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Will soaring chip industry do it again: expand too fast, creating overcapacity?
Not this year, but maybe in 2001
By J. Robert Lineback Semiconductor Business News (03/02/00, 06:01:25 PM EDT)
Everywhere you look these days in the semiconductor industry, companies are tearing up their market forecasts and coming up with higher estimates as orders continue to soar. That's good news for chip production-equipment makers, which are revising upwards their own sales forecasts.
VLSI Research Inc., a leading research firm for the equipment end of the business, is now upgrading its forecast from a growth rate of 29% to 42% over the 1999 total. Leading the way in boosting their orders for chip production gear are foundry giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and Europe's STMicroelectronics N.V.
The big question now is: Will this explosion of equipment orders result in a repeat of the feast-or-famine chip business? There seems to be little danger of overcapacity this year if IC revenues grow at 25-to-30% as expected, according to industry observers.
The industry already is running flat-out, at virtually full capacity. With that kind of growth, it's been estimated the chip business could absorb a 50% increase in tool spending this year.
But if the equipment business keeps growing at the same rate next year as it is expected to rise this year, the chip industry could be looking at a dangerous overcapacity situation.
"The year we have to be watching is 2001," declares analyst Bill McClean, president of IC Insights Inc. "If the increase in capital spending repeats another 50% increase," that would mean, "wow! here we go again," comments the Scottsdale, Ariz. market researcher. He is referring to the industry's history of adding too much capacity during boom times, which ends up pushing the industry into a downturn.
There's no doubt the global chip industry is running flat out. The Semiconductor Industry Association said in late February that worldwide fab utilization was running at 93.6% of capacity in the fourth quarter -- the highest level since the start of the current semiconductor downturn four years ago. At the end of 1999, capacity utilization for MOS process technologies below 0.3-micron was the highest ever, reaching 97.6%.
"This is incredible considering the big jumps in wafer starts," notes McClean "This shows the industry is flat-out sold out."
But the only market this year that appears to be at risk of overshooting demand is flash memory, according to IC Insights. "Suppliers probably will not catch up with demand this year but there are some big companies seriously chasing this business--Intel, Hyundai, STMicro, NEC, Mitsubishi, AMD and others," notes McClean. As a result, he says, "flash is ripe" for Overshooting.
It's no wonder the chip industry is looking for a lot more production equipment this year. The new Semiconductor International Capacity Statistics (SICAS) shows all MOS wafer fabs were operating at 94.3% of their capacity in the fourth quarter last year vs. 91.5% in the third quarter and 82.9% in the fourth quarter a year ago.
Even bipolar wafer fab utilization hit a four-year high in the fourth quarter, working at 88.8% vs. 86.3% in the third quarter of 1999 and 74.1% in the fourth quarter a year ago, according to SICAS.
Chip makers processed 517,100 eight-inch equivalent MOS wafers a week during the fourth quarter, an 8% increase over the third quarter when MOS fabs were starting 479,900 wafers a week, the SICAS report said. Fourth quarter MOS wafer starts were 17% higher than in the same period a year ago.
The sharpest increase in wafer starts came from the finer geometry processes, or 0.3-micron and below category. The SICAS report shows those wafer starts increasing 29% to 461,900 a week in the fourth quarter compared to 358,100 a week in the third quarter.
Leading the rush to expand their chip production are the pure-play foundries. "They have certainly put a stake in the ground and are now responding to the huge demand," points out Risto Puhakka, vice president of operations at VLSI Research.
The pure-play foundries are attempting to use the current recovery cycle to greatly expand their business with large semiconductor makers, which historically has fabricated most if not all of their own wafers. Many of these integrated device manufacturers (IDMs) began shifting their wafer fabrication strategies toward third-party foundries as a way to reduce expenses and risk in 1998 and 1999, but now they're becoming increasingly concerned about the availability of capacity.
"The goal of the foundry companies is to convince the IDMs not to build that next fab," comments IC Insights' McClean. When expenses for "brick and mortar" are taken out, he believes that capital spending for chip production gear could hit nearly $40 billion this year vs. $26.4 billion in 1999.
More than ever, the percentage spending boosts for new gear vary throughout the industry. In fact, a real shocker in the latest capital expenditure plans indicates that Intel Corp. could be dethroned as king of capital spending in the chip industry if Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) does what it says it plans to do. The foundry giant expects to greatly increase its capital spending--from $1.7 billion last year to $4.7 billion in 2000.
Intel, on the other hand, has earmarked $5 billion for capital expenditures this year, but that includes at least $200 million of non-semiconductor investment, it is estimated. What's significant here is that TSMC is now at a run rate that would make it a $4 billion-to-$4.7 billion company this year, while Intel is expected to push past $30 billion in sales. That means TSMC's capital spending will be 100% of its sales, McClean notes. That's is extremely aggressive, even for a fast-growing chip maker.
During the late 1990s, Intel annually spent at least a couple billion dollars more than any other chip maker on capital investments. TSMC is now pouring on the gas in a major gamble to grow market share by serving more of the needs of the large IDMs. Already, TSMC is pulling away from the No. 2 foundry, United Microelectronics Corp., in both capital spending and foundry revenues, IC Insights' McClean points out. During the last half of 1999, both companies steadily increased their capital spending targets as the global chip recovery built up steam. While UMC said in October that it was going to spend "slightly more" than TSMC in 2000, TSMC responded by more than doubling its total capital spending targets.
Another surprise this year is that STMicroelectronics is turning out to be one of the more aggressive spenders. The European chip maker plans to increase capital expenditures by 63% to $2.2 billion from $1.4 billion last year, points out IC Insights' McClean.
TSMC is expanding its capacity in other ways too. It has announced plans to acquire Worldwide Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp. (WSMC), Taiwan's third largest foundry as well as reaching an agreement to take full ownership of a joint-venture fab, TSMC-Acer Manufacturing Corp. A handful of other vendors also expect to raise their capital spending budgets by more than 50% in 2000, he adds. "We must watch Samsung, Micron, Hyundai, Infineon, and others ... if everyone jumps on the bandwagon, then we'll have problems."
So far, price-battered DRAM makers are being more cautious than the foundries. Micron Technology Inc., for example, is on record to raise its capital spending by 36% to $1.2 billion in 2000, up from $900 million in 1999, McClean notes. For now at least, Samsung Electronics Co. is increasing its capital spending by just 33% to $2.4 billion from $1.8 billion last year. |