GENEVA Switzerland – Carlo Bozotti, CEO of European chip company STMicroelectronics NV, has a dream. It is to have both sides of his company be successful and that means fixing mobile chip joint venture ST-Ericsson.
Bozotti was interviewed on stage at an executive conference organized here by the Global Semiconductor Alliance (GSA) industry trade group. His inquisitor was GSA chairman Joep van Beurden, who is also CEO of fabless wireless chip company CSR plc. Bozotti told van Beurden, and through him and audience of senior semiconductor executives, that ST will do "whatever it takes," to fix the problem.
The theme that emerged in the 45-minute interview is that overall chip industry – and therefore STMicroelectronics, which remains a broad supplier with about $10 billion in annual revenue and 50,000 employees – is bipolar and becoming more polarized.
The dotted line that runs through the industry and through ST, divides business between the leading-edge digital products and platforms dominated by Moore's law on the one side and so-called More-than-Moore products that are not at the leading-edge. These include analog and mixed-signal, RF and MEMS devices; areas where ST is successful and growing.
Bozotti's first point was that the semiconductor market has matured and that the double-digit percentage annual growth rates of the previous century will not return on a consistent basis. In addition the industry has just endured a difficult five year stretch that started with a credit squeeze in 2007 and then included multiple economic crises before a one-time recovery year in 2010.
Two challenges were the consumerization of the chip business, which has squeezed margins, and the fragility of the macro-economic environment, he added. "Double digit [annual percentage growth] is not going to come back but I think there is still reasonable growth," said Bozotti.
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