United Business Media EE Times


Search

HOMELATEST NEWSSEMICONDUCTORSMOST POPULARMARKET INTELLIGENCE UNITFORUMSDESIGNNEW PRODUCTSCAREERSBLOGSCONTACTEVENTSSIGN UP!RSS

 

Digital adoption is driving analog growth








Silicon Strategies


The following column was provided by Susie Inouye, a senior analyst with Databeans Inc., a Reno, Nevada-based market research firm.The adoption of digital technology, fueled by lower prices for digital solutions, is driving analog IC sales.

This may sound like a paradox but is entirely logical. Replacement of older technology with digital electronics, and new compelling products offering portability, delivery, and connectivity between humans and information, is driving analog momentum, as each time a dollar's worth of digital is used in an application, systems typically also require supporting analog technology that can be worth 1.4 times as much.

Since 1995, average selling prices for digital ICs have been slipping by an average of 6 percent annually. This has the effect of increasing the analog proportion of the total semiconductor business. The analog share of the total semiconductor market is expected to grow to over 18 percent during the next five years; up from 15 percent in 1991.

Demand for analog circuits increases as digital electronics proliferates. Electronics requires analog circuits to manage power, condition signaling, and to interface with the equipment people use to connect to each other and to the growing abundance of available media.

Awareness of the analog market is also growing. In the past, investor pundits have disregarded analog as 'old' and single-purpose technology, with little differentiation among suppliers, while focusing on the digital IC suppliers that offered integrated "progressive" products. Over time, this has changed, as high-performance analog suppliers have increasingly produced products that are highly integrated, repackaged, and reengineered to meet today's intensive application requirements. Further, traditional digital IC suppliers have moved aggressively into the analog space, with new offerings in mixed-signal and special purpose devices, leading to renewed interest from long time digital IC market followers on Wall Street.

In the computer market, new form factors of the functional PC are continuing to evolve with ever increasing requirements for power and connectivity, leading to growth opportunities for voltage regulators and communications devices, such as IEEE 802.11 specification components. Computer applications contribute the largest portion of revenue to the analog power management market.

In 2002, there was an estimated $1.1 billion of analog power components in this segment consisting of regulator shipments used in PCs, laptops, servers and peripherals.

Communications applications continue to advance in wireless and broadband transmission. For analog, this means growing opportunity in special purpose analog as well as high-speed standard products, including amplifiers, interface, and mixed-signal. High-speed amplifiers are the fastest growing segment of the amplifier market, thanks to the broadband upsurge. Unit shipments for high-speed amplifiers are expected to increase from 95 million units in 2002 to 310 million units by 2008. The broadband segment accounts for 41 percent of high-speed amplifier shipments. Growth drivers in the communications segment include high-speed infrastructure for wireless, VoIP, Gigabit Ethernet, 10-Gbit Ethernet, and personal broadband access equipment.

In the consumer space, rapid adoption of high-performance audio and video offerings continues at pace. Digital cameras, and DVD video and audio products, remain 'hot' sellers, barely resembling other sectors of the consumer segment. High-performance analog products targeting the consumer space include special purpose audio ICs, video ICs, and mass storage control circuits, supported by an emerging technology trend of disk drive and re-writable digital media usage in consumer electronics.

Following a substantial downturn, and a labored drawn-out recovery, it is easy to indulge a pessimistic outlook on opportunities moving forward, but it is unlikely that these recent events will undermine the fundamentals that are driving growth in analog. The catalyst that is driving consumption in this segment is not temporary, nor is it restricted to one sector of the economy, and it supports the expansion of the analog market, which is expected to outperform the total digital IC market by an average of several percentage points of growth each year.











  Free Subscription to EE Times
First Name Last Name
Company Name Title
Email address
  Click here for your Free Subscription to EETimes Europe
 
CAREER CENTER
Ready to take that job and shove it?
SEARCH JOBS
SPONSOR

RECENT JOB POSTINGS
CAREER NEWS
Federal CTO Sees IT Leading U.S. Out Of Recession
Aneesh Chopra is looking to other CIOs to advise him on fleshing out a more detailed agenda to best serve the president's IT agenda.

For more great jobs, career related news, features and services, please visit EETimes' Career Center.



All White Papers »   

  Around Silicon Strategies

FPGA startup crunch: These articles are part of a series that examines the status of various FPGA startups in light of the economic recession. Startups Abound Logic, Achronix Semiconductor and Cswitch are all on the hot seat. More...

10 fab technologies on the hot seat: There's trouble brewing in chip-making paradise. Delivery of chips at 32-nm and beyond won't be a cool breeze. EE Times has constructed the following list of 10 fab technologies that could make or break future IC scaling. More...

6 fab technologies on the bubble: It isn't going to be a slam-dunk to deliver chips at 32-nm and beyond. See our story about 10 fab technologies on the hot seat. Then read this article: 6 technologies on the bubble. More...

Our take on Intel-River: With its acquisition of embedded software leader Wind River Systems Inc., Intel Corp. has unambiguously signaled that it is again attempting to diversify beyond X86 processors. Here's our take on the deal. More...

CEVA's reversal: When Gideon Wertheizer, CEVA's CEO, came to New York to ring the closing bell at Nasdaq to celebrate the company's 10th year anniversary, he talked about CEVA's 21.6 percent revenue growth in 2008. More...

Hot technologies to watch for in 2009: Every technologist, marketer, industry analyst and reporter on a hunt for the next big thing is bracing for the 2009 Consumer Electronics Show scheduled less than a month away. More...

Top 20 predictions for semis in 2009: To help sort out the confusion in the market, EE Times has released its own chip forecasts--and other predictions--for 2009. So, what will happen in analog, FPGAs, foundry, memory, MPUs and other sectors? More...

Silicon 60 version 8.0 The EE Times 60 Emerging Startups list, first published in April 2004, has been updated to version 8.0 to reflect the latest corporate, commercial, technology and market conditions. More...

 
Education and
Learning


Learn Now:












Home | About | Editorial Calendar | Feedback | Subscriptions | Newsletter | Media Kit | Contact | Reprints|  RSS|   Digital|  Mobile
Network Websites
International
Network Features




All materials on this site Copyright © 2009 TechInsights, a Division of United Business Media LLC All rights reserved.
Privacy Statement | Terms of Service | About