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Technology Stocks : Cymer (CYMI) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wayne who wrote (17105)4/24/1998 12:40:00 PM
From: Czechsinthemail  Respond to of 25960
 
from ONLINE INVESTOR:

Stock of the Day (Archive)

Apr 24, 1998

The reaction to the Asian crisis last Fall was swift and severe, especially for semiconductor and chip equipment stocks, but the
impact on these companies will linger on for many months to come. Underscoring the point is Cymer (Nasdaq:CYMI - news) ,
a maker of laser systems used in chip making, which just hit its earnings target for the first quarter but warned that depressed
spending by chip makers on capital equipment is likely to continue for the next few quarters. The quandary for investors is
whether to focus on the exciting long-term prospects for companies like Cymer and hope the current malaise is already in the
stock price, or to watch and wait while the Asian slowdown drags on indefinitely.

To some degree, the question hinges on when deep ultraviolet lasers will push chip making to the next level. Cymer had waited
more than a decade for older chip photolithography technology to be exhausted, and prior to the Asian crisis, the company was
experiencing a rapid ramp-up of demand for its excimer lasers. These complex optical systems mix rare gases with halogen to
produce pulses of short-wavelength light, and when they are built into chipmaking equipment they enable semiconductor
manufacturers to squeeze ever-tinier circuitry onto chips. Smaller, denser chips are faster and more cost-effective, but
chipmakers had to wait until there was sufficient market demand to warrant the hefty investment in new equipment.

The time seemed to have arrived last year, but unfortunately for Cymer many Asian chip makers put their capital investment
plans on hold due to slumping memory chip prices and painful economic conditions in the region. Industry watchers still expect
an aggressive industrywide transition from 0.35 micron chips to 0.25 micron over the next several years (a micron is a millionth
of a meter, and these sizes refer to the line width or spacing between circuitry on a chip). This transition requires an
unprecedented investment in semiconductor manufacturing equipment, and Cymer's excimer lasers are a critical component in
the new deep ultraviolet (DUV) machines. The company commands an estimated 80% of the market for excimer lasers.

Cymer figures their systems can be used to bring line widths as low as 0.10 micron. There are potentially competing
technologies being developed such as electronic beam and X-ray systems, but these appear to be much more expensive than
DUV. Extreme ultraviolet (EUV) is probably more than a decade away from use in production.

The stock had soared more than ten-fold in its first year as a public company, reaching a high of $49.25 last August, but then it
plunged amidst the Asian situation and a heavy dose of short-selling by speculators. It dropped as low as $14.50 in January,
but has crept back up to $25.25 currently.

After the close on Thursday, Cymer reported earnings per share of 9 cents, matching the consensus estimate from analysts for
the first quarter. That was down from 14 cents a year-ago. Revenues of just under $50 million in the quarter were up from $37
million a year ago but down from $59 in the prior quarter. The company went on to say that second quarter revenues are
expected to be flat with the first quarter, and that earnings will likely be down sequentially due to higher production costs
associated with new models and lower margins.

That shouldn't come as much of a surprise, though, indeed prior to this statement analysts were looking for earnings of just 8
cents per share in the second quarter. They might shave estimates a bit more after today's news, but basically it was already
assumed that 1998 would be a pretty tough year for Cymer and other chip equipment companies. Analysts are looking for the
company to earn $0.40-$0.43 this year, less than half its '97 profit of $0.86 per share. But business is seen turning up again in
1999 to produce earnings of $0.93, and the longer-term growth rate is projected at 35%.

As the company indicated in its earnings release Thursday evening, the impact of the Asian slowdown is likely to continue for
several more quarters, so it's not as if Cymer is on the cusp of a miraculous turnaround. Nonetheless, investors with a long-term
view might see it as a company at the center of the next generation in chip making. Eventually when capital investment by chip
makers picks up again, Cymer's lasers should be in great demand.

As with any company involved in the semiconductor equipment industry, volatility if not outright boom-bust cycles are to be
expected. Nonetheless, Cymer has an amazing lock on the market for what looks like one of the most vital technologies for
chip manufacturing in the coming years.



To: Wayne who wrote (17105)4/24/1998 12:47:00 PM
From: Dakota Sullivan  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 25960
 
Something in Harkness' statement puzzles me: anticipating"lost market share." Isn't that exactly what Akins addressed in his statement? Than new product will help prevent loss of current market share?