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To: Kerry Phineas who wrote (29564)3/6/1998
From: Richard Russell  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 53903
 
HOUSE PANEL APPROVES 18B IMF BAILOUT BY AN OVERWHELMING MAJORITY.
Korean chipmakers will have the $ to stay strong and competitive.

According to appelton this means curtains for mu. Now as the prospects of mus demise lurks in the future you can look for ws to push this weasel up to 40 soon.

Plus more on DRAM from TI.

Thursday March 5, 8:17 pm Eastern Time

FOCUS-TI says Asia took big bite out of chip market
By Kieran Murray
DALLAS, March 5 (Reuters) - The Asia crisis has taken at least a $6.5
billion bite out of the global semiconductor market and is hurting
near-term profits, executives at Texas Instruments Inc. said Thursday.

Chief Financial Officer Bill Aylesworth said the industry would grow 10
percent this year and that its long-term prospects remained strong, but
weak chip orders ''across the board'' at the end of 1997 were pressuring
some key markets.

The TI executives spoke a day after Intel Corp., the world's largest
maker of computer chips, stunned Wall Street with a warning of a
first-quarter earnings shortfall, citing weaker-than-anticipated demand
for its microprocessors.

''Late in the fourth quarter, customers concerned about the whole Asian
situation seemed to be hesitant to place re-orders,'' TI's Aylesworth
told Reuters. ''While order rates have resumed to generally more normal
patterns from that, it is still a reason to be cautious in the
near-term.''

He said the global chip market should grow 10 percent to $150 billion in
1998, up from 4 percent last year but still way below the long-term
15-20 percent range that the Dallas-based semiconductor giant had set
for the industry.

Texas Instrument's chief economist, Vladi Catto, said the global
semiconductor market would have grown between 15 percent and 17 percent
this year if it not for the Asia crisis.

In dollar terms, that means the chip market will grow only about $13.5
billion this year, instead of between $20 billion and $23 billion.

''It is a significant impact, but it is not huge, it is not a disastrous
impact,'' Catto said.

He also painted a bright picture for 1999, saying renewed economic
growth in Asia and capacity reductions caused by the region's recent
problems would boost demand and help a recovery in the prices of common
memory chips, which have been battered by excess production over the
last two years.

''If we expect the semiconductor market to grow 10 percent in 1998, then
we should expect the industry to grow between 20 and 35 percent in
1999,'' Catto said.

''We can't wait to get through 1998,'' he added to laughter from
industry analysts gathered for a meeting with Texas Instruments
executives in Dallas.

His one worry for Asia was whether the Japanese government would take
firm enough steps to spark a recovery. He said the government so far had
''done nothing to reflate the economy'' but that he expected it to make
the move in coming months.

U.S. technology stocks took a battering on Thursday after Intel warned
of weaker-than-expected earnings amid falling prices and slowing demand
for personal computers.

In afternoon trading on Nasdaq, Intel's stock was trading $10.69 lower
at $75.75, and Dell Computer Corp. was down $6.50 to $132.375. Texas
Instruments stock was off $2.375 at $52.56 on the New York Stock
Exchange.

Aylesworth said Texas Instruments was less exposed to the PC market than
other big chip makers but that its core markets were ''mixed.''

On the downside, prices for dynamic random access memory (DRAM) chips
are very low and Aylesworth said it was still not clear when they would
break out of their long slump.

But Texas Instruments has shifted its focus away from DRAMs and toward
more specialized digital signal processors (DSPs), used in cellular
phones, modems and other electronic equipment.

Largely because of that shift, Texas Instruments' revenues grew 10
percent in 1997, compared with 4 percent for the industry.

Aylesworth said Texas Instruments' DSP markets should grow more than 30
percent this year and also said its markets for wireless and networking
products were strong.

He declined to say if Texas Instruments would meet analysts' earnings
estimates for the first quarter but drew a distinction between
short-term pressures and long-term prospects.

''We have pointed out that the weak orders we saw in the fourth quarter
(of 1997) were going to put pressure on our revenues and margins in the
near term and that is still our consistent view of the near term,'' he
said.

In reaction to those pressures, Aylesworth said, Texas Instruments was
constraining short-term capital spending but expected to keep to its
standing target of $1.4 billion for the year.

Looking long-term, Aylesworth said the global chip industry should grow
at average rates of 15-20 percent with the strongest growth in DSPs and
other products where TI is a market leader.

He said Texas Instruments' end-equipment markets should grow at annual
average rates of between 20 percent for personal computers and networks
to 30 percent for wireless products between 1998 and 2002.