Posts for Ticker ‘TSM’

Top Day Trader Alerts (ACOR, AVNR, INFY, SVNT, SPPI, TSM)

These are this Friday morning’s top day trader and active trader alert stocks.  We have provided a link through to VSInvestor.com with more detailed price and volume analysis on each stock below:

Acorda Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: ACOR) down on FDA link that made its data public.

AVANIR Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: AVNR) is the top gainer so far as Zenvia data showed positive results at higher doses.

Infosys Technologies Limited (NASDAQ: INFY) beat earnings, but shares are down about 3%.

Savient Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: SVNT) is trading up over 4% after a secondary offering, and an upgrade probably helped here.

Spectrum Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: SPPI) is down sharply on complete response letter from FDA for FUSILEV in advanced metastatic colorectal cancer going against it.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd. (NYSE: TSM) is up marginally on over 1 million shares a sales drop still met plan.

You can join our open email distribution list to get updates each morning on analyst upgrades and downgrades, top day trader alerts, IPO’s and secondary offerings, Warren Buffett and other guru activity, M&A and more.

JON C. OGG
October 9, 2009

Top Analyst Downgrades (AU, BP, CBST, GFI, SNN, STJ, TSM)

These are this Wednesday mornings top Wall Street analyst downgrades and cautious research calls we have seen early this morning:

Anglogold (AU) Cut to Neutral at Nomura.
BP plc (BP) Cut to Hold at RBS.
Cubist Pharmaceuticals (CBST) Cut to Neutral at RW Baird.
Gold Fields (GFI) Cut to Neutral at Nomura.
Smith & Nephew (SNN) Cut to Neutral at UBS.
St. Jude Medical (STJ) Cut to Hold at Canaccord.
Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) Cut to Neutral at UBS.

You can join our open email distribution list which goes out several times per week for reminders of the top day trader alerts, analyst upgrades and downgrades, IPO’s, key secondary offerings, guru investor data on Buffett and others, mergers, and more.

JON C. OGG

Top 10 Analyst Upgrades & Downgrades (ARG, T, GOOG, HOV, MELI, SSL, STO, TSM, TRI, WSM)

These are the top ten analyst calls for research upgrades, downgrades, and initiations which we have seen from Wall Street early this Monday morning:
Airgas (ARG) Started as Buy at Piper Jaffray.
AT&T (T) Removed from Conviction Buy List at Goldman Sachs, but maintained Buy rating with 32% upside.
Google (GOOG) Cut to Hold from Buy at Benchmark.
Hovnanian (HOV) Cut to Underperform at Wachovia.
MercadoLibre (MELI) Raised to Positive at Susquehanna.
Sassol (SSL) Started as Neutral at UBS.
StatoilHydro (STO) Cut to Sell from Neutral at UBS.
Taiwan Semi (TSM) Raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley.
Thomson Reuters (TRI) Raised to Outperform at Scotia.
Williams-Sonoma (WSM) Raised to Buy at Piper Jaffray.

JON C. OGG
June 8, 2009

Live Intel Coverage: Forget Bottoming, Actually More Improvements (INTC, TSM, AMD)

Intel LogoIntel Corp. (NASDAQ: INTC) had already given the indications that the tech market was bottoming out.  At today’s investor meeting, CEO Paul Otellini, said hat he believes conditions seem to be improving further.  He even noted that compared to even last month’s outlook that business is a little better than it had expected.  We covered a snapshot of what we considered the new long-term base-building and trends.
Read More »

Top Analyst Downgrades (AXP, BKE, CIEN, ENER, IP, LINTA, RBS, STO, TSM, TIN, VSAT)

These are some of the top analyst downgrades and cautious research calls we have seen from Wall Street early this Tuesday morning:

American Express (AXP) Started as Underperform at RBC.
Buckle (BKE) Cut to Underweight at KeyBanc.
Ciena (CIEN) Cut to Underperform at JMP Securities.
Energy Conversion Devices (ENER) Cut to Hold at Citi; Cut to Neutral at Credit Suisse.
International Paper (IP) Cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank.
Liberty Media (LINTA) Cut to Sell at Citi.
Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) Cut to Underperform at Credit Suisse.
StatoilHydro (STO) Cut to Hold at Societe Generale.
Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) Cut To Market Perform at FBR.
Temple-Inland (TIN) Cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank.
ViaSat (VSAT) Cut to Hold at Collins Stewart.

JON C. OGG

Short Sellers Abandon Financial Shares, Tech Stocks

r218533_8550254Short sellers are not longer willing to gamble on a collapse in the share prices of America’s largest financial firms. Perhaps they think that the issue of nationalization has largely disappeared, the bank earnings may get better, or that the government’s program to strip them of toxic assets may work.

Based on short selling data as of April 15, the short interest in Wells Fargo (WFC) dropped 11% to 149.8 million shares. Read More »

Hidden Positive Aspects of Intel in Research (INTC, TSM)

intel-logoIntel Corp. (NASDAQ: INTC) shares rose today after  Broadpoint AmTech raised its rating to “Buy” from “Neutral.”  We normally would not make much of an issue on a single event like this, but the analyst made some interesting points which we have also noted recently that might not be modeled into Wall Street forecasts.
Read More »

Intel & TSM Outline System-on-Chip MOU (INTC, TSM)

dram-imageThis is getting completely swept under the table because of the stock market flush-out.  But we have been awaiting the announcement confirming last week’s reports of a venture between Intel Corporation (NASDAQ: INTC) and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd. (NYSE: TSM).  The companies now have agreed  to collaborate on a technology platform, IP infrastructure, and “SoC” solutions (system on a chip).
Read More »

Top 10 Pre-Market Analyst Calls (BA, OMTR, PAS, RRGB, CRM, PCU, TSM, TEVA, WLP, WX)

Below are the top 10 analyst calls we are focusing on this morning:

  • Boeing (NYSE: BA) raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley.
  • Omniture (NASDAQ: OMTR) raised to Buy at Jefferies.
  • PepsiAmericas (NYSE: PAS) raised to Buy at Deutsche Bank.
  • Red Robin Gourmet (NASDAQ: RRGB) raised to Overweight at JP Morgan; started as Buy at Jefferies.
  • Salesforce.com (NYSE: CRM) Started At Buy at Broadpoint.
  • Southern Copper (NYSE: PCU) started as Underweight at JP Morgan.
  • Taiwan Semiconductor (NYSE: TSM) raised to overweight at Lehman Brothers.
  • Teva Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: TEVA) cu to Hold at Citigroup.
  • WellPoint (NYSE: WLP) downgraded to Neutral at Banc Of America.
  • WuXi PharmaTech (NYSE: WX) raised to Buy at Jefferies.

Jon C. Ogg
March 14, 2008

Corporate Earnings Growth Disappearing, Could Go Negative

A survey of analysts taken recently indicates that they believe earnings will be flat in the first and second quarters of this year when compared to the same periods in 2007. The poll, by Reuters Estimates, sees Q1 earnings for the S&P 500 moving up only .4% and Q2 by .9%. Both numbers are worse than those gathered the previous week.

Oddly enough, the same survey showed Q4 2007 earnings for the S&P 500 dropped over 20%.

The information is an example of how securities analysts will hold their estimates high as long as possible. perhaps to keep managements happy or keep shareholders invested in equities. It is hard to stay employed as a stock-picker when everyone is in bonds or cash.

In reality, earnings are likely to fall in each of the next two quarters. Certainly the financial companies in the S&P could see more huge write-offs due to subprime and consumer credit problems combined with falling value of LBO loans. With oil prices high it is hard to imagine that the auto and airline industries will do well. Retailers are already posting drops in same-store sales. The housing and construction industries will have another bad run.

Even technology may do badly. Recent information from Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) and Intel (INTC) show slowing in the shipments of chips used for PCs and servers.

Oil companies and consumer goods operations which sell soap, toothpaste, and razors may fair well, but they cannot offset the drops in other industries.

A doubled-digit drop in the earnings of the firms in the S&P is more likely than flat year-over-year performance.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Media Digest 2/19/2008 Reuters, WSJ, NYTimes, FT, Bloomberg

According to Reuters, Toshiba will drop its HD DVD format.

Reuters reports that Blll Gates said Microsoft (MSFT) will target web search with or without Yahoo! (YHOO)

Reuters writes that RIM (RIMM) has sued Motorola (MOT) over patent issues.

Reuters writes that Exxon (XOM) is willing to enter talks with Venezuela but will continue its fight to be paid for assets.

The Wall Street Journal writes that Credit Suisse (CS) has cut the value of its asset-backed securities by $2.85 billion.

The Wall Street Journal reports that Ambac (ABK) will try to raise $2 billion.

The Wall Street Journal writes that a rival of Baxter (BAX) has started to supply a drug to replace heparin which has been tainted by supply quality problems in China.

The Wall Street Journal reports that problems in the auction-rate securities market may lead to higher financing costs for some institutions.

The Wall Street Journal reports that Martha Steward (MSO) will buy certain assets from Emeril.

The Wall Street Journal writes that Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) will begin to build chips designed by Sun (JAVA).

The Wall Street Journal writes that Verizon’s (VZ) roll-out of HDTV is being delayed by a shortage of settop boxes.

The Wall Street Journal writes that banks and investment houses may have to write down as much as $15 billion in LBO debt.

The Wall Street Journal writes that big media companies want a larger part of video games based on their shows.

The New York Times writes that Wall St. is bracing for another wave of write-downs.

The New York Times writes that China inflation rose 7.1% in January, the largest increase in a decade

The New York Times writes that Delta (DAL) and Northwest (NWA) are close to closing a merger.

The FT writes that banks have quietly borrowed $50 billion from the Fed in the last few weeks.

Bloomberg writes that the second half 2007 profits at Barclays (BCS) fell 21% on write-downs.

Douglas A. McIntyre

The Large US Companies That May Disappear In 2008

Firestone. American Motors. Texaco. Pan Am. Worldcom. At one point or another these large American companies were at the top of their industries. Pan Am was the leading global airline for decades. All are gone. Some were sold off. Others went bankrupt. Who could have predicted it?

There are several iconic US companies that may well not exist at the end of 2008. Some may not even make it halfway through the year. Not all will go out of business. Some may simply be auctioned off in pieces. Others may be bought. These companies will not exist in their current forms as they are known to their shareholders and consumers now.

When a company ceases to exist as an independent entity, it is not necessarily bad for shareholders. Some may be worth more in parts. Often a bust-up or merger is what brings owners the most money.

Here are the big ones that probably won’t make it.

Motorola (MOT) was the No.2 handset maker in the world a little more than two years ago. Its Razr took the wireless industry by storm. It did not follow that product up with another winner and its larger rival, Nokia (NOK) began to take up market share. Smaller competitors Samsung and Sony Ericsson came out with popular phones and Motorola was under siege. Carl Icahn took a stake and tried to get the company to improve its pay-out or sell-off some of its divisions. The board sent him away. Since then things have gotten worse. Motorola’s share price was over $25 in late 2006. It is now below $13. The company has announced that it may sell or spin-off its handset business. That may be bought by Samsung. MOT’s enterprise telecom and home set-top businesses could be acquired by Cisco (CSCO) or Nortel (NT). A tech-oriented private equity firm might also buy the set-top box unit.  As an independent company, MOT has no future.

Sears Holdings (SHLD) is billionaire Eddie Lampert’s experiment at merging big retailers Sears and K-Mart. Unfortunately both were in bad shape at the outset. Putting them together did not help either business. The company has a 52-week high of $195 and now trades at $108. Sears has now reported a string of bad earnings. Last week reports began to appear that Lampert may spin-off the company’s real estate and break the firm into several operating units, each of which would have more operating autonomy. The CEO has been pushed out in favor of a "temp". That sounds like the prelude to an auction.

Citigroup (C) is almost certainly not out of the woods. A recent report in the Financial Times said that US financial company write-offs for the entire sector could total $300 billion this year. Fortune magazine has written that Citi has another $37 billion in CDOs on its balance sheet. It also has LBO loans which it cannot syndicate because of poor credit markets. Shares of JP Morgan (JPM) and Bank of America (BAC) have recovered a good deal from their sell-offs. Citi has not. Wall St. is worried that the level of risk in owning the shares is just too great. A close look at the bank shows that it has some valuable businesses which could operate independent of the troubled part of the company. Citi’s wealth management operation grew 27% last quarter. This division includes Smith Barney. The firm’s international consumer revenue rose 45%. It is Citi’s securities and banking operations which are dragging the company down. With a recession and more financial company write-offs coming, Citi will have to get smaller by selling one or two of its attractive businesses. The global wealth management business had $3.5 billion in revenue in Q4 and $523 million in net income. Citi’s market cap is only $150 billion now. Its consumer units could be worth more than that on their own.

Ford (F) is trading about where it did when there were rumors that the company would go bankrupt. This car company has a market cap of $14 billion against annual sales of $173 billion. Ford lost another $2.8 billion in Q4 and is planning to cut another 13,000 jobs. It has a credit unit which made $775 million last year. Ford is already in the process of selling some small units including Jaguar and Rover. Volvo might be next. The company’s share of the US market is down to about 15%. Even with cost cuts, its product line works against a recovery. The firm’s pick-ups and SUVs have good margins, but high fuel prices have cut into sales. Ford’s new fuel-efficient cars compete directly with companies that have much stronger balance sheet like Toyota (TM) and Honda (HMC). Ford is highly unlikely to stage a unit sales recovery in North America this year. If sales fall further, cuts won’t make up the difference forever. The Ford family, which has de facto control of the company, will have to look at selling the car operations to a large Asian or European auto company. That would allow for a consolidation of production, product development, R&D, and marketing. Bottom line–billions of dollars in annual savings.

Yahoo! (YHOO) was not going to make it as a standalone, especially after Q4 earnings. There has been speculation that the company might be sold to Microsoft (MSFT) and the world’s largest software company has made a $31 a share offer. Recent analysis from Wall St. shows that about $10 billion of the company’s market cap comes from the value its stakes in Yahoo! Japan and China e-commerce company Alibaba. That leaves $27 billion at the current share price for the core portal and search business which has a revenue run rate of about $6.8 billion. Microsoft could take out 3,000 or 4,000 people and add as much as $100 million in operating income per quarter.

AMD (AMD) is the second largest provider of chips and processors for servers and PC’s. Its larger rival, Intel (INTC), has over three-quarters of the market. A price war has hurt AMD’s gross margins badly. The firm also bought graphic chip company ATI and now has over $5 billion in debt. Shares were over $40 less than two years ago and now trade at a little over $8. For AMD to hope to compete, it needs a larger owner with a wider global chip business and better balance sheet. Intel has close to $13 billion in cash and short-term investments and 20% operating income margins on nearly $40 billion in revenue. Where would AMD fit? Somewhere with chip R&D expertise, a broad line of semiconductors, and a mammoth global customer base. Look for Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) or Samsung to court AMD’s board.

Sprint (S) should never have merged with NexTel, but it is a little too late for that to be fixed now. It traded above $23 about a year ago and recently fell to close to $8. While AT&T (T) and Verizon (VZ) post enviable wireless numbers, Sprint struggles to keep current subscribers. Sprint is cutting bodies but Wall St. has no confidence that fewer people and these modest savings will turn around the company. Its issues of being an independent wireless company with angry customers are simply too great. SK Telecom, a big Korean operator, has already come to Sprint with a proposed investment. The board did not listen. But, the company’s shares were not at $10 then. SK may well be back. The other potential buyer often mentioned is Comcast (CMCSA). After years of beating on the big US phone companies, Comcast is now up against their fiber-to-the-home broadband and TV products. And, it is losing customers to them. What Comcast does not have is wireless products to offer consumers and businesses as part of a "bundle" of services. At $6 or $7 Sprint could look very attractive.

Qwest (Q) is the last of the Baby Bells standing from the break-up of the old AT&T. It is the dominant phone company in 14 states. Its shares have fallen from a 52-week high of $10.45 to below $6. Qwest has two problems which it cannot solve. The first is that it has no real wireless operations. Cellular service is what is driving the market valuation of rivals AT&T (T) and Verizon (VZ). Qwest also does not have the balance sheet to upgrade all of its infrastructure to fiber like Verizon is doing. AT&T has started the fiber build-out process. There are rumors that it will get into the TV business by buying one of the satellite TV companies. Either way, Qwest does not have the balance sheet to run fiber across its service area. Qwest does have a very valuable customer and geographic base. Watch for Verizon to get in touch with Qwest’s board. The larger company could use Qwest’s customer base to push its wireless services in bundles. It could also build out fiber into Qwest’s region if the return-on-investment for the current project is good.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Micron Rumors & Reports May Be Its Only Hope (MU, TSM, STM)

If you have tracked Micron Technology (NYSE: MU) over the years you would likely have reached the conclusion that the largest US-based and US-fab DRAM manufacturer wasn’t even cyclical.  You’d maybe even accuse it of having a secular negative trend.  Micron has been in a commodity business for over a decade now, but the only difference is that wheat and corn prices go up and down.  DRAM seems to only go down, at least on a secular trending.

Shares sit above $9.00 today and the 52-week trading range is $7.82 to $15.05.  Its multi-year trading range is not that much different.  Today there are rumors abound that Micron may sell off its Image Processor Unit to Samsung Electronics.  This rumor is based upon a report noting that Samsung was considering an acquisition of Micron’s image sensor operations. 

If Micron will pick up the phone, it should have an easy audience besides just Samsung.  Foreign chip giants like STMicroelectronics (NYSE: STM/ADR) and Taiwan Semi (NYSE: TSM/ADR) immediately come to mind and with the US Dollar trading like a Peso they’d be getting an on-sale asset (or assets) at an extra discount. 

Micron has been shown a path here that Wall Street may reward.  Even if Micron is not selling the unit to Samsung, the company should consider selling it and/or other units to someone.  Micron could also at least consider splitting itself up after that has also been discussed by many in the past.  This has been under review for the 247WallSt.com Special Situation Investing Newsletter in the past, and perhaps another review may be worth a closer look for our subscribers.

Some troubled businesses may be in-play or out of favor, but when they are in trouble like Micron they should pay more attention to how Wall Street reacts when the stocks moves on certain rumors or reports.  Wall Street doesn’t like rewarding losers, particularly not during a credit crunch.  The good news is that with a $7 Billion market cap it trades actually very close to its stated book value.  Since this is not expected to get back to annual profitability until Fiscal 2009 it is the right time to consider its value options.

At the current prices, Micron even qualifies for our "10 Stocks Under $10" Newsletter.

Jon C. Ogg
December 5, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Pre-Market Analyst Calls (October 26, 2007)

ABK cut to Mkt Perform at FBR.
ADVNA cut to Mkt Perform at FBR.
BBY started as Mkt Perform at Wachovia.
BEN cut to Mkt PErform at FBR.
BG cut to Neutral at HSBC.
CC started as Mkt Perform at Wachovia.
CPS cut to Equal Weight at Lehman.
ELX cut to Mkt Perform at FBR.
ETEL cut to Mkt Perform at JMP Securities.
EXBD raised to Buy at Deutsche Bank.
FADV cut to Equal Weight at Lehman.
FVE raised to Buy at Jefferies.
GIS raised to Buy at Deutsche Bank.
HES raised to Buy at B of A.
KND raised to Buy at Jefferies.
LVLT cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
LTM cut to Mkt Perform at Piper Jaffray.
MBI cut to Mkt Perform at FBR.
NILE raised to Hold at Citigroup.
ORCC cut to Sector Perform at CIBC.
PENN cut to Hold at Jefferies.
POWI cut to Hold at Citigroup.
RRI started as outperform at Wachovia.
SE started as Mkt Perform at Wachovia.
STD raised to Buy at Citigroup.
STLD cut to Neutral at UBS.
TRID too 3 downgrades: Jefferies, Deutsche Bank, and Oppenheimer.
TSM raised to Overweight at HSBC.
USU started as Mkt Perform at Wachovia.
WCG raised to Neutral at Goldman Sachs.

Jon C. Ogg
October 26, 2007

Pre-Market Analyst Calls (August 20, 2007)

AGP raised to Buy at Jefferies.
CCO raised to Outperform at Bear Stearns.
DELL started as Buy at WRHambrecht.
DLTR raised to Outperform at Wachovia.
DRI raised to Outperform at CIBC.
EQT started as BUy at Deutsche Bank.
FLS raised to Outperform at RBC.
FSLR raised to BUy at Deutsche Bank.
JBHT raised to Outperform at wachovia.
LAMR raised to Outperform at Bear Stearns.
MHP cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
MPEL raised to Buy at Citigroup.
OATS cut to Peer PErform at Bear Stearns.
RIMM target raised to $295 at Goldman Sachs.
TSM raised to Buy at UBS.
WST started as Neutral at UBS.

Jon C. Ogg
August 20, 2007

Short Sellers Taking Heat in Semiconductor Stocks July 2007

Stock Tickers: AMD, SMH, TXN, TER, ADI, LSI, MU, CY, NSM, TSM, STM, IFX

Tech stocks kept rising from June to July, yet the short sellers were beligerent.  They must have loads of money, because on individual short selling in stocks they lost more and more money if this trend remained static as it looks.  Short selling increased overall on the NYSE as seen on the NYSE notice, but this went above and beyond.  Here was a sector breakdown for the May to June period for 2007 if you want to compare. Here are the chip stock results for the major chip names listed on NYSE:

Advanced Micro (AMD) grew from 73.78M in June to 81.25M in July; Texas Instruments (TXN) grew from 30.6M in June to 33.3M in July; LSI Logic (LSI) grew from 43.77M in June to 49.75M in July; Micron (MU) grew from 50.37M in June to 59.99M in July, National Semi (NSM) went from high to higher after growing from 52.93M in June to 59.3M in July; Cypress Semi (CY) saw its 15.49M in June grow to 17.52M in July, Analog Devices (ADI) saw its 7.77M in June grow to 9.05M in July; Taiwan Semi (TSM) saw its 13.73M in June grow to 14.05M in July.

There were a few standouts as far as the actual drop in the short interest.  The most interesting drop out there came in the Semiconductor HOLDRs (SMH) as the short interest fell from 35.2M in June down to 25.6M in July, so go figure.  Teradyne (TER) fell from 14.2M in June to 13.05M in July; STMicro (STM) saw its short interest drop from 3.7M in June down to 2.89M in July;

Jon C. Ogg
July 20, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers. 

Cramer’s EU Picks: Philips Electronics (PHG, TSM)

On tonight’s MAD MONEY on CNBC, Jim Cramer said his new weekly feature will be to add Eurpoean stock picks into his portfolio.  The markets in Europe are hot despite higher taxes and rising interest rates.  Cramer said the easy play is the European ETF’s, but then he took his stance that ETF’s are just another product scam to him.  He’d rather focus on best of breed names.

The Netherlands has Philips Electronics (NYSE:PHG), and that is one of Cramer’s top picks for the series.  The company was a dead money stock a few years ago without much going on, but now they have pared back operating picks.  He thinks the company is worth 20% more than it is listed as right now.  It has four segments and the non-core operations and investments/stakes that could be worth yet another $10.00.  One such holding is Taiwan Semi (NYSE-TSM). 

This call is hard to argue against, even if you took the ‘anti-Cramer stance’ no matter what.  As a value stock, you could even make the argument that this one could have been in one of his Top Value Picks for 2007 (even though it wasn’t). The company still has Billion’s it owns in stakes of public companies.  It has been able to keep winning medical equipment business and its green business initiatives have been getting good press.  It also has been trying to focus on more and more core-operations so it can more easily derive value.  It has even been able to hedge its currency risk with business in the US and the weak US Dollar.  Lastly, this large cap is fairly liquid and somewhat widely held for an ADR.  Shares did trade down almost 2% today after earnings were released, so barring any major downgrades tomorrow the specific event risk has largely been taken out of the stock.

Jon C. Ogg
July 16, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

NYSE June 2007 Short Interest: Semiconductor Stocks (NSM, SMH, AMD, MU, TXN)

Stock Tickers: AMD, TXN, LSI, MU, NSM, CY, IFX, ADI, STM, TSM, SMH

The Semiconductor HOLDRs Trust (SMH) pretty much says it all, as the SMH short interest rose again in June as the ETF hit a new 52-week high.  Short interest rose from May’s 33.25 million shares up to 35.2 million shares in June; and that is after a rise from 23.76 million shares in April up to a 33.252 million shares in May.  Here are the following changes with the increases in short interest first (from May to June, 2007):

RISING SHORT INTEREST NAMES
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) saw its short interest rise from 73.3 million shares to 73.79 million shares (14.1% of the float). Micron Technology (MU) saw its short interest rise quite a bit from 36.47 million shares up to 50.375 million shares (7.1% of the float).  National Semiconductor (NSM) saw its short interest skyrocket from 9.813 million shares to an unbelievable 52.9 million shares (broker hybrid security is probably cause).  This should be confirmed because that is almost hard to believe as it would be 17% of the float, but that is at multiple sources.  Cypress Semiconductor (CY) saw its short interest rise from 13.89 million shares to 15.495 million.  Infineon (IFX) saw its short interest rise from 2.688 million shares to 3.89 million. Analog Devices (ADI) saw its short interest rise from 6.127 million shares to 7.77 million shares.  Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) saw its short interest rise from 11.33 million shares to 13.73 million shares.

A FEW FALLING SHORT INTEREST NAMES
LSI Corp. (LSI) saw its short interest drop from 44.55 million shares to 43.77 million shares.  STMicroelectronics (STM) saw its short interest fall again from 5.946 million shares to 3.7 million.  Texas Instruments (TXN) saw its short interest drop from 32.41 million shares to 30.6 million.

Jon C. Ogg
June 22, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

DRAM Prices Rise, Partly on Anti-Smuggling Fight in China (MU, TSM, STX, WDC)

Stock Tickers: MU, TSM, STX, WDC

DRAM chip prices have almost always had a trend…Lower prices.  That isn’t always the case but over the long-term that has been the case.  Earlier this month we noted some calls for higher DRAM chip prices later in the year, and it looks like ‘later’ was sooner rather than later.   Interestingly enough, a report out of DRAMeXchange is saying that smuggle-fighting in southern China has forced some channel distributors in Shenzen to pre-stock inventories and that has driven up prices.  Apparently China is willing to fight smuggling if it is coming into their country because it gets to impose a 17% VAT on imported goods.  It appears the recent crackdown efforts have forced distributors to buy legitimately on the spot market because of increased penalties.

DRAMeXchange has also said that a prolonged production cycle when transitioning to 70 nanameter production has also boosted chip prices.  Taiwan saw chip production cuts in Taiwan that lowered supply, although that is expected to smoothen in July and August.

Here is a quote for ahead: Projecting DRAM contract price in 2HJun, DRAMeXchange sees room for growth along with obvious demand pick-up. Contract price for DDR2 667MHz 512MB should stay in the range of US$15-16, similar to that of 1HJun’s. In light of the upcoming PC seasonality in 2H07, some PC OEMs who ink long-term contracts with chipmakers, also helped holding prices firm. If the DRAM spot prices sustain its upward trend throughout June, we anticipate that DRAM contract price to see persistent upward trend in July as well.

Hard disk drive makers are indeed getting some competition from solid-state drives.  Higher-end notebook PC’s are hinting that SSD is indeed coming into production because of power saving efficiency, strong shock resistance and faster boot-up time.  It’s too soon to write of HDD makers like Seagate (STX-NYSE) and Western Digital (WDC-NYSE) because these high-end SSD notebooks can easily be more than double the cost of standard HDD notebooks.  Some outside reports I have seen do not out SSD will make a large dent until 2009 and beyond.

Share of US-chip leader Micron Tech (MU-NYSE) are up more than 3% today and the even larger chip player Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM-NYSE) is seeing shares up 1% on the day.

Jon C. Ogg
June 20, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

May Short Interest Rose in Chip Stocks (AMD, TXN, LSI, MU, NSM, CY, IFX, ADI, STM, TSM, SMH)

Stock Tickers: AMD, TXN, LSI, MU, NSM, CY, IFX, ADI, STM, TSM, SMH

The Semiconductor HOLDRs Trust (SMH) pretty much says it all, although many of the components in that are NASDAQ listed instead of NYSE.  SMH short interest rose from 23.76 million shares in April up to a 33.252 million shares in May.  Here are the following changes with the increases in short interest first (from April to May, 2007):

Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) saw its short interest rise from 45.2 million shares to 73.3 million shares.

Texas Instruments (TXN) saw its short interest rise from 30.76 million shares to 32.41 million shares.

LSI Corp. (LSI) saw its short interest rise from 38.36 million shares to 44.55 million shares.

Micron Technology (MU) saw its short interest rise from 33.14 million shares to 36.47 million shares.

National Semiconductor (NSM) saw its short interest rise from 8.43 million shares to 9.813 million shares.

Cypress Semiconductor (CY) saw its short interest rise from 13.02 million shares to 13.89 million shares.

Infineon (IFX) saw its short interest drop from 3.055 million shares to 2.688 million shares.

Analog Devices (ADI) saw its short interest fall from 6.9 million shares down to 6.127 million shares.

STMicroelectronics (STM) saw its short interest fall from 7.3 million shares to 5.946 million shares.

Taiwan SemiConductor (TSM) saw its short interest drop from 11.75 million shares fell to 11.33 million shares.

Jon C. Ogg
May 22, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.