HZNQ.COM
welcome to my space
X
Welcome to:hznq.com
Article search:  
NAVIGATION - HOME
Soft Sales, Prices Hurt Chips Forecasts
Published by: jack 2008-08-30

The 2007 forecast for semiconductor makers got a whole lot cloudier today with the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) cutting its forecast for global microchip sales growth this year from 10 percent to just 1.8 percent.

FRB: Beige Book - Full report::
Prices of raw materials were mixed, with energy and petroleum-based inputs disappointing sales over the last six weeks and soft sales over Thanksgiving weekend.
http://www.federalreserve.gov/FOMC/BeigeBook/2000/20001206/FullReport.htm
HOME
The SIA cited sharp declines in average selling prices (ASPs) for microchips in several key market segments, including microprocessors, DRAMs and NAND Flash, along with a slowdown in unit sales, although the sales numbers were nowhere near as bad as the ASP projection.

The association said worldwide sales will grow by 1.8 percent to $252 billion in 2007, with further growth to $306 billion in 2010.

Overseas Snack Sales Help PepsiCo Meet Expectations - New York Times::
soft drinks, like Pepsi- Cola, and juices like Tropicana, as price increases hurt sales. The Chips Are Down in Vegas, but Steve Wynn Is Betting Big
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/08/business/08pepsi.html?exrtner=rssuserland&emc=rss
HOME
London shares close touch higher, miners offset weak banks; Wall St ::
weaker at 238-1/2, as the high oil price continued the hurt the fuel consumer. after reporting first-quarter sales figures that missed analysts forecasts.
http://www.forbes.com/markets/feeds/afx/2008/05/08/afx4986621.html
HOME
"The new forecast projects a 5.4 percent compound annual growth rate for year end 2006 through 2010. Rapid price attrition in three key market segments -- microprocessors, DRAMs, and NAND Flash memories -- is the major factor contributing to lower growth than previously projected," said SIA President George Scalise in a statement.

SIA's projections weighed heavily on the ASPs, but Mercury Research principal analyst Dean McCarron sees a slowdown coming from just a dip in sales, a trend that began in the first quarter of this year, he said. All markets, except notebooks, have been flat this year.

Desktop hardware sales have been weak as a result of Vista failing to meet expectations, he said. "There had been a lot of hope that Vista would result in a significant amount of upgrades, with people wanting more RAM and such. That doesn't seem to be the case," he told

reuters - GameSpot::
wii, ds, sales, yasuhiro minagawa, forecast nec, nintendo, nec electronics, turbografx, chips Tags: ps3, sega, price cut, sony, masanao maeda,
http://www.gamespot.com/pages/tags/index.php?type=news&tags=reuters
HOME
Economists View: June 2007::
In addition, interaction outcomes like prices, and the quantity and quality of At each step, inputs like computer chips and a bare circuit board are converted
http://economistsview.typepad.com/economistsview/2007/06/index.html
HOME
internetnews.com
.

As for server sales, he said there is no clear reason why it went soft. It went from being one of the hottest to one of the softest, and is one reason for the downward revision of projections. Gartner and IDC have both said they see fewer physical boxes being sold but more decked out as virtualization becomes more popular.

"There is some speculation that this is the early impact of virtualization. Others speculate that it's simply that we saw a stronger than usual server market in 2005 and the first three quarters of 2006, reflecting pent-up demand. Once that was satisfied, it settled down again," said McCarron.

McCarron expects the usual bump in sales in the second half of the year, as is the norm. He said a report in the San Jose Mercury News that Intel would cut prices by up to 50 percent is totally normal, and that the company slashes prices every year in July in advance of the build cycle for the second half of the year.

The one element he's not sure of is the impact of Intel's new Penryn and AMD's  Phenom processors.

He said they'll contribute to sales, but he's unclear on whether they can overcome the softness of the first half of the year.


Pre-Article:Gartner: Instant Messaging Reigns Supreme
Next-Article:M(3) is For More Mobile Measurement

PRINT Add to favorites
#If you have any other info about this subject , Please add it free.#
Your name:
E-mail:
Telphone:

Your comments:


If you have any other info aboutSoft Sales, Prices Hurt Chips Forecasts, Please add it free.
  • Is the U.S. Ready For The IPv6 Challenge?
  • Home Networking Skyrockets, but Media Lags
  • IDC: A Boom in VoIP
  • AMD Ships 2600+ Ahead of Opteron
  • Viper Strikes Retail Pact
  • Amazon Aiming at Third-Party Sales?
  • HotSocket Adds US Interactive Founder to Board
  • Akamai, Softbank Form Joint Venture
  • In Case You Were Wondering, the E-Economy IS Different
  • IDC: PC Outlook Strong -- For Now
  • Washington to Host Open Source Security Summit
  • Excite@Home Greets E-card Firm with BlueMountain.com
  • Biometric Passport Program Hits Snag
  • Spammers Hijack Microsoft's SkyDrive Service

  • Danger Delays Hiptop, Forges Alliances
  • IM Your Way To E-Commerce Riches
  • Digital River, Connectix Partner to Sell Software Online
  • Will Ad Sales Add Up at eBay?
  • VeriSign Introduces Digital Certificate Solution for VPNs
  • Mainframe Simplicity Not an Oxymoron?
  • Out of the Ashes, Community
  • Checked Your Reverse Logistics Recently?
  • Cisco 'Homes' in on Entertainment
  • Priceline Bulks Up Its Pact With Visa
  • Online Phone Data Brokers Stonewall FCC
  • PayPal Access on the Fly
  • More Entries in the Online B2B Banking Field

  • About us -Site map -Advertisement -Jion us -Contact usExchange linksSponsor us
    Copyright© 2008 hznq.com All Rights Reserved
    Site made&Support support@hznq.com    E-mail: web@hznq.com