Semiconductor Industry Undertakes Much-Needed Inventory Correction 
Stockpiles decline among suppliers in Q3 after seven straight quarters, but levels remain high
December 20, 2011 

Stockpiles from semiconductor suppliers declined in  the third quarter, putting a halt  to  the steady expansion of  the previous seven quarters, as the industry went into welcome self-correction mode in order to reduce oversupply, according to an  IHS iSuppli Inventory Tracker report from information and  analysis provider IHS.

As calculated by  the Days of Inventory (DO I) measure, semiconductor stockpiles in the third quarter stood at 81 days, down a modest 2.5 percent from 83 days in the second quarter. The DOI level  had continued to rise since the fourth quarter of  2009  when it stood at  just  67 days-a  time when stockpiles were  low  because demand had  evaporated during the  dark days  of  the  recession. Since then, inventory DOI has been creeping up, partly to make up for depleted stocks, and  also to cope with growing demand as  strength returned to  the supply chain. The third­ quarter DOI was worth some $36.96 billion, down from $37.29 billion in the second quarter.

Semiconductor inventory levels are an important gauge of  industry health, and the stockpile amount at  any point in time also indicates the confidence-or lack thereof-of the supply chain in its  forthcoming prospects. Too little inventory suggests caution for possible hard times  ahead as manufacturers expect demand to ratchet down; but too much inventory is also a problem, fueling worrisome oversupply that  forces down pricing.

For  the  third quarter, semiconductor suppliers began an inventory correction to alleviate an escalating oversupply situation on  top of already inflated stockpiles. With the global economy all but stalled, and in the face of declining orders as well as decreased visibility, many semiconductor manu­ facturers opted to reduce capacity utilization. And with lead  times now declining to normal levels after extended periods of  waiting in the  past, manufacturers were more confident about trimming bloated inventories this time  around without fear of  causing too  much pain  to the supply chain.

Despite the inventory cutback, DOI in the  third quarter rained elevated in absolute terms­ the highest of the last 10 quarters, dating all the way back  to the  fourth quarter of  2008---suggesting that  stockpiles are still quite high. Moreover, the percentage of  oversupply during the period rose  to12.1 percent, exceeding the 11.1 percent spike in oversupply during the  fourth quarter of  2008. As a result, expectations are that inventories will be trimmed further in the final quarter of this year.

Among the various semiconductor sectors, inventory levels rose for handset original equipment manufacturers, distributors and analog companies—all of which posted percentage gains in DOI. Stockpiles, however, fell for fabless, memory, foundry, PC original equipment manufacturers, storage and electronic manufacturing services.

For handset manufacturers, inventories increased in the third quarter as suppliers prepared for their seasonally busy end-of-year period. In comparison, inventory at pure-play foundries declined more strongly than expected—the result of a reduction in utilization rates.

Total DOI is projected to decline another 2.5 percent in the fourth quarter to 79.3 days, IHS predicts. Visibility continues to be murky in many sectors given the volatile world economy, and end demand remains difficult to predict.

Read More > Semiconductor Supply Chain Begins Much-Needed Inventory Correction in Q3 2011

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