There have been many reports recently of softness in the semiconductor chip market. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) reportedly asked its staff to take vacations, personal computer manufacturers have been lowering their chip demand, and demand from smartphone makers has dropped sharply and is forecasted to get worse going into 2023. While some chip manufacturers appear to be swimming (drowning) in inventories, some chips continue to be in short supply. How do we sort out what is going on? The key is to understand that there are very distinctive market segments, and the supply-demand dynamics are different depending on where you sit.
The high end is seeing softness
When we talk about high-end chips, we usually are referring to the newest and most advanced technologies. Semiconductor manufacturers often talk about “nodes” which have a number associated with them. That number historically mapped to the size of one of the critical features of a chip as measured in nanometers (abbreviated nm); one nanometer is one billionth of a meter. The smaller the number, the more advanced. Thus Apple is using chips manufactured on TSMC’s 5 nm node for its latest iPhones, and DigiTimes reported that they are already working on 2 nm. The big consumers of TSMC’s high end chips are Apple, AMD, Intel
This should not come as a surprise. A significant chunk of the volume in this sector is driven by personal computer sales. Back in April 2021 Gartner
Commodity segments like memory appear to be swimming in inventory
Micron Technology
But the automotive sector continues to struggle
Most automotive semiconductors are produced on “mature” nodes. A recent McKinsey report stated that most of the demand in this sector was for 90 nm and above. For perspective, the 90 nm node was the bleeding edge of chip technology around 2002, twenty years ago. Partly this was because the types of components used in vehicles didn’t benefit from newer technologies, and there is a long and expensive process to move them to more modern nodes. The factories making these chips use older tools, and since these are not terribly profitable commodity parts, there has been little incentive to invest in growing the capacity. Capacity was already tight before the pandemic, and then during a roughly eighty-week period in 2020 when car factories were mostly shut down, most of the OEMs pulled back their orders. Meanwhile an explosion in demand from other sectors filled all that manufacturing capacity, so when the automakers came back to reorder, the lead times had extended way out. They are still catching up.
Aggregation of segments masks underlying dynamics
One lesson we can learn from this mess is that when you take an aggregated view of the semiconductor sector, combining the high end, commodity, and mature chip sectors, it can mask what is going on in different segments of the market. I find the same problem when combing through government import/export trade data or Bureau of Labor Statistics stuff. There’s always great value in understanding the detail.
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/willyshih/2022/11/03/why-are-some-companies-still-short-semiconductor-chips-when-others-are-swimming-in-them/