Global Fab Equipment Spending With 24% Growth to Record $8 Billion in 2021
3D NAND memory subsegment with 30% jump in investments in 2020 before tacking on 17% growth next year
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on June 19, 2020 at 2:20 pm2021 is poised to mark a banner year for global fab equipment spending with 24% growth to a record $67.7 billion, 10% higher than the previously forecast $65.7 billion, and all product segments promising solid growth rates, according to 2Q20 update of the SEMI World Fab Forecast report ($3,300).
Memory fabs will lead WW semiconductor segments with $30 billion in equipment spending, while logic and foundry is expected to rank second with $29 billion in investments.
Fab equipment spending from 2019 by 2021 by quarter
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The 3D NAND memory subsegment will help power the spending spree with a 30% jump in investments this year before tacking on 17% growth in 2021.
DRAM fab investments will surge 50% next year after declining 11% in 2020, and fab spending on logic and foundry, mainly leading edge, will trace a similar but more muted trajectory, rising 16% 2021 after an 11% drop this year.
Some segments will see lower fab equipment spending but impressive change rates nonetheless. Image sensors will notch an impressive 60% increase in 2020 and add a 36% surge in 2021. Analog and mixed signal will grow by 40% in 2020 and 13% in 2021. And power-related devices are forecast to register 16% growth in 2020 with a healthy jump of 67% in 2021.
The report also shows the worldwide fab equipment spending trough in 2020 shifting from the first to the second quarter.
A review of Q/Q spending trends reveals the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic over the course of 2020.
Global fab equipment spending Q/Q declined 15% in 1Q20 – performance that was stronger than the 26% decline forecast in February. In March, some companies appeared to build up safety stock as a countermeasure to the spreading virus as shelter-in-place orders emptied offices, malls and schools worldwide.
As the contagion grew, demand for IT and electronic products such as notebooks, game consoles and healthcare applications surged. Some stockpiling is expected to stretch into the second quarter, fueled by fear of restrictions – scheduled to take effect in late June – on semiconductor equipment sold to China.
While the report predicts rising investments in 2H20, the year will mark the second consecutive yearly drop in fab equipment spending – 4% this year after an 8% dip in 2019.
And despite the bullish projections, threats from the pandemic still lurk. Pandemic-related layoffs, with more than 40 million workers idled in the United States alone (as of May), and company closures will trigger ripple effects in consumer markets and discretionary spending. For instance, rising unemployment will lead to falling smartphone and new car sales. Despite those downdrafts, digital transformation and the need to communicate will still drive industry growth as cloud services, server storage, gaming and health applications spur demand for memory and IT-related devices.











