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No need for doom ‘n’ gloom in 2008

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It appears far too early to write off 2008. Rising ASPs will help chip market recover in 2008 or 2009 as commented by Malcolm Penn of Future Horizons
Fear of a US recession combined with bad news in the financial markets is making the chip market jittery, according to Future Horizons' CEO and chairman Malcolm Penn. But whilst these near term uncertainties are clearly unsettling the market, Penn believes company balance sheets are strong and the underlying industry fundamentals have rarely been in better shape. "Don't write off 2008, the underlying semiconductor industry is in good shape" comments Future Horizons' Malcolm Penn. "Rising ASPs will trigger a market recovery, if it does not occur in 2008 then it will be 2009, however, it is far too early to write off 2008." Despite the current turmoil, Penn is adamant that the market is not leading towards a major recession. IC unit growth continues to be strong at 12.9 percent year on year, January 2008 against January 2007 "making IC ASPs the sole cause of the current industry's problems", says Penn. However, doing more for less simply cannot continue forever, if only because eventually someone throws in the towel, thus reducing the competitive pressures bringing about an eventual turnaround in profits. Whilst it may take some time for this process to happen, happen it will in a free market environment. In parallel, other companies, led by foundry giant TSMC, are choosing to force profitability to happen, by cutting back on investment and thereby taking supply out of the market. Once companies start to experience wafer 'rationing', prices will eventually stabilise, even rise. "Even flat pricing at their current low levels would have a dramatic impact on market growth; and if they were to notch, the leverage/scaling factor would trigger high double digit growth." Says Penn. Fundamentally Future Horizons believes that it is far too early in the 2008 cycle to start slashing forecasts. "Our forecast of 12 percent market growth is predicated on a 4 percent decline in the first quarter of 2008 versus the last quarter of 2007, followed by a flat second quarter and a strong second half rebound. If Q1 is more negative, the 12 percent number will fall, but if the second half is stronger, 12 percent is in the bag. It is far too early to say which way the wind blows."
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