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2008 likely to shake foundation of IC industry

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CIOL Bureau
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USA: This January, General Motors' President, Bob Lutz, stated that GM would intentionally cut back its fleet sales (i.e., rental cars) by at least 100,000 vehicles in 2007. At the same time, Ford Motor Co. also voiced its plans for a similar cutback in fleet sales. It should be noted that these announcements came at a time when the two auto makers were, and still are, involved in a desperate struggle for automotive marketshare with Toyota and others.

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Move forward to October 2007. In its 3Q07 financial report, UMC made this bombshell statement: "CAPEX for 2008 will be significantly reduced relative to 2007………. From now on, increasing profitability will be UMC's number one business objective. However, this goal will not happen overnight. A solid beginning will be the implementation of a disciplined CAPEX strategy."

What ties these two seemingly unrelated situations together? In IC Insights' opinion, an increasing number of companies in the automotive and semiconductor industries have reached their "pain threshold" for pricing pressures and low profit margins! In both of these cases, marketshare gains are willing to being sacrificed in order to achieve higher profits.

In the automobile world, fleet sales are an extremely low margin business. It currently appears that GM and Ford have reached the breaking point where they would rather walk away from selling tens or hundreds of thousands of automobiles to rental car companies, and lose unit marketshare to their competitors, than to continue in this low margin segment.

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Although IC Insights highlighted a paragraph describing UMC's increased emphasis on profitability, its message can be applied to a rising number of companies throughout the semiconductor industry. Other major IC foundries and many DRAM producers are expected to follow UMC's example, at least for 2008.

Only 3 percent increase in capital spending in 2007

In total, a 3 percent increase in capital spending is likely for 2007 after an 18 percent increase in 2006. A 3 percent capital spending increase exactly matches what the surveyed companies, in total, budgeted for the year. Since 2004, semiconductor companies, in total, have essentially stuck by the budget levels they announced early in the year, with the notable exception to this trend being the DRAM and flash memory suppliers spending surge (over 40 percent increases in each segment) in 2006.

Although total semiconductor industry capital spending is forecast to increase 3 percent in 2007, Samsung is expected to increase its spending by 22 percent this year — to an astounding $8.33 billion. In fact, Samsung's capital spending as a percent of sales level is expected to be 41 percent in 2007, about twice the industry-average ratio of 22 percent.

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Even with Intel lowering its capital spending budget by 15 percent for 2007, Intel and Samsung are collectively expected to represent about 24 percent of worldwide semiconductor capital expenditures this year! Given the importance of these two companies, the semiconductor equipment suppliers are waiting with great anticipation for Intel and Samsung to announce their 2008 spending budgets.

Semicon capital expenditures to decline 9 percent in 2008

The total semiconductor industry capital expenditures are forecast to decline by 9 percent in 2008 to $51.0 billion. As of early December, the two
largest semiconductor industry capital spenders — Samsung and Intel — had not released their 2008 capital spending guidance.

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Depending on what Samsung and Intel budget, IC Insights believes the total 2008 industry-wide capital spending level could be about ±4 percentage points from the current forecast of -9 percent.

Thus, at the present time, it appears that the "best-case" scenario for semiconductor industry capital spending in 2008 is -5 percent.

The top five spending cutbacks in 2008 are expected to come from major DRAM suppliers — Micron, ProMOS, Samsung, Hynix, and Nanya. After increasing total spending for DRAM by 44 percent in 2006, the DRAM suppliers "paid" for this overspending with a price collapse in 2007.

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Heading into 2008, many DRAM suppliers have collectively (though most likely not through illegal means this time!) come to the conclusion that big spending cutbacks are needed to restore some sanity to DRAM ASPs next year.

For 2008, IC Insights is forecasting a 10 percent increase in the semiconductor market. Assuming this growth takes place, the semiconductor capital spending as a percent of sales ratio for next year would be only 18 percent, down from 22 percent this year.

At only 18 percent, it would be the lowest ratio since 2003, the year before the big boom year of 2004 (in which IC ASPs increased 10 percent). Overall, the industry-wide capital spending as a percent of sales ratio is continuing to trend downwards and is likely to reside in the "high-teens" range during the latter half of this decade.

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