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To: 16yearcycle who wrote (55588)5/6/1999 8:57:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
By Andrew Hay
NEW YORK, May 5 (Reuters) - National Semiconductor Corp.
<NSM.N> on Wednesday said it would exit the cutthroat PC chip
business, taking a fourth-quarter charge of up to $300 million
charge, as it focuses on chips for new smart devices.
The charge includes expenses related to a workforce
reduction of about 5 percent, covering some 550 jobs.
The Santa Clara, Calif., chip maker -- hurt by price wars
between rival chip makers Advanced Micro Devices Inc. <AMD.N>
and Intel Corp. <INTC.O> -- said it would sell the PC unit at
its struggling Cyrix processor business. The company will
retain its business making chips for smart information
appliances like set-top boxes and other devices used to hook up
to the World Wide Web.
"We will immediately cease slugging it out in the PC
processor market, which has been dragging down our financial
performance for several quarters," Brian Halla, chairman,
president and CEO of National said in a statement. "By
contrast, the information appliance market is now on the launch
pad.
Wall Street reacted favorably to the news. Shares of
National, which supplies chips to Compaq and General Motors for
products ranging from cellphones to laptops, were up $1.31 at
$16.06 in mid-morning trade.
Analysts said National's move to exit the personal computer
business marked aggressive price cutting by Intel Corp.
<INTC.O>, the world's largest computer chip maker, at the lower
end of the PC market.
"It leads to the conclusion that we're in a two-horse race
- Intel and AMD," Needham & Co. analyst A.A. LaFountain said in
a telephone interview.
National, which has previously had to streamline its
business to move into higher-margin chip markets, said it
intends to sell a majority interest in its South Portland,
Maine, wafer fabrication plant.
The company plans to cut 550 positions through early
retirement, attrition and layoffs, including 165 job cuts in
Singapore announced in April. This represents less than 5
percent of its employees. National will continue to focus on
analog products which represented about 70 percent of its
fiscal 1999 sales through the third quarter.
National expects to take a one-time fourth quarter charge
of between $250 to $300 million as it exits the PC processor
business and cuts its work force.
Upon completion of the restructuring, the company expects
to return to profitability in its fiscal 2000 second quarter,
ending Nov. 1999.



To: 16yearcycle who wrote (55588)5/6/1999 9:40:00 AM
From: Tom Kearney  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
Alan Greenspan is endorsing the internet as I write! He says it's gonna change the world and accelerate the ability to make profitable business.



To: 16yearcycle who wrote (55588)5/6/1999 9:59:00 AM
From: Tom Kearney  Respond to of 164684
 
AG is saying that tech driven increased productivity is responsible for lack of inflation, and will probably continue. It even extends to non-tech businesses. It is dramatic and revolutionary. He goes on and on, of course, and it is a total rout. Take that Alan Abelson!