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Technology Stocks : Texas Instruments - Good buy now or should we wait? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jad who wrote (3177)3/5/1998 2:57:00 PM
From: pat mudge  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6180
 
Word from the analyst meeting says response was positive. No doubt we'll know for certain over the next few days as more analysts bring out their updated comments.

Pat



To: jad who wrote (3177)3/7/1998 10:18:00 AM
From: jad  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6180
 
Texas Instruments Looks To Fix Dynamic RAM Joint Venture
(03/06/98; 12:11 p.m. EST)
By J. Robert Lineback, Semiconductor Business News
Texas Instruments has not yet given up on the dynamic RAM (DRAM) business, but it is finding it harder to tolerate the round of losses and the unpredictable nature of the memory business, said TI president and CEO Thomas (Tom) J. Engibous during an annual briefing in Dallas Thursday for financial analysts and the media.
On Wednesday, TI and its original DRAMhttp://www.techweb.com/encyclopedia/defineterm.cgi?sstring=dynamic+RAM joint-venture partner, the Acer Group in Taiwan, announced an agreement to end their collaboration in DRAM manufacturing. Under the agreement, Acer said it intends to acquire TI's 33 percent stake in its Taiwan venture and will use the operation to pursue silicon foundry services.
The announcement has increased speculation that Dallas-based TI is planning to eventually exit the DRAM business after failing to bring stability to its much-celebrated joint-venture model. In the early 1990s, TI pursued the joint-venture strategy to insulate itself from the volatile nature of the commodity DRAMs while it focused more resources to grow higher-value products, such as digital signal processing.
Fielding questions from analysts, Engibous said TI's top management continues to struggle with the solution. When asked what it would take for TI to finally decide it could no longer tolerate DRAM losses, Engibous refused to comment, saying it was TI's policy not to talk about exiting or acquiring businesses.
However, it is clear that TI is not yet willing to say it is giving up. "Over the [entire DRAM business] cycle, we see a very good return on investment capital because of our joint-venture strategy," Engibous said. "We are still working diligently to figure out how we get the volatility to be consistent with the goals of the whole company."
"While we have made some progress, we don't have the answer as we stand here today," he added.
What Engibous and other TI officials want is to find a way to weather bad times in DRAM devices and still come close to the company's two key business goals: an average of 20 percent revenue growth and 20 percent return on invested capital. Engibous said the DRAM joint ventures have the potential to meet TI's return on invested capital goal because the majority of the capital investments are made by partners. The problem has been the volatility of DRAM pricing, he added.
"Make no mistake about it, we look at our memory business as we look at all our businesses," Engibous said. "It must add value consistent with our company objectives."
TI has explored a wide range of options -- "more than there are options," said Engibous after his presentation. While he would not discuss details of these options, Engibous hinted of the kind of new arrangements being explored with TI's remaining joint-venture partnerships with Singapore and Japan. "One option has been to consider payment based upon bits vs. DRAM devices," he said, referring to TI's discounted price for memories purchased from the joint-venture fab. "The bit growth continues at more than 70 percent." techweb.com