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To: getgo234 who wrote (26377)1/10/1998 4:11:00 PM
From: DJBEINO  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 53903
 
Koreans begin slowing growth, selling assets (EBN)
By Jack Robertson

The major electronics companies of South Korea last week began slowing expansion, cutting production, shaking up executive staffs, and selling off assets as part of an effort to dig themselves out of a mammoth financial crisis.

Hyundai Electronics Industries Co. Ltd. confirmed that it has postponed the construction of a $1.4 billion fab in Scotland, a delay that had already been signaled by the British government. KoreLG Semicon Co. Ltd. had no announcement on whether the company would delay the construction of a $2.2 billion fab in Wales. A Welsh development agency was reportedly discussing whether to provide additional support to keep that venture on track.

Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. said the company would slash production of TV sets and other consumer electronic devices by up to 40% at plants in China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand.

South Korea's electronics companies are undergoing executive changes. Michael Williams, senior vice president of sales and marketing at LG Electronics America, has resigned. Reached at his home, Williams said the South Korean company steadfastly denied that it was facing any economic problems before he left the company. A spokeswoman for Samsung, Seoul, South Korea, said the company's semiconductor unit was in the midst of broad staff changes. She said that details would be released when the reorganization is completed.

Hyundai and LG Semicon did not return calls.

Samsung announced that it was selling its gallium-arsenide semiconductor operation in Milpitas, Calif. The company said in December that it was selling its audio equipment business in South Korea. The deals are part of the Samsung Group's plan to shed more than 25 operations.

Analysts expect Samsung and other South Korean companies to make more divestitures. A.A. La Fountain III, a financial analyst at Dominick & Dominick, New York, predicted "fire-sale purchases" of various South Korean electronics operations that were launched or acquired in the past two years of free-wheeling corporate expansion.

Vladi Catto, chief economist at Texas Instruments Inc., Dallas, expects the South Koreans to sell off operations but stay in the semiconductor arena. "I suspect they will retrench but do everything they can to preserve their presence in semiconductors," he said.

Analysts said they were watching what the South Korean companies will do with money-losing businesses, including AST Computer Inc., owned by Samsung, and Zenith Electronics Corp., owned by LG.

South Korea's electronics companies have extensive ties with foreign partners. Intel Corp., Santa Clara, Calif., has a secured 10% equity interest in Samsung's new DRAM fab in Austin, Texas, and has developed a digital PC camera with the company. Samsung produces a System LSI single-chip graphics device for Chips and Technologies Inc. that is at the core of Intel's PC graphics strategy. Some sources said that Intel might act to safeguard these efforts.

Texas Instruments has given South Korea's Anam Industries the front-end wafer production technology to make DSPs and has agreed to purchase between 40% and 70% of the output of an Anam fab that will use the technology. A TI spokeswoman said that Anam's fab in Buchon, South Korea, should not be adversely affected by the current crisis.

One tactic used last month to raise desperately needed foreign currency - clearing out a large inventory overhang of DRAM chips - has apparently run its course for the most part. Analysts and some DRAM competitors in the United States said that the South Koreans are no longer flooding the spot market but that it remains to be seen if the lower level of South Korean chips in the spot market will hold up. But some analysts attending the SEMI Industry Strategy Symposium in Pebble Beach, Calif., said the South Koreans will pump out all of the DRAM chips they can possibly produce in the months ahead.

The efforts to raise cash come as the country's conglomerates, or chaebol, wait for their short-term debt to be refinanced by South Korean banks. These banks, in turn, face $40 billion of their own short-term debt on money borrowed from abroad, which will come due by the end of March. When the South Korean banks restructure that debt, the chaebol will be able to finance their loans.

South Korea's banks desperately need the bailout to replenish their tills with foreign currency, which has virtually run dry, causing a traumatic impact on South Korean imports. The country's banks have almost no foreign currency against which letters of credit to foreign shippers can be written. Sources said that the lack of foreign currency could become a monumental barrier to the South Korean chip industry if producers can't get letters of credit for such critically needed semiconductor materials as epoxy from Japan, which is used to encapsulate chip packages. South Korean companies must juggle priorities until the current financial crisis eases.

Electronic competitors will closely watch how the South Korean companies restructure their massive short-term loans to the country's banks as part of the bailout. Executives at Micron Technology Inc., Boise, Idaho, South Korea's archcritic, said last week that they have been assured by the U.S. Treasury Department that none of South Korea's corporate debt, either principal or interest, would be forgiven.

Press reports from South Korea indicate that many South Korean companies may be looking to float their own bond issues to refinance some of their private loans and gain critically needed capital. Most attempts to issue bonds last fall were unsuccessful.

Darrell Dunn contributed to this story.