To Thread: Led by LSI, Chip Industry Gets On Rebound (04/26/99, 2:37 p.m. ET) By Brian Fuller and David Lammers, EE Times (http://www.techweb.com/wire/story/TWB19990426S0013)
The semiconductor industry seems to be on a rebound.
As gauged by LSI Logic and other semiconductor companies that have reported first quarter financial results, 1999 should be the light at the end of a dark, three-year tunnel. "We are now firing on all cylinders," said Bruce Entin, vice president of marketing at LSI Logic, in Milpitas, Calif.
LSI Logic, which has successfully diversified into telecommunications and wireless and is now ramping up its newest fabrication facility, saw first quarter revenue shoot up 41 percent compared with the first quarter of 1998, to $457 million. Profits of $11 million exceeded the consensus expectation of financial analysts.
Elsewhere, Texas Instruments' net income jumped to $233 million in the January-to-March period, against only $11 million in the same period last year, when DRAM chips still hung around the Dallas company's neck. In Europe, STMicroelectronics said its first quarter revenue declined slightly compared with the fourth quarter of last year due to "seasonal" fluctuations. But compared with 1998's first quarter, revenue shot up 10.8 percent to $1.113 billion and net income rose 16.5 percent, to $105.1 million.
Zilog, in Campbell, Calif., said bookings during its first quarter reached $63.5 million, a $10 million increase from the fourth quarter of 1998.
And Motorola's Semiconductor Products Sector reported a profit of $47 million for the first three months of this year, compared with a loss of $58 million in 1998's first quarter. Sales were up 4 percent to $1.9 billion, and orders were 11 percent higher, despite a decline in Europe.
Lucent, in Murray Hill, N.J., said its non-U.S. chip revenue was the biggest contributor to a strong quarter. Overall, microelectronics revenue increased 21 percent over that recorded a year ago, to $851 million, as revenue outside the United States soared 37 percent.
In a conference call with financial analysts, LSI Logic's CEO, Wilf Corrigan, said most chip forecasters are in the process of upgrading 1999 predictions by about 5 percentage points, particularly for companies that play outside of the PC space.
Reflecting the upbeat but guarded mood of the industry, Corrigan said he is "cautiously optimistic" about the remainder of the year. "I think we'll be biting our nails for the rest of the year," said Dataquest analyst Joseph Byrne.
Jim Feldhan, president of Semico Research, in Phoenix, said he is sticking by his already optimistic December prediction that the worldwide semiconductor industry will grow 17 percent in 1999. Semico DRAM analyst Sherry Garber said DRAM prices have declined by about $2 per 64-megabit unit since early March. Compaq's poor results may put further pressure on DRAM chips and PC-related chip prices.
Feldhan said he is awaiting World Semiconductor Trade Statistics numbers for March, which may not be as strong as expected. "It may be a stretch to get to 17 percent growth this year. The March numbers will have to be pretty good to meet my target for the first quarter," Feldhan said.
Semico said he predicts broadband networking and digital consumer applications will lead the industry to faster growth next year and in 2001.
Analyst Byrne, who tracks microcontrollers and DSPs, said Dataquest is in the midst of revising its forecast, which now stands at just under 15 percent for 1999. But the first quarter was tough for certain companies in DRAM chips and PC-centric chips, with the market for 8-bit and 4-bit MCUs "quite soft," he said.
At LSI Logic, part of the year-to-year revenue jump was because of the acquisition of Symbios Logic. And LSI's top line will grow further once its $100 million acquisition of Seeq Technology is approved, bringing physical-layer (PHY) networking ICs into the company's portfolio. Overall, revenue for 1999 is expected to exceed $2 billion, and LSI Logic is aiming at a 20 percent operating income goal.
Corrigan said he predicted second quarter revenue would rise 5 to 6 percent, and that the fourth quarter -- when digital still cameras and other digital consumer products sell as Christmas gifts -- will be "extremely strong."
Not By PlayStation Alone Not long ago, LSI's fate was seen to ride on one prominent design win, the Sony PlayStation, and the company seemed one PlayStation away from disaster. Executives said the company's current growth is based on success in diversifying across major markets, with no one customer accounting for more than 10 percent of sales.
John Daane, executive vice president for communications, computer and ASIC products, said once Dataquest finishes tallying its numbers for 1998, LSI Logic expects to be ranked as the leader in cell-based ICs for the merchant market. The company's "Coreware" approach to integration -- as contrasted with full custom designs -- now accounts for about 30 percent of total revenue, and will rise to 50 percent by the end of this year.
Daane said LSI's rapid growth in telecommunications, to several hundred million dollars in revenue this year, is key to the improved picture.
"In communications, we wanted to take things one step at a time and not dilute our efforts," he said. "We had a good business with big ASICs in telecom gear, growing 10 to 15 percent a year with customers such as Alcatel, Siemens, Lucent and Fujitsu. Then we moved to network ASICs and cores for ATM controllers, and then to the Ethernet market."
The wireless business, which has doubled in recent years, is the next big area, Daane said.
A CDMA chip set, which LSI has used in Japanese field trials, is "difficult technology but successful for us. The wireless team has really done a good job."
Demand is such that Corrigan said this past week LSI will prolong the life of its oldest fab in Tsukuba, Japan, and continue manufacturing there for a few months, then shutter the facility later this summer. Meanwhile, LSI is in the process of ramping up production at the first fab at its 350-acre campus in Camas, Wash.
Elie Antoun, in charge of LSI's digital consumer IC business, said the company enjoys a book-to-bill ratio of 1.2 for its digital consumer solutions, and predicted DVD player shipments worldwide will hit 5 million to 8 million units this year after a disappointing start.
LSI, which partnered with Sony in the design of its DVD chip sets, is now producing its third generation of the set, and will soon release a two-chip version with a design kit for the Chinese market, said Antoun, who ran LSI's Japan operations for five years.
"When China happens, it'll be big," said Corrigan.
To prepare for an unexpected shift in business, Corrigan acknowledged LSI has been in discussions with several major foundries. In an astonishing display of open-mindedness for someone so skeptical of the intellectual-property-to-foundry model, Corrigan said LSI could offload some of its capacity requirements to a foundry that would duplicate LSI's process. Conversely, foundry partners might be able to use capacity at LSI's new fab at Gresham if they run short of submicron capacity, as Feldhan and others are predicting.
Last month, the Gresham fab was processing about 700 eight-inch wafers per week, with plans to ramp up to 3,500 wafers. The fab could process 5,000 wafers a week if extra equipment is moved in.
Ronnie Vasishta, director of ASIC technical marketing at LSI Logic, said the company's 0.18-micron process technology will be ready for general release this summer, and key customers are working on designs now that will help fill out the Gresham facility.
The LSI managers expounded on a common theme: that complex ICs cannot just be thrown together by design teams that take intellectual-property cores from others and hope to send the design to some distant foundry.
"You can't deliver something complex unless you own the whole solution," said Vasishta. "How do you get a 0.18-micron design through a factory you don't own?"
Corrigan said he wants people to look upon LSI as "a methodology company," in which the essential elements -- tools, core design, and manufacturing -- "are like a railroad track, and we are all running on the same gauge."
But that doesn't mean LSI is trying to do everything in-house. Corrigan disclosed the company is working with SandCraft, in Santa Clara, Calif., which is designing a MIPS core for LSI that initially will be used in set-top-box applications. Prototyping is expected late in the third quarter, with production set for the fourth quarter.
"We see that as our high-end CPU offering," Antoun said. "By mid-next year, it's a core." The SandCraft design, a 350-MHz dual-issue CPU, will be one of the lead products coming out of Gresham, requiring 0.18-micron, four-layer metal technology.
Outsiders agree taking complicated IP designs to a foundry is difficult.
"It just doesn't work," said Handel Jones, an analyst with IBS, in Los Gatos, Calif. If you harden your intellectual property, he argued, you can reduce implementation time 30 to 50 percent, increase chip performance 20 to 30 percent, and trim chip area by another 20 to 30 percent.
"LSI has had Coreware for six to seven years. They know what it takes to embed these blocks and come out with integrated solutions," Jones said.
Distributed Engineers Daane said to address the electronics engineer shortage, LSI has expanded its distributed engineering model, setting up design centers in Minneapolis; Dallas; Boulder, Colo.; Tokyo; and Bracknell, England.
"You go to where the expertise is," Daane said. "By getting out of the [Silicon] Valley, you can develop a very, very stable work force." And he argued that system-on-a-chip design is where many talented engineers want to work, and stay. In Minnesota, LSI has lost two people out of 125 over the past eight years, he said.
But the idea of passing designs from one team to the next has not worked out, Daane added.
"It's been tried a few times, and there are too many obstacles to surmount," he said. "There are cultural issues, and you miss the personal interaction that makes a good design team. You want to have all the people locally who have the confidence."
Sometimes LSI will distribute a software team, but even that is becoming less common now that hardware/software codesign is becoming a mainstream methodology. "We've learned what works and what doesn't," Daane said. "It's still a human endeavor, with people talking to each other." =====================================================================
A positive article for the industry and also LSI...
EKS |