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To: Mr. Aloha who wrote (14273)2/6/1998 1:40:00 PM
From: TideGlider  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 25960
 
You mean this? Got it this am with Zacks..

TOKYO, JAPAN, 1998 FEB 5 (NB) -- By Martyn Williams, Newsbytes. The
plans of Hitachi, Ltd. [TOKYO:6501], Mitsubishi Electric Corp.
[TOKYO:6503] and Texas Instruments [NYSE:TXN] to jointly develop a
one gigabit DRAM (dynamic random access memory) chip are on hold.
A spokesman for Hitachi told Newsbytes the project has been delayed
for about a year, because of the poor conditions in the semiconductor
market.

"One gigabit DRAMs are next, next-generation products. At present,
each company would like to concentrate more on products that will
be marketed sooner," he explained. "We are still jointly working
together, it's just a little delay"

The joint development agreement was announced by the three companies
in February 1997 and was signed to help reduce to large investments
required and complex research and development work that has to be
done before such large capacity memory chips can be realized.

The three partners had originally scheduled the start of the next
stage in the project for this spring, although this will now be started
in spring 1999, the official said.

The project is the latest casualty of a collapse in the DRAM chip
market, which has seen prices fall rapidly over the last few months.
Hitachi announced recently that it is halting semiconductor
production at its eight Japanese factories for between four and seven
days in both February and March.

By lowering production in the two months, the company is hoping to
reduce inventories of DRAM, synchronous random access memory (SRAM)
chips and mask read only memory (ROM) chips, building up because of
the collapse in the market.

Mitsubishi Electric announced in mid-January that its net-loss for
the current fiscal year, to the end of March 1998, is likely to be
worse than previously forecast.

The company revised its net-loss forecast to 40 billion yen ($323.1
million) and announced a further cut in semiconductor spending, from
105.0 billion yen ($848.1 million) to $90 billion yen ($727.0 million),
because of the weak chip market. In November 1997, the company had
cut spending by 10 billion yen ($80.8 million), from 115.0 billion
yen ($928.9 million), for the same reason.

In January, it also announced the closure of its semiconductor wafer
fabrication operations in the United States, effective March 16, 1998.
The plants were proving unprofitable, said the company.

Exchange rate: $1 = 123.80 yen

Reported By Newsbytes News Network: newsbytes.com