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


To: Steven Messina,L.M.T. who wrote (20291)12/1/1998 5:44:00 PM
From: Ian@SI  Respond to of 25960
 
Orion hits the street...

biz.yahoo.com

...

Commenting on the impact of this new product introduction, VLSI Research Inc. President Dan Hutcheson noted that the ELS-6000 puts Cymer a full generation ahead in the critical area of advanced light sources for DUV lithography. ''Although a number of competitors have introduced advanced lasers in the last two years, they all compete with Cymer's prior generation lasers -- no other system comes close to matching this new tool for throughput, reliability and cost of operation,'' said Hutcheson.

...




To: Steven Messina,L.M.T. who wrote (20291)12/1/1998 5:45:00 PM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25960
 
Industry, analysts see chip-equipment recovery next year
semibiznews.com

A service of Semiconductor Business News, CMP Media Inc.
Story posted 4 p.m. EST/1 p.m. PST, 12/1/98

TOKYO -- The global semiconductor equipment and materials industry will
begin to recover in 1999, but the timing of the recovery could be anywhere
from the first quarter of the year to the third quarter, according to more than
100 financial analysts, fund managers, and industry executives who met here
prior to the annual Semicon Japan exposition, which begins today.

"We are predicting that the semiconductor capital equipment industry will
continue to grow even faster than the semiconductor industry, at a compound
annual growth rate of 20-25%. This is what has made it such an attractive
industry for investors," said Linda Strunk, senior capital equipment analyst for
Warburg Dillon Read. "The high rate of growth is a function of the increasing
amount of value that equipment manufacturers are providing for
semiconductor makers."

While participants differed on the quarter in which the recovery will begin,
most felt it will occur in 1999. "We see good prospects for the future, with
5-10 percent capital spending growth in 1999," said Noriko Oki, vice president
of Morgan Stanley Japan Ltd. "The outlook for technology-driven equipment
buys is much better than capacity-driven buys."

The turnaround will depend a number of factors: a return to a balance in
supply and demand in chips, more non-PC applications, and fundamental
changes in the way chips are made.

Akira Minamikawa, senior analyst for component semiconductor research at
IDC Japan, said that in the recovery, PCs will begin to lose their place as the
primary driver of semiconductor usage. Instead, he said, such applications as
automobiles, smart cards, communications and digital consumer products will
consume ever-larger quantities of circuits.

In order to participate in the recovery, Japanese companies will have to
develop a more global point of view, according to Tetsuo Tsuneishi, executive
vice president of Tokyo Electron Ltd. In particular, he said, they need to
expand their presence in the U.S. market. "We must completely change the
shape of the industry and the corporations that participate in it," he said.

Other speakers at the conference emphasized that the industry will look
different when the recovery comes. They cited further consolidation, more
technology partnerships, and selective purchases of advanced equipment to
upgrade and extend the life of existing fabs.