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Dakhil

Member
Mar 26, 2019
4,459
Orange County, CA
www.scmp.com

Chip shortage spirals beyond cars to phones and game consoles

Worsening crunch could affect sectors well beyond carmaking as Apple and China hoard chips.
  • The dearth of supply is deepening as Apple, China hoard chips
  • Worsening crunch could affect sectors well beyond carmaking, including the gaming manufacturers behind Nintendo Switches, PlayStations and Xboxes
The first hints of trouble emerged in the spring of 2020. The world was in the early throes of a mysterious pandemic, which first obliterated demand then supercharged internet and mobile computing when economies regained their footing. That about-face – in a span of months – laid the seeds for potentially the most serious shortage in years of the semiconductors that lie at the heart of everything from smartphones to cars and TVs.

Auto and electronics makers that cut back drastically in the early days of the outbreak are now rushing to re-up orders, only to get turned away because chip makers are stretched to the max supplying smartphone giants like Apple Inc. This week, Qualcomm Inc's Cristiano Amon, head of the world's largest mobile chip maker,
flagged shortages "across the board,"
citing the industry's reliance on just a handful of players in Asia.

Amon joined a growing chorus of industry leaders warning in recent weeks they cannot get enough chips to make their products. Carmakers appear in direst straits and have spurred the US and German governments to come to their aid – General Motors Co this week was forced to mothball three North American plants and Ford Motor Co is bracing for a 20 per cent drop in near-term output. But more industries have lately copped to shortages, emphasising how Covid-19 and a boom in a new breed of 5G-ready smartphones like the iPhone 12 is exacerbating a shortage of capacity plaguing the entire consumer industry. Chip shortages are expected to wipe out US$61 billion of sales for carmakers alone, but the hit to the much larger electronics industry – while tough to quantify at this early stage – could be far larger.

Apple, a major Qualcomm customer, said recently that sales of some new high-end iPhones were hemmed in by a shortage of components. Europe's NXP Semiconductors NV and Infineon Technologies AG – whose roles near the top of the supply chain grant them visibility over global chip flows – have both indicated the constraints are no longer confined to autos. And Sony Corp said Wednesday it might be unable to fully sate demand for its new gaming console in 2021 because of production bottlenecks.

"The virus pandemic, social distancing in factories, and soaring competition from tablets, laptops and electric cars are causing some of the toughest conditions for smartphone component supply in many years," said Neil Mawston, an analyst with Strategy Analytics. He estimates prices for key smartphone components including chipsets and displays have risen as much as 15 per cent in the past three to six months.

PC makers were among the first to hint, in the spring of 2020, at an impending crunch, a warning echoed by Lenovo Group Ltd on Wednesday. At the heart of the crisis sits Taiwan and its largest company Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, the chip maker of choice to the world's technology and auto giants. It spent billions in past years ensuring it remains at the forefront of semiconductor production technology – a costly exercise that has both paid off and also thrust it into the middle of a global geopolitical dogfight.

On Friday, Qualcomm and Corning Inc joined Biden administration officials to discuss the gathering storm with their Taiwanese counterparts and the island's top industry representatives including TSMC. Both sides repeatedly stressed their interdependence, Taiwan's Minister of Economic Affairs Wang Mei-Hua told reporters. The presence of several senior US officials and the Semiconductor Industry Association – which represents America's biggest chip makers – emphasised the urgency of the situation.

The current crisis stems from several factors that converged last year. Like most every chip designer on the planet, Qualcomm outsources production to Asian companies, foremost among which are TSMC and Samsung Electronics Co. The pair are increasingly the only recourse for producing the most advanced semiconductors. But their capacity takes years to plan and billions of dollars to build in tandem with customers, and the post-Covid 5G phone and internet boom took their clients by surprise.

Industry executives also blame excessive stockpiling, which began over the summer when Huawei Technologies Co – a major smartphone and networking gear maker – began hoarding components to ensure its survival from crippling US sanctions. Led by Huawei,
Chinese imports of chips of all kinds climbed
to almost US$380 billion in 2020 – making up almost a fifth of the country's overall imports for the year.

Rivals including Apple, worried about their own caches, responded in kind. At the same time, the stay-at-home era spurred sales of home appliances from the costliest TVs to the lowliest air purifiers, all of which now come with smart, customised chips. TSMC executives said on its two most recent earnings calls that customers have been accumulating more inventory than normal to hedge against uncertainties, a manoeuvre they see persisting for some time.

"There's a chip stockpiling arms race," said Will Bright, co-founder and chief product officer at Drop, which uses custom chips in headphones and keyboards.

All that has dried up the spigot for smaller-volume buyers such as the makers of cars and gaming consoles: Nintendo, Sony and Microsoft have struggled to make enough Switches, PlayStations and Xboxes for about a year. The game hardware industry is bracing for supply to get worse before it gets better in 2021, potentially even affecting the next holiday season, people familiar with the mater say.

It did not help that carmakers – the most visible cohort to be affected – misjudged the situation. Some industry observers blame their predicament on nearsighted planning and underestimation of a post-Covid rebound in auto demand. Others argue chip makers are prioritising higher-volume and more lucrative consumer electronics such as smartphones.

On Friday, Minebea Mitsumi Inc – a vital supplier to the transport and electronics industries – suggested shortages may plague even more sectors, including aviation. "Demand is springing up everywhere at a faster-than-expected pace," CEO Yoshihisa Kainuma told analysts on a call. "Airlines around the world are scrapping old aircraft to slim down their balance sheet. And people's desire to travel will explode after the pandemic."

It is anybody's guess when production will catch up with demand. But a growing number of industry observers do not see quick or simple resolution.

"A lot of it can be traced back to the second quarter of last year, when the whole world basically shut down. Many auto companies shut down manufacturing and their suppliers re-prioritised," said Mario Morales, an analyst with IDC. "Not until the second half will we see relief for some of these markets."
 

Ariakon44

Prophet of Truth
Member
Nov 17, 2020
10,184
This has been clear for a couple of months now, unfortunately. It was hard to see how game hardware would escape the same crunch that's been gumming up the auto industry and other electronics sectors considering they all essentially use the same chips. I dunno if we'll be seeing readily available ps5's anytime this year.

And yeah, I wonder if the Switch Pro or whatever they eventually call it might get bumped back a few months, or at least (more likely, in my opinion) experience major shortages when it comes out.
 
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Dekim

Member
Oct 28, 2017
4,301
This is going to be the longest generation yet, isn't it? The last two generations were about 7 years long each. I can see this generation lasting until 2028 at the least. 8 years. I wonder if this will convince Sony and MS to do another mid-gen upgrade in 2024 or 2025 (PS5 Pro, XSX Ultimate).
 
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alphacat

One Winged Slayer
Member
Oct 27, 2017
4,932
This is going to be the longest generation yet, isn't it? The last two generations were about 7 years long each. I can see this generation lasting until 2028 at the least. 8 years. I wonder if this will convince Sony and MS to do another mid-gen upgrade in 2024 o 2025 (PS5 Pro, XSX Ultimate).

agreed, I think the mid-gen upgrade happening in 2024 would make sense
 

Necron

▲ Legend ▲
Member
Oct 25, 2017
8,292
Switzerland
This is going to be the longest generation yet, isn't it? The last two generations were about 7 years long each. I can see this generation lasting until 2028 at the least. 8 years. I wonder if this will convince Sony and MS to do another mid-gen upgrade in 2024 o 2025 (PS5 Pro, XSX Ultimate).
If anything, I do expect that mid-gen revisions will indeed be postponed by at least a year at this rate. So yeah, 2024 at this point.
Could end up getting longer if this continues.
 

Jonnax

Member
Oct 26, 2017
4,921
The thing that is often overlooked is that there are different production lines for high end chips versus the kind used in cars and planes.

Your car isn't going to using 5 and 7nm chips.
 

sir_crocodile

Member
Oct 25, 2017
23,506
mariko Switch is 16nm iirc, so current switches wouldn't be affected by fab demand. could be affected by basic silicon shortages though
 

brain_stew

Member
Oct 30, 2017
4,731
I always find it fascinating how the entire world became so utterly dependant on TSMC. No easy way around it either as even with the technology and billions to fund a new foundry you're still talking the best part of 3 years to ramp up a new foundry.

I don't see these chip shortages ending any time in 2021, there's going to be a lot of pain for quite a long time to come.
 

Samiya

Alt Account
Banned
Nov 30, 2019
4,811
This is going to be the longest generation yet, isn't it? The last two generations were about 7 years long each. I can see this generation lasting until 2028 at the least. 8 years. I wonder if this will convince Sony and MS to do another mid-gen upgrade in 2024 or 2025 (PS5 Pro, XSX Ultimate).

The longer, the better for the environment. Our carbon budget can hardly take any more GHG-intensive manufacturing processes such as new hardware every 5-7 years.

People should start thinking about more sustainable games instead of this death drive we're in.
 

toy_brain

Member
Nov 1, 2017
2,207
Awesome.

Right now my 'gaming rig' is comprised of a 10 year old CPU, a 5 year old GPU, and a couple mechanical hard drives (among other things).
So I guess I'll be playing lots of retro-pixel-art indie games for the foreseeable future.

Hmm, I wonder if there are even enough....
\Checks Steam
Oh right, yea, silly me, there's enough to keep me going until 2023 in there.
 

Yuuber

Member
Oct 28, 2017
4,153
The longer, the better for the environment. Our carbon budget can hardly take any more GHG-intensive manufacturing processes such as new hardware every 5-7 years.

People should start thinking about more sustainable games instead of this death drive we're in.

I agree. However, it's very hard to change the consumerism mindset. It's what capitalism does better.
 

Yopis

Banned
Oct 25, 2017
1,767
East Coast
Some con artist on YouTube said Nvidia hoarded chips on purpose. What a joke that turned out to be. Mild says hi.

I wonder with all the shortages if companies are using lesser quality components as well, to make what devices they can. You would never know. Motherboards and graphics cards don't list every single component on the board. How would you know if it's high quality, or a lesser quality, to save a couple of bucks.
 
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Euan_1981

Member
Apr 23, 2018
330
I might sound ignorant here, but what is stopping other countries from setting up shop?..seems like a lucrative industry.
 

IamPeacock

Member
Feb 9, 2018
790
Belgium
This is going to be the longest generation yet, isn't it? The last two generations were about 7 years long each. I can see this generation lasting until 2028 at the least. 8 years. I wonder if this will convince Sony and MS to do another mid-gen upgrade in 2024 or 2025 (PS5 Pro, XSX Ultimate).

Way too early in making such predictions.
 

SilentPanda

Member
Nov 6, 2017
13,726
Earth
I might sound ignorant here, but what is stopping other countries from setting up shop?..seems like a lucrative industry.

Money and it isnt a factory process


Here's someone that worked in US fab saying

https://www.forbes.com/sites/willyshih/ ... -big-news/

$12 billion to make a small modern fab.

https://www.reuters.com/article/tsmc-in ... SL3N1O737Z

Upwards of $20 billion on the bleeding edge.


I've been working in a US chip FAB for over twenty years now, and they are not just an assembly-line you can throw together and start printing money with.

1. You use a metric butt-load of electricity, so you need to site the plant where you can lock-in good rates for it. After all these years, it still boggles my mind that we have so many production tools - I'm looking at you, Diffusion and EPI reactors - which IDLE at 700C to 900C.

1a. And have fun if your power isn't reliable. A power "bump" can abort a batch-process Diffusion furnace, and there goes 150 of your wafers into scrap. Watch your bean-counters heads explode every time that happens. The last two we had - I sh$t you not - were when Facilities was testing the hand-off between our power back-up systems.

Oh, and if it was an LP-CVD tool that was affected, and the chamber got dusted, you also get to eat the lost production time for doing a quartz change, and time to run quals to get the tool back into production. And those pesky batch tools can have a couple of 6 -to- 8-hour processes to run to pass quals - so your affected tools can be down for a day or two.

2. As you are building the plant, you have to maintain/enforce cleanliness protocols so that you can have an acceptable chance of meeting cleanroom requirements required in the functioning FAB.

3. You use all kinds of industrial gases & chemicals, so you need to site the plant where you can have reliable supply of bulk materials - so if you don't have Praxair, Air Liquide, etc nearby your costs are going to be higher. e.g. My employer has a deal with our supplier that has a Nitrogen concentrator installed & running on-site, and the supplier gets to sell any excess N2 to their other nearby customers.

4. Clean water. We use tons of DI water, so you have to build that supply system into .....

Aw screw it. I don't feel like writing a wall of text.

There is a lot going on in running a FAB, even after you've paid out the nose to build a huge cleanroom space, run all the needed support gases and fluids to each tool, and paid out the nose to have expensive production tools installed and processes qualified for production.

Hazardous materials out the wazoo... most every acid you've ever heard of... Hydroflouric (HF) is my personal fave...

Chlorine (in its' own 'bunker'), Hydrogen, Silane (pyrophoric!), - scared me when we got a new tool using Nitric Oxide (NO) a few years ago, and I overheard a couple of Process guys joking about sneaking back behind the tool to huff a little - because they were thinking it was Nitrous Oxide (NO2). I interrupted them to say they were mistaken, and huffing on any NO would be the last thing they would ever do...

Hell, just DI is dangerous when there are ignorant workers around. e.g I had an operator in CMP who had to be convinced that it was bad for them to be refilling their water bottle with DI from a sink in the FAB ...

TL:DR So yeah, a wall of text anyway... Fabs are expensive to build, staff, and run - and they only make economic sense - due to all the fixed costs for electricity, DI water, and gases (N2) which are required even when the FAB is "idle" - to be running 24/7/365

arstechnica.com

A silicon chip shortage is causing automakers to idle their factories

Automakers canceled orders due to COVID-19, and foundries switched to other customers.