LONDON – Morris Chang, chairman and CEO of leading foundry chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd., has warned that a slowdown is coming to the chip market and has cut his forecast for the total semiconductor market's annual growth, according to reports.
Chang, speaking during TSMC's second quarter earnings conference on Thursday (July 19), disclosed a cut in the growth forecast for the global semiconductor market in 2012 to between 1 and 2 percent, the reports said. This is lower than recent forecasts from Future Horizons Ltd. (
4 percent) and from International Data Corp. (
4.6 percent).
Chang said the slowdown is set to start in the fourth quarter and last into the first quarter of 2013, and put it down to a renewed inventory correction and deterioration in the global economy, the reports said.
"We are now seeing a dip in our revenue in the fourth quarter from the third quarter," the
Taipei Times quoted Chang as saying. Chang also sees a strong rebound in the second quarter of 2013 after the inventory adjustment.
TSMC posted strong revenue results and soaring profits for its 2Q12. The company expects to expand sales revenue by about 7 percent sequentially in 3Q12, which is roughly in line with TSMC's historical average for the third calendar quarter. Over the last ten years TSMC has averaged sequential third quarter revenue growth of 6.5 percent. Over the same period TSMC's fourth quarter revenue has, on average, dipped sequentially by 1.8 percent although it has grown by as much as 17.2 percent and contracted by as much as 30.6 percent.
Chang also confirmed that TSMC is negotiating with lithography equipment maker ASML Holding NV about investing in the company, according to a
Dow Jones Newswires report. The
Taipei Times said that TSMC maintained its advice it would spend between $8 billion and $8.5 billion on capital expenditure in 2012.
Related links and articles: TSMC profit soars despite 28-nm supply shortage
IDC cuts 2012 chip market growth forecast
Analyst lowers 2012 chip market growth forecast
TSMC's Chang says no to buying Renesas fab