THE LATEST NEWS
Broadcom ascended to the top of the heap in sales among fabless chip vendors in

 After a three-year run of record chip sales, the widely expected semiconductor industry downturn appears to be at hand.

Chip sales fell sharply in January on both a sequential and annual basis, according to the World Semiconductor Trade Statistics (WSTS) organization. It was the first year-to-year decline in chip sales for any month since July 2016.


Recommended
Chip Sales Slow, China Talks Start


John Neuffer, the Semiconductor Industry Association’s president and CEO, said through a statement that semiconductor sales got off to a slow start in 2019, with sales down compared with December 2018 across all major product categories and regional markets.

“It seems clear the global market is experiencing a period of slower sales,” Neuffer said.

Semiconductor sales reached a record $468.8 billion in 2018, up 13.7% from 2017, capping a historic three-year run that saw the industry set a new all-time sales high each year. The latest WSTS forecast calls for semiconductor sales to increase by 2.6% this year, although most independent analysts are less optimistic.

Last month, Neuffer — whose group opposes the Trump administration’s tariffs on Chinese goods — warned that the U.S.-China trade war, falling memory prices, and an economic slowdown in China could lead to a period of slower growth or even contraction in chip sales.

Acting AG Whitaker

The three-month rolling average of chip sales fell to $35.5 billion in January, down 5.7% compared to January 2018 and down 7.2% compared to December 2018, according to the WSTS.

In the Americas region, chip sales for January were down 15.3% year to year and down 13% month to month, according to the WSTS.

Despite the slowdown in sales, Neuffer maintained that the long-term outlook for the industry remains promising “due to the ever-increasing semiconductor content in a range of consumer products and future growth drivers such as artificial intelligence, virtual reality, the internet of things, and 5G and next-generation communications networks.”

Acting AG Whitaker


Back
China EUV Breakthrough and the Rise of the ‘Silicon Curtain’
Inside a secure facility overseen by the Central Science and Technology Commission, Chinese engineers have activated an Extreme Ultr...
More info
AI Directs UFS Advancement
The next Universal Flash Storage (UFS) standard has yet to be released, but the standards organization overseeing it has made the unc...
More info
Marvell Eyeing Connectivity as the Next Big Thing in AI
At this year’s Marvell Industry Analyst Day, held on Dec. 9, Marvell Technology’s President and chief operating officer Chris K...
More info
0.0983s