EL SEGUNDO, CA — Surprising fourth-quarter weakness in the
memory chip market took the wind out of the sails of the global semiconductor
market, causing 2007 growth to fall short of expectations, according to
iSuppli Corp.
Global semiconductor market revenue grew 3.3% in
2007, iSuppli says, lower than the firm's 4.1% estimate in November.
For
the quarter, semi revenues fell 0.5%, but were up 2.4% excluding
memory.
Worldwide DRAM revenue fell 19.1% sequentially in the fourth
quarter, below the November estimate of a 4.7% drop. NAND flash revenue declined
3.9%. Overall, memory chip revenue fell 11% sequentially.
“This was a
complete role reversal for memory semiconductors compared to 2006,” said Dale
Ford, senior vice president, market intelligence, for iSuppli. “During the
second half of 2006, memory IC revenues helped to prop up the growth of the
overall semiconductor industry. In 2007, the poor results for memory chips
restrained overall market growth.”
Application-specific standard
products and ASICs enjoyed the strongest performance of all semiconductor
segments in 2007 with growth of 12.9%.
Sony and
Toshiba were the
key drivers of growth in this segment due to sales of semiconductors for the PS3
game console. Optical semiconductors were up 7.4%, and discretes grew 4.2%.
Overall, microprocessor revenue grew 2.1%.