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To: Woody_Nickels who wrote (4091)10/8/1998 10:59:00 PM
From: DJBEINO  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9582
 
European Union won't probe alleged DRAM dumping by Koreans
By Jack Robertson

WASHINGTON--The European Union has decided against launching a DRAM dumping case against Korean chip makers, industry officials in Seoul confirmed today.

The Korean Semiconductor Industry Association said the EU rejected the dumping petition filed by the European Electronic Components Manufacturers Association (EECA) because it didn't include Japanese DRAM makers as well. The Koreans said the EU feared a DRAM dumping investigation against Korean suppliers only could subject the Europeans to World Trade Organization action that they were discriminatory because Japan wasn't also included.

As previously reported, EECA early this year did its own analysis of Korean DRAM pricing and concluded chip makers there were dumping memory chips in the European market last year. EECA turned its data over to the EU hoping to trigger a dumping investigations specifically against Samsung Electronics, Hyundai Electronics Industries and LG Semicon.

The EU did tell ECCA that the group could refile a DRAM dumping case if Japanese suppliers were included along with the Koreans.

Eckhard Runge, executive director of EECA, was out of his office in Brussels and could not be reached for comment today.

While the EU turned back the DRAM dumping case against Korea, the United States last month did levy a final 9.28% dumping penalty tariff against LG and a 3.9% duty against Hyundai.

Both firms have appealed to the U.S. Court of International Trade to overturn the penalty tariffs, but in the meantime must pay the duty on all imported DRAMs.

An LG spokesman in Seoul said the firm is continuing to ship DRAMs to the U.S. but is absorbing the extra duty cost itself to avoid having to reflect the higher tariff in its U.S. prices. Hyundai can avoid penalty duties on all DRAMs made at its new U.S. plant in Eugene, Ore., now ramping up to full production.

semibiznews.com



To: Woody_Nickels who wrote (4091)10/9/1998 10:01:00 PM
From: DJBEINO  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 9582
 
DRAM pricing remains strong on 16 MEG Fast Page Mode product as
availabilities are limited. The short supply of product has contributed to
a steady rise in SIMM module pricing as well. 64 MEG product has no
significant changes at this time. (Friday October 09, 1998)-AICE

=========
DRAM pricing continues its climb as 16 and 32 MEG SIMM modules are at price
levels last seen in Q-2
. 64 MEG pricing is also up on select product lines,
i.e. 8MX8 PC-100 16MX4 FPM, EDO and 4MX16 EDO. (Thursday October 08, 1998)
===========

Pricing trends on DRAM include the following: 4MX4 FPM SOJ as well as 4MX4
based SIMMS 4MX32, 8MX32 have had a significant price increase in the open
market
. The attributing factors are manufacturer production cut backs,
eliminating production altogether, and declining OEM excess. Many board
designs that use this product are not 64 MEG compatible, consequently
demand is still somewhat strong (Wednesday October 07, 1998)