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To: NBS who wrote (4295)11/30/1998 11:34:00 PM
From: DJBEINO  Respond to of 9582
 
PC shipments to region (Asia-Pacific )forecast to grow again


ELLA LEE
The market for personal computers in the Asia-Pacific region seems to be rebounding from a slump as shipments in the third quarter registered their lowest year-on-year decline this year.

Shipments of PCs are expected to grow again during the busy Christmas season and maintain that pace next year, International Data Corp (IDC) says.

About 2.5 million PCs, worth US$3.54 billion, were shipped in the third quarter, representing a decline of 2.3 per cent in unit shipments and of 26 per cent in revenue, compared with the same quarter last year, IDC said.

The regional PC market was hard hit in the first half, falling 4.5 per cent in shipments and 35 per cent in revenue. The decline in revenue was due mainly to falling prices of PC products and the currency crisis.

The third-quarter result was better than IDC's original forecast of a 3.1 per cent decline.

This was because the PC market as well as currencies were recovering, Dane Anderson, IDC's research director of computer systems in the Asia-Pacific, said, adding that some key markets such as South Korea and Australia performed better than expected.

IDC expected the PC shipments to grow in the last three months of the year by 5 per cent over last year's fourth quarter, when the market was first hit by the regional economic slump.

The PC market was believed to have hit bottom this year, with an expected 1 per cent decline in PCs shipped, and IDC forecast next year's PC shipments would rise 16 per cent.

"Even those [countries] which have been hard hit such as Indonesia, where the PC market decreased by 82 per cent, will start to turn around, and we expect a 14 per cent increase in Indonesia," Mr Anderson said. "But [South Asia and Korea] will not be as strong as" previous years.

After Indonesia, Thailand, Korea and Malaysia reported the worst third-quarter downturns, with year-on-year shipment declines of 44 per cent, 35 per cent and 27 per cent respectively.

By contrast, the mainland and India continued their rapid growth of 28 per cent and 24 per cent respectively, while markets in Taiwan, Australia and New Zealand remained robust.

The mainland is the largest and fastest-growing market in the region, accounting for 38 per cent of regional PC shipments, with 40 per cent forecast for next year. This benefits key mainland players and strengthens market positions.

IDC said a major competitive shift in the third quarter was the replacement of Hewlett-Packard (HP) by Legend as the third-largest PC vendor in the region. Also, first-tier mainland player Founder marked its entrance into the top 10.

Legend's success was based on its leading position in the mainland.

The company recently re-entered the Hong Kong market with a new management team after failing nine months ago, Mr Anderson said.

He believed Legend was looking at the SAR as a testing ground before branching out into other geographical areas. However, Legend should not expand too quickly, but further strengthen its position in the mainland where all vendors were working hard to increase market share, he said.

Though HP fell to fourth position in the region in the third quarter, it achieved 26 per cent year-on-year growth with exceptional gains in the mainland, Australia and New Zealand, IDC said.

Also, HP is the second-largest foreign PC vendor in the mainland, behind IBM and ahead of Compaq.

HP has a 5 per cent share of the regional PC market, and Legend has 6 per cent.

Compaq and IBM continue to be the first and the second PC vendors in the region, with market shares of 9 per cent and 8 per cent respectively. Acer is fifth-largest, despite a year-on-year decline of 24 per cent.



To: NBS who wrote (4295)11/30/1998 11:37:00 PM
From: DJBEINO  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 9582
 
Wafer foundry shortage possible in 2000, says report

PHOENIX--Third-party wafer foundry capacity could end up in short supply by the year 2000 if chip manufacturers increase their use of contract manufacturing, warns a new report from Semico Research Corp. here.

Currently, there is a glut of silicon foundry capacity, but Semico said that condition could quickly change if major semiconductor makers decide to shift more of their wafer processing to third-party fabs at a time when chip markets begin recovering from the current slump.

The Phoenix market researcher estimated that demand for processed wafers is increasing at a compound annual growth rate of 13% over the next five years. Silicon foundry demand is expected to grow at 21% in the five-year period.

Today, fab-operating chip suppliers--known as integrated device manufacturers, or IDMs--get about 5% of their processed wafers from foundries, according to Semico's report. If IDMs increased their use of foundries to about 10% of their processed wafer, the silicon foundry business could grow 40%, which would lead to a potential shortage of capacity in 2000, the report concluded.

A number of major IC manufacturers are planning to increase their use of outside foundries as part of a restructuring of their business models and a hedge against uncertain times. Motorola Inc., for example, intends to get 30% of its chips from third-party foundries by 2000 compared to just 7% last year. In four years, Motorola wants to move 50% of its wafer processing needs to outside foundries (see story from Oct. 15 issue of SBN).
semibiznews.com

GOOD TIMING FOR USC IPO



To: NBS who wrote (4295)12/2/1998 9:57:00 AM
From: DJBEINO  Respond to of 9582
 
DRAM Chip Market On The Upswing

In a reversal of the industry's trend in recent years, prices of DRAM chips have been maintaining their bullish trend, according to industry sources Wednesday. The unit price of semiconductor products had showed overall declines in the U.S. software market after the Comdex Show held every year, usually in November - a trend which also affected the DRAM market. This year, however, demand has remained strong because DRAM chips are needed in upgrading software to cover the Y2K bug. The price of Asychronous 64-mega byte DRAM chips has gone up to US$12 - 13.25 and 16-mega byte chips are up to US$3.75 - 4.75, the sources said.