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


To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (1034)11/17/2005 12:39:46 PM
From: niek  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 43333
 
Some more details Brian.

ASML has 16 orders for new tools, sees Japan deal

Thu Nov 17, 2005 12:07 PM ET

(Adds CEO comment on fourth quarter forecast, new orders, Japanese customer win, rivals)

By Lucas van Grinsven, European Technology Correspondent

BARCELONA, Nov 17 (Reuters) - Dutch chip equipment maker ASML Holding NV received more orders for its latest and most expensive machines, its chief executive said on Thursday, adding he expects a sixth Japanese customer.

ASML (ASML.AS: Quote, Profile, Research) (ASML.O: Quote, Profile, Research) , the world's largest maker of chip lithography machines which map out electronic circuits on silicon wafers, has eight firm orders in backlog for its latest immersion lithography machines that cost up to 30 million euros ($35 million) each.

There are orders pending for eight more, signed up in the last four to six weeks, Chief Executive Eric Meurice said.

ASML said order intake was on track with its forecast for stable units in the fourth quarter compared with the third, on the back of immersion and a cautious recovery of the chip sector fuelled by strong demand for cell phones, computers and other consumer electronics items.

In a presentation at a Morgan Stanley investor conference in Barcelona, Meurice said he expected to ship the first of the latest systems to a customer in the first quarter of 2006.

The system is the only chip lithography machine commercially available that can produce chips in the 45 nanometre specification, which enables much thinner circuits and hence smaller chips, or same-sized chips with more functionality.

Immersion refers to a water-like liquid between the lens and the silicon wafer, which allows higher depth of focus. This is the reason the circuits can be thinner than with traditional chip making lithography that uses no water.

As flash memories become more powerful, chip makers such as Samsung Electronics (005930.KS: Quote, Profile, Research) expect they will be used in new applications. These include personal computers, where they will enable instant switching on, because flash memory chips remember their data even when power is off.

"This is the gold rush, or the flash rush. Everyone in flash needs to go to 45 nanometres (and) if you want to play in immersion you have to come to ASML," Meurice said.

ASML reiterated it expects to ship 20 to 25 immersion tools in 2006, which are in great demand from makers of flash memory now used in cellphones and digital music players.

"We're getting more optimistic about the 20 to 25 immersion systems shipped in 2006," Meurice said.

There are still teething problems with the new technology that need to be ironed out.

NEW JAPANESE CUSTOMER

The lead in immersion over its two main rivals from Japan, Nikon Corp. (7731.T: Quote, Profile, Research) and Canon Inc. (7751.T: Quote, Profile, Research) , is delivering ASML new customers in Japan, a bastion where it has a market share of less than 10 percent, compared with its global share of more than 50 percent.

"Hopefully we can announce our sixth customer in Japan in the first quarter," Meurice said.

"We were astonished to receive a letter of intent without negotiations," he added. He declined to name the firm.

He said the accelerated penetration of Japan pointed to weakness of its rivals, but he could not gauge the magnitude. In any case, ASML would have to stop signing up new customers after number six as it could not support more, he said.

"We're going to fairly soon close our capability to do more in Japan," Meurice said.

The lens is the heart of a lithography machine and Meurice said that the first lens of the so-called Twinscan XT:1700 machine had been received and installed and that the first chip images were exposed just a day earlier. They delivered the big improvement that was hoped for.

ASML's customers include the world's largest chip maker Intel Corp. (INTC.O: Quote, Profile, Research) and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd. (2330.TW: Quote, Profile, Research) , the world's largest contract chip maker.

ASML shares closed 1.1 percent down at 15.38 euros, underperforming 0.2 percent higher Eurotech index .



To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (1034)12/12/2005 11:34:01 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 43333
 
ASML, Nikon tie in litho share race

Mark LaPedus
EE Times
(12/12/2005 10:58 AM EST)

SAN JOSE, Calif. — In the battle for dominance in the lithography equipment market for 2005, it appears there is a tie between ASML Holding NV and Nikon Corp.

For 2005, preliminary data indicates that ASML of the Netherlands will retain the lead in revenues with a 53.2 percent share of the $4.8 billion market for new lithography tools, up from a 50.3 percent share in 2004, according to The Information Network (New Tripoli, Penn.).

ASML gained ground on the strength of its 193-nm immersion tool, which sells for $26 million each, according to the research firm. In terms of sales, Japan’s Nikon held a 31.3 percent share in 2005, up from 26.8 percent in 2004, according to the firm.

In terms of the number of new lithography tools sold in 2005, The Information Network anticipates that Nikon will regain the lead in unit shipments with a 39.3 percent share of the market, up from 34.1 percent in 2004.

Nikon is projected to be ahead of ASML in terms of unit shipments. In that category, ASML is expected to have a 32.7 percent share in 2005, down from 38.7 percent in 2004, according to the firm. Japan’s Canon Inc. is believed to be in third place.

“While unit shipments were down 18.5 percent in 2005, average selling prices (ASPs) tools increased 17.2 percent,” said Robert N. Castellano, president of The Information Network, in a report. “The large growth in immersion DUV-based tools will be responsible for the continued high growth in ASPs. Immersion 248-nm tools from ASML cost $26 million each versus $21 million for dry, and will increase to $27.2 million each in 2006.”

Beyond the marketing hype, ASML and Nikon are running dead even on immersion lithography (see Oct. 21 story).

ASML (Veldhoven, The Netherlands) is also developing two alpha EUV lithography tools for delivery some time in the second quarter with one going to the IMEC research center (Leuven, Belgium) and the other headed to University of Albany nanotechnology campus, New York.

Nikon (Tokyo) said that it will ship an EUV tool in the first half of 2007. EUV lithography is a likely next-generation chip processing technology, based on 13-nanometer wavelength illumination, allowing chip makers to print features sizes of 32 nm and below on integrated circuits.