According to Chinese media ChinaFund, there are reports that TSMC is increasing prices for its advanced 3nm and 5nm process nodes and advanced packaging. The report also cites a Morgan Stanley Securities prediction that Hua Hong Semiconductor may raise prices by 10% in the second half of the year.
Notably, China’s wafer foundries are showing signs of reducing domestic competition. While foundry price increases are not yet confirmed, utilization rates at major foundries have significantly improved, with many operating at full capacity or even exceeding 100%.
Industry sources cited by ChinaFund believe that the sustained increase in utilization rates and full capacity at some foundries could lead to potential price hikes in the future.
TSMC was the first to signal a price hike in the wafer foundry sector. Reports indicate that the global leader in foundry will increase prices for its advanced 3nm and 5nm nodes, with a potential 5% increase for 3nm and a 10%-20% rise for advanced packaging next year.
TSMC’s 5nm node continues to receive AI semiconductor orders, maintaining high capacity utilization.
At the same time, a recent Morgan Stanley report stated that Hua Hong Semiconductor, one of China’s leading foundries, is currently operating at over 100% capacity and may raise wafer prices by 10% in the second half of this year.
In an interview with ChinaFund, United Nova Technology CEO Michael Zhao stated that the semiconductor industry’s basic pattern of change starts with memory, then digital, and finally analog ICs. “Whether it’s a downturn or recovery, this is the sequence,” he emphasized.
“We are experiencing the same trend in the power semiconductor sector. We were at full capacity in Q4 last year and saw a significant recovery in Q1 this year.”
According to tracked data cited by ChinaFund, power semiconductor manufacturers have collectively raised prices this year. Sanliansheng increased prices by 10%-20%, Bluecolor by 10%-18%, Gaoge Microchip by 10%-20%, and Jiejie Microelectronics raised prices for its Trench MOS by 5%-10%.
For the memory sector, TrendForce forecasts that Q2 DRAM contract prices will rise by 13%-18%, and NAND Flash contract prices by 15%-20%.
Huafu Securities projects that, given the gradual increase in foundry utilization rates and rising inventory levels in consumer electronics and other fields, end-market demand will clearly drive growth across the semiconductor supply chain.
ChinaFund reports that several chip companies have recently announced price increases, with some as high as 20%. For instance, Yaxin Microelectronics, Chiplink, and iCM have all issued price hike notices.
(Photo credit: SMIC)