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October outlook: where IC markets are headed SOI still has problems; DRAM sales in '02 will be only 20% of peak year; DSP shipments will decline 30% this year; Embedded SRAM is killing discrete SRAM market; IDC says contract manufacturing will double next year; 18 of top 21 fabless IC suppliers are U.S. based; iSuppli gets cold feet, cuts two-week-old IC forecast; and other market reports |
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Robert Henkel
(10/19/2001 9:13 AM EDT) URL: http://www.eetimes.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=10809679 |
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![]() SOI wafers will be a boomer, if cost drops
TOKYO--Silicon-on-insulator technology is really neat and proponents have long predicted that widespread usage would be coming. But today, even its strongest backers admit that high wafer costs are still holding SOI back.
Cost is the only remaining frontier, declares Motorola staff scientist Michael Mendicino. "Five years ago, I could show you road maps that said costs would be competitive with bulk at the volumes we have today," he points out. "We have the volumes now, but we don't have the prices. Cellular phone makers would love SOI's 20% performance benefit and dynamic power, but they can't afford the price."
"We think SOI is a strong candidate for the future, but these days the most important point is the cost of the substrate," agrees Yoshio Miura, retired R&D director at Nippon Motorola. "When I was working at Motorola, "We used to say that if the price could drop to three times that of bulk, SOI use would increase dramatically. But today that price is still between five times and 10 times."
Motorola has shouldered most of the cost to develop this technology and wants SOI in place for the next upturn, Mendicino says. The chip maker intends to develop a future generation of SOI-based DSPs, he says.
Motorola isn't the only chip company pushing SOI. IBM, Advanced Micro Devices, and Texas Instruments also are heavy backers for 0.13-micron and 0.10-micron logic. But some people have been sending mixed signals on the merits of SOI vs. bulk CMOS. Sun Microsystems and TI decided not to use SOI for Sun's next-generation microprocessor. But IBM will still use SOI to make its upcoming 0.13-micron Power4 processor.
SOI got a thorough airing at the recent solid-state devices and materials conference, with 16 SOI-related papers. SOI wafers were riddled with as many as 10,000 defects as recently as 1997, but have been reduced to a fraction of that level and now nearly match those of bulk silicon wafers, Mendicino said.
SOI's reduced junction capacitance, lack of reverse body effect and radiation hardness all indicate a bright future for the technology in limited applications, Mendicino said. He was bullish about its prospects for high-end devices, but bearish on its use in memory, ASIC and low-power communications devices. SOI costs will never be low enough to compete in the memory sector, and the ASIC market moves too fast for SOI-based designs, he said. "But everyone is agreed that for high-performance logic, SOI is top of the list," he said.
What DRAM biz needs is
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| Country | 2000 sales | Growth | |
| 1. Xilinx | U.S. | $1,560 | 74% |
| 2. Altera | U.S. | $1,377 | 65% |
| 3. Qualcomm | U.S. | $1,250 | 9% |
| 4. Broadcom | U.S. | $1,096 | 114% |
| 5. VIA Technologies | Taiwan | $909 | 160% |
| 6. Cirrus Logic | U.S. | $729 | 37% |
| 7. Nvidia | U.S. | $699 | 97% |
| 8. PMC-Sierra | U.S. | $695 | 165% |
| 9. SanDisk | U.S. | $602 | 144% |
| 10. Lattice Semiconductor | U.S. | $568 | 76% |
EL SEGUNDO, Calif.--Another market researcher has gotten cold feet and has cut back its two-week-old forecast for the global chip market this year and next. "Decreasing consumer spending and lower projections for IT investments by enterprises will significantly reduce semiconductor revenues below our recent forecasts for the next few quarters," admits Greg Sheppard, head of market research at iSuppli. "The chip market will still experience a small gain in the fourth quarter thanks to traditional seasonal factors, but overall revenues for 2001 will decline by 30.9%--down 2.6% from the 28.3% decline we were forecasting just two weeks ago," Sheppard says. Next year's forecast was cut back as well. "With OEMs and contract manufacturers beginning to stretch out deliveries, we are also lowering our forecasts for semiconductor revenue growth from 9.9% to 4.1% for 2002," Shepard says. "We anticipate little positive momentum in the marketplace until well into the second quarter of next year."
BOSTON -- Cost of converting wireless networks to next-generation services is going to be darned expensive for operators, but they're going to have to do it to stay competitive. As a result, global spending on infrastructure systems for wireless mobile communication networks will jump from $99.4 billion this year to a peak of $120.2 billion in 2004. Then spending will drift down to $114.6 billion by 2006, according to Yankee Group.
Much of the new investments over the next five years will be aimed at overlaying 2.5 and 3G generation technologies on top of existing cellular networks and services. While it's going to be expensive, "operators cannot avoid these costs without the risk of losing market share," says Phil Marshall, Yankee Group analyst. This is due to "the imminent obsolescence of second-generation technologies and the promise of next-generation services."
The lion's share of the new infrastructure investments will go for GSM, GPRS, and WCDMA formats, the analyst says, with an increasing amount of money going for electronics--63% of total capital expenditures in 2005 vs. 53% in 2001.
NEW TRIPOLI, Penn.--Believe it or not, there's one sector in the semiconductor capital spending market that's shooting up this year.
Investments in 300-mm wafer processing tools are expected to grow 39% in 2001 to $11.4 billion from $8.2 billion last year, according to a new report from The Information Network here. Next year, the market researcher expects growth in 300-mm equipment purchases will slow to an increase of 16.7%, reaching $13.3 billion worldwide.
Next year, revenues from 300-mm systems will represent 48.2% of all frontend fab tools in 2002, The Information Network says. "Some of this equipment will be bridge tools, able to process 200-mm and 300-mm wafers," says Robert N. Castellano, president of the research firm.
"The strong growth of 300-mm fabs and fab equipment in 2001 . . . is due to the substantial savings of up to 40% that could be realized by 300-mm chip production," Castellano says. "That trend will continue in 2002 as chip manufacturers move to smaller feature sizes to remain competitive and build on a 300-mm platform to further reduce costs." Now, the SEMI trade group is predicting that worldwide spending on chip production systems will fall 35% in 2001 after surging last year by 87%. First-half sales were down 16.1% in chip equipment to $18.3 billon. Next year SEMI predicts semiconductor equipment spending will rise 11% next year.
SAN JOSE--It's always fun for a journalist to cover the Microprocessor Forum, held annually in mid-October in San Jose. I call it the "gee whiz" show, where the experts try to out-do one another in predicting future products and technology trends.
The star of tomorrow at this year's conference was the 10-gigahertz microprocessor. Yup, an incredible 300-million transistor processor for PCs is right around the corner, predict the experts.
Right now, Intel claims the world's fastest processor for desktop PCs, which runs at speeds to 2 gigahertz. And by early next year, it will launch the 2.2-gigahertz Northwood processor.
"You can expect to see a 10-gigahertz processor by 2005," predicts Bill Pohlman, chip veteran who is now chairman of Primarion, a Tempe-based developer of optical I/O technology. "Moore's Law is pretty much on track," he adds. "You might even see one earlier," he says.
Such a super processor most likely would be manufactured with 0.05-micron CMOS technology, Pohlman says. The 0.5-to-0.8-volt part will probably carry more than 16-megabytes of cache, offer fault tolerance features, and run up to 30-gigabyes-per-second, he says.
But there's still a lot of work to be done. And there are some major challenges, "namely power and thermal limitations in processor design," Pohlman notes. "Packaging is also behind," he adds.
"There also will be a need for processor and system designers to work together, says Martin Rausch, platform technology manager at Intel. "Ten gigahertz processors pose significant system-level challenges to the industry," he points out. "Cost will also be a major factor in the acceptance" of such monster chips.
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz.--Don't count on information technology customers to help lift the chip business out of the hole this year or maybe even 2002. Overall business IT spending will fall more than 12% this year from 2000--the first annual decline in overall business IT spending in a decade, according to Cahner's In-Stat Group.
The impact of the September 11th terrorist attacks is expected to drive IT spending down even more, particularly among companies with less than 100 full-time employees, where business failures are predicted to be on the rise. Along with smaller IT budgets in 2001, this guarantees falling IT spending by U.S. businesses this year and a slow recovery in the future, In-Stat says. "This is literally a new economy," says In-Stat research director Kneko Burney.
"The unfortunate reality is that many businesses over-invested in IT products and services in 2000, creating sluggish demand in 2001," he says. This factor alone was expected to lead to a decline in IT spending before the September 11th attacks, he adds. "We believe the fear and economic uncertainty following these events will lead to a freeze in IT investments for the next few months and will continue to negatively impact our economy and IT spending well into 2002."
IT spending segments that will be least affected by the attacks will be communication services, networking, and outside services such as applications integration and hosting, In-Stat predicts.
The average company spending for IT this year is predicted to be $19 million for enterprise firms (more than 1,000 employees), a drop of 18% from 2000; $846,000 for middle market firms (100 to 999 employees), a decline of 13%; $70,000 for small businesses (5 to 99 employees), a drop of 17%; and $6,000 for SOHO businesses with less than five employees, a decline of 27%.