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UMC
Group Announces Consolidation of Joint Ventures and Acceleration
of Foundry Capacity Expansion
Company
Set for Exponential Growth: Will Further Address Industry's Need
for More Capacity
SUNNYVALE,
CA and TAIPEI, TAIWAN, June 14, 1999- In an extraordinary session
today, the respective boards of the Taiwan companies in UMC Group
unanimously approved merging three joint venture companies and
one publicly traded entity into the United Microelectronics Corporation
(UMC). Today's board action is the beginning of the formal process
in which United Semiconductor Corporation (USC), United Integrated
Circuits Corporation (UICC), United Silicon Incorporated (USIC)
and UTEK Semiconductor Corporation (UTEK) [2339] will be merged
into United Microelectronics Corporation (UMC) [2303]. Bob Tsao,
Chairman of UMC Group, stated "This reorganization focuses
our Taiwan-based fabs into a single more financially efficient
and competitive organization, setting the stage for us to be the
largest, most profitable, and most technologically advanced pure-play
foundry in the world".
The corporate
status of Nippon Foundry Incorporated (NFI) [NFI 6939 JP], the
newest joint venture member of UMC Group and the first pure-play
foundry in Japan, is unchanged by the reorganization. It retains
its status as a member of UMC Group and as a publicly traded company
in Japan.
This reorganization
will enable UMC Group to accelerate capacity expansion plans forward
by approximately 12 months, maintaining a rate of 45% per year
in both 1999 and 2000, the highest rate of capacity expansion
in the foundry industry. This expansion will be funded in those
years with an average annual capital expenditure of $1.3B US,
the largest in the foundry industry. This will bring UMC Group
0.25 micron and smaller capacity to 1.2M 8-inch wafers in 2000,
raising previous capacity by 50%, in a decisive move to address
the anticipated shortage in 0.25/0.18-micron foundry supply worldwide.
Total capacity will be 2.4 M 8-inch equivalent wafers in 2000.
John Hsuan, CEO of UMC Group explained, "Analysts are forecasting
a reversal in the supply-demand balance for 0.25-micron foundry
wafers in 2000, and that supply will get progressively tighter
in 2001. We are already seeing this trend emerging in bookings
at UMC Group for the second half of 1999. With this merger, we
will better meet market trends and customer needs".
Along with
capacity expansion, this change will also accelerate the foundry
process technology rollout for 0.15 and 0.13-micron technologies;
and the Group is committed to continue to be first in foundry
production with the most advanced process technologies, as it
was for both 0.25 and 0.18-micron. The Group is currently shipping
approximately 25,000 0.25-micron 8-inch wafers/month. The top
4 graphics vendors have all committed to 0.18 tape-outs at UMC
Group, adding their commitments to those of leading FPGA, chipset,
and microprocessor vendors. In addition, 400+ Mhz microprocessors
are currently in production using 0.18-micron UMC Group technology.
Moreover,
operational efficiency gains in areas such as financial management,
administration, and technology development will also benefit sales
and customer service, enhancing UMC's responsiveness. Jim Kupec,
President UMC Group (USA) commented, "Capacity enhancement
is the first benefit that will come to customers with this merger,
however, we are also convinced that this combination will allow
us to offer even more seamless and competitive services to our
customers worldwide".
The three
affected joint ventures (USC, UICC, USIC) are privately held companies.
Their shareholders will realize a rapid path to liquidity via
this merger as they, along with the UTEK shareholders, become
shareholders of the publicly traded UMC. A substantial investment
return multiple is anticipated for all joint venture investors.
Consolidated
revenues for the Group are anticipated to remain on plan for 1999
at $1.6B USD, up from $1.1B USD in 1998, a 45% increase, by far
the biggest in the foundry industry. The financial position of
the Group is also exceptionally strong. With cash assets of $1.6B
USD, UMC Group is well positioned to execute the unprecedented
capacity expansion plans described above.
UMC has a
tradition of flexibility and quick decision-making to meet the
demands of the rapidly changing landscape of the high technology
world. The decision to abandon its position as Taiwan's leading
integrated device manufacturer to become a dedicated wafer foundry
was made in May of 1995. By September of the same year, UMC had
announced the formation of three joint venture wafer foundry companies
(USC, UICC, and USIC). UTEK was added to UMC Group in 1998, and
NFI followed several months later. The current decision to merge
the 5 Taiwan-based UMC Group foundries into one flagship company,
UMC, was carried out within a similarly condensed period. Such
rapid decision making has proven to be a significant competitive
advantage for UMC throughout its history.
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