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Semiconductor Equipment Industry to See Further Capex Declines in 2009

(Top News, 18 Jun 2009 )

The outlook for the semiconductor equipment industry is beginning to improve, as it appears capital equipment spending has bottomed out in the second quarter of 2009, according to Gartner Inc. Analysts predict a gradual improvement on a quarter-by-quarter basis throughout the rest of the year and into 2010.

The current uptick in semiconductor sales will not be sufficient to overcome the effects of industrywide overcapacity and low utilization rates in the short term. Worldwide semiconductor capital spending is on pace to total $24.3 billion in 2009, a 44.8 percent decline from 2008 spending of $44 billion. In 2010, worldwide capital equipment spending is forecast to reach $29.4 billion, a 20.9 percent increase from 2009.

“The impact of the economic crisis has hit the semiconductor equipment industry hard, but signs of life are returning,” said Klaus Rinnen, Managing Vice President at Gartner. “Undoubtedly it will be a long, slow road to complete recovery, but we are seeing the first indications of increased foundry activity to replenish inventories depleted by the cutbacks of the past few quarters.”

Worldwide wafer fab equipment spending is expected to decrease 47.1 percent in 2009, following a drop of nearly 33 percent in 2008. In 2009, the etch, clean and planarization segments will be the largest of the front-end equipment areas, followed by deposition and then by lithography. Lithography has been hit especially hard by the downturn as sales for the most advanced 193nm immersion tools in memory have been lukewarm, with capital spending for memory at levels not seen since 2002.

After declining nearly 25 percent last year, the packaging and assembly equipment (PAE) market is expected to fall nearly 47 percent in 2009. A recovery for PAE is likely to be seen in the second half of this year if recent positive economic developments are sustained.

For 2009, the worldwide automated test equipment (ATE) market is forecast to decline 32 percent. While the test market has waded through a difficult period since 2007, it appears that a bottom is forming in the second quarter of 2009. The ATE market now sits at very low market levels, with some test segments very likely realizing substantial capacity reductions. As the industry moves toward a growth phase, the potential for explosive growth in the 2010 and 2011 time frame could be realized.

Rinnen said that overall, the industry has responded as it should when faced with one of the worst downturns in its history — by eliminating all unnecessary spending, cutting purchases to inventories and not doing anything dramatic. He recommended that for the next few quarters, equipment suppliers focus on quarter-to-quarter growth and let the annual numbers fall where they may.

“Over the past few years, we have seen the semiconductor and electronics industries implement impressive movements in their ability to control and manage inventories,” said Rinnen. “It appears the industry has learned a painful lesson and can implement improvements on its ability to manage capital investments and capacity and thus bring a return to profitability to all segments.”

Gartner

 
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