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To: MileHigh who wrote (32)10/24/1998 12:18:00 PM
From: MileHigh  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 236
 

October 26, 1998, Issue: 813
Section: Sourcing
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Intel takes stake in Micron -- Makes $500M Equity Investment In Struggling DRAM Maker
Amber Howle

Santa Clara, Calif. -- In order to boost development of the Direct Rambus memory systems it supports, Intel Corp. is making a $500 million equity investment in memory manufacturer Micron Technology Inc.

The deal, however, is not likely to put a damper on Micron's plans for the competing SLDRAM memory technology.

Boise, Idaho-based Micron is one of the few members of the SLDRAM (formerly known as SyncLink) consortium currently shipping samples of 64-Mbyte SLDRAM. Micron, along with many other SLDRAM supporters, also supports Direct RDRAM and Double Data Rate (DDR) SDRAM technologies.

"The deal makes no change in our plans for developing other alternatives or architectures," said Jeff Mailloux, DRAM marketing manager at Micron.

Although SLDRAM is unlikely to generate a lot of volume next year, "we think it is a good technology and an area we want to keep pursuing," Mailloux said.

Representatives from Santa Clara-based Intel said the company's acquisition of stock rights, exchangeable for 6 percent of Micron's common stock, is part of its strategy to accelerate the adoption of Direct RDRAM.

Micron is one of the world's largest DRAM manufacturers, and it meets Intel's strategic requirements to provide industry leadership, said an Intel spokesman.

Rambus Inc., Mountain View, Calif., in close conjunction with Intel, developed the concept of Direct RDRAM. Major memory suppliers have rallied around the technology, which requires a whole new memory architecture with core logic support.

Memory suppliers, however, have not put all their eggs in one basket. Some already are shipping DDR samples, which are scalable to the current generation of SDRAM. Others still officially are supporting SLDRAM, which, like Direct Rambus, requires a new architecture.

To date, Micron and Siemens Components Inc., Hong Kong, have been the most vocal supporters of SLDRAM.

Although Micron claims the deal with Intel will not affect its plans for SLDRAM, analysts were skeptical, saying it could put SLDRAM on Micron's back burner.

"[Micron] is obviously going to put a lot more emphasis on Direct Rambus, and [SLDRAM] will wind up the odd man out," said Steve Cullen, DRAM analyst at Cahners In-Stat Group, Scottsdale, Ariz.

The memory industry's manufacturing capabilities are not likely to keep up with the demand for Direct RDRAM next year, said Sherry Garber, senior vice president of Semico Research Corp., Phoenix. "Intel realizes that they'll have a hard time getting the amount of Direct RDRAM they believe they'll need," she said. With the acquisition of Dallas-based Texas Instruments Inc.'s memory business, Micron has the opportunity to expand manufacturing significantly in the next year, she said.

Because of a softening market over the last three years, the DRAM industry is not very enthusiastic about making investments into new memory architectures such as Direct Rambus and SLDRAM, Garber said.

Although Intel does not have a controlling interest in the deal, "$500 million is a nice incentive to get Micron to make an investment in Direct RDRAM," Garber said.

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Who Gets What: Highlights of deal

- Investment gives Micron much-needed capital.

- Intel acquires rights to 6 percent of Micron's outstanding shares; ensuring ample domestic memory chip supply.

- Micron plans to develop alternative memory technologies.

Copyright ® 1998 CMP Media Inc.




To: MileHigh who wrote (32)10/24/1998 12:30:00 PM
From: MileHigh  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 236
 

October 26, 1998, Issue: 1132
Section: News
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Why Intel put money into Micron
Jack Robertson

Intel Corp.'s $500 million investment in Micron Technology Inc. is prompting a fair amount of armchair quarterbacking, as observers explore the range of market dynamics that such a large cash infusion could unleash.

The investment, which grants Intel the rights to 6% of Micron's stock, is overtly directed at winning Micron's support of Direct Rambus DRAM, an emerging architecture that Intel is positioning to serve the high-end PC market next year.

A Rambus licensee for some time, Micron nevertheless had kept its Direct RDRAM development program on a slow track. Because the technology is forecast to enter high-performance-computing markets first, the Boise, Idaho, company was content to watch from the sidelines until Rambus chip sales reached volume levels.

Micron's apparent changeof heart could be a boon for Intel, according to observers, particularly because at least one market research house had been predicting a serious shortage of Direct RDRAM chips in 1999.

In addition to shoring up the supply chain, Micron could apply its vaunted cost-cutting technology to drive down Direct RDRAM prices and speed the architecture's adoption across the lower-cost PC market, observers said.

As previously reported, 64-Mbit Direct RDRAM chips are expected to carry a 15% to 30% premium, which could discourage a quick market start. But with the industry's top five memory vendors solidly behind Intel's next-generation memory strategy, Direct RDRAM could spur yet another pricing war if any one company tries to grab early market share, analysts said.

What's less clear, according to observers, is the effect Micron's support of Direct RDRAM will have on the company's other new memory R&D efforts.

Some believe Intel took its equity stake, in part, as a preemptive strike against NEC Corp.'s Virtual Channel Memory (VCM), a lower-cost, high-speed DRAM core the company is proposing as an open industry standard for next year's mainstream PC market. Sources suggested that Intel wanted to nip VCM in the bud, especially since the technology has won the early support of Siemens Microelectronics Inc. and three Taiwan-based memory chipset makers.

Additionally, while VCM, as a DRAM core, could actually operate in conjunction with the Direct RDRAM memory interface, observers have speculated that Intel does not want its technology message confused by the introduction of another architecture.

Analyst Jonathan Joseph of NationsBanc Montgomery Securities Inc., San Francisco, said the 133-MHz speed of NEC's VCM doesn't approach the 800-MHz clock rate of Direct RDRAM, but could push back the market adoption of the Intel-backed wideband memory chip beyond Intel's planned 1999 timetable.

"The Intel investment brought Micron into the Direct RDRAM camp, but equally important, probably kept them out of the Virtual Channel Memory field as well," Joseph said.

Intel, sensitive to a pending antitrust probe by the Federal Trade Commission, has denied trying to influence Micron's pursuit of any alternative high-speed DRAM architectures. "Micron is free to develop any DRAM technology it wishes," an Intel spokesman stressed.

Indeed, Micron is expected to continue developing SLDRAM, a wideband-protocol memory that the company earlier championed as a competitor to Direct RDRAM. With a potentially lower cost structure, SLDRAM is aimed at price-sensitive PC and workstation/server memory markets, where Direct RDRAM initially may be out of reach.

Until the Intel investment, Micron's roadmap had only marginal funds available for early Direct RDRAM development and capital spending, according to observers. Now, Micron could follow a dual wideband memory path, aiming Direct RDRAM at high-performance desktop PCs and workstations, and SLDRAM at servers.

However, analyst Thomas Kurlak of New York-based Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. doesn't believe Intel's cash infusion will do much to change the shape of the global memory market. "Micron already was upgrading the former Texas Instruments fabs and had adequate money for [capital expenditures at] its own [Boise] fabs," Kurlak said, referring to Micron's recent purchase of TI's memory operations. "Micron will continue its DRAM strategy regardless of the Intel investment."

Micron forecasts $800 million to $1 billion in capital spending next year, but most of this will be spent moving 64-Mbit chip production at its Boise fabs to linewidths of 0.18 micron and less. The company will spend another $1 billion over three years to convert three former TI fab complexes to 0.18-micron processes, but this will be largely funded from $750 million in heavily discounted financing obtained from TI and former TI partners.

If it is to enter the Direct RDRAM arena by the third quarter of 1999 as planned, Micron will need to draw on Intel's equity stake to make major capital investments, including the creation of a chip-scale packaging (CSP) operation, which is required by the new memory technology. Micron has a limited internal CSP effort for its fledgling SRAM and flash memory programs, but very little is tailored to DRAM.

Direct RDRAM will also demand new and costly testers to deal with the pipeline memory architecture, on-chip logic control, and chip speeds that are six to eight times faster than current 64-Mbit PC-100 devices. Micron said the Intel money will help it install Direct RDRAM production testers far sooner than originally planned.

Copyright ® 1998 CMP Media Inc.