Navigation Bar: Home > Economics Articles > Recovery August 2003
|
Month
|
Growth
|
|
Jan
|
19.5%
|
|
Feb
|
16.7%
|
|
Mar
|
13.0%
|
|
Apr
|
12.5%
|
|
May
|
12.3%
|
|
Jun
|
11.7%
|
From table 1 two interesting conclusions may be drawn. The first is that 2003 is showing significant revenue growth over 2002, and secondly that the growth rate is moderating as the year progresses.
Historically the first year of a semiconductor industry recovery has shown very strong growth with greater than 20% being quite common. This recovery is in our opinion different from previous recoveries. For many years PCs have been the largest application for semiconductors. Each time new faster processors were released, users would rapidly upgrade for the obvious improvement in PC responce speed. PCs have now reached a point where a faster PC is imperceptible to the average user and the upgrade cycle has been replaced with more of a "wear-out cycle". There are hot new applications such as DVDs, MP3 players, Digital Cameras, etc. driving semiconductor demand, but these applications are too small to drive the industry the way that PCs have. Our belief is that the industry will see more moderate growth over the next few years unless some new "killer application" emerges for the PC.
For 2003 we would expect 10% to 12% growth. There are some recent signs of price firming that will help with revenue growth, but with 6 months complete it will become increasingly difficult to drive the yearly number back up much.
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