Title: Outsourcing and Offshoring in the Semiconductor Industry
1Outsourcing and Offshoring in the Semiconductor
Industry
- David A. Hodges
- Robert C. Leachman
- Competitive Semiconductor Manufacturing Program
- UC Berkeley
- Sloan Industry Centers Annual Conference
- Atlanta, GA April 19-21, 2004
2U.S. Integrated Device Manufacturers(e.g. Texas
Inst., Motorola, Intel, )
- Labor-intensive chip assembly work mostly
off-shored since the 1960s - Initially, plants served just one company
- More recently, independent assemblers and testing
firms are serving multiple customers - IBM automated in the 1960s
- Automation of assembly and testing now spreading
industry-wide and world-wide
3U.S. IDMs, 1960-1990
- Capital-intensive wafer fabs were off-shored
selectively important aid market access - Cost of direct labor not a significant factor
- US ownership, international professional staff
- Hazards weak infrastructure, long supply lines,
business and political climate - Early examples Texas Instruments (Japan), Analog
Devices (Ireland), Intel (Israel)
4U.S. IDMs, 1960-1990
- Skills-intensive process development and product
design mostly remained in the US - Firms sought advantages from proprietary
technologies - Few skilled professionals available abroad
- Some exceptions Chip design centers in England
(TI), Israel (Intel) typically devoted to
specific products for worldwide markets - Sales, marketing, customer support efforts
carried on world-wide
5Changing business modelsIDMs forced to become
specialists
- Intel, AMD microprocessors
- Samsung, NEC, Micron, Infineon memory
- Texas Inst., STM chips for cell phones
- These are standard products, MM units same
designs purchased by many competing original
equipment manufacturers (OEMs) - Above categories represent about ½ of total
worldwide semiconductor production - What about the other half?
6Factors leading to foundries
- Competitive modern wafer fabs cost 2-4B
- employ 1000 people (total for 7 x 24 operation)
- Annual revenues gt ½ fab cost for profitability
- Worldwide standardization of mfg. process
- Innovative design firms require only a fraction
of one fabs capacity - Vastly different management skills design vs.
fab - IDMs rarely succeed in serving fabless firms
- Foundries were established to serve this need
- Leadership of Morris Chang!
7Fabless-foundry business model
- Fabless firms define, design, market chips
- small investment, quick response
- 300-500K revenue/employee
- 50,000 well-paid U.S. jobs 13,000 ROW
- Asian foundries fabricate chips for many firms
- huge investments fixed costs 75 of total
- 15,000 factory jobs, well-paid by local scales
- highly automated for tight process control
- short production cycle
- timely intro of new technology generations
- excellent customer service
- some niche specialists with old technology
8Outsourcing, Offshoring?
- Fabless design centered in the U.S.
- MS, PhD grads of top U.S. universities
- U.S. is 1 (78 of 03 revenues)
- Taiwan is 2 (11 of 03 revenues)
- Equivalent design skills very rare elsewhere
- Most silicon foundries are in Asia
- Many process development jobs in Asia
- Many grads of top US universities
- Weak U.S. domestic investment (except Intel)
9Food chain for semic. industry
- Semiconductor production equipment raw
materials are supplied mainly from U.S., Japan,
and Europe - U.S. leads in key areas
- MS PhD education
- Computer-aided design for semiconductors
- University-industry cooperation
- Climate for innovation
- Market for advanced technology
- Government support is strongest in Asia
10Factors influencing location for manufacturing
investments
- Trophy value of semiconductor fabs
- (Think about the steel industry in the 1960s)
- Trophy sought by govts worldwide tax
incentives! - China is the current leader in incentives
- Most capital comes from outside PRC
- Fading concerns about investment risks
- Weaker controls on U.S. equipment export
- Commodity status of manufacturing technology
- Return of expatriates spread of higher education
- Protected IP less important than know-how
- Improving infrastructure in China, other nations
11Chinese competition for foundry business
- Semiconductor Manufacturing Intl Corp. (SMIC)
- largest, most advanced Chinese foundry
- founded in 2002 3 8 fabs in Shanghai
- purchased Motorolas 8 Tianjin facility
- 12 fab in Beijing under construction
- 3/17/04 1.8B IPO in HK NY -12 as of 4/6/04
- U.S. filed WTO complaint re Chinas lower VAT
for locally designed or manufactured
semiconductors - China remains far behind in chip design
capability - China establishes unique domestic standard for
cellular telephony Chinese partners required
122003 Foundry revenue leaders
- 1. TSMC (Taiwan) 5.9 billion 26
- 2. UMC (Taiwan) 2.7 27
- 3. Chartered (Singapore) .73 49
- 4. IBM (U.S.-IDM) .56 - 27
- 5. NEC (Japan-IDM) .43 33
- 6. SMIC (China) .37 630
- 7. Hynix (Korea-IDM) .34 39
- 8. DongbuAnam (Korea) .33 27
- 9. Jazz (U.S. ex-Rockwell) .19 16
- 10. HHNEC (China) .17 13
- 11. SSMC (Singapore) .16 82
- 12. X Fab (E. Germany) .13 27
13Survival strategies of U.S. IDMs
- Intel heavy investments try new markets
- Texas Inst limit investments use foundries
- IBM partnered with Chartered, Infineon
- AMD more German incentives in Dresden
- Micron innovation more cost reductions
- Motorola divesting semiconductor business
- National product focus use foundries
- Analog Devices limit investments foundries
14Conclusions for semiconductor industry
- Its a fully globalized industry
- Microprocessors Intel unchallenged
- Memory is a commodity Samsung leads by far
- IDM business model is dead for other products
- U.S. leads in innovative chip design
- U.S. unchallenged in design software
- design software skills are bound to spread!
- Asia leads in foundry manufacturing
- U.S. is not a serious competitor poor ROI
- TSMC, UMC are likely to remain leaders
- Overcapacity looms SMIC payoff is uncertain