Here is a take on NAND vs. HDs: needhamco.com
[EDIT: It's easier to read in the original PDF, but I put it here in case the original "goes missing," as they say. Warning: it is very long (20 pp., including boilerplate stuff), but it covers a lot of material. More favorable to HDs than to NAND.]
CHARLIE GLAVIN • CGLAVIN@NEEDHAMCO.COM • 415/262-4874 October 12, 2005 RICHARD KUGELE • RKUGELE@NEEDHAMCO.COM • 617/457-0908 NAND vs. Hard Disk Drives: Hype, Myth and Reality Recent comments by Samsung and Hynix have hyped speculation that NAND Flash will soon displace hard disk drives in all mobile devices. While the NAND market is expected to exhibit high unit/bit growth due to the advantages of solid state memory in handhelds, to paraphrase Mark Twain, “the rumors of HDD death are greatly exaggerated.” We believe investors can take advantage of such misperceptions by buying “the arms dealer” stocks that would benefit from such heated competition, while purchasing the much-maligned HDD stocks and their chip suppliers that have been oversold. This report examines and compares the advantages of each media type, along with a supply/demand analysis of the NAND market. Our conclusions are as follows: • We believe the hype surrounding the battle between Flash and Hard Disk Drives (HDDs) has been overblown and has clouded the true market opportunities for both industries. Each technology has certain advantages/disadvantages that make it more suited for certain markets, and both should experience significant unit growth in the coming years. • Contrary to the myths surrounding the Flash vs. HDDs debate, our analysis suggests that both technologies are on similar trajectories regarding cost and areal density improvements (due to their common semiconductor manufacturing processes), making a “crossover” point unlikely over the foreseeable future. • We believe that the key market growth opportunities for Flash include segments where footprint, ruggedness and power are paramount such as MP3 players (sub-10GB), digital cameras and camcorders, and mainstream handsets (90-95% of the market). • Hard drives likely to remain dominant in markets where cost/GB and throughput are essential, such as PVRs, large capacity MP3 and video applications, high-end handsets/converged devices, and mainstream laptops (with the possible exception of the niche UltraPortable market). • From a market perspective, we believe that the transition at Apple on the Nano from a 1-inch drive to Flash has created only a modest headwind for the HDD industry. Overall unit growth is still expected to remain 15-20 over the next 2-3 years, with the only casualty from Flash’s increasing presence being the nascent 0.85-inch drive (<1% of industry revenue), whose form factor prevents areal densities that can effectively compete with Flash. • Additionally, rather than look at the NAND vs. hard disk drive debate as an “either/or” scenario, we believe “Hybrid” solutions are likely to emerge that that use increasing amounts of NAND memory as a buffer for hard drives to increase performance and life. • Overall, we believe that all of this competition between NAND and HDDs could be boon for digital media chip makers that are fairly agnostic to the memory media type, so long as cheaper memory enables more consumer-friendly applications (such as Silicon Motion). • Semiconductor equipment stocks (covered by Needham Analyst Robert Maire) could also benefit as our supply/demand model suggests the Flash industry will need to build just under two (1.8) new 300 mm fabs next year to satisfy demand (and migrate quickly to 60 nm in 2006 and then 50 nm in 2007 to meet current market commitment). • Within the drive space, we believe Seagate, with the broadest product line, is best positioned for the rapid adoption of hard drives in the home. Component suppliers Komag (with significant exposure to highcapacity, high-platter count drives) and Hutchinson (suspensions) also benefit from the industry growth rate. 2 Introduction It’s Déjà vu All Over Again: Beware the Hype While NAND unit growth is expected to outpace the overall market in the near term, we would caution against accepting the hype that NAND will take over disk drive market. Similar prognostications were made in the 1990s when RISC processors would suppose to kill CISC processors such as the Pentium, or, in 1999 when George Gilder said that optical fibre would kill cable and satellite options. Ironically, in 1992-94, similar hype was made about NOR Flash displacing DRAM and disk drives in PCs, yet died down when the Apple Newton (using Intel’s 12-volt, 8Mb Flash chips) failed to take off and IBM introduced the first microdrives. The following quotes highlight how NAND is being (over-) heralded as the next “can’t miss” market: • “There are so many new applications for NAND,” said Reza Faramarzi, marketing manager for Hynix’ U.S. subsidiary. “There is an infinite demand for flash at the current price points.” EE Times, 10/6/05. • “The high margin of NAND will push capital spending on NAND.” IDC report, “Worldwide NAND Flash Memory Demand and Supply 1Q05-4Q06 Forecast and Analysis,” #34037, Sept. 2005. • "NAND flash will eventually replace other storage mediums, especially those used in mobile products, creating a Flash Rush, as NAND continues to register an unprecedented surge in demand as the backbone of the mobile electronics era." Dr. Chang Gyu Hwang, CEO of Samsung Semiconductor. • “Hard drives are living on borrowed time and will be replaced with solid-state Flash memory. From Dr. Chang Gyu Hwang, CEO Samsung Semiconductor. Chris Mellor, Techworld, 9/13/05. Such recent comments have created a press storm about how dominant Flash is and why the hard disk drive market is doomed. While we agree that NAND flash is a great option and will be one of the dominant form factors, we believe that the marcom (marketing communications) hype is way ahead of reality. Each product has its own advantages, and we believe the market is more likely to see more co-existence and hybrid designs over the remainder of this decade than one factor killing the other. Our Key Conclusions: 1. NAND is not expected to achieve cost parity or density levels comparable with hard disk drive, limiting some of the markets that it can penetrate (laptops). 2. However, current NAND roadmap will mean more fabs need to be built (roughly two per year) to keep pace with demand, but more importantly, NAND fabs will need to be upgraded (to 60 and 50nm processes) to achieve higher density cards. 3. NAND and Disk Drives likely to Co-exist in Hybrid designs due to the advantages of both media types. 4. We believe that the only casualty of flash’s greater presence in consumer applications will be the 0.85-inch drive; while drive industry gets a boost from new smaller form factor 1-inch “Mikey” drives from Hitachi and Seagate. This report is split into two parts. In the first section, we examine and compare hard disk drives versus NAND Flash drive alternatives. In the second half, we present a supply/demand outlook for the NAND Flash Market. 3 PART I: A View From the Front Lines of the Storage Wars—Flash vs. Drives Summary Investor focus in recent months on the broader penetration of flash-based storage into consumer electronics applications has been steadily increasing. Apple’s recent announcement for the iPod Nano brought this issue to the forefront, as the previous product (the 1-inch drive based iPod Mini) was replaced, at least temporarily. Our view, which is outlined below, is that the truth lies somewhere in the middle, with each technology having a distinct place within the storage requirements of consumers. We believe that our analysis suggests the following conclusions: • Rather than look at NAND and hard disk drives as an “either/or” scenario, it is our belief that they will both co-exist and prosper as OEMs leverage the advantages of each technology. Look for “Hybrid” solutions that will use increasing amounts of NAND memory as a buffer for hard drives to increase performance and extend product life. • Both hard drives and Flash have pros and cons that are unique and solve distinct problems for consumer application designers. • We believe the real battleground between drives and Flash appears to be confined to applications where space limitations, power requirements, or ruggedness are less attractive for HDD-based solutions. Even so, we believe that the 1-inch and similar small form factor drives (SFF) will be a relative low percentage of total drive shipments over the next three years, and should be viewed as “icing” to a good growth market. • Flash will likely only challenge the drive space at low capacity points (under 20GB) over the next 2- 3 years, that larger capacity environments requiring higher performance will remain the domain of HDDs, and that current fears of a more substantial threat are overblown. Flash vs. Drives: Advantages of Each Technology We believe that at least part of the confusion in the flash vs. drives discussion is the difficulty in finding an honest comparison of the advantages of each technology. While not an exhaustive list, we believe our findings in Figure 1 include some of the most critical features. Note that pros for drives should be considered cons for flash and vice versa. Additionally, where possible, we have used Hitachi’s new “Mikey” microdrive design as a proxy for HDDs, as it is the closest comparable to flash in targeted end markets. Figure 1: Technological Comparison of Flash and HDD storage - Robustness (i.e. temperature, shock) - Significantly More Capacity Per $ - Smaller Footprint - Faster Write Speeds - Lower Power Consumption - Better Bit Stability - Building block architecture/cost - Multistreaming Capability Source: Needham & Company Flash Advantage Drive Advantage Our extensive industry discussions give flash an advantage in four key areas: robustness, footprint, power consumption and cost scalability. In terms of robustness, flash has very high tolerances with regards to heat (- 40 to 85 degrees C vs. drives at 0-65 C) and shock resistance. Operating shock tolerances of 2,000G surpasses drives of 400G, although non-operating shock is comparable at 2,000G. It is also worth noting these statistics are based on the storage on a standalone basis. The ultimate packing will play a key role in shock performance as many consumer electronics manufacturers are designing their solutions with added cushioning of the HDD in mind. The footprint is also smaller for flash vs. the 1-inch, although improvements continue to close that gap. Typical flash form factors are 12.5x20x1.4 mm vs. “Mikey” at 30x40x5 mm. Additionally, power can be at least 50% lower in flash compared to even the significant advancements in “Mikey.” Finally, unlike drives, flash appears to have a better ability to scale its costs. For example, drives can reduce COGS only to the point when the costs of a head, platter, etc. become equal to the price. Traditionally, the industry migrates buyers to the next capacity at that point to reset the cost curve. Key advantages for hard drives include significantly more capacity per dollar, faster data transfer speeds (especially at higher capacities), better bit stability, and multi-streaming capability. As Figure 2 indicates, the slope of cost reductions, while simultaneously increasing capacity, has enabled the drive industry to continue to offer a compelling value proposition for customers. Industry checks also suggest that while read speeds 4 may be comparable between flash and drives, write speeds can be up to 10x faster for HDDs. Additionally, with data transfer rates upwards of 130 MB/sec, we believe drives are well positioned for applications such as video, where even small errors or lags are particularly evident to consumers (compared to music). Discussions also indicate that drives have longer bit stability, as magnetic media is designed for higher levels of writes/erases. While this is not an issue with MP3 players, it does become more of a factor in high I/O applications such as laptops. Finally, drives are well-suited to multi-streaming data, such as handling an incoming data flow while simultaneously managing two additional outgoing streams (which is helpful in applications such as video). Improvements in both technologies continue to be made. For example, Hitachi’s recent “Mikey” design improves power consumption by 40%, weight by 10% and overall design dimensions by 20% all with a 100% increase in density (from 4GB to 8GB). Our message is that neither industry should assume the other is standing still just waiting to be eliminated. Overall, we believe that in applications where space, power and ruggedness are most critical, flash will be the storage medium of choice. Conversely, in situations where speed and capacity at a reasonable price are essential, HDDs appear to have a clear advantage. Areal Density/Pricing Analysis One of the arguments made by flash players is that the flash industry will be able to catch up to or surpass HDD technology. We disagree. The drive industry has always found new and ingenious ways to move technology forward while improving overall reliability. Since the disk drive was first invented by IBM in 1957, capacities have increased by a factor of 35 million. Prior to the release of GMR (Giant Magneto Resistive) heads in 1997, areal densities were increasing 60% per year. From 1997 until roughly 2003, densities increased to more than 100% per year. Looking forward, we anticipate a growth rate more at 40% as the industry is limited by, among other factors, the rate of improvement in the semiconductor manufacturing tools used to produce the read/write heads. However, this growth rate puts the industry in parallel with the rate of increase in flash (as it is largely the same equipment set). The price per GB is on a similar trajectory. Consequently, we believe that for the foreseeable future, there is no crossover point between capacity points on disk drives and flash. To provide some further perspective, our checks suggest that the drive industry is nearing significant new announcements for 1-inch capacity. Utilizing perpendicular recording, we believe that players such as Hitachi and Seagate are tracking to a 10GB 1-inch solution by the end of C2005, 12GB in 1H06 and 15GB by the end of C2006. A 20GB 1-inch solution is on the horizon for sometime in C2007. These capacity points are also made possible by the larger amount of “real estate” that a 1-inch provides over a 0.85-inch drive. In fact, we believe that the only casualty of flash’s greater presence in consumer applications will be the 0.85- inch drive, which will likely be unable maintain the traditional $/GB advantage of drives over flash, and may not survive its infancy as a product. The following three figures outline the price and capacity curves for each technology. 5 Figure 2: HDD $/GB Declines vs. Areal Density Growth 1.46 2.23 36.97 7.70 17.22 78.71 3.90 1.04 0.82 0.68 0.55 0.44 320 240 30 15 40 60 80 120 160 $0 $20 $40 $60 $80 $100 199 7A 199 8A 199 9A 2000A 2001A 2002A 2003A 2004A 2005E 2006E 2 00 7E 200 8E 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 Price Per GB GB per Platter 2000-2008 $/GB CAGR: -30% 2000-2008 AD CAGR: +47% Source: Komag, Inc., IDC Figure 3: NAND Pricing vs. Capacity 120 169 1,524 483 813 2,858 352 52 30 19 11 8 12 378 32 20 54 86 137 187 266 $0 $500 $1,000 $1,500 $2,000 $2,500 $3,000 1998A 1999 A 2000 A 2001 A 2002 A 2003 A 2004A 2005E 2006 E 2007 E 2008 E 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 Price Per GB Avg Density MB (MB/Unit) 2000-2008 $/GB CAGR: -42% 2000-2008 AD CAGR: +54% Source: IDC, Needham Estimates 6 Figure 4: HDD vs. NAND Cost Comparison HDD vs NAND Cost/GB Comparison $- $20 $40 $60 $80 $100 $120 $140 $160 $180 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Cost/GB ($) 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% Cost / GB of HDD as % of NAND NAND 1" HDD Cost/GB of 1" HDD as % of NAND Sources: WSTS, IDC, Needham & Co estimates Conclusion: NAND is unlikely to even approach cost parity with disk drives this decade. Since both NAND and disk drive components are made on the same semiconductor process (even the head on disk drives are semiconductors), there is no price per GB crossover expected this decade with the difference being fairly constant: disk drives having roughly one-fourth the cost of NAND. NAND Needs Faster Process Adoption Curve to Meet Higher Densities Goals Recent comments by Korea’s two largest NAND producers that Flash is ready to displace all disk drives seem to overlook one major factor: they don’t even have the required chip densities yet and it will take years . Dr. Chang Gyu Hwang, head of Samsung’s semiconductor group, recently claimed his company would have a 32Gb chip out next year enabling 64 GB cards by the end of 2006. He further went on during recent media events to predict the ramp of NAND-based solid state drives would be the death knoll for the hard disk drive market. While this made for very impressive announcements, the reality is that Samsung only just announced a new 16Gb SLC chip that needs a 50 nm process. The problem with this roadmap scenario is that Samsung hasn’t even qualified its 60nm process, and ASML sources say 50nm equipment isn’t even been shipped to Samsung yet. Even assuming a new process in just one year, instead of normal 18 months, market won’t see the 16Gb in mass production until beginning of 2007. Even Hynix, who is pushing NAND, is just beginning to sample a 8Gbit solution this month, but it is not a monolithic chip, according to DigiTimes, but four 2Gb chips stacked together. Samsung is doing both an 8Gb chip and a two 4Gb stacked solution. To give some idea of why this roadmap is so critical, the current 4 GB iPod Nano is using four 8Gb chips (actually, two 16Gb “stacked chips”). According to various suppliers to Apple, doing an 8GB Nano would require either a series of stacked 16Gb chips or a slightly larger chasis. Given that Samsung’s16Gb chips are not due out until late 2006 or early 2007, Apple may face a pause before it can refresh the Nano line. Penetration by Flash Into the PC Market: A Niche Opportunity Emboldened by their pyrrhic victory at Apple, certain flash players are talking again about a 32GB flash product for the laptop market. Pricing comments suggest that this 32GB product would be available for the low discount price of $300 (in 2007 when it might see the light of day). For comparison, a 40GB mobile drive today can be purchased (retail) for a mere $62. However, we do believe a select portion of the laptop market (such as ultra-light or tablet PCs) may adopt a flash-based solid state solution despite significant trade-offs such as capacity and cost. One argument made by flash manufacturers is that disk drives consume a tremendous amount of the power available for laptop applications. Again our checks suggest otherwise, bolstering our view that the opportunity in laptops will be a niche. According to Intel (see Figure 5) the hard drive represents only 8% of the power drain of a laptop, well below that of the screen (estimated at 33%). With even the clock drawing 5%, we believe the drive is not a significant problem for laptop designers. The screen and the keyboard represent the greatest drivers for the shape of a laptop, in our view. In desktop applications, the power argument is even less relevant. Similarly, space requirements in desktops are not an issue as the drive requires only a small space within a PC, with much of the balance for cooling and future expansion. 7 Figure 5: Power Consumption by Laptop Components (% of Total) Graphics Card, 8% Miscellaneous, 8% Intel® Memory Controller Hub, 9% Power Supply, 10% Display, 33% CPU, 10% Clock, 5% Intel® I/O Controller Hub, 3% LAN, 2% Fan, 2% DVD, 2% Hard Drive, 8% Source: Intel A Look at the Demand Side of the Equation With power as an insufficient rationale in laptops for a large shift away from HDDs, we believe flash will find it difficult to compete with the growing capacity requirements. As Figure 6 illustrates, capacity points for most applications are moving higher. For example, within the mobile segment, approximately 86% of drives consumed by laptops are between 40 and 80GB today. By 2009, 83% are expected to be between 80GB and 160GB. In our view, these capacity points are unattainable by flash at a cost effective level by that timeframe. Consequently, we believe that over the foreseeable future, the encroachment by flash into laptop applications will be relegated to the R&D lab and ultra-rugged environments such as the military market. Figure 6: Percentage of Drives by Capacity Point into Notebook Applications 2005E 2006E 2007E 2008E 2009E Notebooks 40-80GB (86%) 40-80GB (91%) 40-80GB (83%) 60-120GB (76%) 80-160GB (83%) Total HDDs 40-80GB (63%) 40-80GB (57%) 80-160GB (55%) 80-160GB (53%) 80-160GB (44%) Source: IDC, 2005 The Real Battleground As our analysis shows, the opportunity for flash-based drives in the near term is largely confined within the parameters of the consumer electronics market (and we would argue a subset of that market). We have noted for some time that the consumer opportunity for drives was far larger than just the 1-inch MP3 market. For drives, the growing recognition by the average consumer of the need for more storage in applications such as PVRs and backup devices has created a market opportunity that is uniquely addressable by hard drive suppliers. For example, IDC forecasts that consumer electronics and external storage will represent 40% of all drive shipments in 2008 (30% and 10%, respectively). In the near term (2006), we expect consumer electronics applications to be driven by set-top boxes and digital cameras/MP3 players in roughly equal percentages (see Figure 7). It should be noted that although on a unit volume basis PVRs are equal to cameras/MP3s, the profitability is significantly slanted towards PVRs. We believe that certain high-capacity drives (such as 250GB and above) can garner gross margins in excess of 25-30% or more, compared with the 1-inch space at 15-20%. 8 Figure 7: Estimated Consumer Device Breakdown for HDDs (Shipments in Thousands) % of % of % of 2004 Total CE 2005 Total CE 2006 Total CE Set-top box 15,649 37% 23,883 36% 31,188 38% (PVR/DVR) Information Appliance 5,511 13% 5,692 8% 12,544 15% (i.e. game consoles) Digital Camera (1in/1.8) 12,213 15,000 Audio Players (1in/1.8) 21,000 17,000 Total Camera/MP3* 17,001 40% 33,213 50% 32,000 39% Commerical 2,639 6% 1,920 3% 1,849 2% Applications GPS & 1,379 3% 2,388 4% 3,634 4% Telematics Total Consumer 42,179 67,096 81,215 Total Drive Shipments 306,055 377,000 433,000 % of Total Drives 14% 18% 19% Sources: IDC, June 2005; IDC, September 2005; Needham Estimates *IDC only provides a combined total historically. In our view, the real opportunity for flash in the consumer segment is MP3 applications (sub 10GB), and all but high-end handsets/converged devices (which combined represent 5-10% of the handset market). Game consoles could also prove a potential point of conflict between drives and flash, but to date it has remained a low-volume, low-profitability segment for both. Looking at possible penetration into the market opportunity for drives in 2006, we estimate that the maximum ‘at risk’ TAM (total market opportunity) is less than 7% of drive shipments (39% of CE related to cameras/MP3s X 19% CE percentage of total drives). Revenue contribution from the roughly 7% unit battleground is less than 6%. We suspect that the most likely near-term outcome is a modest headwind to the industry’s overall 15-20% unit growth (for example, IDC’s recent downward revision of 1-inch shipments in C2005 by 1%). The main casualty is likely to be the sub 1-inch market. Specifically, we do not believe the 0.85-inch segment (<1% of industry revenue and a niche product supplied in limited volume by Toshiba and Samsung today) will get off the ground as its form factor does not allow sufficient areal density to compete with Flash. Overall, we believe flash will only challenge the drive space at low capacity points (under 20GB) over the next 2-3 years, that larger capacity environments requiring high performance will remain the domain of HDDs and that current fears of a more substantial threat are overblown. Figure 8: Estimated HDD Unit Shipment Percentages, Breakdown by Form Factor Form Factor 2005E 2006E Mobile 0.85" 0.2% 0.6% Mobile 1.0" 4.5% 5.1% Mobile 1.8" 4.0% 4.1% Mobile 2.5" 19.9% 20.8% Desktop 3.5" 52.0% 49.9% Enterprise 2.5", 3.5" 19.4% 19.5% Total 100% 100% Source: IDC 9 Flash and HDD Likely to Co-Exist: The “Hybrid” Approach In the near future, we believe that NAND and HDD will co-exist, often within the same device. This is because there is no panacea or “one-size-fits-all” device. Many consumer devices today use some form of non-volatile memory (usually single cell NAND Flash) as a buffer. For examples, disk drives have embedded memory of typically 2, 8 or 16 MB used in buffering. Intel suggests that increasing this amount could also provide vast improvements in overall drive efficiency as well as power consumption by reducing the number of accesses. Company data indicates that using a 16 MB buffer in a disk drive is only 44% efficient, but increasing that level to 128 MB yields 86% efficiency. With Microsoft’s rollout of Vista (previously known as Longhorn) on the horizon, the requests are coming in from OEMs to improve drive performance to accommodate the significant increase in desired boot time. We estimate this could increase the cost of a drive by $3-5, which of course OEMs are reluctant to pay. Nevertheless, we expect hybrid drives to begin to appear during 1H06. Overall, we believe this blending of technologies is more likely to occur as the strengths of each technology are harnessed rather than the wholesale displacement of drives. For users/applications that need to do both code storage as well as high density storage (e.g., cell phones) the industry trend has been to use multi-chip packaging that combines NOR, NAND and even other types of memory (DRAM, PSRAM) into a single package. We believe this model will also occur in the HDD vs. NAND market. Digital camera makers have already begun to ship products that includes controllers which use 2-32 MB of embedded NAND memory as a buffer for capturing and reviewing photos or short videos, before “burning them” to a more permanent storage media such as an external Flash card. Why All the Rhetoric? Is NAND Flash Facing a Multi-Front Battle? One possible explanation for NAND makers so aggressively marketing the technology is that the NAND market may be facing a multi-front battle. 1. High End: At the 8GB and higher segments, NAND cards/SDD are trying to pushing up the density curve, while the hard disk drive makers trying to use small form factor drives to get into the consumer market. That battle is likely to intensify in 2006 when the new 1-inch “Mikey” drives hit the market. As an example, we believe the high capacity NAND flash and the 1-inch drives will continue to compete in the portable music player market even after Apple’s launch of iPod Nano, as new applications for these devices such as photo or video would require more storage capacity. Figure 9 illustrated our projections of the NAND vs. HDD in the portable music player market. Figure 9: Estimated Number of Portable Music Player Shipped Worldwide by Media Type. Portable Music Player Shipments 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2 010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Calendar Year High Capacity Flash Low Capacity Flash 1.8" Hard Drive 1" Hard Drive CD Source: IDC, Needham & Co estimates. 10 2. Low End: One of the growing markets for NAND Flash has been the lower density flash cards and “disposable” camera markets (such as Lexar relationship with Kodak). However, there are three alternative non-volatile execution memory options that could hit the mainstream market within 2-4 years: Ovonics, FeRAM and MRAM. There is another option, being development by Matrix that could pose the biggest threat: it is a 3-D (stacked) memory architecture that would essential be a ROM (read-only) type memory that could be anywhere from a third to one-fifth the cost of NAND. This could be a great option for people who use the memory cards similar to camcorder tapes: record on them once and then buy a new one, instead re-recording over them. Again, this would most likely involve a hybrid solution (Agnostic) Consumer Media Makers May Be Among the Best Positioned Stocks No one benefits more from competition between NAND and disk drives than consumers such as chip suppliers that enjoy cheaper memory costs. In our case, most of the stocks covered by Needham’s Digital Media analyst, Quinn Bolton, would be mostly agnostic as to which media type become more dominant in the consumer arena. For example, Flash Translation Layer (FTL) software makes flash look like a disk drive to the operating system, enabling digital media chip makers to design to any interface. For these companies, the current market trends have accelerated consumer adoption patterns that could increase use of their chips. One potential “arms dealer” that would benefit from the proliferation of Flash drives /cards would be Silicon Motion, which makes the controllers for these devices. 11 Part II: NAND Flash Supply vs. Demand Analysis NAND flash demand has been strong throughout 2005, fueled by the recent introduction of Apple’s iPod Nano which uses NAND flash for storage. This strong demand has allowed the average prices of some high capacity NAND to increase during the past quarter (spot prices for 2 and 4Gb chips are up 6-7%, while 8Gb chips are up 20% since June 30). The key investment question is whether these trends can last. In order to better understand the market, we constructed a supply/demand model comparing the bit production from manufacturers to projected market demand for NAND memory by application type and density. Some key conclusions: 1. While NAND bit/unit growth is “slowing” from 2005 to 2006, NAND is still expected to grow through 2008 at a rate of 19% per year. 2. Some supply constraints in 2H2005 in the high Gbit chip segments should be resolved by 1Q06; however, demand is NOT expected to outpace supply during 2006. 3. We estimate that the industry will need to build 1.8 new 300 mm equivalent fabs in 2006 to meet incremental demand. 4. The big wild card (no pun intended) to our demand model is usage patterns for Flash cards: how consumer reuse, upgrade and store their external Flash cards. Flash Market Continues to Grow The flash market is expected to continue to grow in the next few years. NAND bit growth is expected to “slow” from 262% in 2005 to 145% in 2006, while unit growth is forecasted to drop from 84% to 31% over that same period as the market builds more 8Gb chips. According to the SIA, NAND revenue is expected to surpass NOR this year and continue to grow through 2008 at 19% per year. This compares to a flat revenue projection for NOR in the same time period (see Figure 10 for more details). Figure 10: Flash Market Projections 2003A 2004A 2005E 2006E 2007 2008 CAGR (04' - 08') NAND Flash Bits Total (Millions of 1GB Equiv.) 21 56 203 496 YoY Growth 165% 262% 145% Units Shipment (Millions) 386 656 1,210 1,586 YoY Growth 70% 84% 31% Revenue ($Millions) $4,503 $6,467 $8,794 $9,639 $10,931 $12,898 19% YoY Growth 44% 36% 10% 13% 18% NOR Flash Revenue ($Millions) $7,237 $9,143 $8,004 $8,804 $9,069 $9,431 1% YoY Growth 26% -12% 10% 3% 4% Source: SIA (for Revenue Projections), IDC and Needham & Co. estimates. Supply Tracking Demand Growth, Assuming 30% More Capacity Added in 2006 By overlaying demand projections onto our supply model, we believe we get a clearer picture of the NAND flash market. As shown in Figure 11, bit supply and bit demand (in terms of 1GigaByte equivalents) are tracking close to parity. Overall, we believe NAND bit demand will not outpace supply in 2006, and that the industry will only need a 29% increase in capacity next year to meet demand. While our model shows an 18% oversupply by 4Q2006, we believe the excess is a healthy buffer and not a sign of structural overcapacity. Put a different way, that 18% delta would translate into less than one extra 300 mm fab (~0.8 fabs) next year for the entire industry, or 35,000 wafer starts per month, easily absorbed over the seven major suppliers. Such a buffer could also handle the non-consumer NAND business or any increase in unexpected, new flash applications. 12 Figure 11: NAND Flash Supply vs. Demand 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 1Q05 2Q05 3Q05 4Q05 1Q06 2Q06 3Q06 4Q06 Millions of 1GB Equiv. Total Flash Supply Total Flash Demand Source: Needham & Co. estimates Manufacturers Need to Continue to Increase Supply On the supply side, we expect to see strong bit growth continue through 2H06, as suppliers build more high capacity (>2Gb) products while maintaining the volume of low capacity in their older generation fab. Using data from published reports, third parties data and our own checks, we modeled the 2005-2006 quarterly total supply by looking at the production targets of the top seven NAND manufacturers. We projected the corresponding wafer starts (in 200 mm equivalents) and number of wafer fab necessary to meet the production targets. Figure 12 shows the estimates number worldwide 200 mm equivalent wafers starts needed to meet the production targets. Overall, our model projects unit supply should continue to grow rapidly in 2H2005 (84.4% YoY), but at a slower pace in 2006 (31.1% YoY). Based on our finding, we believe the number of 200 mm equivalent wafer fabs worldwide will increase from 10.8 fabs in 2Q05 to 13.7 by the end 2005, and up to 17.7 by the end of 2006. This data indicates that the number of chips output would slow in 2006 as the results of increases in density per chip. Since our projections are base on 200 mm equivalents, the current plans to build 300 mm fabs by leading NAND manufacturers would future slow the need to build more fabs. The four (200 mm) fab delta between the end of 2005 and 2006 would roughly translate into 1.8 300mm equivalent fabs. Figure 12: Worldwide Wafer Supply for NAND Flash Productions Total Worldwide Supply of Equiv. No. of 200mm Wafers per Quarter 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 1Q04 2Q04 3Q04 4Q04 1Q05 2Q05 3Q05 4Q05 1Q06 2Q06 3Q06 4Q06 Equiv. No. of 200mm Wafers (Thousands of Wafers) Source: Needham & Co. estimates Delay of Process Technology Migration Would Impact Supply With memory density per chip grew 56% and bit growth increased 163% in 2004, NAND flash manufacturers had to constantly lower their cost to maintain profits. The simplicity of the NAND flash device architecture 13 (fewer metal layers than NOR or logic chips), combined with its low reliability requirements, makes it easier for manufacturers to migrate NAND device process technology to lower manufacturing cost. As highlighted by recent Samsung’s announcement of its 50 nm process just one year after its 60 nm (although we believe 50 nm will not be ready by 2007), most NAND manufacturers are following Samsung’s lead to reduce cost by transitioning productions every four to five quarters to new technology nodes, versus more traditional six to eight quarters for other semiconductor devices. Figure 13 demonstrates the increase utilization of newer process technologies. Figure 13: Unit Production of NAND Chips by Process Technology Node Unit Production of NAND Chips, By Process 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 1Q04 2Q04 3Q04 4Q04 1Q05 2Q05 3Q05 4Q05 1Q06 2Q06 3Q06 4Q06 Millions of NAND Chips 60nm 70nm 90nm 120nm 150nm Source: IDC, Needham & Co. estimates In our model, we assume aggressive technology migration for NAND, especially for the high capacity devices. We also modeled in a lower starting yield (60% in our model) for any new technology than mature technology (80% in our model). Looking at the sensitivity of technology migration and yield improvements, we observed these impacts on the number of wafer fabs needed to meet supply targets: 1. If technology migration would slow down by one quarter for all device sizes, our model shows that by 4Q06, this would increase the total 300 mm monthly wafer starts by 16,200 wafers, which translates to approx 0.4 fabs. Based on this analysis, we believe the timing of technology migration has a mild effect on NAND supply. 2. If we assume yield drops to 50% from each technology migration for all device sizes, the total 300 mm monthly wafer starts would increase by 50,000 wafers, or 1.26 300mm fabs, in 2006. This shows that while technology migration would improve profit margins, yield impacted by newer technology has a crucial effect on production. Demand Growth: Strong Bits but Slowing Units We believe the while bit demand growth for NAND flash continue at its torrid pace into 2006, the growth in units and total revenue will slow. To be clear, we believe NAND demand would continue to see a health growth and outpace the entire market. In fact, our model shows a 133% YoY bit growth in 2006; however, we believe this it the result of continue price/bit decrease and the elasticity of the NAND market, and as the result, the unit growth will be at a more moderate pace in 2006. We note that some market participants assume a much higher NAND consumptions by digital camera via flash memory card than our opinion. For example, a recent report by one third party research group implied that all flash memory cards sold would be used in digital camera, and used this assumption with digital camera sales volume projections to estimate the demand of flash memory cards. While we agree that one of the main growth drivers behind flash memory cards is digital cameras sales, we believe such approach might overestimate flash card demand. Flash memory cards are being used in other mobile devices such as smart handhelds, mobile phones, handheld game console and even some mp3 players. We believe assuming all cards to be used in digital cameras would overestimate the number of card used per camera that results in an over-projection of future card consumptions. 14 We believe a better way to analyze flash consumptions is to separate the external flash memory cards demand from the projected market for embedded memory per device. In our approach, we model our flash memory card projections based on data collected by ourselves and third party reports. For example, our sources at Micron indicate that they believe there is roughly 17MB of embedded memory per “point and shoot” digital camera, and 376MB for each card sold into the DSC segment in 2005. Combining our digital camera and flash memory cards data with demands of six other consumer products groups, we form a complete picture of NAND bit demand per device in 2005-2007, as shown in Figure 14. Figure 14: Flash Content per Device (MB) 2004 2005 2006 2007 Digital still camera (embedded) 27 38 78 113 Digital video camcorder 134 175 333 490 MP3 400 667 1294 1897 Mobile phone 8 20 75 147 Smart handheld device 15 34 80 125 USB flash drive 264 381 660 966 Game console 38 61 97 119 Flash Memory Card 166 197 222 255 Sources: IDC, Micron, SanDisk While the average density per flash memory card may seem low over time, this is a blended average of all types of cards: CompactFlash, MultiMedia Cards, SD, etc. We will elaborate more on Flash Cards /Drives in the next section. Flash Card Usage: The Wild Card in Elastic Market We believe flash memory card market to be very price elastic, with the price per bit of NAND memory is expected to continue to fall at a similar pace as new supply comes on line next year. However, the biggest swing factor in our demand analysis is the usage model of Flash Memory Cards. If the price of cards becomes low enough, consumer may adopt a use-it-once mentality (similar to how VCR or camcorder tapes evolved), which could accelerate the growth curve. Furthermore, consumers might find new ways for using flash memory cards if price falls. Similar to the explosive growth of digital photography, digital videography could be the next popular media for the mass consumer market. As compression technology improve, digital video files would become small enough that consumer could fit multiple files within a flash card. However, as shown in Figure 15, a high capacity flash card could store quite a lot of video, pictures and song files. Ultimately, we believe even free memory may find that the elastic curve flattens out, since there are only so many video, pictures and song a person use in a year. 15 Figure 15: Estimates Capacity and Usage of Flash Card Sources: SanDisk, April 2005, Canon, Needham estimates MP3: 128Mb/sec, average song = 4.5 mins. (~ 4MB); DSC 2 Megapixel camera DSC: 4 Megapixel camera (high quality JPEG) - Canon website Video Clip & Broadcast Recording: VGA, 30 fps, MPEG 4 @ 384 Kbps Average Card Capacity - Mobile 180 Songs 40 Songs 217 Pics 30" clips 120" video - 200 400 600 800 1,000 1,200 1,400 1,600 1,800 2,000 2005 2008 MB / Card Broadcast Video Personal Video Camera MP3 What was somewhat surprising during our analysis was that the overall flash memory card segment is expected to decline from 33% of the total flash bits shipped in 2005 to 21% of 2007 shipments. This decline, however, is due to the mix of low and high density flash cards (mentioned in the previous section) and a shift in the amount of embedded NAND used in MP3 players and mobile phones. The recent success of the Apple Nano would suggest that consumers would accept and pay up for the embedded memory. In Figure 16, we examined the market by breaking out three major types of external, high density Flash cards or drives: CompactFlash, Secured Devices and USB drives. Three key points from the market trends and their implications: 1. High density, external drives will stay at a fairly constant level percentage of the total amount of NAND Flash shipped. This is important since it means that higher density cards/drives will need higher density chips, pushing the need for OEMs to upgrade their equipment. 2. High density media devices (USB drives, CompactFlash and SD cards) comprise just 41-47% of total unit shipments for cards/drives. This means that lower density cards (MMC, miniSD) with slower density ramps are weighing down the blended average of memory per card. 3. The year-over-year growth in units is very high, even as the density per device more than doubles by 2007. For companies such as Silicon Motion, which makes Flash controllers for external devices, it isn’t the amount of density, as much as the number of devices shipped that would be critical to the business of these “arms dealers.” 16 Figure 16: Compare High Capacity External Flash Devices to Flash Market 2004 2005 2006 2007 Units (in millions) USB Flash Drives 57.8 110.2 161.8 194.5 CompactFlash cards 31.3 32.3 34.0 34.2 Secured Digital (SD) cards 33.5 58.8 74.7 92.4 Sub-Total (high density) 122.5 201.3 270.5 321.0 y/y growth for high density cards/drives 64% 34% 19% High density cards as % of total Flash Cards/drives 42% 47% 43% 41% average memory density per card/drive (MB) USB Flash Drives 264 381 660 966 CompactFlash cards 314 443 769 985 Secured Digital (SD) cards 136 199 259 317 Sub-Total (high density) 241 338 563 781 (Millions of GB shipped) USB Flash Drives 15.2 42.0 106.8 187.8 CompactFlash cards 9.8 14.3 26.1 33.6 Secured Digital (SD) cards 4.5 11.7 19.4 29.3 Sub-Total (high density) 29.6 68.0 152.3 250.7 y/y growth for high density cards/drives 130% 124% 65% % of total NAND bits sold USB Flash Drives 19% 24% 26% 26% CompactFlash cards 12% 8% 6% 5% Secured Digital (SD) cards 6% 7% 5% 4% Total High Density Cards/ Drives 37% 39% 37% 35% Source: IDC, USB Alliance, Needham & Co. estimates Overall Flash Demand Bit Growth Should Double Again As shown in Figure 17, the flash bit demand is projected to continue to grow in a rapid pace at 134% YoY in 2006, while the unit shipment is growing in a much more moderate pace at 25.1% YoY. This is the results of increase consumption of higher capacity NAND flash, such as Apple iPod Nano and higher capacity flash memory cards. As a commodity product, NAND price/bit is expected to fall in the future. Therefore we believe the revenue growth rate would track closer to the unit shipment estimate, and grow in a slower pace than 2005. Figure 17: Flash Demand (Bits vs. Units) 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 1Q05 2Q05 3Q05 4Q05 1Q06 2Q06 3Q06 4Q06 Bit Demand in 1GB Equiv (Millions) 0.0 20.0 40.0 60.0 80.0 100.0 120.0 140.0 160.0 Unit Demand (Millions) Unit Demand Bit Demand Source: IDC, Needham & Co. estimates 17 APPENDIX 1: A Quick Primer on Flash Memory NOR vs. NAND Flash memory is a type of nonvolatile memory that allows users to use electricity to program and erase memory cell. The “non-volatile” aspect comes from a design where the memory is retained even when the power is turned off; compared to DRAM memory which must be constantly “refreshed” while in use and losses its content completely when the PC is shut-off and must be “rebooted”, when turned on again. Technically, flash memory has these capabilities because it is designed with a thin oxide layer that is thin enough to be reprogrammable, but effective enough to prevent electrons from leaking (no information lost) when power is off. There are two major types of flash memory: NAND and NOR. NOR Flash was initially developed and introduced by Intel in 1988 as a lower cost, high capacity replacement for EEPROM. NOR is a random access device, which makes it appropriate for storing program codes where access time (read speed) is important. NOR flash has a more robust memory design than NAND, which means it seldom has bad block in its memory cell and does not require file management. However, NOR has a much slower writing and erasing speed, and has a lower storage capacity per chip than NAND. NAND Flash was initially developed by Toshiba in 1989 for mass storage purposes. It is a sequential access device that has faster write and erase speed than NOR, but a slower read speed. NAND is also less reliable than NOR and requires an on-chip write bad block management controller. However, it has the advantage of much higher capacity per chip and lower $/MB than NOR because of its high density. Figure 18: NOR vs. NAND NOR Flash NAND Flash Interface Random Access Sequential Access Read Speed 55 MB/s 27 MB/s Write Speed 0.15 MB/s 7.5 MB/s Erase Speed 0.032 MB/s 85 MB/s Max Density Shipping 1 Gbit 8 Gbit Reliability No not need file management Requires bad blocks write controller Applications Program Code Execution Mass Data Storage Source: Toshiba and Needham & Co estimates Gigabit (Gb) vs. GigaByte (GB) There are eight (8) bits or memory in one byte; thus it take eight 1-Gigabit (Gb) chips to make one 1 Gigabyte (GB) card. This may seem silly to mention, but there have been several articles and reports we’ve read that have either had typos or have confused the difference between a Gb and a GB. Monolithic vs. Stacked Chip Samsung recently announced its first 16Gb NAND chip, but if you go to Samsung’s website, the company already has a 16Gb product. Why? This is because Samsung (and other manufacturers) stacks two dies on the single package to build higher capacity chip. Apple is using this two of these 16Gb (2GB) stacked chips to fit the tiny package of their 4GB iPod Nano. Most manufacturers start a high capacity NAND with a 2-Stack or 4-Stack package until they can reliable produce higher chip die, and then move to a monolithic package for lower cost. SLC vs. MLC Most flash memory cells use a voltage level that distinguishes its value. In a single-level cell (SLC), there is one memory bit per cell, with a value of 1 or 0 – if the voltage in that cell is above a reference threshold, the value would be 1; if below, it would be 0 (or vice versa). However, in a multiple-level cell, the voltage is broken up into additional states, like a measuring cup. In a 2-bit per cell MLC, there would now be four states; when the voltage is between certain thresholds, it would hold a given set of values – one for the first bit, and one for the second bit. Figure 19 compares a SLC with a MLC design. If this were a 3-bit per cell design, the cell would be split into 8 difference states, for 4-bit per cells, sixteen states. 18 Figure 19: SLC vs. MLC Source: Samsung Advantages of SLC Over MLC: • SLC uses less energy. Since SLC use only two electrical states instead of the 4+ by MLC, it can expend less energy to program and manage it charges. • Simpler architecture. MLC designs need more error correction (ECC or EDC) and have lower performance than a SLC design in terms of slower access time (25ms vs 70ms). In addition, due to the multiple energy states, this also leaves MLC’s with a lower margin of error to read the bit. • SLC lasts 10x longer. Most SLC chips are qualified to endure 100,000 read/write cycles, while a MLC chip is only spec’d for 10,000 cycles. To achieve over 10,000 cycles, MLC must go from 1-bit ECC to multi-bit, increasing cost and lowering performance. • MLC is a Process Generation Behind SLC. According to Samsung (which does not have an MLC design yet), SLC NAND is 6-9 months ahead of MLC with the same technology and that difference is expected to increase as geometries get smaller. Smaller die size (though less Gb per square mm of silicon). • Cost advantage of MLC not as great as thought. While having 2-bits in one cell would seem to mean that the cost of MLC is half that of SLC, the need to add more overhead circuits (increasing the die size), lower die yields, and increased testing to handle the MLC, means that the final cost of MLC is just 80% that of SLC. So the question is whether the 20% savings is worth giving up performance, time-to-market, reliability and endurance. 19 ANALYST CERTIFICATION I, Charlie Glavin, hereby certify that the views expressed in this research report accurately reflect my personal views about the subject company (ies) and its (their) securities. I also certify that I have not been, am not, and will not be receiving direct or indirect compensation in exchange for expressing the specific recommendation(s) in this report. I, Richard Kugele, hereby certify that the views expressed in this research report accurately reflect my personal views about the subject company (ies) and its (their) securities. I also certify that I have not been, am not, and will not be receiving direct or indirect compensation in exchange for expressing the specific recommendation(s) in this report. Companies mentioned in this report under coverage by Needham & Company, LLC (Prices as of October 11, 2005): ASM Holdings (ASML, $16.29, Buy, Disclosures: B, G) Apple (AAPL, $51.59, Buy, Disclosures: A, B, G) Hutchinson (HTCH, $26.04, Buy, Disclosures: B, G) Intel (INTC, $23.42, Buy, Disclosures: B, G) Komag (KOMG, $28.91, Strong Buy, Disclosures: B, G) Lexar (LEXR, $7.45, Hold, Disclosures: B, G) Seagate (STX, $15.67, Strong Buy, Disclosures: B) Silicon Motion (SIMO, $13.66, Buy, Disclosures: B, C, D, E, G, J) 445 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10022 (212) 371-8300 % of companies under coverage % for which investment banking services with this rating have been provided for in the past 12 months Strong Buy 7% 35% Buy 59 20 Hold 29 3 Under perform 2 0 Rating Suspended 1 0 Restricted 2 71 Under Review <1 0 Needham & Company, LLC (the Firm) employs a rating system based on the following (Effective July 1, 2003): Strong Buy: A security, which at the time the rating is instituted, indicates an expectation of a total return of at least 25% over the next 12 months. 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