El Segundo, CA
- Worldwide contract manufacturing revenues will reach nearly $300 billion
by 2008, says a research firm.
Sales of EMS and ODM
services are on track to hit $298.4 billion, a compound annual growth rate of 13.7%
through 2008, iSuppli Corp. said yesterday.
Last year, sales of EMS
and ODM firms were $190 billion, up 20.1% year-on-year. The surge was a marked
improvement over 2003, in which revenues climbed 5.4%.
SAN JOSE -- North
American-based manufacturers of semiconductor equipment posted $1.01 billion in
orders in January and a book-to-bill ratio of
0.80, according to SEMI.
The data reflect a three-month average and are 18% below the
revised December level of $1.24 billion and 18% below last year.
A book-to-bill of 0.80 means that $80 worth of orders were received for every
$100 of product billed for the month.
The January three-month average of worldwide billings was $1.27 billion, down 4% from December but 23% higher than last year.
"The three-month average bookings figure for new
semiconductor equipment is now at the lowest level since November 2003,"
said Stanley T. Myers, president and CEO of SEMI. "Total bookings declined
sharply in January and are now about 37% below the cyclic peak observed
in June 2004."
SAN JOSE - January chip sales were $18.3
billion worldwide, 0.5% below December sales but 17.5% higher than January 2004 sales, the SIA reported today.
SIA pointed that January is usually a weak month for chip sales
following the typically strong holiday season.
"The modest sequential sales decline is an encouraging sign," said SIA president George Scalise, in a statement.
"January is historically one of the weakest months of the year for the
microchip industry. We are encouraged by recent signs of strength in
the overall U.S. economy, as evidenced by the 3.8% growth in GDP in the fourth quarter.
Dan Hutcheson of
VLSI Research has noted that when GDP grows by more than 3% ,semiconductor sales have shown healthy growth except when there are
excesses of inventory or production capacity. At the present time,
neither production capacity nor inventory excess is a problem.
"The excess inventories that slowed growth in the second half of
2004 have been largely depleted," Scalise said. "According to iSuppli,
excess inventories declined from $1.6 billion at the end of the third
quarter to $1 billion at year end. In some market segments, inventories
are now below target levels, thus we are confident that inventory
issues will not be a significant factor in semiconductor sales beyond
the first quarter."
Factory utilization continued to decline, as expected, throughout
the second half of 2004. Overall utilization was at 86% in the
fourth quarter, and leading-edge capacity utilization was at 93%. Industry capital spending increased to approximately $47
billion - roughly 22% of total sales - in 2004.
"In a year of
record industry sales, this level of capital spending is in line with
capacity needs going forward and should not lead to either excess
capacity or severe price pressures," said Scalise.