| Semi Gear Spending to Taper through Year-End |
|
|
| Written by Mike Buetow | |||
| Friday, 29 June 2012 14:10 | |||
|
STAMFORD, CT — Worldwide wafer fab equipment spending is on pace to fall 8.9% to $33 billion in 2012 on lower demand for logic production gear. A rebound is expected in 2013, says according to Gartner, with sales growing 7.4% to $35.4 billion. "In 2012, WFE started off the year strong, as foundries and other logic manufacturers ramped up sub-30nm production," said Bob Johnson, research vice president at Gartner. "The need for new equipment was stronger than originally anticipated, because strengthening demand for leading-edge devices required higher production volumes as yields had yet to reach mature levels. However, demand for new logic production equipment will soften as yields improve, leading to declining shipment volume for the rest of the year." Wafer fab manufacturing capacity utilization will decline into the mid-80% range by the middle of 2012 before slowly increasing to about 87% by the end of 2012. Leading-edge utilization will return to the high-80% range by the second half of 2012, and move into the low-90% range through 2013, providing for a positive capital investment environment. "Production is getting back to more-normal levels, following a period of inventory correction," Mr. Johnson said. "Increased demand, combined with less-than-mature yields at the leading edge, is consuming increased capacity, with the result that utilization will begin to climb upward again in the second quarter of 2012. Capital spending restraints through the second half of 2012 will also slow new capacity additions, with the result that overall utilization rates will return to normal levels at the start of 2013. Leading-edge utilization will stay in the low-90% range through most of 2013, providing continued impetus for capital investment. The industry was ramping up different technology nodes in 2011 and will continue to do so in 2012, driving a broad spectrum of equipment segment sales opportunities. The industry had been ramping up different technology nodes in 2011, and that continues in 2012. Foundry is ramping up 28nm, leading-edge logic has transitioned to 20nm, NAND flash will ramp up the 1X node, and DRAM will be ramping up 4X and 3X nodes. Gartner analysts said this will create different challenges for the equipment manufacturers because they face different issues at each node. Semiconductor equipment demand is considered a leading indicator for future printed circuit board and electronics assembly orders.
|
Design News
- Mentor, Tezzaron Optimize Calibre 3DSTACK for 3D-ICs
- FabStream, ADI Offer Digi-Key Parts Library
- DRAM Market Getting Tight
- Ansys Sets Q1 Revenue Mark
- EI SiP Meets Missile Interceptor Challenge
- Sweden to Host SI Workshops
- Altium Signs Fisher/Unitech as Midwest US VAR
- NI's Revenue Jump Can't Save Profits
- 2013 PCD&F NPI Design Awards Open
- PCB Designers Roundtable: ‘Trust, But Verify’
Market News
- Phones, TVs Boost Printed and Flexible Electronics Sales
- Medical Electronics Market to Double, Offering Ample Opps for EMS
- IT Market Being Pulled Down by PC Sluggishness
- Tablet Sales Surged in Q1
- Smartphone Shipments Up 38% in Q1
- IPC: March PCB Orders Down 2.3%
- Solid Forecast for Enterprise Network Equipment Spending
- IC, Packaging Sales to Grow through 2017
- Driver-Assist Systems Market Going Fast on Own
- Study Says US on Track to Compete with China on Cost
Fab News
- Camtek’s Q1 Revenue Nearly Flat at $18.1M
- Enthone Parent Sees Pickup in PCB Demand
- SMTA, IPC to Co-locate Fall Events
- LPKF Posts Q1 Revenue Up 60%
- Despite Sequester, Aurora Circuits Reports Q1 Sales Up 12%
- Rogers Restructuring to Cut Annual Spending by $12M
- DoD to Propose Changes to Counterfeit Electronics Procurement Practices
- Cambridge Nanotherm to Build 1st Manufacturing Plant
- Ex Jisso Members Re-Form Under CAMEST Banner
- April Not Cruelest Month for Park
Products
Vault 1.1 features enhanced searching and filtering tools and design bill of materials for easy-to-use component navigation.
Features
A series of workshops next month on compliance with RoHS and other directives will help US companies looking to break into the European market.


