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


To: Curlton Latts who wrote (8682)11/7/1997 1:58:00 PM
From: Holyman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25960
 
Paul:

Keep up the good work. I learn a lot from your post. Oops sorry Curlton, I put this for Paul on your post.

God Bless



To: Curlton Latts who wrote (8682)11/7/1997 4:48:00 PM
From: TechHunter  Respond to of 25960
 
TO ALL: I am a first time poster but have been 'lurking' since post 3200. and I've read every post. I thank Curlton DSmith Maxwell The Specialist Tideglider Steve A Billy Scott MCI PA investor jess etc etc for helping me 'keep the faith' I am long 3K at 29 and I intend to stay around until at least 2001. The following article I don't understand too well and would appreciate what you all think its impact is on our company. It doesn't mention any of the wafer/stepper companies that we sell to:Monday October 27 7:01 AM EST

Company Press Release

Xilinx, UMC First to Deliver Programmable Logic Using 0.25 Micron
Technology

Leading process technology delivers world's highest complexity logic
device in FPGA

SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 27, 1997--Leading the logic
industry into the most advanced semiconductor manufacturing processes,
Xilinx, Inc., (NASDAQ:XLNX) in partnership with United Microelectronics
Corporation (UMC) announced the first FPGA product built with
0.25-micron process technology.

This leading-edge technology is the basis of a new Xilinx FPGA family
whose initial device incorporates 25 million transistors in a single
piece of silicon--more than three times that of today's highest
performance microprocessors, such as the Intel Pentium II with 7.5
million transistors. UMC and Xilinx are jointly developing 0.25-micron
FPGA technology with expected volume production in January 1998.

''As the first dedicated foundry to market with 0.25-micron technology,
we lead the industry in this next generation of processing. The UMC 0.25
micron CMOS process with dual-gate oxide and five layer metal is a very
demanding and rugged technology that will enable end products with
better integrity, yields, quality, and performance,'' stated Don Brooks,
UMC board member. ''Furthermore, UMC offers Xilinx and other customers
additional advanced technology, including low-voltage and mixed signal
capability. With our progress in 0.18 micron technology, we will
continue our leadership in process introductions.''

''Our close partnerships with industry-leading manufacturing partners
has directly aided our delivery of advanced processes,'' said Wim
Roelandts, Xilinx president and chief executive officer. ''Furthermore,
it's more than just having access to industry-leading technology in
order to deliver on this process. Our unique methods for rapid
deployment of new architectures on new processes allows us to bring
better products to market faster and, in turn, bolster the success of
our customers.''

Made possible through partnerships

For its 0.25-micron product development, Xilinx partners with suppliers
such as Cadence Inc., San Jose; DuPont Photomasks Inc., Round Rock,
Texas; and United Microelectronics Corp., Taiwan.

''With 25 million transistors on an FPGA, Xilinx is providing a dramatic
increase in capability for its customers,'' said Bill Portelli, vice
president and general manager, Cadence Custom IC Business Unit. ''Xilinx
turned to Vampire, Cadence's state-of-the-art hierarchical physical
verification tool, in order to verify the correctness of the world's
most complex FPGA device. First pass working silicon is a testament to
excellent IC design, a great tool, and impressive teamwork between
Xilinx and Cadence on this project.'' Xilinx partner, DuPont Photomasks,
Inc. (NASDAQ:DPMI), more commonly referred to as DPI, met the challenge
of developing a set of photomasks that would unite the Xilinx design
specifications with UMC's manufacturing process technology. The
extraordinary density of the larger Xilinx FPGA die required DPI's ex
tensive technical expertise to meet the demanding 0.25-micron design and
manufacturing specifications. DPI also drew on the strengths of its
global network to manufacture the photomasks, with data collection and
coordination occurring in Santa Clara, Calif., and actual production
taking place in its Ichon, Korea, facility.

Xilinx also announced today the availability of the industry's first
FPGA products based on 0.25-micron process, the XC4000XV FPGA family.
(Xilinx Announces Industry's First Half-Million-Gate FPGA Family).
Samples of the first product in this new family, the XC40125XV -- the
industry's largest FPGA device -- are available now. Production
shipments will begin in January 1998.

About UMC

Based in Hsin-Chu City, Taiwan, UMC is Taiwan's first private sector
manufacturer of integrated circuits. UMC operates two wafer fabs in the
Science-Based Industrial Park in Hsin-Chu City. UMC is also involved in
three joint ventures including United Semiconductor Corp. (USC), United
Integrated Circuits Corp (UICC) and United Silicon Inc. (USIC).

If it doesn't impact Cymer my apologies in advance.

Keep the Faith!

Craig P

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To: Curlton Latts who wrote (8682)11/7/1997 9:30:00 PM
From: Apple12  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 25960
 
Everybody has to stop watching this stock tick by tick. Many of us are down but lets face facts, news drives stocks up or down. CYMER has a pretty lame policy as far as press releases go. Therefore its going to take blow out earnings again or some large buying. If analysts start upgrading the smart buyers have already got in and its probably now time to get out. We need News. I have added this article to give us some pep it may have been read b4 but this baby can make an eskimo buy ice cubes.

Sep 02, 1997
Highlights On SI, Cymer: Keeping Moore's Law legal
Sal Habash, is an active participant at the Cymer (CYMI) thread here on SI. Sal provides a magnificent commentary on Cymer (CYMI 90 7/8). Below is his write up.

"Dr. Gordon Moore, co-founder of Intel, wrote "Moore's Law," which has defined the computing era since it was first articulated in 1965: "The average power and complexity of the silicon chip will double every 18 months with proportionate decreases in cost." Over the last 32 years, Moore's Law has been nothing short of prophetic, much to the shock of skeptics who argued that the rapid development of technology would have to slow. But how long will this continue? When will Moore's Law cease to rule technology? The single most important determinant of this question comes from the semiconductor capital equipment industry--the "chip-making equipment makers." The easiest way to ensure more powerful chips is to make them smaller, Smaller, smaller, smaller..

Most commonly today, semiconductor chip manufacturing is done on the 0.35-micron photolithography process (which etches lines of about 1/200 the width of a human hair on a piece of silicon). Light from mercury-arc lamps is shined through camera-like tools, known as steppers and scanners, which shrinks and projects circuit images onto photosensitized silicon wafers. When all layers are imprinted, such wafers are cut into small segments, bonded and packaged into integrated circuits or "chips."

Improvements in photolithography technology are the key for driving the miniaturization of silicon chips, and the best way to etch finer lines is to use [focusable] light of smaller wavelengths. As a rule of thumb, the resolution of a stepper approximates the wavelength of light used. For more than 30 years, mercury-arc lamps, which produce light with the wavelength of about 350 nanometers, provided the necessary light for steppers and scanners to image their patterns as small as 0.35-microns. But their relatively long wavelength does not meet the required resolution, depth of focus, and critical dimension control for next-generation (<0.35-micron) semiconductor designs. Mercury-arc lamp technology has reached its physical limits. It's time to move on..

Without Cymer's micro-fine laser light technology, Moore's Law is doomed

"Excimer" lasers are recognized throughout the semiconductor industry as the light source replacement for mercury arc lamps, and this is where Cymer (NASDAQ: CYMI; $90 7/8) comes in. Cymer's excimer laser light is generated by mixing krypton and fluorine gases inside a two and a half foot-long chamber. A 12,000 volt charge is repeatedly burst into the chamber, forcing krypton and fluorine (KrF) atoms to combine into an unstable molecule known as an excited dimer, or "excimer" (note the company name, Cymer). During the electrical discharge, pulsed deep-ultraviolet (DUV) light of less than 250 nanometers is released, purified, and directed out one end to its stepper/scanner mate. Though invisible, this light has just the right characteristics (aside from the extremely narrow wavelength, it must be able to be focused with a lens) to image the microscopic circuit patterns never before possible.

Chipmakers must now rely on excimer lasers as the illumination source for production of semiconductors with critical geometries below 0.35-micron. The Semiconductor Industry Association's Technology Roadmap forecasts that leading-edge 0.25-micron devices will be produced in volume by 1998 and 0.18-micron devices will ramp in production by 2001. Everyone in the semiconductor industry--from makers of microprocessors to integrated circuits to memory chips--has just begun to ramp up to 0.25-micron technology for their products; thus, they need 0.25-micron capacity in their chip fabrication plants. To illustrate: On September 8, semiconductor kingpin Intel will announce their "Tillamook" chip--their first processor designed to be exclusively manufactured on the 0.25-micron level. All this makes the excimer lasers imperative to the production of the next several generations of semiconductor chips. Without Cymer's micro-fine laser light technology, Moore's Law is doomed.

Initially, Cymer was having trouble carrying the weight of Moore's Law

Cymer effectively owns the transition to chip geometries of 0.25-micron and below, with about 90% of the DUV excimer laser market. The only competition, Komatsu and Lambda Physik, are at least a full generation behind Cymer's current KrF laser technology, and even further behind in next-generation argon fluoride (ArF) lasers for sub-0.18-micron technology. Cymer has full support of the industry--stepper and scanner makers being amongst the most significant. The five DUV stepper/scanner manufactures of the world, ASM Lithography, Canon, Nikon, Silicon Valley Group, and Integrated Solutions, all recognize Cymer as the excimer light source of choice (as well, ASML, Nikon, and Canon each own an equity stake in Cymer). In turn, this DUV lithography equipment is sold to the end users--the likes of Intel, IBM, Motorola, AMD, Texas Instruments, Micron Technology, Samsung, NEC, Toshiba, Fujitsu, etc, etc. Cymer's massive technology lead (including 16 patents and many more pending) and strong customer relationships described above create an extremely high barrier to entry of competition. The excimer laser market is Cymer's to lose!

Initially, Cymer was having trouble carrying the weight of Moore's Law and the semiconductor industry on their shoulders; they couldn't begin to meet the world's demand for their lasers. But management has taken action. Manufacturing capacity has ramped up sharply--as fast as Cymer can hire qualified engineers, that is. Cymer has also outsourced some manufacturing to Seiko (which holds a 2% equity stake in Cymer). In short, Cymer is alleviating its status as the industry bottleneck and should have the capacity to ship about 1,000 (cost around $428,000 each) laser units in 1998. To quantify their growth: Cymer shipped 34 laser systems in 1995; 145 units in 1996; and in just the first half of 1997, 201 laser systems.

I believe that Cymer has the potential to be amongst the best stock investments for the next several years

One advantage of being capacity-constrained, however, is that it gives us good future-earnings visibility. Book-to-bill is enormous at a reading of 1.68 (for every $100 worth of product Cymer ships, they receive orders for $168). Cymer's 12-month deliverable backlog stood at $122 million as of June 30, 1997, which equates to roughly 300 laser systems already on order for delivery by June 1998. According to First Call, the consensus earnings per share (EPS) estimate for Cymer's 1998 fiscal year is $2.30, which the analysts themselves have dubbed "quite conservative." In Wall Street jargon, "quite conservative" actually means ridiculously conservative.

But what happens if there is another downturn in the wildly-cyclical semiconductor industry? Fortunately for Cymer, it should be business as usual. When times get tough for the chip makers--when competition, commoditization , and oversupply wreak havoc- the way to survive is to separate yourself from the competition with better technology and especially lower prices. This is done by investing in advanced capital equipment which facilitates the manufacture of smaller chips (dramatically lowering manufacturing costs, because you can etch more chips on a single wafer) which are also more powerful. Moore's Law, always in effect! Ultimately, it will be a Cymer excimer laser which will fulfill the need. The future truth of Moore's Law, the future of technology, it all belongs to Cymer.

[My personal opinions, rant, and babble]: I believe that Cymer has the potential to be amongst the best stock investments for the next several years. Perhaps one day in the future, people will be looking back and saying how they coulda/woulda/shoulda bought Cymer back in 1997-1998; the same kind of retrospect that we now hear in reference to legendary stocks such as Dell Computer, Cisco Systems, Ascend Communications, Microsoft, and Intel. Of course, in this schizophrenically volatile and nervous market, short-term forecasts are impossible to make. I view Cymer as a tremendous investment, a long term investment.