It’s All About Supply and Demand for Chip Stocks
Orders for semiconductor equipment manufacturing were up sharply in April, exceeding last month’s order level by 16 per cent and growing 60.4 per cent compared with the previous year. This also marks an acceleration from the 40.2 per cent year/year growth rate seen in March. We described earlier this week how the optimism of the CEO at one equipment manufacturer appeared at odds with macroeconomic data, and followed up with the story that leading chipmakers are poised for dramatic capacity boosts already. This is adding up to a difficult outlook for semiconductor stocks.
After semiconductor equipment is ordered, it takes a few months to install it. Once installed, semiconductor equipment increases the available capacity at chipmakers, thus increasing the supply of chips. Meanwhile, the end demand for chips is growing at a much slower rate – 7.3 per cent year/year in March, the latest month for which information is available.
Basic economics tells us that when supply is greater than demand prices will fall. The chart below tracks the year/year change in equipment orders (supply) minus the year/year change in chip sales (demand.) When the columns are higher than zero, supply is growing faster than demand. When they are below zero, demand is growing faster than supply.

Since January 2006, potential supply has been outpacing demand. We say potential because we are measuring the orders, which will take several months before becoming installed equipment. However, since the market is said to look ahead several months, we believe this is the correct comparison to make when considering an investment. Furthermore, this chart does not show the acceleration in supply growth that we mentioned for April, since that month’s demand statistic is not yet available. Since the highest demand growth rate in the last year has been 8.6 per cent, it appears highly unlikely that demand will accelerate by the same 20 percentage points as supply, which means the imbalance likely got worse.
Disclosure: William Trent has a long position in SMH.
Like this article? Why not try out:
[...] We have been pointing to the overcapacity threat for many months. As all of the equipment ordered recently comes on line, inventory will pile up and the manufacturers will stop ordering equipment until the inventories start working down. The author may hold a position in the securities discussed. The author’s current holdings are as follows: Long: Intuit (INTU) put options; Nasdaq 100 (QQQQ) put options; Bookham (BKHM; Ballard Power (BLDP); Syntax Brillian (BRLC); CMGI (CMGI); Genentech (DNA - Annual Report; Ion Media Networks (ION); Lion’s Gate (LGF); Three Five Systems (TFS); Adobe Systems (ADBE) call options; IShares Japan (EWJ); StreetTracks Gold (GLD); Starbucks (SBUX); U.S. Oil Fund (USO); Plantronics (PLT) call options; Short: Ceradyne (CRDN) put options; Lion’s Gate (LGF) call options; Dell (DELL) put options; Plantronics (PLT) put options; [...]
[...] In the interest of digging deeper into the semiconductor oversupply issues, this post will begin a series of data gathering on important ratios for companies in the industry. Hopefully the process will provide insight toward the companies better (or worse) positioned to take advantage of the next upturn or weather the downturn. Today I used Zacks Research Wizard to get the recent Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) and Inventory levels for semiconductor industry participants over the last several quarters. I made some modest limitations on the share volume and market cap, but still ended up with more than 50 names. I used trailing twelve month COGS and the average of the last five quarters (for a beginning, ending and average) of inventory to calculate Days Sales in Inventory. [...]
[...] SMH: Money Where My Mouth Is After long having a bearish outlook toward semiconductor stocks, I recently started noting more favorable indicators. While I am not quite turning bullish, I am becoming not-bearish. And now I am putting my money squarely in the not-bearish camp by selling naked put options on the SMH at $35. [...]
[...] The fact that end market demand is “in line with previous forecasts” but sales are weaker means there is exactly the type of overcapacity-related price cuts that I have been forecasting for some time. Back when the rest of the world didn’t seem to be on board that argument it made me bearish about the prospects for semiconductor stocks. Now that everyone understands what is going on, the prospects that the predicted outcome will disappoint investors has been reduced, and I am no longer bearish. [...]
[...] warned most of last year that building oversupply would harm pricing for semiconductors, and the latest PPI data bear that [...]