San Jose, CA -- Electronics manufacturing in China experienced another year of record growth in 2003, exceeding even optimistic expectations, according to a new report from Electronic Trend Publications. While part of the growth is attributable to a bandwagon effort to keep pace with worldwide competitors who manufacture in China or have CM/ODM partners there, the major trend is for companies to lower product cost by leveraging the outsourcing model and gaining access to the enormous, undeveloped local Chinese market.
ETP estimates the cost of goods sold for electronics products manufactured in China was $122 billion in 2002. The market is predicted to grow at a CAGR of 15.4%, reaching $270 billion by 2008. Some of the fastest growing companies over this period should include TCL, Aucma, AsusTek, Jinling, Quanta, Gree and UTStarcom, all of which saw their revenues double from the previous year.
Computing and communications IT equipment will continue to grow, accounting for nearly 68% of China's total electronics production by 2008. However, the market in all industries is expanding for both domestic consumption and export.
The unanswered question is: How long can this growth be sustained without a downturn? ETP suggests that Asian companies tend to compete themselves into an unhealthy market environment from a supply and profit point of view. Yet, as long as fundamental worldwide demand for products remains strong, China is expected to expand its market share of the worldwide assembly market.
Net income dropped, however, to $236,439, from $440,679 last year (when the company gained a tax credit of $213,000.) The company cited pricing pressures and higher charges for freight and raw materials.
Income from operations was $541,576, up from $439,034. Backlogs were up 20% to $14.2 million.
Year to-date sales are uup 24%, to $52.3 million, a company record. Net income was $384,472, down from $788,990, including the one-time credit.
The company guided for fiscal 2004 revenue of $68 million to $71 million, up 20%.
The conference takes place Rosemont, IL Sept. 25 to 29, in Rosemont (Chicago), IL.
The deadline for abstracts is Feb. 7. Abstracts can be submitted by clicking here.
Papers should describe significant results from experiments or emphasize new techniques and contain technical, economic or test data. Material should be original, unpublished and noncommercial.
SMTA provides a $1,000 awards for papers judged best of conference, best of proceedings and best international.
Steve Hunter will be responsible for all manufacturing operations including logistics, inventory and purchasing procedures and policies.
"Hunter's past experience and overall knowledge of global logistics, inventory control and operations is exceptional," said Neil MacRaild, Americas general manager, in a statement.
Hunter has 15 years of logistics experience, most recently as global supply chain manager for a major medical device company.
If accurate, the EMS firms most likely to suffer would be Celestica (>10% of revenue comes from Cisco), Solectron (16%) and Jabil (15%).
Cisco forecast Q2 sales of $6.03 billion to $6.15 billion, lower than the Wall Street consensus of $6.21 billion.
Cisco's finished goods inventory increased during the last quarter to $714 million from $656 million. The company's book-to-bill is below 1.0, the mark of future expansion, Whitmore reported.
"[W]e expect soft trends in the communications infrastructure end market (for EMS vendors) to extend well into 2005. As such, we remain cautious on those EMS vendors with significant exposure to this end market," Whitmore said.
Solectron appears "most vulnerable" to softness at Cisco, Whitmore said.
Nashville, TN, Nov. 10 —Mike Bixenman, Kyzen Corp.'s CTO, will present a paper on "Optimizing Cleaning Energy in Batch and Inline Spray Systems" at the Nov. 11 meeting of the SMTA Intermountain Chapter. Pat Ryan of Indium Corp. will follow with a presentation on lead-free.
The meeting will take place from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. at Computrol in Meridian, ID, and will focus on cleaning and lead-free.