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To: gbh who wrote (47195)2/15/1999 2:42:00 PM
From: gbh  Respond to of 132070
 
ASML Gets Samsung, Motorola Orders
And Says Chip Industry May Rebound

Dow Jones Newswires

AMSTERDAM -- ASM Lithography NV has received two orders that might
signal the start of a recovery in the market for dynamic random-access
memory chips.

The Dutch maker of semiconductor equipment said on Friday that the
orders from Samsung Corp. of South Korea and Motorola Inc. of the U.S.
total between 300 million guilders and 350 million guilders ($152.9
million and $178.4 million).

Samsung's order, valued at between 200 million guilders and 250
million guilders, is among the largest ever received by ASML. The
Motorola order is valued at more than 100 million guilders, ASML said.

ASML makes scanners and so-called wafer steppers, machines that etch
patterns onto silicon to make computer chips. The company has been
suffering from the Asian financial crisis and an extended slump in the
market for computer chips. In 1998, ASML's net profit fell 58%.

The Samsung order, ASML said, could indicate that an industry
turnaround is under way.

"We believe this order ... might be an early sign of the DRAM market's
stabilization and recovery," said Dave Chavoustie, ASML's vice president
of world-wide sales.

"In fact, it is a very good sign for the industry," said Jan Coen Balt, an
analyst with Effectenbank Stroeve in Amsterdam. "Samsung is among the
most aggressive of DRAM memory-chip producers, so it isn't a surprise
that it would be among the first to bet that the recovery has begun."

The Samsung and Motorola orders consist of numerous advanced
photolithography systems, the most-expensive equipment made by the
Dutch company. ASML began shipping the Samsung order to Korea earlier
this month, and the Motorola systems will be installed at plants in Texas
and Arizona.

The orders help confirm an ASML forecast issued in mid-January, when
the company said it expected demand for the high-end machines to be
strong in 1999 and beyond. The orders also put pressure on Nikon Corp.
and Canon Inc., two Japanese rivals of ASML that have lost market to the
Dutch company in recent years.

ASML's shares rose to 40.15 euros ($45.09) on Friday, up 15 cents each in
reaction to the orders.

The stock benefited from the size of the Samsung order, said Wouter de
Ridder, an analyst with Kempen & Co. "It was already known that
Samsung would make an order," he said. "However, that it was
larger-than-expected is obviously positive."