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While 2009 was clearly a down year for the semiconductor industry the stocks have recovered from the bottom set in March 2009. Most of the recovery was driven by valuation and technical. In 2010, we expect industry fundamentals to improve. The credible indicators that a recovery is on the way include stable memory prices for the past 6 months, lean inventory and component shortage. Managements have indicated that global demand for semi devices have improved and customers are asking for capacity related tools. Bit growth is expected to be in the range of 45-55% in 2010 driven by the adoption of new technologies and products. According to a panel of CIOs at a recent technology conference, 2010 spending will be for “catching up “ on technologies not implemented in 2009 and looking into the future for new ones.
There are a number of technologies grabbing the attention of device manufacturers, enterprises and consumers. Computing has become an integral part of our every day lives. We can’t leave home without it. Technologies such as virtualization, cloud computing, 3D and solid state drives (SSD), are driving the upgrade cycle in the semi industry. Enterprise spending on SSD has picked up in the past 6 months due to performance and new applications, while DRAM prices have more than tripled in the past 9 months paving the way for profitable growth for device manufacturers.
New equipment will be required to make SSD price competitive not only in the enterprise market but also for penetration into the consumer market. The trend in the semi conductor industry is to put more functionality on a single chip. Therefore, cost and yield improvements are critical for profitability and margin expansion. It is imperative the semi device makers invest in the next leading edge technology to get a lower cost-per-die. Companies that do not invest will be out of position and their competitive advantage will be compromised and their sustainability questioned.
Currently, only 3-4% of notebooks have SSD. This technology will provide a significant growth opportunity for the industry over the next several years. Initially, the demand for SSD will be driven by the enterprise market due to better performance, reliability, power consumption and speed. In the consumer market-- smart phones, netbooks, notebooks, e-readers will fuel the growth going forward. The consumer has not embraced SSD due to its high price relative to HDD. However, with the advent of cloud computing (application are stored in the cloud, rather than locally) consumers might be willing to trade capacity for performance. Therefore, a price crossover point for SDD and HDD might not be the key factor for SSD adoption in the consumer market.
When SSD penetration accelerates, for long-term investors this could be a multi-year cycle that could change the profitability for many device manufactures.