Technology Report
After the Chip Shortage, Fears of a Capacity Glut Are Overblown
After the Chip Shortage, Fears of a Capacity Glut Are Overblown
The industry and its customers are adept at balancing long-term capacity and supply.
Technology Report
The industry and its customers are adept at balancing long-term capacity and supply.
This article is part of Bain's 2023 Technology Report.
Many manufacturers that depend on the semiconductor supply chain are breathing easier now.
As post-pandemic demand for PCs, smartphones, and consumer devices eased, capacity grew in the semi market. In fact, we’ve gone from a chip shortage in 2021–2022 to underutilization of capacity in some parts of the semi value chain. Some say this is a harbinger of a massive capacity glut, implying we no longer need to worry about securing our semiconductor supply chain. We disagree.
Cyclicality and brief periods of underutilization are normal features of the semiconductor business cycle. But cyclicality has actually dampened over the past couple of decades for three main reasons (see Figure 1).
Cyclicality is likely to continue, but structural or long-term overcapacity is unlikely for several reasons.
One is the underlying secular growth of the industry combined with the pragmatic nature of semiconductor manufacturers when it comes to building out capacity. Bleeding-edge fab shells (7-nanometer nodes and below) are not cheap, costing about $2 billion and taking more than two years to build. Even greater expense lies in the equipment, which can run up to $9 billion and take up to 18 months to qualify and ramp up. When downturns reduce expectations to fill capacity, manufacturers often hit pause before adding machinery to prevent periods of overcapacity. This creates large swings of cyclicality in the semiconductor equipment market as projects are started and then paused abruptly. As the market for electronics returns to its historic growth, demand for semiconductors grows, quickly consuming any overcapacity, which is why we rarely see semiconductor downcycles lasting longer than two years.
Another factor that absorbs overcapacity is that chips can be designed on a range of technologies, and products can be adapted to take advantage of available supply, thereby rebalancing demand. This redesign process takes 12 to 18 months. So, although it didn’t help alleviate the recent shortage, it does help prevent structural or long-term overcapacity.
Similarly, large government subsidies don’t usually change this calculus. Although the US and EU are offering about $100 billion in subsidies through 2030, this is only a fraction of the $1 trillion in capex that the semiconductor industry plans to invest. Government subsidies might influence the location of fabs built, but they are unlikely to lead to structural overcapacity.
Since the market is growing, overbuilt capacity is generally consumed by market growth within a year or two, as we have seen in previous cycles.
Although cyclicality is leveling out over time, pockets of overcapacity still occur for short periods (one or two years) and for certain technology nodes or regions.
The big question here is whether the semiconductor market remains a single global demand pool or splinters into competing blocs. A key indicator will be whether governments start to mandate where some chips are manufactured (domestically or via a trade partner). This would accelerate the splintering of semiconductor ecosystems and have a greater effect than subsidies on the global market for semiconductors.
We also see specific technologies in which the current plan to build out supply could lead to challenges—for example, the bleeding-edge foundry capacity being added by TSMC, Intel, and Samsung in the US, or the older technologies largely being built out in China and Taiwan.
Given these dynamics, we expect that the supply-demand balance will be bumpy over time by node and by region, especially in three key areas.
What does all this mean for industries that rely on semiconductor chips? Customers still need to pay attention to the semiconductor supply chain.