Automotive chip market, previously enjoying robust growth among the semiconductor sector, is now showing signs of slowing down.
According to a report from WeChat account DRAMeXchange, the major foundry UMC announced that it expects customer inventories in the communications, consumer electronics, and computer sectors to return to seasonal levels as usual in the second half of this year, and to reach healthy levels by the end of the year.
However, demand in the automotive end market remains weak, which may extend the period of inventory adjustment, with healthy levels anticipated only by the first quarter of next year.
Another foundry giant, TSMC, warned in its latest financial statement that the automotive market might decline this year in spite of a quarter-on-quarter increase of 5% in the revenue of its automotive electronics end market in 2Q24.
Meanwhile, the sluggish growth trend in the automotive chip market is also exemplified by the business performance of three leading automotive chip companies—Texas Instruments, STMicroelectronics, and NXP as they all saw declines in revenues.
Texas Instruments’ revenue for 2Q24 was USD 3.82 billion, down 16% YoY and the sales of its industrial and automotive business continue to decrease.
STMicroelectronics delivered revenue of USD 3.23 billion, down 25.3% YoY, with automotive business revenue falling short of expectation, offsetting growth in personal electronics sales.
NXP’s achieved revenue of USD 3.13 billion, down 5.2% YoY and its automotive business generated revenue of USD 1.728 billion, down 7.4% YoY, indicating the decline widened compared to the first quarter.
Despite the strong growth in the automotive chip market in 2023, the industry believes that as the overall automotive end market fails to advance as expected and there is an overcapacity in some automotive chip markets, automotive chip market growth will slow down in 2024, with the growth rate dropping to single digits in the coming years.
It’s learned that automotive semiconductor can be broadly categorized into microcontroller (MCU), computing chip (CPU, GPU, NPU, etc.), sensing chip (radar, image sensor, photoelectric sensor, etc.), memory chip (DRAM, NAND Flash, etc.), communication chip (CAN bus chip, connectivity chip, etc.), and power chip (IGBT, silicon carbide, etc.), among others.
In the view of the industry, current MCU and other chips are facing significant inventory pressure due to the declining automotive end market demand. However, power chip and autonomous driving chip continue to see strong demand driven by the wave of automotive electrification and intelligence.
Therefore, while the automotive semiconductor market may slow down in the short term, the automotive chip market still possesses growth potential in the long run with the continuous adoption of silicon carbide and autonomous driving chips in the increasingly popular EV and smart vehicle markets.
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