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Deb Nystrom, REVELN's curator insight,
February 10, 2014 10:08 AM
These qualities are a good list to compare to other global company innovation lists, such as from Forbes. Money is high on the list of 12, yet other qualities bear a look, compared to Forbes rankings based on the difference between their market capitalization and a net present value of cash flows from existing businesses. ~ Deb
Deb Nystrom, REVELN's curator insight,
February 26, 2014 3:18 PM
This is a good list to compare to other global company innovation lists, such as from Forbes. Money is high on the list of 12, yet other qualities bear a look, compared to Forbes rankings based on the difference between their market capitalization and a net present value of cash flows from existing businesses. ~ D |
Yangtze YTMC and Changxin Memory Technologies represent a new disruptive force in the sector, according to Natixis analysts. The
chinese memory chip makers could add downwards price pressure on suppliers in the memory chip sector China’s memory chip makers are pushing into the lower-end of the market even as the country faces an increasingly steep uphill battle to achieve its self-sufficiency goals amid ongoing geopolitical tensions and a global semiconductor shortage. Yangtze YTMC and Changxin Memory Technologies represent a new disruptive force in the sector and are expected to increase global capacity by 29% between 2020 and 2022, economists from investment bank Natixis said on Wednesday. “Even though it is coming from a very low base, it is probable that some mainland China firms will put pressure on market leaders,” Gary Ng, Asia Pacific economist at Natixis said, adding that an expansion of low-end products from Chinese memory chip makers could add downwards price pressure on suppliers in the memory chip sector. China has flagged an ambitious yet loosely-defined goal - as part of its industrial upgrade blueprint known as Made in China 2025 - to achieve 70% self-sufficiency in semiconductor production by 2025. The self-sufficiency drive has been ramped up amid rising tensions between the US and China in the technology sector, giving domestic suppliers with inferior technologies a better chance to be considered in procurement, according to several industry experts the South China Morning Post has interviewed recently.