyo:7731.T - News) and Canon Inc (Tokyo:7751.T - News).

Japanese customers buy most of their chip lithography gear from Nikon and Canon, and despite being the industry's market leader ASML's business there is still small.

Seiko Epson (Tokyo:6724.T - News) and Fuji (Tokyo:6504.T - News), plus an indisclosed third chip maker are ASML's Japanese customers at the moment.

"We employ 80 people in Japan now. That number could go to 400 over the next two years. That's a best case scenario. We could be hiring if there is the business to support it," the spokeswoman said.

ASML's customers include the world's largest chip maker Intel Corp (NasdaqNM:INTC - News) and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (Taiwan:2330.TW - News), the world's largest contract chip maker.

ASML is pioneering a new technology, which uses water between the lens and the silicon wafer, allowing chip makers to produce smaller and cheaper chips on the current generation of machines. ASML analysts estimate the firm is well ahead of its Japanese rivals with this so-called immersion technology.



To: Cary Salsberg who wrote (934)7/7/2004 9:29:17 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 43442
 
Found this on the Yahoo message boards so reader beware:

MS today reits overweight on ASML ASML scheduled to announce its 2Q 04 results on July 14 at 7am UK time with a press conference at 9am UK time and an investor conference at 3:30pm UK time. MS expects 2Q revs of E 572.6MM, up 26.3% seq with eps of E 0.11, vs. consensus of E 560 mm and eps of E 0.11. MS expects total unit shipments to increase to 69 units (54 new tools and 15 used tools) from 58 tools (42 new/16 used) in Q1. Sees gross margin of 33.5%, up 2% seq. Sees rising ASPs in order backlog reflecting richer mix of 300 mm tools.

MS believes ASML will provide a solid outlook for Q3 and 2H 04 and update on potential entry into the LCD stepper market and confirmation of the scheduled shipment of the industry's first immersion litho tool to TSMC in Q3.

MS Target price of E 20 or $24.60