UMS Holdings

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(06-12-2013, 11:52 PM)mulyc Wrote: this is one stock to hold for the long term.

vested.

i think you need to temper your expectations here. there are a few things that could turn out very bad for a business that solely depends on one customer and have shown in the past that they are not able to diversify away to other customers successfully.

often its the fat tail risk that is the most harmful.
Dividend Investing and More @ InvestmentMoats.com
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I would not be that worry for the next 3 years as the contract with Applied Materials still in force, but I really hope that UMS can go beyond its main customer and try to venture into new markets and new customers. And I don't rule out the possibility of exit offer from AMAT, who knows...

Vested
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It may not be easy to diversify due to expertise and competition among the top equipment producers. Some of them have the full chain within their company. They will not need UMS services.

If UMS intend to divest to other customers, they may need to start a totally new line of products. That will likely add more to their R&D cost, and weakens the company. And, as seen in many companies, it may not work out well. The value will be corroded.

And yes, the best possibility is AMAT taking over UMS. Afterall, their factories are just side-by-side? Just walk over and offer a price!
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A Deeper Look at the Applied Materials-Tokyo Electron Merger
Fri, Dec 13, 2013
By Andy Ng

Applied Materials (AMAT) and major Japanese chip equipment maker Tokyo Electron are planning to merge in an all-stock deal that is expected to close in the middle or second half of 2014 and will create a combined company valued at roughly $29 billion. We view the deal favorably, as it should affirm Applied's position as a wide-moat firm in chip equipment. Although the transaction will involve two of the three largest firms in the semiconductor equipment industry, both of which compete with each other in some segments, we view the deal as complementary, given that Applied's strengths tend to be TEL's weaknesses and vice versa. After the merger, Applied-TEL will have a significant presence across many key market segments, which we believe should bolster the combined company's competitive position. In addition, the merger will better position Applied-TEL from a technological standpoint, as the two firms can pool their technical expertise across various process steps involved in chip fabrication, thereby allowing the combined company to better develop next-generation manufacturing tools to help chipmakers scale down Moore's law.

A Merger of Two Majors
Applied Materials and TEL are two of the three largest chip equipment firms in the world. (ASM Lithography (ASML) is the other.) Both firms have broad product portfolios that span a number of key segments in the front-end wafer fab equipment portion of the chip equipment market. Front-end equipment is used to fabricate the circuitries on semiconductor wafers, while back-end tools are used in testing and separating the wafer into individual dies, which are then assembled and packaged into final chips. The front-end wafer fab equipment portion is vastly larger than the back end, with total revenue in 2012 of $32 billion versus $6 billion, according to technology research firm Gartner. Applied and TEL have no presence in the back end.

When looking at the total semiconductor equipment industry, including both the front and back ends, Applied had 14% share in 2012, while TEL had 11%, according to Gartner. After the merger, Applied-TEL will own roughly one fourth of the chip equipment market, making it the runaway number-one player.

Within the front and back ends there are numerous segments, and most companies typically specialize in only one or a few market segments or subsegments. Applied and TEL are exceptions in that they are diversified across many market segments and subsegments (all in the front end), which has allowed each firm to garner double-digit share in the industry. But even then, there are areas, such as photolithography, where Applied and TEL have no presence at all.

Merger Will Expand and Deepen Applied-TEL's Presence Across Segments
We expect Applied to maintain its wide economic moat after merging with TEL. The combination of the firms will bolster the new company's overall competitive position and enhance its status as the nearest thing to a one-stop shop for front-end equipment for chipmakers. Although there appears to be some market segment overlap on the surface because of the firms' broad product portfolios, when digging deeper into the specific segments, investors will discover that Applied tends to be stronger in areas where TEL is weaker or has no presence, and vice versa. As a result, Applied-TEL will have not only a more robust and comprehensive product line, but also greater technical expertise across a larger number of the process steps involved in semiconductor manufacturing. Together, Applied-TEL will have almost one third of the overall front-end wafer fab equipment market.

Of the 12 major segments in the front-end chip equipment market, Applied-TEL will have a presence in 10, with the exception of photolithography, a $6.5 billion segment dominated by ASM Lithography, and strip, which is a relatively small market. Applied-TEL will have market shares of 40% or greater in six of the key segments: track, deposition, etch, chemical mechanical planarization, RTP/oxidation/diffusion, and ion implant. Collectively, these six segments have a market size of $14 billion. Put another way, Applied-TEL will be leader or near leader in six market segments that total $14 billion in size, which is remarkable considering that the entire front-end wafer fab equipment market is worth $32 billion. Of these six segments, we view the $6.0 billion deposition and $3.9 billion etch segments as having the most strategic importance to Applied-TEL because of their relatively large sizes, the two firms' competitive positions in the subsegments in deposition and etch, and next-generation 3-D chip technologies that will create significant opportunities for deposition and etch tool vendors.

Applied-TEL Will Be Better Positioned in Key Etch and Deposition Segments
In the etch market segment, where Applied-TEL would have about 40% combined share, Lam Research (LRCX) has steadily captured share from Applied and TEL over the past decade and had 46% share in 2012, according to Gartner. Applied and TEL remain the second- and third-ranked players, respectively. It should be noted that the etch segment is primarily made up of silicon wafer etch tools, with other etch tools accounting for only a minuscule portion of the market.

In the subsegments of silicon wafer etch, Lam holds the number-one position in silicon etch and metal etch, while TEL is the leader in dielectric etch. While Applied is clearly a laggard, it still holds a somewhat sizable presence in metal etch (where TEL has no presence at all) and silicon etch, though Applied's dielectric etch business now consists mostly of legacy products. By teaming up, Applied and TEL will immediately close the gap with Lam in terms of total etch market share and will have a number-one or -two position in the three major etch subsegments, providing Applied-TEL with a comprehensive etch product portfolio. More important, Applied and TEL believe they will have an opportunity to combine their technical expertise in each of the etch subsegments to strengthen research and development in the area and to be better positioned scalewise to compete with Lam.

In deposition, Applied is the top player, with 47% share in 2012, while TEL's share was 12%, according to Gartner. The other key player is Lam, which merged with major deposition company Novellus in June 2012 to gain a substantial presence in the segment.

The deposition market can be broken into a number of subsegments, with chemical vapor deposition, epitaxy, sputtering, spin-on deposition, and electrochemical deposition being the most relevant for our analysis of Applied and TEL. These are the tools used for fabricating mainstream semiconductor devices (integrated circuits that provide functionality for electronics applications) and account for the bulk of the revenue--$5.5 billion in 2012--of the total deposition segment. The other subsegments, metalorganic CVD and other deposition, had total sales of only $500 million in 2012 and are more niche areas consisting of equipment used to manufacture nontraditional devices (such as light-emitting diodes) that aren't typically viewed as part of the mainstream semiconductor industry. Although Applied has significantly more deposition market share than TEL, it has opportunities to fill out its product portfolio and strengthen its competitive position with the merger.

Aside from being relatively large market segments, etch and deposition are noteworthy, in our opinion, because they will be areas of significant growth in the semiconductor equipment industry over the next several years, driven by the emergence of 3-D semiconductor technologies to extend Moore's law. The two areas in which 3-D technologies are poised to appear are 3-D NAND flash memory and FinFET, or tri-gate, transistors.

The extension to the third dimension in NAND and FinFET transistors makes it strategically important for Applied and TEL to focus on etch and deposition. These 3-D chip technologies will require significantly more deposition and etch process steps in order to form the three-dimensional structures. Further, the technological complexities involved in various deposition and etch processes will increase substantially because of the enhanced precision that will be required. Coupled with the new materials that will be introduced to enable the 3-D technologies, which will add even further complexity to etch and deposition steps, we expect the deposition and etch segments to outperform the overall semiconductor equipment market in the coming years.

Merger Makes Sense From Customer Consolidation and Tech Perspectives
Historically, TEL had a strong competitive position with Japanese chipmakers, while Applied had more of a global presence (excluding Japan). Nonetheless, the decline over the years in the number of semiconductor firms that can afford to have their own chip-fabrication plants has reduced the customer base for the industry. In 2012, three chipmakers--Intel, Samsung, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, accounted for just over 50% of total capital spending in the semiconductor industry, while eight chipmakers made up half of total capital expenditures in 2005, according to Gartner.

This customer consolidation has resulted in some large mergers and acquisitions in recent years, such as Applied's acquisition of leading ion implant tool supplier Varian Semiconductor in 2011 and Lam Research's merger with Novellus in 2012. Even though the Applied and TEL merger is sizable, it can also be viewed as another chip equipment deal to create synergies in response to a shrinking customer base.

The Applied-TEL merger also makes sense strategically from a technological perspective. As semiconductor-manufacturing technologies continue to advance, the complexities involved with chip fabrication have been rising significantly. By pooling R&D and being able to deepen technical expertise in various segments across the front-end wafer fab equipment market, Applied-TEL will be better positioned to tackle the increasing technological challenges involved in developing cutting-edge manufacturing tools necessary to support chipmakers as they advance their chip-fabrication technologies.

Such comprehensive understanding of a broader number of process steps involved in semiconductor fabrication is becoming increasingly important, because of the rising interaction among the various steps as chipmakers continue to scale down Moore's law--a key reason for the escalating technical complexities. Therefore, having a bigger toolkit--in terms of technical know-how and equipment for various process steps--should create significant technology synergies for Applied-TEL down the road.

Overall, we believe leading customers will welcome the Applied-TEL deal, as the relationship between a chipmaker and an equipment supplier is highly collaborative. It has become increasingly critical for chipmakers to have a viable, healthy, and profitable supplier base that can continue to develop and provide ever more advanced manufacturing equipment that will enable them to continue pushing the envelope on semiconductor fabrication technologies. The merger will satisfy these conditions, as it will allow Applied-TEL to respond to its consolidating customer base and better develop next-generation chip equipment solutions to support customers in moving down Moore's law. The enhanced technological capabilities of Applied-TEL will be paramount to customers, as it is the technology advances associated with Moore's law that enable faster, more power-efficient, and cheaper chips over time, which in turn expands the number of applications and market size for semiconductors and allows the overall industry to grow.

Applied Is Fairly Valued Now, but Keep an Eye on Cycles for Opportunities
Given that stocks of chip equipment companies tend to fluctuate with industry cycles, we would wait for a cyclical slowdown in business conditions before looking to acquire shares of Applied. Although the semiconductor equipment market has been affected by a cyclical slowdown in calendar 2013, there are signs that chip equipment demand is improving, particularly as memory chipmakers increase capital spending in response to strong conditions in the memory market. Chip equipment stock prices have responded accordingly and are pricing in an upturn in semiconductor equipment industry conditions for calendar 2014. If these expectations aren't met or if the chip equipment industry enters an unexpected cyclical slowdown in the coming quarters, another buying opportunity could arise for Applied's shares. Despite our favorable view of the Applied-TEL merger, we urge investors to be patient for the time being and to wait for a better buying opportunity

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/deeper-loo...body&app=n
Research, research and research - Please do your own due diligence (DYODD) before you invest - Any reliance on my analysis is SOLELY at your own risk.
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(12-04-2013, 07:20 PM)a74henry Wrote: Singapore has to make it more attractive for semicon giants to set up their foundries and R&D here.

EDB got to work harder. Perhaps, give incentives to develop the whole cluster and supporting industries like what the Govt announced for the shipping industry.

Semicon is a sunset industry in Singapore. Our labour cost is too high vs our counterparts in Taiwan and China. Temasek selling Chartered to GLOBALFOUNDRIES already tell us that the government is no longer as supportive on the industry. Our technical expertise pales in comparison vs them. There are no compelling reasons for MNCs to expend or set up their operations in Singapore.
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(14-12-2013, 12:04 PM)Boon Wrote: A Deeper Look at the Applied Materials-Tokyo Electron Merger
Fri, Dec 13, 2013
By Andy Ng

Applied Materials (AMAT) and major Japanese chip equipment maker Tokyo Electron are planning to merge in an all-stock deal that is expected to close in the middle or second half of 2014 and will create a combined company valued at roughly $29 billion. We view the deal favorably, as it should affirm Applied's position as a wide-moat firm in chip equipment. Although the transaction will involve two of the three largest firms in the semiconductor equipment industry, both of which compete with each other in some segments, we view the deal as complementary, given that Applied's strengths tend to be TEL's weaknesses and vice versa. After the merger, Applied-TEL will have a significant presence across many key market segments, which we believe should bolster the combined company's competitive position. In addition, the merger will better position Applied-TEL from a technological standpoint, as the two firms can pool their technical expertise across various process steps involved in chip fabrication, thereby allowing the combined company to better develop next-generation manufacturing tools to help chipmakers scale down Moore's law.

A Merger of Two Majors
Applied Materials and TEL are two of the three largest chip equipment firms in the world. (ASM Lithography (ASML) is the other.) Both firms have broad product portfolios that span a number of key segments in the front-end wafer fab equipment portion of the chip equipment market. Front-end equipment is used to fabricate the circuitries on semiconductor wafers, while back-end tools are used in testing and separating the wafer into individual dies, which are then assembled and packaged into final chips. The front-end wafer fab equipment portion is vastly larger than the back end, with total revenue in 2012 of $32 billion versus $6 billion, according to technology research firm Gartner. Applied and TEL have no presence in the back end.

When looking at the total semiconductor equipment industry, including both the front and back ends, Applied had 14% share in 2012, while TEL had 11%, according to Gartner. After the merger, Applied-TEL will own roughly one fourth of the chip equipment market, making it the runaway number-one player.

Within the front and back ends there are numerous segments, and most companies typically specialize in only one or a few market segments or subsegments. Applied and TEL are exceptions in that they are diversified across many market segments and subsegments (all in the front end), which has allowed each firm to garner double-digit share in the industry. But even then, there are areas, such as photolithography, where Applied and TEL have no presence at all.

Merger Will Expand and Deepen Applied-TEL's Presence Across Segments
We expect Applied to maintain its wide economic moat after merging with TEL. The combination of the firms will bolster the new company's overall competitive position and enhance its status as the nearest thing to a one-stop shop for front-end equipment for chipmakers. Although there appears to be some market segment overlap on the surface because of the firms' broad product portfolios, when digging deeper into the specific segments, investors will discover that Applied tends to be stronger in areas where TEL is weaker or has no presence, and vice versa. As a result, Applied-TEL will have not only a more robust and comprehensive product line, but also greater technical expertise across a larger number of the process steps involved in semiconductor manufacturing. Together, Applied-TEL will have almost one third of the overall front-end wafer fab equipment market.

Of the 12 major segments in the front-end chip equipment market, Applied-TEL will have a presence in 10, with the exception of photolithography, a $6.5 billion segment dominated by ASM Lithography, and strip, which is a relatively small market. Applied-TEL will have market shares of 40% or greater in six of the key segments: track, deposition, etch, chemical mechanical planarization, RTP/oxidation/diffusion, and ion implant. Collectively, these six segments have a market size of $14 billion. Put another way, Applied-TEL will be leader or near leader in six market segments that total $14 billion in size, which is remarkable considering that the entire front-end wafer fab equipment market is worth $32 billion. Of these six segments, we view the $6.0 billion deposition and $3.9 billion etch segments as having the most strategic importance to Applied-TEL because of their relatively large sizes, the two firms' competitive positions in the subsegments in deposition and etch, and next-generation 3-D chip technologies that will create significant opportunities for deposition and etch tool vendors.

Applied-TEL Will Be Better Positioned in Key Etch and Deposition Segments
In the etch market segment, where Applied-TEL would have about 40% combined share, Lam Research (LRCX) has steadily captured share from Applied and TEL over the past decade and had 46% share in 2012, according to Gartner. Applied and TEL remain the second- and third-ranked players, respectively. It should be noted that the etch segment is primarily made up of silicon wafer etch tools, with other etch tools accounting for only a minuscule portion of the market.

In the subsegments of silicon wafer etch, Lam holds the number-one position in silicon etch and metal etch, while TEL is the leader in dielectric etch. While Applied is clearly a laggard, it still holds a somewhat sizable presence in metal etch (where TEL has no presence at all) and silicon etch, though Applied's dielectric etch business now consists mostly of legacy products. By teaming up, Applied and TEL will immediately close the gap with Lam in terms of total etch market share and will have a number-one or -two position in the three major etch subsegments, providing Applied-TEL with a comprehensive etch product portfolio. More important, Applied and TEL believe they will have an opportunity to combine their technical expertise in each of the etch subsegments to strengthen research and development in the area and to be better positioned scalewise to compete with Lam.

In deposition, Applied is the top player, with 47% share in 2012, while TEL's share was 12%, according to Gartner. The other key player is Lam, which merged with major deposition company Novellus in June 2012 to gain a substantial presence in the segment.

The deposition market can be broken into a number of subsegments, with chemical vapor deposition, epitaxy, sputtering, spin-on deposition, and electrochemical deposition being the most relevant for our analysis of Applied and TEL. These are the tools used for fabricating mainstream semiconductor devices (integrated circuits that provide functionality for electronics applications) and account for the bulk of the revenue--$5.5 billion in 2012--of the total deposition segment. The other subsegments, metalorganic CVD and other deposition, had total sales of only $500 million in 2012 and are more niche areas consisting of equipment used to manufacture nontraditional devices (such as light-emitting diodes) that aren't typically viewed as part of the mainstream semiconductor industry. Although Applied has significantly more deposition market share than TEL, it has opportunities to fill out its product portfolio and strengthen its competitive position with the merger.

Aside from being relatively large market segments, etch and deposition are noteworthy, in our opinion, because they will be areas of significant growth in the semiconductor equipment industry over the next several years, driven by the emergence of 3-D semiconductor technologies to extend Moore's law. The two areas in which 3-D technologies are poised to appear are 3-D NAND flash memory and FinFET, or tri-gate, transistors.

The extension to the third dimension in NAND and FinFET transistors makes it strategically important for Applied and TEL to focus on etch and deposition. These 3-D chip technologies will require significantly more deposition and etch process steps in order to form the three-dimensional structures. Further, the technological complexities involved in various deposition and etch processes will increase substantially because of the enhanced precision that will be required. Coupled with the new materials that will be introduced to enable the 3-D technologies, which will add even further complexity to etch and deposition steps, we expect the deposition and etch segments to outperform the overall semiconductor equipment market in the coming years.

Merger Makes Sense From Customer Consolidation and Tech Perspectives
Historically, TEL had a strong competitive position with Japanese chipmakers, while Applied had more of a global presence (excluding Japan). Nonetheless, the decline over the years in the number of semiconductor firms that can afford to have their own chip-fabrication plants has reduced the customer base for the industry. In 2012, three chipmakers--Intel, Samsung, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, accounted for just over 50% of total capital spending in the semiconductor industry, while eight chipmakers made up half of total capital expenditures in 2005, according to Gartner.

This customer consolidation has resulted in some large mergers and acquisitions in recent years, such as Applied's acquisition of leading ion implant tool supplier Varian Semiconductor in 2011 and Lam Research's merger with Novellus in 2012. Even though the Applied and TEL merger is sizable, it can also be viewed as another chip equipment deal to create synergies in response to a shrinking customer base.

The Applied-TEL merger also makes sense strategically from a technological perspective. As semiconductor-manufacturing technologies continue to advance, the complexities involved with chip fabrication have been rising significantly. By pooling R&D and being able to deepen technical expertise in various segments across the front-end wafer fab equipment market, Applied-TEL will be better positioned to tackle the increasing technological challenges involved in developing cutting-edge manufacturing tools necessary to support chipmakers as they advance their chip-fabrication technologies.

Such comprehensive understanding of a broader number of process steps involved in semiconductor fabrication is becoming increasingly important, because of the rising interaction among the various steps as chipmakers continue to scale down Moore's law--a key reason for the escalating technical complexities. Therefore, having a bigger toolkit--in terms of technical know-how and equipment for various process steps--should create significant technology synergies for Applied-TEL down the road.

Overall, we believe leading customers will welcome the Applied-TEL deal, as the relationship between a chipmaker and an equipment supplier is highly collaborative. It has become increasingly critical for chipmakers to have a viable, healthy, and profitable supplier base that can continue to develop and provide ever more advanced manufacturing equipment that will enable them to continue pushing the envelope on semiconductor fabrication technologies. The merger will satisfy these conditions, as it will allow Applied-TEL to respond to its consolidating customer base and better develop next-generation chip equipment solutions to support customers in moving down Moore's law. The enhanced technological capabilities of Applied-TEL will be paramount to customers, as it is the technology advances associated with Moore's law that enable faster, more power-efficient, and cheaper chips over time, which in turn expands the number of applications and market size for semiconductors and allows the overall industry to grow.

Applied Is Fairly Valued Now, but Keep an Eye on Cycles for Opportunities
Given that stocks of chip equipment companies tend to fluctuate with industry cycles, we would wait for a cyclical slowdown in business conditions before looking to acquire shares of Applied. Although the semiconductor equipment market has been affected by a cyclical slowdown in calendar 2013, there are signs that chip equipment demand is improving, particularly as memory chipmakers increase capital spending in response to strong conditions in the memory market. Chip equipment stock prices have responded accordingly and are pricing in an upturn in semiconductor equipment industry conditions for calendar 2014. If these expectations aren't met or if the chip equipment industry enters an unexpected cyclical slowdown in the coming quarters, another buying opportunity could arise for Applied's shares. Despite our favorable view of the Applied-TEL merger, we urge investors to be patient for the time being and to wait for a better buying opportunity

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/deeper-loo...body&app=n

The deal might not go through due to anti-trust issues. These 2 guys are the biggest players in the equipment supplier market.
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(10-12-2013, 09:10 AM)NTL Wrote: It may not be easy to diversify due to expertise and competition among the top equipment producers. Some of them have the full chain within their company. They will not need UMS services.

If UMS intend to divest to other customers, they may need to start a totally new line of products. That will likely add more to their R&D cost, and weakens the company. And, as seen in many companies, it may not work out well. The value will be corroded.

And yes, the best possibility is AMAT taking over UMS. Afterall, their factories are just side-by-side? Just walk over and offer a price!

In my 10 over years of experience in the semicon industry, I have seen companies like AMAT outsourcing more and more of their manufacturing operations to subcons and vendors so that they can be more nimble and flexible through the cyclical semicon industry. There is very low possibility for AMAT to acquire UMS.
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(16-12-2013, 09:14 PM)Tiggerbee Wrote:
(10-12-2013, 09:10 AM)NTL Wrote: It may not be easy to diversify due to expertise and competition among the top equipment producers. Some of them have the full chain within their company. They will not need UMS services.

If UMS intend to divest to other customers, they may need to start a totally new line of products. That will likely add more to their R&D cost, and weakens the company. And, as seen in many companies, it may not work out well. The value will be corroded.

And yes, the best possibility is AMAT taking over UMS. Afterall, their factories are just side-by-side? Just walk over and offer a price!

In my 10 over years of experience in the semicon industry, I have seen companies like AMAT outsourcing more and more of their manufacturing operations to subcons and vendors so that they can be more nimble and flexible through the cyclical semicon industry. There is very low possibility for AMAT to acquire UMS.

Agree with TiggerBee. Granted, while AMAT do hold a 6% stake in UMS, I don't see why it will choose to take it private unless there is a risk of UMS servicing its rivals. Of course, I could be wrong. Personally, a PE fund might be more likely suitor judging by its strong cash-flow but even then, it is just speculation.

(Vested)
Disclaimer: Please feel free to correct any error in my post. I am not liable for anything. Do your own research and analysis. I do NOT give buy or sell calls and stock tips. Buy and sell at your risk. I am not a qualified financial adviser so I do not give any advice. The postings reflects my own personal thoughts which may or may not be accurate.
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(16-12-2013, 09:24 PM)Nick Wrote:
(16-12-2013, 09:14 PM)Tiggerbee Wrote:
(10-12-2013, 09:10 AM)NTL Wrote: It may not be easy to diversify due to expertise and competition among the top equipment producers. Some of them have the full chain within their company. They will not need UMS services.

If UMS intend to divest to other customers, they may need to start a totally new line of products. That will likely add more to their R&D cost, and weakens the company. And, as seen in many companies, it may not work out well. The value will be corroded.

And yes, the best possibility is AMAT taking over UMS. Afterall, their factories are just side-by-side? Just walk over and offer a price!

In my 10 over years of experience in the semicon industry, I have seen companies like AMAT outsourcing more and more of their manufacturing operations to subcons and vendors so that they can be more nimble and flexible through the cyclical semicon industry. There is very low possibility for AMAT to acquire UMS.

Agree with TiggerBee. Granted, while AMAT do hold a 6% stake in UMS, I don't see why it will choose to take it private unless there is a risk of UMS servicing its rivals. Of course, I could be wrong. Personally, a PE fund might be more likely suitor judging by its strong cash-flow but even then, it is just speculation.

(Vested)

AMAT will rather acquire its competitors than buying up its suppliers. Like in the case of the merger with TEL.
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I would expect 4Q2013 result of UMS to be better than 3Q2013 and 4Q2012 - hence, a reasonably high probability of getting a year end special dividend. This trend certainly supports the current outlook showing a rebound in equipment spending for 2014
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North American Semiconductor Equipment Industry Posts November 2013 Book-to-Bill Ratio of 1.11

SAN JOSE, Calif. — December 19, 2013 — North America-based manufacturers of semiconductor equipment posted $1.24 billion in orders worldwide in November 2013 (three-month average basis) and a book-to-bill ratio of 1.11, according to the November EMDS Book-to-Bill Report published today by SEMI. A book-to-bill of 1.11 means that $111 worth of orders were received for every $100 of product billed for the month.

The three-month average of worldwide bookings in November 2013 was $1.24 billion. The bookings figure is 10.1 percent higher than the final October 2013 level of $1.12 billion, and is 72.3 percent higher than the November 2012 order level of $718.6 million.

The three-month average of worldwide billings in November 2013 was $1.11 billion. The billings figure is 4.0 percent higher than the final October 2013 level of $1.07 billion, and is 22.4 percent higher than the November 2012 billings level of $910.1 million.

The continuing rise in equipment bookings clearly points to year-end order activity that is substantially stronger compared to one year ago,” said Denny McGuirk, president and CEO of SEMI. "This trend supports the current outlook showing a rebound in equipment spending for 2014."........................................................

http://www.semi.org/en/node/48451?id=highlights
Research, research and research - Please do your own due diligence (DYODD) before you invest - Any reliance on my analysis is SOLELY at your own risk.
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