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Politics : Formerly About Applied Materials -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Gottfried who wrote (24815)10/2/1998 12:29:00 AM
From: Big Bucks  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 70976
 
GM,
I might nibble at $22 but am keeping my options open. The world markets are in complete chaos with no relief in sight, so I want to
conserve as much capital as I can until things bottom out for a while. Investing now is like shooting at a moving target that is
moving away from you, you might hit it but you could miss and not
have any ammo left for better shots later. Any good hunter knows
that patience and stealth allows one to get closer to his intended
prey and have a better chance at a "clean" kill shot. I am after
trophy game and will wait for the right time, but ohhhh it is tempting!!
Interesting that AMAT volume has been so low for so long now, mostly
traders/speculators I think. I want to see a 10-12M down trading day
indicating that funds are unloading.

BB



To: Gottfried who wrote (24815)10/3/1998 6:43:00 AM
From: Justa Werkenstiff  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 70976
 
GM and All: Must Read on Micron and DRAMs:

"While the DRAM slump already has lasted far longer than he anticipated, Appleton is convinced conditions will improve soon. He notes that spending on DRAM front-end equipment this year is expected to reach only $4.5 billion, one-third the level of recent years. "There's no way that's going to sustain the DRAM industry," he says, especially since most chip-manufacturing equipment is effectively obsolete in three-and-a-half years.

That means most of the equipment installed at the peak of the industry's mid-90s boom will soon need replacing. "You have incredible under-investment occurring right now, because nobody has any money," he says. "And you have an increasing rate of obsolescence occurring in the equipment. Those two factors are going to turn the market."

In anticipation, Micron is gearing up to introduce its products and process technology as quickly as possible to all the newly acquired TI fabs, except the one in Richardson, TX, which will be used for R&D purposes until its capacity is needed. Appleton figures the fabs should be fully qualified and producing Micron-designed DRAMs within 12 to 18 months, by which time he hopes the industry's manufacturing capacity will be back into balance with demand.

That wouldn't surprise Dan Niles, senior analyst with BancAmerica Robertson Stephens in San Francisco. He says TI's decision to sell out to Micron has "sort of made it okay" for other DRAM players to cut back or exit the business, which is precisely what the market needs.
Within weeks after the deal was announced in mid-June, he notes, Siemens AG, Munich, announced it would close a $1-billion U.K. DRAM fab, and Taiwan's Acer Inc., one of TI's former manufacturing partners, said it would stop making DRAMs entirely.

Niles, who sees signs of the market nearing the bottom of its cycle, anticipates more consolidation before the market recovers. He adds, however, that a slow recovery might actually benefit Micron. "That way you would have a lot of the weaker players overseas go out of business," he says. "A lot of these guys are on the ropes and, much like TI, they're ready to give in." "


eb-mag.com