| |
|
|
|
| For business information, annual reports, laws, ordinances, regulations and articles. |
|
|
|
|
030401
Global chip sales fall in Feb
AMSTERDAM: Global chip sales fell 3.3 percent in February from January to $11.84 billion, extending a seasonal decline which started in December, a trade group said on Monday.
Semiconductor sales are traditionally slow at the start of the year, as electronics retailers digest Christmas leftovers and Asian business is generally weak over the Chinese New Year.
Compared with February a year earlier, sales were 18.1 percent higher, signalling a continuing recovery in the global industry from its worst ever slump, the World Semiconductor Trade Statistics (WSTS) group said.
Annual sales of chips - essential ingredients for computers, TVs, cellphones and toys - plunged 34 percent to $140 billion in 2001, spurred by the bust of the dot-com and telecoms spending boom, as well as by slowing economies.
But the pace of the recovery has stalled. Year-on-year growth fell below 20 percent in February amid slow economic growth and the build-up to the war in Iraq, while comparable year-ago periods were becoming less depressed.
Asia Pacific and Japan led the sales growth from February 2002, by 26 and 35 percent respectively, with Europe increasing 17 percent and the Americas falling 4.5 percent, the WSTS said.
Month-on-month chip sales dropped most in Asia Pacific and the Americas, by over five percent, while sales in Europe and Japan declined by only one percent. In previous months, the decline was virtually the same for all four regions.
The US-based Semiconductor Trade Association (SIA) forecasts 20 percent growth for the global chip industry in 2003, but most analysts have recently become more cautious, expecting around a 10 percent increase in revenues.-Reuters
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Home | About Us | Contact | Information Resources |