UPDATE:Taiwan Government: DRAM Cos Can Apply For Government Invest
21 Juillet 2009 - 12:41PM
Dow Jones News
The Taiwan government said Tuesday the island's makers of
dynamic random access memory chips can seek investment from the
government in support of their plan to restructure the chip
industry.
DRAM makers that will be eligible for such investment includes
companies that can gain access to foreign firms' intellectual
property rights, propose plans to jointly develop next-generation
technologies with foreign partners, and consolidate through mergers
and acquisitions, the Bureau of Industrial Development said in a
statement.
The Taiwan government said in March it will set up a new chip
company called Taiwan Memory which will be tasked with developing
next-generation chip technologies to increase the island's
competitiveness in the DRAM sector. In April, Taiwan Memory chose
Japan's Elpida Memory Inc. (6665.TO) as its technology partner. At
the time, Minister of Economic Affairs Chii-ming Yiin said the
government may invest less than NT$10 billion in Taiwan Memory.
The government didn't give a value for the investment program,
which comes after Yiin said earlier this month that Formosa
Plastics Group submitted a proposal seeking NT$20 billion to NT$30
billion for its memory-chip units, Nanya Technology Corp. (2408.TW)
and Inotera Memories Inc. (3747.TW).
Inotera is a joint-venture between Nanya and U.S. chip-maker
Micron Technology Inc. (MU).
Separately, Powerchip Semiconductor Corp. (5346.OT) is
considering applying for government investment, company spokesman
Eric Tang said Tuesday.
"Powerchip meets the conditions the government has set," Tang
said.
Powerchip is Taiwan's second-largest DRAM maker by revenue after
Nanya Technology Corp.
Global DRAM makers have suffered from consecutive quarterly
losses since last year after a supply glut drove chip prices well
below their manufacturing costs. Prices have slowly rebounded this
year after companies cut production and their capital expenditure
budgets. Many have sought help from their governments in order to
ride out the DRAM sector's worst downturn since 2001.
-By Jessie Ho, Dow Jones Newswires; 88622 502-2557;
jessie.ho@dowjones.com