Last week’s shock news from TSMC that it is planning to significantly reduce capital spending in 2008 and indications that this would be potentially become the norm for several years ahead shouldn’t be underestimated.
I have to point out from the outset that I was surprised by the
comments from Rick Tsai during the financial analyst conference call.
But when I took the time (provided by a 6-hour flight that took 9 hours
with AA last Friday) I started to realise that what I had been saying
to people for the last two years had finally been verified by Rick’s
comments!
More on that below!
Many people within the
industry, including market research analysts and equipment suppliers,
had expected CapEx spending to return with some level of rigor in 2008
as it had become blatantly obvious that as utilization rates passed the
90 percent range at TSMC, it would be forced to spend more money in
2008 than it did in each of the last two years.
Equipment
suppliers were expecting the major foundries like TSMC to start
spending in the third quarter of this year onwards, but as a range of
suppliers have now reported, this simply hasn’t happened.
Novellus’
Rick Hill was convinced only a week ago that he expected the major
foundries to come back and spend dollars by the second quarter of 2008.
Although that is later than most have hoped for, at least the pattern
looked good!
As the biggest foundry in all terms this has the
potential knock-on effect for the other foundries that include UMC,
SMIC and Chartered. TSMC has out-spent the others significantly for
over a decade and importantly has the right level of business to ensure
that it suffers less than its rivals in any downturn, and can also
recover faster. These points shouldn’t be sidestepped as the others
have historically mirrored TSMC, albeit at lower levels of utilization,
CapEx and profitability for longer than I care to mention!
When
the inventory issue raised its ugly head in 2006 I expected TSMC to cut
CapEx to better fit the economic climate. It didn’t.
As the
chart below shows from official TSMC figures, the foundry spent $2.4
billion on CapEx in 2006. But it started the year with a low level of
spending, climbing to a peak in the third quarter. The taps were turned
off for two quarters (4Q06-1Q07) as the inventory overhang was highly
visible and utilization rates declined.
As can be clearly seen, both 300mm fabs hardly added any capacity, highlighting the lack of demand from customers.
Things started to recover by the end of 2Q07, but don’t be misled by what the chart seems to be showing!
With
low utilization rates through 2006 and into 2007, TSMC had added
significant capacity at its two 300mm fabs. TSMC had gone through phase
2 & 3 expansion at Fab 12 and had been adding leading-edge capacity
at Fab 14.
As the chart shows, TSMC had increased 300mm
capacity by approximately 33 percent in 2006, yet utilization rates
were declining. In 2007 we saw a similar pattern of investment with the
bulk of spending occurring in Q2 & Q3. TSMC is now on track to have
expanded 300mm capacity by approximately 43 percent in 2007. However,
the utilization rates have only recovered since Q2 onwards.
The
realization of all this is that TSMC had been adding significant
capacity when demand didn’t justify it. I had been questioning this
aspect for some time, as TSMC was out of sync with its rivals.
Compared
to the other major foundries, TSMC had ramped its 300mm fabs
significantly faster than any of its rivals in the past two years,
while many would have expected a closer correlation across the
industry. UMC, for example, has been expanding 300mm capacity at a
snail’s pace in comparison. Only Chartered and SMIC have seen
reasonable ramp rates, both coming from a low starting point.
Chartered, for example, has achieved a 1,100 (approx) wafer ramp per
quarter in 2007 - hardly a ramp at all!
So is Rick Tsai correct
in claiming that productivity improvements as well as the installed
base allows the foundry to drastically cut back on CapEx next year?
The
chart shows that capacity growth of an extra 10 percent over 2006 has
actually been achieved, but yet the total CapEx budgets vary by only
$200 million. Considering the larger budget in 2007 has not all gone on
300mm tools it is fair to say that productivity improvements could
account for the extra wafer starts.
There is also the strong
possibility that TSMC has enough extra capacity already in place that
has yet to be ramped at both 300mm fabs. This comes from considering
the CapEx spending it has achieved over the last two years.
Then there is the issue of Fab 15, which is expected to be ready for first-phase tool install in 2Q08!
With a CapEx cut will that new facility be mothballed until demand justifies its opening?
Until
TSMC provides a real CapEx figure for 2008, this will be difficult to
ascertain. TSMC has historically fitted a pilot line but only ramps
when necessary. Considering the current cloudy horizon I wouldn’t bet
against TSMC following this course of action. The kudos of being able
to announce the opening of a new fab regardless of whether it will be
ramped straight away may prove too tempting!
It will also be
interesting to see what the CapEx plans are from UMC, SMIC &
Chartered for 2008. I would be surprised to see significant increases
from any of them, which would mean that TSMC would still be spending
close to or more than double that of its rivals.
The problem has
been that many equipment companies were expecting more of the same from
TSMC in 2008, and that’s just simply not going to happen!