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Technology Stocks : Cymer (CYMI) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TideGlider who wrote (8197)11/5/1997 12:11:00 AM
From: pass pass  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25960
 
Catch-22 for Cymer

Investors worry firm's edge may cut both
ways

By Bruce V. Bigelow
STAFF WRITER

November 4, 1997

For hundreds of high-tech executives, the four-day financial conference
that began yesterday in San Diego offers an opportunity to explain their
business strategies to Wall Street.

But to Robert P. Akins, the event sponsored by the American
Electronics Association represents a chance to accomplish much more.

It gives Akins a much-needed platform to try to calm panicky investors
who've hit the emergency exits at Cymer Inc., the specialized laser maker
founded in San Diego 11 years ago.

After touching a record high of $48.75 per share on Aug. 22, Cymer
stock plummeted to a scary Halloween low of $22.875 on Oct. 31. The
sell-off in September and October shaved more than $600 million from
Cymer's market valuation.

Yesterday, Cymer shares closed at $23.75, up 87.5 cents in moderate
Nasdaq trading.

So what happened?

As securities analysts gathered in room 275 at the Sheraton Harbor
Island hotel, Akins insisted that "from a fundamental standpoint, there's
been no change" in Cymer's operations.

"The basic message is that the company is shipping orders and making
money," the chief executive said. "And we see an accelerating rate of
delivery."

It was a message that Akins repeated in sessions throughout the day.
Last night, Cymer even invited analysts and others attending the
conference to its newest manufacturing plant in Rancho Bernardo for a
firsthand inspection of the company's factory.

Yet the advanced technology that made Wall Street so exuberant about
Cymer following its initial public offering in September 1996 was the
same thing that investors found frightening in September 1997.

The company practically has a chokehold on a key laser technology,
which is widely viewed as absolutely critical to the semiconductor
industry. Despite two longtime competitors, Cymer currently dominates
the market for deep ultraviolet lasers, the key component needed by the
semiconductor industry to make the next generation of computer chips.

Cymer's specialized lasers enable chip makers, such as Motorola and
NEC, to etch much finer details onto silicon wafers so that more
microcircuitry can be squeezed onto each integrated circuit.

The lasers are incorporated into machines known as wafer steppers or
scanners, which use a process known as photolithography to imprint
circuit patterns on silicon chips. The process is similar to the way light is
projected through film to develop a photograph, except the circuit traces
are about as thick as a human hair.

There are only five companies in the world that make wafer steppers and
scanners -- and they are all Cymer customers.

If you look at it one way, Cymer is the proverbial toll bridge that every
chip maker must use to stay in business. But if you look at it another way,
such complex technology could also become the single biggest road
block for the entire semiconductor and computer industries.

The disparity between the two views may explain how Cymer could go
so high -- and then fall so far.

Cymer's stock price began tumbling after the company said an unnamed
customer, believed to be Nikon Corp. of Japan, had delayed some of its
orders for Cymer's exotic lasers.

The plunge accelerated a few weeks later, after Montgomery Securities
analyst Brett Hodess suggested that both Nikon and Canon Inc. were
having technical problems integrating the deep ultraviolet lasers into the
next generation of steppers.

"I think the market overreacted," said Charles DiLisio, president of
D-Side Advisors, a San Jose firm that offers investment advice. DiLisio
said that the semiconductor industry will inevitably move smaller features
on each integrated circuit and Cymer's technology "is the way to go."

On the other hand, possessing such crucial technology seems to make
Cymer particularly vulnerable to short-sellers and rumors.

Cliff Kalista of the Pennsylvania Merchant Group voiced concern that
one of Cymer's arch rivals was on the verge of introducing a competitive
ultraviolet laser that would cost 40 percent less.

Yesterday, Akins reminded analysts that Cymer has signed strict
confidentiality agreements with its customers that preclude him from
discussing difficulties that customers might have encountered.

Yet he reminded analysts that such technology is extremely complicated
and tricky to implement.

"The fact that that there are issues shouldn't be a surprise to anybody,"
Akins said. "This is what happens when you introduce new technology."

He also noted that Cymer's customers shipped more steppers using the
new lasers in the third quarter of this year than in the first and second
quarters combined.



To: TideGlider who wrote (8197)11/5/1997 12:27:00 AM
From: Autumn Henry  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25960
 
This ought to warm the cockles of your hearts for CYMI via The Street.com:

Top Stories: AEA Attendees Find Themselves Jostling for Space

By Cory Johnson
Staff Reporter
11/4/97 4:38 PM ET

SAN DIEGO -- It's 6 a.m., but walking down the hallways of one of the many sold-out hotels here, you can hear televisions on in most every room, as the guests try to get the latest batch of overnight news. The restaurants are also packed, the 7-11s choked with long lines and parking is hard to come by. But we're not talking about the money managers who've come here to get the latest scoop on hot technology companies -- because the Brooks Brothers crowd is incidental to the overflow of surfers flocking to the San Diego area.

It seems a massive, El Nino-enhanced swell has rolled into Southern California just in time for the annual four-day American Electronics Association conference. So in the San Diego hotels -- as on the Internet -- CNBC takes a back seat to the Weather Channel as surfers look to see how long these bullish weather patterns will continue, and "Yo, dude" is a more common utterance than "EBITDA."

As it should be.

But for dedicated professional stock-pickers, the lures of Mother Ocean have taken a back seat to fiduciary concerns (though at least one analyst -- who asked to remain anonymous so he can keep his job -- ditched some of Monday's sessions to catch the day's last bit of waves). Big-time fund managers like Garrett Van Wagoner and analysts of similar stripe are gathered here for the AEA "Classic" -- a bitchin' conference that is actually as high-quality as this week's San Diego surf. The format is unique. More than 400 companies, represented by their CEOs, CFOs and other big kahunas, give 45-minute presentations every hour on the hour for a day and a half to an audience of about 1,300 analysts and money managers. Monday and half of Tuesday are companies with an over-$250 million market cap like Baan Co. (BAANF:Nasdaq) and SanDisk (SNDK:Nasdaq). Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday morning feature smaller companies ($100-$250 million) like Chips and Technologies (CHPS:Nasdaq) and Digital Lightwave (DIGL:Nasdaq). From there on even tinier companies like Premenos (PRMO:Nasdaq) and something called The Panda Project (PNDA:Nasdaq) fill out the show.

Unlike the Montgomery Growth Conference, this is not a momentum crowd and not a very talkative one either, because this is where story stocks attract their admirers. And fund managers like to keep these stories secret until they've bought in. Said one fund manager: "I did hear a really good story, but I can't really tell you about it until tomorrow, and you can't use my name." Great.

At least he could have said, "Hey dude, I did hear a really good story..."

There were some bad stories to be heard. An unusually glum Ascend (ASND:Nasdaq) CEO Mory Ejabat met with group of about 20 investors crowded into a meeting room as he admitted that important products like the MAX TNT remote modem with 56k add-ons were still not shipping in volume in Europe. He even had a sheepish and weird explanation for selling some of his own ASND stock: "You cannot have all of the eggs in one basket," he said. "Even Bob Dole needs to diversify now that he's retired."

One Merrill Lynch fund manager, who (big surprise) asked not to be named, got detailed answers to detailed questions and still left the meeting shaking his head. "Things are not good," he said. "Things are not good."

The talk of the first day's show, however, was good news from chip makers and chip equipment makers. Few of those presenting here said they would see much impact from the upheaval in Asian currency markets. "A lot of the chip business in Asia is in Taiwan, Korean and Japan," said ASM Lithography (ASMLF:Nasdaq) President and CEO Willem Maris. "And they've seen very little impact from this problem in Southeast Asia. Furthermore, the market for products from these companies is global; they will continue to see revenue and we will continue to sell to them. I don't know what will happen, but I can't imagine that companies like Hyundai and Samsung will stop selling products worldwide."

So the buzz on chip makers and chip equipment makers was all good. Particularly intriguing were the laser manufacturers, like Cymer (CYMI:Nasdaq), whose product is used in chip fabrication. "That," said a Dean Witter fund manager, "is the best story I've heard all day."

Indeed, one Oppenheimer analyst suggested that the Asian currency problems, coupled with steady international demand, could even result in lower labor costs for Asian chip customers, allowing them to buy more new fabrication capability.

The collapse of the Thai baht? The fearsome fury of El Nino? To those in the world of silicon, be they microchip makers or surfers on the beach, bad news from across the Pacific might be all good news in the end -- at least to those with the courage to paddle out into the break.

Or, in the words of Rich Flicker, 20, a surfer from Escondido, Calif.: "Bro, this is way big for San Diego, and long lefts like this, bro, are clean. El Nino ain't so bad, the sun is bitchin', the hotties are out in force. Tell your Wall Street dudes they should get out of their three-piece suits and into wetsuits if they want to see what's really up." <Picture>
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c 1997 TheStreet.com, All Rights Reserved.

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Who else is a lazer manufacturer like CYMI?

Thanks.

Autumn