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"Top Talk" Chihiro Kanagawa (Asahi Evening
News/Jan.21.2001)
By TOSHIMICHI MATSUMOTO
Asahi Evening News Senior Staff Writer
Shin-Etsu Chemical Co., a chemical company
known for its profitability, leads the world in the production
of polyvinyl chloride(PVC) and silicon wafers for semiconductors.
"Maintaining steady growth and aiming for maximum profitability
are my top corporate priorities," says President Chihiro Kanagawa,
who intends to keep reinforcing his company by adding materials
and components for optic communication to its mainstay line
of products.
Q: How is business?
A: Among our flagship items, silicon wafers are doing
very well. For the current fiscal year, which ends in March,
we should be able to register a record net income , or net
profit, for the entire Shin-Etsu group. This will be our sixth
consecutive year of record-breaking net profit - no mean feat
in the face of shifting economic circumstances.
Q: Last autumn, Shin-Etsu stock placed No.1 in Japan
and fourth in the world in the so-called market capitalization
ranking of global chemical companies. How do you feel about
this?
A: As president, I am naturally very pleased. Some
Japanese chemical companies boast higher sales than we do,
but in terms of net income per share, we are rivaled by none.
Obviously, the market understands the significance of this
fact.
Q: How did you become such a high-profit operation?
A: While taking up and developing profitable new businesses,
we have been pursuing endless rationalization in every possible
area. Some people associate rationalization with cutting back
on office supplies like envelopes and copying paper, but that's
nonsense - that's just being stingy.
Real rationalization entails things such as factory automation,
energy saving, improving the production process and so on.
That is what we have been doing.
Once such steps are taken, you can expect long-term results,
and that gives you an edge over your competitors.
Q: Which of your products leads the global market?
A: We lead the world in the production of PVC and silicon
wafers which are used to make semiconductors. Our global market
share for PVC is about 12 percent, and about 25 percent for
silicon wafers.
Q: What are your current plans regarding PVC?
A: Shintech Inc., our U.S. subsidiary, is currently
building its second plant in Louisiana. Half of this new factory
commenced operation in December. When the whole plant is completed
at the end of this year, the entire Shin-Etsu group's total
PVC output will reach 3.19million tons annually, putting us
way ahead of even our closest competitor.
The market price of PVC tends to be volatile, which means
your profit is unstable. But since our plants are spread out
in Japan, the United States and Europe, we are able to determine
the most efficient production plan by comparing the market
prices in the three regions.
Q: Your silicon wafer business is also quite solid,
isn't it?
A: Yes, indeed, thanks to brisk semiconductor demand
from makers of personal computers and cellular phones. Silicon
wafers with an eight-inch diameter are the mainstream at present,
but semiconductor makers have started moving on to 12-inch
next-generation type for greater production efficiency. We
were the first in the industry to build a factory for 12-inch
wafers, and this facility is scheduled to commence full-scale
operation soon. We are already being swamped with orders.
Q: Are there any new areas of business that seem particularly
promising?
A: The optic communication area is just such an example.
We are currently No.2 in the world in the production of optical
fiber preforms. A preform is a synthetic quartz material.
A preform with a length of 1.5 meters and a diameter of 16
centimeters can be formed into a 2,000-kilometer-long optical
fiber.
Our new preform production plant is now under construction.
Together with optical isolators that are used as optical fiber
joints, materials and parts for optic communication present
a new, lucrative business area where we expect a lot of growth.
Q: What is your assessment of the overall operating
structure of the Shin-Etsu group?
A: My basic business philosophy is never to rely just
on a single business area or a single product. To illustrate
my point: Our silicon wafer output rose considerably last
year, and so did sales. But in order to minimize any financial
damage to the entire company during a low period in the so-called
global silicon cycle, we must be able to fall back on other
areas of business where we can expect stable profit.
In our case, our organic and non-organic chemicals department,
which produces PVC, is one such area.
In most cases, silicon wafers and optical fiber preforms have
different demand cycles. This means the chances of both demands
falling simultaneously are relatively small. I believe one
of the reasons we have been making stable profit is that we
have multiple stable businesses we can rely on.
Q: What is the ratio of your overseas operations to
domestic operations?
A: Of the entire Shin-Etsu group sales, 51 percent
are on foreign currency basis, mainly U.S. dollars. This serves
as a buffer against international monetary fluctuations, and
is another factor that contributes to our stable profitability.
I personally think our overseas-domestic ratio is just right.
Q: Where do you think your greatest strength lies?
A: We are essentially a materials maker. Where our
basic technology is concerned, the types of technologies we
have developed to date are unrivaled in originality.
In addition to our silicon-wafer technology, we possess an
extremely wide-ranging technology that extends over many aspects
of semiconductor production - from photoresists to photomasks,
synthetic quartz for stepper lenses and so on.
Nobody else in the industry possesses such an extensive technology.
And the sheer versatility we boast translates into tremendous
synergy.
Q: What is your foremost corporate priority?
A: State-of-the-art products are nice to make, but
there is no point if they don't bring any profit. By the same
token, there is no point expanding your business if that doesn't
improve the bottom line. I do not believe in blaming slack
business on the slack economy. In order to earn a stable profit
even when the economy is in the pits, we have constantly sought
to enhance our operating efficiency and develop new businesses.
Raising our sales and improving our profitability will always
remain our foremost priority as we continue to try to further
reinforce our business base.
And we will also keep our eyes open for possible partnerships
and mergers and acquisitions with solid companies, both domestic
and overseas.
(©The Asahi Shimbun. All Right Reserved.)
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