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To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (2856)5/10/1999 8:55:00 PM
From: Jong Hyun Yoo  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 5867
 
Enough about Chaudri's words...
Here is an article from Semibiznews.

IC sales may gain 18% in 1999 after three
years of no growth

Turnaround looks stronger

By J. Robert Lineback

With first-quarter sales running slightly ahead
of most forecasts and no major problems in
sight, chip managers and analysts are now
declaring - with a lot more confidence - that a
bona fide recovery is underway at last. About
the only cloud on the horizon is April's sudden
drop in 64-megabit DRAM prices, a
development that caused more than a few
analysts to pause before hiking their global forecasts. But they
ended up downplaying the dip, believing that DRAM prices had
risen artificially high at the start of the year.

Most 1999 forecasts now call for a 12-to-18% rise in global chip
sales. This turnaround would follow three years of no growth for
chip makers.

"People are dropping the word 'cautiously' and they are now
simply optimistic about the outlook," comments Bruce Entin, vice
president of marketing at LSI Logic Corp. in Milpitas, Calif.
"We're in the early stages of a full-fledged recovery after [the last
slump] bottomed in the summer of 1998. From here on," he says,
"people are expecting to [go] full throttle [for] the next year or
so."

The main factor behind the boost in industry confidence was the
unexpected jump in chip demand for wireless cellular phones.
"We were looking for a slowdown in digital mobile [growth] to
around 25-27% this year," says Jean-Philippe Dauvin, vice
president and chief economist at STMicroelectronics, "but we've
[just] heard from a leading handset maker in Europe that the
growth will be above 40% this year."

Based on that surprising market growth prediction, plus an Asian
recovery and continued strong consumer confidence in North
America and Europe, the Paris-based Dauvin has doubled his
1999 forecast for chip revenue growth from 7% to 15%. "We are
now confident that 1999 will put the industry back on a growth
path," adds Dauvin, who also is the current chairman of the
World Semiconductor Trade Statistics (WSTS) organization.

"The much-watched supply-and-demand crossover point has
been passed," Dauvin believes, referring to an end to the excess
fab capacity that glutted chip markets and drove down industry
revenues by about 9% to $125.6 billion in 1998. "At the end of
this year, I'm sure we will conclude that the crossover occurred
earlier than expected, at the end of March."

Dauvin isn't alone. Other industry observers are gaining far more
confidence in the recovery after seeing first-quarter results of
chip makers and the growing demand for new end products.
"The computer industry still looks good and the overall drivers in
communications equipment, such as the cellular phone, are very
strong," says analyst Bill McClean, president of IC Insight Inc.
The Scottsdale, Ariz.-based market researcher officially is still
calling for 12% revenue growth, but admits that his forecast is
conservative and does not factor in "wild cards," such as the
positive impact on chip orders that some people forecast due to
the Year 2000 software bug.

"This Y2K factor - positive or negative - won't be felt by the
industry until later this year, perhaps from September on,"
McClean predicts. His only major concern is the pricing on
DRAMs and x86 microprocessors - industry segments that are
under pressure because of the market-share battles raging
between major competing suppliers.

"The second quarter will be the 'market share' quarter," says the
veteran DRAM observer. "Micron, Samsung, and Hyundai/LG are
jockeying for position in the belief that a boom period is just
ahead," he points out. "Based on this and Intel's attempts to take
market share [away from Advanced Micro Devices Inc.] in
low-cost processors, the second-quarter numbers might not be
as good as we hope."

But DRAM sales are still due for a big increase for the year,
according to most forecasters, even with 64-Mbit DRAM prices
getting close to $7 after hitting nearly $11 a piece earlier in the
first quarter. IC Insight's McClean is forecasting a 25% increase
in DRAM revenues this year to about $17.5 billion. But, he adds,
it could go higher than that to around $18-to-20 billion if unit
demand picks up and prices firm up in the second half of 1999.

Another factor that could dampen the overall growth of the IC
business is the industry's inability to add capacity once chip
makers are ready to expand. "The bust cycle was so deep that
production equipment suppliers have pared back to the bone,"
points out G. Daniel Hutcheson, president of VLSI Research Inc.
in San Jose. "They cannot respond quickly [to orders] at this
point. In fact we are hearing about semiconductor companies
complaining about the service and training of service people
because suppliers are operating with short staffs."

It will be difficult for any chip maker to add new wafer capacity
quickly because of the depressed equipment segment, according
to STMicroelectronics' Dauvin. "It will take 20 months before a
new fab is in full-volume production," he adds, "and that won't
now happen until 2001."