According to the latest figures released by the Semiconductor
Industry Association (SIA), worldwide sales of semiconductors in May
reached $21.8 billion, 7.5 percent higher than the $20.3 billion
reported for the same month a year ago. May sales were 2.8 percent
higher than the $21.2 billion reported for April 2008. May is
traditionally a stronger month than previous months in the calendar
year, according to the SIA.
“Growing sales of consumer electronic products in emerging markets,
including China, Latin America, and India, have become a major factor
driving semiconductor sales,” said SIA President George Scalise.
“Consumers account for more than half of all semiconductor sales
worldwide. In the past, the U.S. was the largest consumer market and
the primary driver of demand. Today this country accounts for less than
a quarter of total consumer demand,” Scalise noted. “Factors affecting
the world economy – rather than just developed country markets – are
increasingly important to the industry,”
Although fears continue
to circle about the U.S. credit crunch and its impact on consumer
spending, the SIA believes that the recent tax rebates in the country
may have supported continued consumer electronic spending, at least in
the short-term.
According to Scalise, the shift in demand
patterns has major implications for the semiconductor industry. “While
we haven’t seen a slowdown in U.S. consumer spending on electronic
products, a slowdown in the U.S. today would not have the same impact
it had in the past,” said Scalise. “The addition of more than 300
million consumers in other regions has created new opportunities for
the worldwide microchip industry, and a more diversified market has
helped to drive increased sales of semiconductors.”
The
semiconductor industry, according to the SIA, is becoming significantly
less dependent on the North American consumer. Currently, the U.S.
controls only 21 percent of PC unit sales, compared to 31 percent in
the past few years. This is also true in the mobile phone market, with
mobile phone sales only 13 percent of the global total, compared to 21
percent only five years ago, the SIA said.
However, the memory
market continues to be a challenging environment, pulling overall sales
revenue down due to continued price erosion caused by oversupply.