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Chip Equipment Industry Forecast Tastes Best With Grain of Salt

Tags: KLA-Tencor (KLAC), MEMC Electronic Materials (WFR), Applied Materials (AMAT), Semiconductors
17 Jul 10:00am

UPDATE 1-Chip equipment orders seen rising 1 pct this year | Reuters

Sales of equipment used to make microchips are seen rising 1 percent this year to $40.9 billion, cooling markedly from last year’s 23 percent growth, a U.S. industry group said on Monday.The market is expected to grow 7 percent in 2008 and 4 percent in 2009, Stanley Meyers, president of Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International told reporters.

A quick refresher on what these forecasts are worth. In December, SEMI forecast that sales “will grow in the single digits in 2007, and in the double digits in 2008. In 2009, growth is anticipated to be in the single digits with sales expected to hit $50.42 billion.”

I guess technically 1% is “single digits,” or digit anyway. But as I said at the time, and again last month, if the industry group is to be believed the current decline will mark the shortest semi equipment contraction in history. Which is a big part of the reason why I don’t believe it.

The fact is, industry trade groups exist to promote industry trade. Whether the National Association of Realtors or anyone else, the industry forecasts are generally overly optimistic. I look to such groups for their current and past data, not their forecasts.

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BillTrent

Stock Market Beat editor William A. Trent, CFA, has been an equity analyst since 1996 and is co-author of Understanding and Evaluating Prospectuses, Offering Documents, and Proxy Statements. Prior to starting Stock Market Beat he was Senior Equity Analyst for New Amsterdam Partners LLC, a $6 billion institutional asset manager. His experience covers all market-cap sizes and is primarily within the TMT (Telecom, Media and Technology) and Transportation sectors. He is also the senior editor of Financial Education. He is available for freelance writing and consulting projects and can be contacted here. He is not, however, a registered investment advisor and will not accept funds for management.