Was geht eigentlich bei Rambus heute ab ?? o.T.


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311 Postings, 8850 Tage martockHast Recht, Al:

 
  
    #26
23.06.00 13:39
Friday June 23, 7:29 am Eastern Time
Before the Bell - Rambus roars up on Hitachi deal
NEW YORK, June 23 (Reuters) - Shares in Rambus Inc. (NasdaqNM:RMBS - news) roared higher in pre-opening trade on Friday after the semiconductor technology company settled patent lawsuits with Japan's Hitachi Ltd. .

Rambus was up at 133 on the Instinet electronic broker system from a Thursday close of 97-1/8.

After markets closed Thursday, Rambus said Hitachi, a computer memory supplier, had agreed to a patent licensing deal, settling patent litigation between them.

 

10739 Postings, 9127 Tage Al BundyEin interessanter Artikel:

 
  
    #27
26.06.00 16:14
Monday June 26, 9:33 am Eastern Time
Forbes.com
Rambus Feeling Its Oats
By Arik Hesseldahl


It used to be such a quiet company. But in recent months Rambus has gone from being the quiet force behind the design of computer memory technology to a booming voice that has shaken the semiconductor industry to its very foundations.

It's a curious turn of events for a company that doesn't make anything itself. Mountain View, Calif.-based Rambus (Nasdaq: RMBS - news) makes its money, $8.7 million in profits on revenue of $43.3 million last year, by selling ideas for the design of computer memory technology to chip manufacturers.

Its technology is the basis for a new memory interface technology known as Direct Rambus DRAM, which speeds the ability of a computer's main processor to talk to the memory. Most computers now use a type of memory known as synchronous DRAM, or SDRAM. But as speed of processors from companies like Intel (Nasdaq: INTC - news) has climbed ever upward, the speed at which those processors can talk to the main memory has not kept up. Intel says that its next generation processor, codenamed Willamette, will work exclusively with Rambus' RDRAM technology and nothing else.

But now in what is proving to be a controversial gambit, Rambus is claiming ownership of some of the fundamental patents to not only its RDRAM technology, but also to some patents related to conventional SDRAM and to a another next-generation memory technology known as Double Data Rate DRAM, which some companies are backing as an alternative to RDRAM.

Rambus claims it is entitled to royalty payments from companies making either type of computer memory, and if its claims are borne out--and there is a good chance they will be--it will essentially become the gatekeeper to the computer memory industry, earning a royalty on all the DRAM chips shipped Cahners. In-Stat Group, a Scottsdale, Ariz. based market research firm has estimated the overall DRAM market as being worth $26.7 billion this year.

While the exact terms of each royalty and licensing agreement between Rambus and the various memory manufacturers are confidential, some reports have suggested they could be as much as 1% to 2% for each RDRAM chip sold, and Rambus has said that the royalty for DDR chips would be higher than that. The news has also sent Rambus stock soaring, as investors see huge dollar signs at the prospect of the intellectual property firm owning a little piece of every PC memory chip shipped regardless of its type. Shares in Rambus opened Friday more than $22 higher than Thursday's close just of $97.13.

So far, two memory manufacturers have surrendered to Rambus' patent demands. Japan's Hitachi last Thursday settled a series of Rambus lawsuits in the U.S. and Germany by agreeing to pay a quarterly royalty for all three types of memory. Hitachi did not admit to having infringed any Rambus patents. The settlement followed a similar deal with Toshiba, another Japanese company.

The two deals may have set a precedent that could ultimately force other memory manufacturers to start coughing up royalty payments to Rambus no matter what kind of PC memory they make.

The list of companies that could end up paying huge royalties to Rambus include Micron Technology (NYSE: MU - news), Infineon Technologies (NYSE: IFX - news), Samsung and NEC (Nasdaq: NIPNY - news), among others. No one is quite sure how the rest of the industry will respond to the new royalties, and Rambus has indicated that it may be in talks with other memory manufacturers to cut similar deals.

``The choices facing the rest of the industry are to do what Toshiba has done or to sit and wait until Rambus does to them what it has done to Hitachi,'' and get sued, says Steve Cullen, a Boston-based DRAM industry analyst with market research firm Cahners In-Stat Group.

Until recently Rambus has relied on no less than the world's biggest semiconductor company, Intel, to bend the memory industry to their collective will. A few years back, when Intel said it needed new, faster memory technology, Rambus was really the only game in town. Intel, with its dominance in PC processors, has more or less laid down the law to the entire industry that its next generations of processors--starting with the forthcoming Willamette processor, due this fall--would work only with Rambus DRAM.

While some memory makers, notably Korea's Samsung, fell right into lockstep with the Intel-Rambus party line, other memory makers have accepted Rambus, but not without a lot of complaints about having to pay royalties. Many have also pursued DDR, much to the chagrin of Rambus.

``The memory companies don't like the royalty model and don't want to be paying anyone for products they develop by themselves,'' says Dean McCarron, an analyst with Mercury Research, a Scottsdale, Ariz.-based semiconductor market research firm. ``While with Rambus memory they got some help, each one still views the products they develop as unique. These companies signed on with Rambus because of Intel's influence.''

And building memory chips using Rambus technology is expensive. The RDRAM chips themselves are larger, and therefore costlier, than the conventional SDRAM memory typically found in today's PCs, and manufacturing yields (the number of functioning chips versus defective chips) for RDRAM chips tend to be lower than for SDRAM, making the entire prospect of manufacturing Rambus memory an overall painful prospect.

But Rambus is beginning to see a serious challenge from the DDR camp. Like RDRAM, DDR technology lets a processor talk to a PC's memory faster than before but is easier and more cost efficient to manufacture. Micron and Infineon are two of DDR's biggest boosters, but they are also licensed by Rambus to make RDRAM. Intel's main rival in the PC processor business, Advanced Micro Devices (NYSE: AMD - news) is also strong in the DDR camp. Its Athlon processor will support both SDRAM and DDR, but not Rambus DRAM.

``DDR is gaining a lot of momentum,'' says Mario Morales, a semiconductor analyst with International Data Corp. in Mountain View, Calif. ``The market is beginning to shift away from Rambus because of DDR. There is no question that Rambus is feeling threatened. Their success is now questionable.''

Yet while Rambus-based PCs are available now, PC manufacturers are for the most part still working on bringing DDR to their systems. That has Rambus nervous and explains why it is pressing so hard to exact tribute from makers of all three types of memory.

``While we don't see DDR as an effective competitor to RDRAM, the intent is clear, and so we determined that the royalty on DDR should be higher than for RDRAM,'' says Rambus vice president Avo Kanadjian.

But struggles between DDR and RDRAM aside, Rambus stands to win no matter what. Should RDRAM ultimately turn out to be a technological turkey, Rambus is banking its future on collecting royalties on all types of computer memory no matter what the flavor. Rambus may end up with their hands in all of them.

``Hitachi and Toshiba are both very competent companies,'' says In-Stat's Steven Cullen. ``If those two have settled, there's a good chance that most others will decide not to fight Rambus on these patents either.''


Al grüßt  

1737 Postings, 8820 Tage Hans DampfEin weiterer Diskussionsbeitrag..

 
  
    #28
26.06.00 21:19
THE BIG STORY

                                    Rambus roller coaster
                                      Friday, Jun. 23, 2000 16:30 PDT

                                  By Jim Woods, America-iNvest.com

Shares of chip technology firm Rambus (RMBS) are on a rampage. The stock surged nearly 18% at midday Friday on news it had settled its legal dispute with Hitachi (HIT) over patent infringement and the payment of licensing fees for the use of Rambus’ technology.

The deal comes less than a week after Rambus inked a similar licensing
agreement with Toshiba (TOSBF) for the use of Rambus’ patented technologies.

The deals will add significantly to the company’s revenues, with one industry  analyst speculating that the Hitachi deal alone could generate up to $9 million in revenues for Rambus this year.

The latest round of agreements lends credence to the argument that the whole semiconductor manufacturing industry owes Rambus royalties for the use of its patented chip-processing technologies.

The big question everyone is asking on Wall Street is will these current and
possible future royalty agreements be enough to keep the company and its
stock rolling?

Difference of opinion

There is a heated debate in both analyst and investor circles as to whether
Rambus is the kind of company that will prosper in the long term, or whether it is simply a speculative stock that is the subject of day traders’ dreams.
The debate revolves around the issue of the semiconductor industry’s adoption of an industry standard for chip technology, and whether it will embrace Rambus’ version of the dynamic random access memory known as RDRAM.

Only about 2% of memory chips today use the technology. Most chip makers
prefer to use synchronous DRAM, or SDRAM technology, with one notable
exception: Intel (INTC).

                   Intel has been behind Rambus
                   since 1996 and has been
                   championing RDRAM as the
                   industry standard. But while
                   Intel is certainly an industry
                   behemoth, it isn’t as big as
                   DRAM maker Micron
                   Technology (MU), which has
                   not integrated Rambus
                   technology into its chips.

Larry Woods, an independent technology analyst, has covered the whole
Rambus issue for several years and feels that Intel has “been trying to cram
RDRAM down everyone’s throat.” Woods feels that Intel has not executed this
plan well, typified by its recent recall of close to a million defective
Rambus-compatible motherboards.

Although Woods says that the recent licensing agreements are a positive for
Rambus, he also feels that even the most optimistic revenue estimates
generated by the payment of royalties for Rambus technologies “do not support the [stock's] current wave of euphoria.”

Drew Peck, analyst with S.G. Cowen, agrees. He says that if all the chip
manufacturers agreed to pay Rambus royalties, it would generate about $280
million in revenues per year. “That still wouldn’t be enough to justify the
valuation of Rambus.” Peck says the volatility and recent price run-up in
Rambus is the result of strong investor emotion, and not the product of rational valuation analysis. Only the most intrepid speculators should consider the stock, he says. “If you ask me should I buy the stock, I wouldn’t discourage you, but it’s not something I would buy for my kid’s college fund,” Peck told America-iNvest.com.

Rambus, however, is not without its fans. The most prominent is Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter’s Mark Edelstone, who upgraded Rambus shares to a
strong buy from outperform after the Toshiba deal was announced June 16.

“We believe it is likely that several more companies will complete licensing
agreements before the end of the year, and Rambus should continue to
advance as more companies license its patents,” Edelstone said. He has a
12-18 month price target of $200 on the stock. As of this writing, Rambus
shares were trading at $116 1/16.

Whether Rambus’ royalties will continue to fuel its growth may be a matter of debate, but one thing that can’t be debated is the stock’s recent performance.

Gruß Dampf  

10739 Postings, 9127 Tage Al BundyTja, so geteilt waren die Meinungen

 
  
    #29
26.06.00 22:59
auch schon, als Rambus bei (gesplittet) 20 standen und ich bin so schlau wie vorher. Zukaufen? Verkaufen? Teilverkauf? Ich weiß es nicht und lasse sie erstmal unter strengster Beobachtung weiterlaufen.

Al grüßt  

3516 Postings, 8770 Tage baanbruchIhr Rambus-Spezies: Niemand von Euch von der Diraba verarscht bzw. geschädigt?

 
  
    #30
27.06.00 21:26
Habt Ihr alle Euer Depot bei einer richtig funktionierenden Bank?
Wenn mir doch bloss mal ein DAB-Kunde mit Rambus-Aktien sagen würde,
ob bei ihm (oder ihr) inzwischen endlich die richtige Anzahl (nach Split)
verbucht ist.
Sämtliche Diskussionen über Halten/Nachkaufen/Verkaufen sind für mich
zur Zeit recht unrealistisch, weil ich wegen DAB-Blödheit überhaupt
nicht agieren kann.

Wer kennt sich denn wenigstens mit folgendem aus?:

Gesetzt den Fall, ich habe 25 Aktien, die demnächst 1:4 gesplittet
werden sollen. Danach hätte ich also 100.
Wenn nun meine Bank ewig und 5 Tage braucht, um so einen superschwierigen
und ach so seltenen Vorgang in den Griff zu kriegen und ich auch Wochen später noch nur 25 im Depot finde  ---
   kann ich dann wenigstens diese 25 zum Verkauf stellen und bekomme
später (vielleicht noch vor Weihnachten) dann noch 75 dazu?

Bei Börse Online stand vor einigen Monaten, dass die in Ihrem Musterdepot
die Sony-Aktien nicht verkaufen konnten, weil die Berichtigungen nach dem Splitt in Japan in BRD erst so spät nachgemacht wurden. Hätten die nicht
wenigstens ihren bisherigen Bestand abgeben können (ohne die Berechtigung
auf die zusätzlichen Aktien zu verlieren)?

Tut mir leid, Euch hiermit zu langweiligen. Wenn die DAB nicht so ein
Saftladen wäre, müsste ich Euch hiermit gar nicht erst belästigen.

Also: Rambus vor! Und noch ein Tor (oder wenigstens 100 Euro-Punkte)!
 

10739 Postings, 9127 Tage Al Bundybaanbruch:

 
  
    #31
27.06.00 22:44
Versuch es doch mal mit einer telefonischen Anfrage bzw. Reklamation bei der DAB. Soweit ich weiß, kannst Du zumindest den Altbestand veräußern.
Ich habe mein Konto bei Comdirect.

Al grüßt  

3516 Postings, 8770 Tage baanbruchDanke an Kelly's Dad! Versuch es mal mit Reklamation? Habe doch schon

 
  
    #32
28.06.00 18:58
4 mal reklamiert!

Bei der Diraba ist der Kunde nun mal angeschissen, wenn die pennen
und was schief geht.
Bezgl Reklamationen ist die comdirect besser und schneller.

An alle DAB-Kunden, nochmals:

wie sieht es bei Euch mit Rambus aus ?
 

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