The continued over-supply of memory devices is continuing to impact
overall semiconductor growth figures, according to the Semiconductor
Industry Association (SIA). Excluding the memory sector from sales
reporting data, the semiconductor industry would have shown an 11
percent year-on-year level of growth, against the actual low single
digit increase the industry as a whole experienced in 2007.
According to the SIA, DRAM sales declined by 37.4 percent
year-on-year despite a 30.6 percent increase in unit shipments. ASPs
declined by 52 percent - not taking product mix into account. According
to Micron Technology, 512Mb DRAM prices declined 73 percent
year-on-year.
Total DRAM bit shipments are expected to grow by 56 percent in 2008, according JP Morgan.
Sales
of NAND flash memory revenue grew by 45.9 percent in the first quarter
on unit shipments that increased almost 46 percent over last year.
According to Micron, ASPs for 8Gb NAND were down 70 percent from March
2007.
“Micron noted that the memory capacity of a typical PC
has more than doubled from 2006 to 2008, to 1,817 MB on average this
year,” said George Scalise, SIA President . “The company also reported
that the DRAM content of a typical handset has tripled from 12 MB to 36
MB, while the NAND content of a handset has increased by more than
1,300 percent to 412 MB this year.”
The observations were made
on release of semiconductor sales for the month of March, which saw
that sales of $21.1 billion were 3.4 percent higher than the $20.5
billion reported for February 2008. Sales declined by 5.1 percent in
the first quarter of 2008 compared to the $66.8 billion for the fourth
quarter of 2007.
Worldwide sales of semiconductors of $63.4
billion for the first quarter of 2008 were 3.8 percent higher than the
$61.1 billion reported for the first quarter of 2007.
“Sales
were buoyed by growing consumer purchases of electronic products in
world markets, more than offsetting the effects of a slowing U.S.
economy,” said Scalise. “Although semiconductor sales in the U.S. grew
more slowly than overall worldwide sales, revenues in the first quarter
of the year still registered growth of 2.3 percent versus the 3.8
percent growth worldwide year-on-year.
“According to a new
Gartner report, PC unit sales grew by 12 percent in the first quarter
of 2008, reaching 71.1 million units, with strong sales outside the
U.S. and slower sales in the U.S. The U.S. market now accounts for
approximately 21 percent of worldwide PC demand – down from over 31
percent just five years ago. Strength in the PC market was reflected in
sales of microprocessors, which increased by 13.4 percent year-on-year.
Average selling prices (ASPs) for microprocessors declined by a modest
3.5 percent over the past year, while units were up by 17.4 percent.”