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Technology Stocks : C-Cube -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DiViT who wrote (28253)1/19/1998 9:00:00 PM
From: John Rieman  Respond to of 50808
 
DataQuest says Asian chip sales are up, than down, now China is the market.....................................................................................

techweb.com

Asian Chip Market A Big Puzzle
(01/19/98; 9:21 a.m. EST)
By Mark LaPedus , Semiconductor Business News

Forecasts for the Asian semiconductor market in 1998 are now being marked down because of the region's economic meltdown, but mostly they still see the Asia-Pacific region growing by a healthy 20% or more. The picture is changing rapidly, however, and chip makers are getting increasingly pessimistic. They say the days of double-digit growth in this region are gone, at least for now.

There are good reasons for the industry's growing pessimism. Asia's economic mess began last summer when stock markets and currencies began collapsing in a giant, domino effect. Now the disaster may be taking on a life of its own with many analysts predicting the turmoil could last through 1998 -- and maybe even longer.

It's hard to see how the region's chip market can avoid being hit by this ongoing disaster. First to fall were Indonesia and Thailand, both running into a major financial crisis and forced to seek massive bail-out packages from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Then debt-ridden South Korea, the world's 11th-largest economy, had to swallow its pride in December and accept the tough terms of an IMF-led bail-out package.

Already, South Korea's giant chip makers are beginning to retrench. "While China still has good potential for 1998, the rest of the Asia-Pacific chip markets doesn't look so good," said an official from South Korea's LG Semicon Inc. in Seoul.

The nation's economic problems, coupled with the worldwide DRAM glut, could force Hyundai, LG Semicon, and Samsung to cut back their planned fab expansions. "The currency situation isn't helping us either," said the LG Semicon official. "Currency devaluations in South Korea will make our product exports more competitive, but they also increase our material and equipment costs,'' he said.

Asian IC revenues will be hit by weaker consumer markets in the region. Industry analysts agree that consumer spending for PCs and other chip-intensive products will drop significantly in many of the troubled Southeast Asian nations. In fact, several of the Southeast Asian nations have already sliced their 1998 gross national product growth forecasts by half or more.

Daniel Heyler, senior industry analyst at Dataquest Asia-Pacific Co. in Hong Kong, could see only one bright spot in 1998 for the Asian chip business. "Greater China will remain stable, but there will continue to be problems in Japan, Korea, and Southeast Asia," he said.

At this point, Dataquest seems to be more bullish than bearish. The market researcher originally forecast that Asia-Pacific's IC market would grow 15% to $34 billion in 1997. But later, its analysts changed their minds and said the region would achieve only 8.3% growth to about $32 billion in 1997. Now Dataquest is bullish about 1998, predicting that the region would rebound and hit a growth rate of 20.7% to reach $38.6 billion in semiconductor sales.

For now, however, some chip executives are in the "cautiously optimistic" camp. "Clearly, consumer spending will decrease in [Asia], because of the collapse in the region's currencies and stock markets," said W.J. Sanders III, chairman and CEO of Advanced Micro Devices Inc. "But," he added, "I don't think this will cause an overall disruption in our business."

Asia could gain as much as it might lose as a result of the current economic turmoil. While Asian consumers might cut back their own product buying, the region's manufacturing operations could become more competitive with lower costs based on global exchange rates, said Walter Conrads, international marketing and sales director for Philips in Eindhoven, The Netherlands.

"It very well could be cheaper to produce products in the region based on the devaluation of currencies, shifting more of the world's production to the region," Conrad said. Philips, which jumped from No. 10 to No. 5 in 1996 semiconductor revenues in the Asia-Pacific region, accounted for 4.9% of the $29.7 billion Asian chip market in 1996, according to Dataquest.

But the turmoil is hurting some bottom lines. U.S. companies with large exposure in Asia -- including Cisco, Intel, and Oracle -- have already reported disappointing results from the region. For example, Intel reported that its Asian sales in the third quarter of 1997 slipped to 28% of its worldwide revenues, down from 30% in the same 1996 period.

While acknowledging some concern about Asia's economic crisis, Ronald J. Smith, vice president and general manager for Intel's Computing Enhancement Group, is still a long-term bull on the region. Intel still sees Asia as "one of our best and fastest-growing markets. I still believe there's a huge demand for PCs [in Asia] despite the currency problems in the region."

Kulicke & Soffa Industries Inc. said it will miss its earnings and sales forecasts for first fiscal quarter of 1998 primarily because of the financial crisis in Korea. "Because of uncertainty among our Korean customers, we are seeing the rescheduling of delivery of equipment from the current quarter to later in the fiscal year," said C. Scott Kulicke, chairman and CEO. As a result, its equipment shipments will run lower than expected.

Lattice Semiconductor Corp. has run into another type of problem due to the economic crisis in South Korea. The Hillsboro, Ore., chip maker said that its sole Korean sales representative and distributor, Woo Young Tech Co., had been declared insolvent. This puts at risk the company's entire backlog of orders, amounting to about $3.5 million, from its Korean customers. Lattice is working now with its major Korean customers to arrange for direct product shipment.

Growth for IC-driven products in China and a few other nations will more than offset the downturn in Southeast Asia in 1998, predicted Dataquest's Heyler. The Asia-Pacific IC market will continue to outpace worldwide chip growth, which is expected to run 16.7% in 1998, he predicted.

China, one of the few bright spots in the Asia-Pacific region, surpassed Taiwan for the first time to become the region's largest IC market in 1997, according to Dataquest. "China's IC market grew 16% in 1997," Heyler said, "and is now on pace to equal or surpass those growth rates over the next three to five years."

Fueled by the demand for PCs, TVs, and cell phones, "China's IC market could grow by as much as 20% next year," predicted Nicholas Leung, general manager of sales and marketing for Avnet WKK Components Ltd., the Hong Kong subsidiary of distribution giant Avnet Inc.

Much of China's chip growth is coming from surging PC sales. Its PC market will grow from 2.5 million units in 1997 to 3.3 million units in 1998, according to one forecast. In 1996, the nation became the second-largest PC market in Asia, passing South Korea and lagging only Japan, said International Data Corp.

Another bright spot is India, now Asia-Pacific's fourth-largest PC market running behind only Japan, China, and South Korea, according to IDC. Overall, Asia-Pacific's PC market is going to grow by a compounded annual rate of just over 26% for the next three or so years, the market researcher predicted.

But weak prices in memories could end up hurting the Asia-Pacific chip market in 1998 even more than they will other parts of the world. Taiwan's DRAM makers are furiously ramping up both 16-and 64-megabit parts at a rate that could exacerbate the global memory glut. This growing overcapacity will exist throughout 1998 -- and perhaps even beyond.

Some Taiwanese DRAM makers already are battening down the hatches. Due to price pressures and other problems in its DRAM business, Taiwan's Mosel-Vitelic Inc. revised its 1997 sales forecast downward by 30.3% and its profits by 42%. Its core specialty memory business has been battered and prices for its 4-Mbit DRAM lines have dropped by nearly 60% from $2.30 last March to $0.95 now, according to John Kuo, senior industry analyst at China Securities Investment Trust Corp. in Taipei.

Flash memories are experiencing demand that is still growing, but at a lower rate. Demand for flash will remain strong in Asia, but prices will continue under severe pressure, predicted Miin Wu, president of Taiwan's Macronix International Co., a supplier of non-volatile memories.

Even the highly profitable wafer-foundry business may be heading for trouble in 1998. More competition from new foundry players in South Korea and Taiwan, coupled with falling currencies in the region, could put pricing pressure on finished wafers next year, said James Hines, principal analyst for semiconductor contract manufacturing services at Dataquest.

While problems like this would tend to flatten the Asia-Pacific market, there are others that could really push the region's IC market over the edge in 1998. One possible doomsday scenario would be if the current shining star in Asia -- China -- followed Malaysia, Indonesia, and Korea into economic chaos next year. "It's entirely possible,'' concluded one analyst. "And it would be a disaster for the worldwide electronics industry.'' <Picture: TW>



To: DiViT who wrote (28253)1/19/1998 10:23:00 PM
From: CPAMarty  Respond to of 50808
 
Cable's Future Seen in a Small Black Box
Electronics: Set-top machines promising interaction galore are finally on the way. The question is, do people want them?
By GREG MILLER, Times Staff Writer
ÿhttp://www.latimes.com/HOME/NEWS/CUTTING/topstory.html
<Picture: A>ÿ bundle of electronics encased in black, it looks more like a mutant VCR or CD player than the high-tech Holy Grail.
ÿÿÿÿÿBut there is more than electronics in this device that the cable television industry calls its next-generation set-top box. It carries the burden of two decades of unkept promises, millions of dollars for failed market trials and the moneymaking dreams of business giants from John Malone to Bill Gates.
ÿÿÿÿÿWith this box, the cable industry hopes to transform television sets into high-tech nerve centers, powerful appliances that deliver not only sitcoms, but e-mail, movies on demand, online shopping, at-home banking and more.
ÿÿÿÿÿIf you think you've heard all this before, you're right. Interactive television has been "the next big thing" for nearly 20 years, always proving too costly, too clunky or both.
ÿÿÿÿÿMany believe that the era of disappointments may finally be ending and that interactive television is about to be realized by an unprecedented alliance between the cable industry and Silicon Valley.
ÿÿÿÿÿThe last few weeks have been marked by a flurry of deals that call upon giants of the high-tech industry, including Sun Microsystems Inc. (<Picture: [Current Quote]><Picture: [Company Capsule]>) and Microsoft Corp. (<Picture: [Current Quote]><Picture: [Company Capsule]>), to help build set-top boxes that have more in common with PCs than the boxes familiar to most cable subscribers.
ÿÿÿÿÿIt may turn out to be another bust, and many question whether people really want to interact with their television sets.
ÿÿÿÿÿBut this time there is no turning back. Cable companies, including Malone's Tele-Communications Inc., have ordered 15 million boxes. In so doing, they have given Silicon Valley an invitation into the nation's living rooms that can't be rescinded.
ÿÿÿÿÿ"This is the moment when the whole cable television industry changes," said analyst Gary Arlen of Arlen Communications in Bethesda, Md.
* * *
ÿÿÿÿÿUntil now, TV set-top boxes basically have been decoding devices, converting cable transmissions into signals that televisions can display. Many cable subscribers with newer TVs don't even need the boxes because their sets receive and display cable signals on their own.
ÿÿÿÿÿThe new boxes are designed to do much more. For starters, they will handle the cable industry's ongoing conversion from analog transmissions to digital signals that allow more channels, sharper pictures and additional services.
ÿÿÿÿÿInstead of just receiving information, the new boxes also will send data back through the cable network, so consumers can surf the Internet, send e-mail to relatives and order goods from online catalogs. The boxes also might have enough memory to download a video game or store a program so subscribers can watch it later.
ÿÿÿÿÿAccomplishing this requires the power of a computer, and essentially that is what the new boxes are. Like any PC, they will have a microprocessor, memory, an operating system, software and a modem.
ÿÿÿÿÿCable executives say they know TV audiences demand simplicity. So although keyboards will be available, remote controls and on-screen program guides will remain the primary tools of navigation.
ÿÿÿÿÿSet-top boxes traditionally have been assembled by a handful of companies, including Scientific-Atlanta and General Instrument Corp. (<Picture: [Current Quote]><Picture: [Company Capsule]>) That won't change. But for the first time, the parts for the new devices will come from giants of Silicon Valley, including Sun, Microsoft, Intel Corp. (<Picture: [Current Quote]><Picture: [Company Capsule]>) and Oracle Corp. (<Picture: [Current Quote]><Picture: [Company Capsule]>)
ÿÿÿÿÿThe emerging alliance between the cable and computer industries is an uneasy one, with each side wrestling for a dominant position. But in many ways, the two sides need each other. Cable has the customers and the all-important pipe into their homes. Silicon Valley has the technology and the manufacturing muscle to build systems cheaply. And both sides are likely to profit from the relationship.
ÿÿÿÿÿFor the cable industry, more services mean more charges. Consumers might not drive to Blockbuster if they can order movies from their cable company for a few dollars, for example. Blockbuster Video controls about 25%, or roughly $2.5 billion, of the $11-billion domestic video rental market.
ÿÿÿÿÿThe relationship might be even more lucrative for the computer industry. With PC penetration stalled at about 40% of U.S. households, Silicon Valley has been eyeing the living room as a ripe market. Nearly every household has a TV, making the living room the ultimate mass market.
ÿÿÿÿÿ"The volumes in TV are staggering compared to the volumes in the PC industry," said Marge Breya, a marketing director for Sun, which aims to supply software and microprocessors for the new boxes.
* * *
ÿÿÿÿÿIf interactive TV has been such a tantalizing prospect, why is the rush to deliver it only happening now? Mainly it's because the last few years have ushered in changes that few expected.
ÿÿÿÿÿCompetition from satellite TV has put pressure on cable operators to upgrade their equipment. The costs of the necessary hardware and software have come way down. And out of nowhere, the Internet showed up to do much of the groundwork, proving consumers have an appetite for interactive services and spawning the software and standards needed to deliver them.
ÿÿÿÿÿNone of this was true during the failed experiments in interactive television over the last 20 years, including a high-profile trial by GTE Corp. (<Picture: [Current Quote]><Picture: [Company Capsule]>) in Cerritos and a more recent one by Time Warner Cable in Orlando, Fla.
ÿÿÿÿÿDuring the two-year experiment in Orlando, Time Warner delivered 100 channels of programming, online games and even the ability to order pizza by remote control. But the company pulled the plug on it last year.
ÿÿÿÿÿJim Chiddix, Time Warner chief technical officer, said many obstacles that doomed the project have since evaporated, demonstrating how quickly technology evolves.
ÿÿÿÿÿA critical problem in Orlando was the enormous expense of delivering the service. It took a staff of 300 people to operate a system that served only 4,000 subscribers. And in those days--before the Internet blossomed--creating even basic online shopping services was an onerous task.
ÿÿÿÿÿ"It took months, and hundreds of thousands of dollars, just to create the pizza-ordering application," Chiddix said. "Today a bright high-school kid could do that in a couple days with a series of Web pages."
ÿÿÿÿÿIndeed, millions of people every day are using the Web to purchase everything from books to automobiles. The cable industry no longer has to create those services.
ÿÿÿÿÿWhat's more, the set-top boxes deployed by Time Warner were custom-made and cost the company about $8,000 apiece. The new boxes do more, but because they use standard computer parts and can be mass-produced, they will cost the cable companies just $300 apiece.
ÿÿÿÿÿFor all its synergies, the budding relationship between the cable and computer industries has had all the romance of a shotgun wedding. Cable executives were particularly nervous about doing business with Microsoft, a company that prefers to rule any market it enters.
ÿÿÿÿÿ"They're a great company and have great technology," said Bruce Ravenel, senior vice president of TCI Ventures Group, a division of the nation's largest cable company. "You just don't want to turn your back on them."
ÿÿÿÿÿIronically, no one has done more to shore up confidence in the cable industry than Microsoft's Gates. His decision to invest $1 billion in Comcast Corp. last year was a catalyst for a stock rebound that has boosted cable shares by an average 100% over the last year.
ÿÿÿÿÿBut cable executives who watched Gates and Microsoft gain a stranglehold on the computer industry feared he had similar ambitions in cable. Indeed, Microsoft's early proposals would have given the company control over set-top box technologies.
ÿÿÿÿÿBut cable executives, led by Malone, thwarted Microsoft by playing the company against its enemies and insisting the boxes be built on open standards, meaning software and other components had to be interchangeable. The boxes themselves also will be interchangeable, able to function anywhere in the country, in any cable system.
ÿÿÿÿÿEarlier this month, TCI said that the 10 million or so boxes it buys will have a Microsoft operating system but also will contain key software from Microsoft's archenemy, Sun Microsystems. Analysts credit cable executives with trying to declaw Microsoft, but wonder whether they succeeded.
ÿÿÿÿÿ"Malone has done a wily job of counterbalancing Microsoft," said analyst Arlen. "But we know from Microsoft's other adventures, if they get a toehold in something, they're eventually going to get their whole body in."
* * *
ÿÿÿÿÿEven though the technology may finally be falling into place, there still are many questions about the new boxes.
ÿÿÿÿÿWhere will consumers get them, for instance? Until now, cable companies have owned the boxes and rented them to subscribers. But the industry hopes that consumers eventually will buy the boxes at Radio Shack, Circuit City and other retail outlets.
ÿÿÿÿÿWill consumers be willing to pay for such a device, and, if so, how often would they be willing to upgrade? These are crucial questions for computer companies, which have thrived on a business model of rapid obsolescence.
ÿÿÿÿÿIntel, for example, has said it hopes consumers will trade up to new boxes every few years. But consumers expect their TV sets to last a decade, and cable doesn't want to test consumers' loyalties just to make Silicon Valley happy.
ÿÿÿÿÿ"Technology advances very rapidly, and you want to be thoughtful of riding that wave and not being swept under by it," TCI's Ravenel said. "These boxes will have to have a useful life of five to six years or longer."
ÿÿÿÿÿFinally, the most fundamental question is, how badly do consumers want to interact with TV sets?
ÿÿÿÿÿSome services are likely to be instant hits. Movies on demand, for the right price, will probably be popular. So will online games that let players compete with others across the street or across the country.
ÿÿÿÿÿBut online banking, at-home shopping and other services are likely to catch on slowly, partly because television is less personal and private than a computer. Some suggest that set-top boxes eventually will be connected to other screens throughout the house. So maybe banking won't be done in the living room, but in the study.
ÿÿÿÿÿIf a new type of programming will blend standard television fare with interactive touches, even industry visionaries say they don't know what shape it might take.
ÿÿÿÿÿ"Nobody knows," said Avram Miller, an executive at Intel who is largely responsible for that company's digital television initiatives.
ÿÿÿÿÿ"I don't think we'll see people acting with their TV sets the way they act with their computers," he said. "But I think we can get them to do a little more than pushing the up and down channel buttons."
ÿÿÿÿÿFor now, cable companies are harboring modest expectations. Sure the new boxes can deliver banking, shopping, online classes and perhaps entertainment hybrids that Hollywood hasn't dreamed up yet. But when asked to predict the killer application of the new set-top boxes, Ravenel didn't hesitate.
ÿÿÿÿÿ"Watching television," he said.
ÿÿÿÿÿ
* * *

ÿÿÿÿÿConverter vs. Computer
ÿÿÿÿÿThe cable industry hopes the new generation of set-top boxes will turn televisions into high-tech nerve centers. A look at the features of old and new boxes:
ÿÿÿÿÿOLD
ÿÿÿÿÿ* Analog tuner
ÿÿÿÿÿ* Signal-conversion equipment
ÿÿÿÿÿ* Descrambler for premium channels
ÿÿÿÿÿ* Access control for pay-per-view movies
ÿÿÿÿÿ* Remote control
ÿÿÿÿÿOld set-top boxes functioned primarily as a tool for converting analog cable transmissions into signals that could be displayed on the TV set. They also controlled access to premium channels and pay-per-view movies.
ÿÿÿÿÿNEW
ÿÿÿÿÿ* Pentium-caliber microprocessor
ÿÿÿÿÿ* Computer memory
ÿÿÿÿÿ* Cable modem for high-speed Internet access (minimum 1.5 megabits per second, 50 times faster than a 28.8 modem)
ÿÿÿÿÿ* Operating system, such as Microsoft's Windows CE
ÿÿÿÿÿ* Additional software, such as Sun Microsystems' Java, for delivery of interactive content
ÿÿÿÿÿNew set-top boxes are essentially computers. They are designed to handle new digital transmissions and to enable services, such as e-mail, high-speed Internet access, interactive games, online shopping, sophisticated program guides, digital audio channels and real-time pay-per-view movies.
ÿÿÿÿÿSource: General Instrument Corp.

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To: DiViT who wrote (28253)1/19/1998 11:07:00 PM
From: Bill DeMarco  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
David,

Oh well, good to know it's Cube though.

>>Interesting note, it has an STB graphics card in it and STB has already announced a non Cube DVD solution? Why not go with them since they are already a supplier?

These computer manufacturers drive me crazy! Use this part, use that...I would would think a low cost outfit such as Dell would want to optimize profit by utilizing existing and reliable suppliers (not that they should choose STB over C-Cube of course). Good luck to us and Cube tomorrow.

Bill