Will Korea Money Moves Hit Drives, LCDs, Chips?
Date: 2/17/98 Author: Reinhardt Krause
South Korea's fiscal crisis is forcing its electronics companies to rethink where to put their ebbing capital.
Many U.S. companies have a stake in what they decide. One reason is that Korean firms' aggressive investments in some industries have caused oversupply.
Korea is seeking aid from the International Monetary Fund to ease its financial woes. And IMF loans come with conditions that won't let Korean firms operate quite like they have in the past.
''The chaebol (Korean conglomerates) are supposed to have their manufacturing units operate in the black, rather than operate at a loss to build market share,'' said Jim Porter, president of market researcher Disk/Trend Inc. in Mountain View, Calif.
If the IMF forces Korean firms to change their ways, ''then it will alter the competitive environment quite a bit,'' Porter said.
To build market share, Korean electronics firms have invested heavily in factories. Then they've aggressively priced products. Their push into the memory-chip market helped create a huge glut in '96. Analysts also blame them partly for the current oversupply of flat-panel screens and hard-disk drives.
In '97, Korea's Samsung Group , Hyundai Corp. and L.G. Electronics Inc. held about a third of the $21 billion memory-chip market.
The Koreans' heavy spending on chip factories has made them big customers for the makers - mostly U.S. companies - of chip manufacturing gear.
In fact, a group of U.S. chip equipment companies is trying to help Korean chipmakers find new financing from investment banks, says James Morgan, chief executive of Applied Materials Inc. in Santa Clara, Calif. It's the largest maker of chip equipment gear.
Morgan tempers his worries. He says Korea's chipmakers are better positioned than most of the country's other industries, such as automobiles.
''Money finds its way to (industries) that have long- term potential,'' Morgan said.
But Korea's problems are hurting Applied Materials. Last week, it said Korea accounted for 6% of its new orders in the first quarter, down from 15% in the year-ago period. And on Thursday, Applied rival Lam Research Corp. said it will lay off 14% of its work force, or 700 jobs.
In the short term, Korean chipmakers can maintain their market share, says George Iwanyc, chip industry analyst at Dataquest Inc. They've invested in enough factories to make 64-megabit chips. Today's standard chips store 16 megabits of data.
But longer term, Korean firms might not be able to invest in new plants that make chips more efficiently. That could be a factor in the next era of memory chips - 256 megabits. If Korea doesn't invest, that's good for U.S. memory-chip makers, such as Texas Instruments Inc. and Micron Technology Inc.
Similar issues face the computer disk-drive market, where Korean tech leaders Samsung and Hyundai are trying to become bigger players. They, along with Japan's Fujitsu Ltd., have helped spark the price warfare and oversupply that are affecting the entire industry, says Disk/Trend's Porter.
Disk-drive prices fell 10% to 12% in the fourth quarter. The oversupply is pressuring U.S. disk- drive makers, including Quantum Corp., Western Digital Corp. and Seagate Technology Inc.
Seagate in January said it planned to lay off 10,000 employees, about 10% of its work force. It's the largest one-time layoff for a company based in California's Silicon Valley. The bulk of the layoffs are in Asia. Western Digital and Quantum also have said they'll take restructuring charges related to oversupply problems.
''U.S. hard-disk makers are fighting to hold their share in face of renewed Asian competition,'' Porter said.
Similarly, Korean firms have picked up market share in the flat-panel screen industry. That has boosted U.S. equipment suppliers.
The thin, lightweight screens are commonly built into notebook computers. The flat panels, or liquid crystal displays, are electronic screens consisting of layers of liquid crystal suspended between glass.
Wholesale prices for 12.1-inch, active- matrix screens fell 40% in late '97 to $360, from about $645, says Ross Young, president of DisplaySearch Inc. in Austin, Texas. He cites Korea's aggressive pricing.
Korean firms sold about 22% of active-matrix screens in '97, up from 14% a year earlier, says DisplaySearch.
The active- matrix LCD market rose 21% to $6.95 billion last year, from $5.75 billion in '96. And flat panels eventually could replace cathode-ray tube monitors in desktop PCs, which would really boost the market.
Korea's flat- panel makers invested heavily in new factories in the early '90s, enough to stay competitive now.
Despite the country's fiscal woes, Korean firms could boost their LCD market share to more than 35% in '98, says David Mentley, an analyst at Stanford Resources Inc., a market research firm in San Jose, Calif.
But Korean firms may have difficulty building next-generation plants needed for larger flat-panel displays. If that happens, a shortage of bigger, 14.1-inch LCDs could occur sometime in '99, says DisplaySearch's Young.
Should Korean companies decide to attack other markets because of oversupply in chips, drives and flat panels, they might target telecommunications.
Cell-phone makers are on their guard because of Korea's record in tackling new markets, says Jane Zweig, an analyst at market researcher Herbert Shosteck Associates Inc. in Silver Spring, Md. Samsung, for example, already is making digital cellular phones.
''Are they paying attention to Samsung? I believe so,'' she said.
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