SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Semi Equipment Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: etchmeister who wrote (30754)6/1/2006 5:11:36 PM
From: etchmeister  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 95420
 
For nine months monthly IC sales have matched or exceeded the bubble peak of Y2K; I recall from the dark hours that that peak was an all time event

April chip sales up year-to-year, flat sequentially, SIA says

Dylan McGrath
EE Times
(06/01/2006 4:31 PM EDT)

SAN FRANCISCO — Global semiconductor sales were up 8.1 percent year-to-year in April, reaching $19.6 billion, the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) said Thursday (June 1). Sequentially, worldwide chip sales slipped a nominal 0.4 percent from March, SIA said.

"More intense competition led to a sequential decline of 6.1 percent in sales of microprocessors, offsetting modest growth in the rest of the microchip market," said George Scalise, SIA president, in a statement.

Sales of microprocessors, which make up 14 percent of the overall chip market, were up nominally year-to-year, Scalise said. April DRAM sales were up 3.7 percent sequentially and 7.7 percent year to year, he said. "The PC market remains strong, with unit sales of personal computers running 13 to 15 percent ahead of last year's levels," Scalise said.

Overall chip sales were down sequentially in all regions expect Asia Pacific, which grew 1.1 percent to top $9 billion, SIA said. Sales in the Americas region slipped 3.7 percent sequentially to settle at $3.59 billion, SIA said, while sales in Europe and Japan slid 0.2 and 1.1 percent, respectively.

Year-to-year, sales in April were up in all regions except Europe, which was down 2.7 percent from April 2005, SIA said. April sales were up year-to-year 11.4 percent in the Americas region, 1.4 percent in Japan and 14.4 percent in Asia Pacific, SIA said.

Sales of wireless handsets containing analog products, digital signal processors (DSPs), NOR flash and optoelectronic devices continued to show healthy growth in April, Scalise said. Total analog sales were up by 23 percent year-to-year, while DSPs grew by 16.1 percent from 2005 levels, he said. NAND flash devices declined by 11.7 percent from March, but were up by nearly 25 percent year-to-year, Scalise said.

"The overall market growth rate continues to run slightly ahead of the SIA forecast issued last November, which projected growth of 7.9 percent," Scalise said, adding that SIA plans to issue an updated forecast June 7.

us.f13.yahoofs.com



To: etchmeister who wrote (30754)6/1/2006 7:00:58 PM
From: BWAC  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 95420
 
<Kind of "childish" trying to find an exact cause/logic reason that does not exist >

One and only one reason exists for anything the markit does in the ongoing groupthink computer dominated trading:

"Mr. Algo was programmed to Insert Appropriate Movement
(Buy Sell Spin) until it achieved Insert groupthink collusive goal here "