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To: Mr. Aloha who wrote (11753)12/20/1997 12:02:00 AM
From: BillyG  Respond to of 25960
 
Excerpts from next week's Semiconductor Business News...............

techweb.cmp.com

And here we go again!

Shades of MITI and Japan Inc.! Japan's Ministry of International Trade and
Industry has launched a project that could make it possible to fabricate chips
with 40-nanometer gate lengths within four years, Yoshiko Hara writes in
EE Times.

This would speed up the arrival of the 256-gigabit DRAM, lopping 10 years
off the schedule predicted by Moore's Law. Based on work done by Kyoto
University and Fujitsu Labs, the MITI effort aims to come up with a
production tool for creating extremely shallow ion implants. This is vital to
building working transistors with very short channels. In a little-noticed paper
at the recent Electron Devices meeting (IEDM), this cluster ion-beam
implantation was described that was used to create a functioning p-channel
MOS transistor with a 40-nm gate.

-----------------------------

Good year ahead for chips?

Despite all the bad vibes coming from the Far East, market researchers tell
EE Times' Margaret Ryan that the semiconductor industry will do a lot
better in '98 than in the two preceding years. They figure that South Korea's
economic dive will force chip makers there to put fab-expansion plans on
hold, easing overcapacity and stabilizing memory chip prices.

Dataquest's Jim Handy says '98 IC sales will climb 16.7%, up from this
year's 5.6% increase as IC-fab investments fall and DRAM prices rise.
He
expects global memory IC sales to grow to $39 billion, up 18% from '97's
disastrous $33 billion. Vladi Catto, TI's economist, agrees. "We have a
recovery in progress," he says, and it's going to benefit chip makers selling to
wireless com, networking, and computer industries. He doesn't see Asia's
problems hurting IC sales.
--------------------

Chip gear is another story

But the semiconductor capital-equipment market could be a different story.
It started softening in the last half of '97. After reports of Asia's financial
troubles surfaced this fall, UBS Securities' Mark Fitzgerald lowered his
projections for '98 equipment sales from 11% to zero growth. He believes
the flat market will persist in '99. Dataquest's Ron Dornseif expects South
Korean chip makers to trim capital spending 20% from '97 levels and the
Japanese to cut their capital spending by 5% to 10%. On the plus side, he
expects chip making gear sales to be flat to slightly up in Europe and up by
as much as 10% in North America. These forecasts are in contrast to
SEMI's, which at this point still expects 11.6% global growth in '98.