SAN FRANCISCO -- Aggressive pricing pressure and
excess capacity are hurting margins at providers of EMS and ODM
services, a top investment bank said today.
Noting the "disappointing" margins of the last quarter turned in by Taiwan-based ODMs
Hon Hai, Asustek and Quanta, Deutsche Bank asserted that further downsizing is ahead for the industry.
Taiwan's leading EMS/ODMs have seen margins fall, on average, from 9.9%
in 2001 to 4.8% in 2004, DB said. "We believe the difficult pricing
environment and weak margin performance throughout the industry
will ultimately drive additional restructuring and capacity reduction,"
DB analyst Chris Whitmore wrote in a research note issued today.
In the past two weeks three of the top Taiwanese suppliers posted below
expected margins. Hon Hai's consolidated net margin fell to 4.4% in the
first quarter from roughly 6% sequentially. Asustek reported 1Q
margins of 5.8% (DB had forecast 6.2%) and flat profits year-on-year
despite an 11% jump in sales.
"While some of the margin erosion is undoubtedly from a mix shift
toward lower margin products and services, appreciation of the
Taiwanese dollar and other
non-core operating items and investments, we believe the pricing
environment has had a substantial impact to margins," Whitmore wrote.
Whitmore forecasts continued pricing pressure for contract manufacturing and
ODM services barring "significant structural change ... for the foreseeable future."
The firm expects the environment will lead to further cuts in
manufacturing capacity and consolidation. "We believe weak
industry-wide margins and continued lackluster final demand will drive
another round of M&A in the EMS/ODM industries," Whitmore wrote.
Whitmore said the analyst also remains concerned about
Sanmina-SCI's (and to a lesser extent
Solectron's) footprints in high-cost regions such as Europe and North America.