Is the electronics supply chain diving headlong into one of its
infamous component undersupply situations and the associated procurement
woes? Some industry veterans are concerned this may be the case as they
watch average selling prices inch higher and demand strengthen in an
environment marked by low inventories and limited manufacturing
capacity. With companies keeping a wary eye on uncertainties in the
global economic and political environment – and hesitant to raise capex –
the stage may be set for a scary demand-supply imbalance by the third
quarter of the year, sources said.
It may be too early to
categorically state that the electronics industry will be by mid-year
enmeshed in another round of its vicious shortage cycles. The industry
is notorious for projecting inaccurate sales forecasts, numbers which
companies nevertheless use to determine capex and other major
infrastructure expenses. The repeated failures to hit projected sales
figures have in the past hurt suppliers and OEMs alike, forcing many of
them to be more cautious in production capacity planning.
What
could be different this time is that the wariness has spread so
thoroughly into the supply chain that limited capacity exists today to
absorb any unanticipated surge in demand. Current forecasts, for
example, calls for semiconductor sales to rise anywhere from the low
single digit to as high as 15 percent in 2017. The numbers vary widely.
The World Semiconductor Trade Statistics said IC sales will rise about 3 percent this year, after a no-growth situation in 2016, and climb 2 percent in 2018. Meanwhile, Gartner Inc.
in November revised upward its earlier forecast and now expects
semiconductor sales in 2017 to jump 7.2 percent from a mere increase of
1.5 percent in 2016.
“The worst is now over with a positive
outlook emerging for 2017 driven by inventory replenishment and
increasing average selling prices (ASPs) in select markets, particularly
commodity memory and application-specific standard products,” said Ganesh Ramamoorthy, research vice president at Gartner, in a release.
“The turnaround that started at the end of the second quarter of 2016
will continue to gain momentum and we expect the improved conditions to
carry through 2017.”
At Future Horizons,
a U.K.-based market consulting firm, principal analyst Malcolm Penn
would seem to agree with Gartner that semiconductor makers should
anticipate a robust year. His numbers, though, are a bit more
optimistic. The scenarios described by Penn during Future Horizons’
annual forecast conference last month call for IC sales to soar as high
as 16 percent, if currently favorable conditions persist throughout the
year. His most likely scenario, however, is for sales to increase 11
percent to approximately $375.6 billion.
“The economy and capacity
are the industry’s biggest wildcards,” Penn said. “An economic
roadblock will derail the market; capacity constraints will trigger
panic.”
It may not matter whose forecasts bend closer to the
actual market performance if the industry records even the slightest
growth: A shortage would ensue and already rising prices will surge
higher, putting pressure on buyers and pasting a smile on the faces of
components manufacturers. This is because “capital expenditure and
capacity are today finely tuned to current low level of demand,” as Penn
points out. With inventories at low levels, any upturn in demand will
trigger shortages of critical components, according to observers.
Good News, Bad News
Despite
the possibility of supply shortages, a sales turnaround in the
electronics industry would be a positive development. In the different
segments of the supply chain, companies are resorting to a low-level
form of cannibalism for growth. Semiconductor suppliers are in a frenzy
of mergers and acquisitions while the distribution channel has been
turned into a scramble for engineers, who many distributors believe can
help them secure desired design sockets. (See: Distribution: More M&A on the Way).
A
market upturn will also exact a negative toll on the supply chain; many
companies have been so focused on keeping costs low that they have
inadvertently placed extreme constraints on the entire infrastructure.
Analysts say capex reductions over the years have sharply reduced the
number of manufacturing facilities companies can tap to meet
unanticipated surge in demand. Add to this the growing dependence on
foundries for semiconductors and the advent of fabless chipmakers and
what you have is an explosive mix of supply constraints at a time of
firming demand.
How did we get here? One word: prudence, which,
though advisable, has since morphed into incapacitating caution.
Inventories are at historically low levels throughout the electronics
industry. Suppliers, distributors and OEMs have turned raw materials,
components, work-in-progress and finished inventories into the
traditional hot potato; nobody wants to keep more than they can juggle
at any one point. As a result, semiconductor suppliers, for example,
have tamped down hard on inventories and gone as far as keeping chips in
die form rather than finished products ready for sale.
Another
troubling factor today is the growing shortage of silicon wafers from
the leading suppliers, many of which have put customers on notice about
their inability to meet current demand.
“Companies are no longer
making the once typical 10- to 15-year bet and investments in capital
infrastructure because they just don’t have any reliable demand
visibility,” said Penn at Future Horizons. “The amount of leading-edge
manufacturing capacity available today is quite low, IC companies no
longer invest in fabs and even those that still have plants have hardly
any spare or redundant capacity.”
The electronics industry hasn’t
had a manufacturing capacity squeeze in years. That’s not because
component suppliers don’t want one, after all shortages can lead to
firmer prices, higher capacity utilization rates and stronger profit
margins. It was just that nobody wants a repeat of the horrific
scarcities that followed the industry’s great cyclical expansion in
2000. What is still widely acknowledged as the industry’s worst downturn
followed; Component pricing fell off a cliff, sales slumped and
inventories ballooned at suppliers, OEMs and at contract manufacturers.
Many companies went out of business and billions of dollars in unwanted
inventories were written off or scrapped.
Many of today’s buyers
at OEMs/EMS providers may not recall the extraordinary twin-dance of
shortages and overages that marked the beginning of the century. Those
who do have wild stories to tell, even if these might seem implausible
to many now. This is why some in the industry are worried. The incidents
of 2000 appear so hazy now that few believe the industry would ever
experience anything remotely similar again. The lack of visibility into
OEM/EMS provider and end-market demand beyond a few weeks, in many
cases, is making companies hesitant to accept anecdotal evidence
indicating a potential surge in demand, analysts said.
“Companies
should be putting in new equipment to absorb higher demand but nobody
wants to do it because they don’t have visibility into the next month
not to talk of one or more quarters ahead,” Penn said. “Yet, the supply
chain is tight and we are still bleeding current capacity for more. This
could be dangerous in an environment where everything is outsourced.”
https://epsnews.com/2017/02/09/severe-electronics-components-shortages-possible-in-2017/
No comments:
Post a Comment