Business Day

Lockdowns lift demand for chips

- Kyoungwha Kim and Heejin Kim Hong Kong/Seoul

As the coronaviru­s prompts talk of an earnings recession for most Asian emerging stocks, there is an industry that is holding up: chipmaking.

As the coronaviru­s prompts talk of an earnings recession for most Asian emerging stocks, there is an industry that is holding up: chipmaking.

The worldwide lockdowns due to the pandemic and ensuing contractio­ns in output have sparked indiscrimi­nate selling across industries, and dismal earnings forecasts for this quarter and beyond — except for the tech industry.

Micron Technology last week reported adjusted earnings that beat market estimates by 24%, and predicted strongerth­an-expected revenue, fuelling optimism about other chipmakers’ prospects. With most of the population in major economies working or learning remotely, online and e-commerce services are booming, stoking demand for cloud storage and a recovery in memorychip prices.

“Definitely, demand for server chips is on the rise as people increasing­ly go on shopping sprees online and are working remotely with laptops, said Lee Seung-Hoon, head of ”equity at DB Asset Management. “For the tech industry, demand for handsets and home appliances has been hit. But this new trend suggests chipmakers could rebound faster than other industries, once virus infections peak.”

The earnings season kicks off in April with investors keen to look beyond the abysmal first quarter. Samsung Electronic­s, the largest memory chipmaker, will give a clearer picture of the industry’s outlook in its preliminar­y earnings release scheduled next week. The company’s shares have been the most sold by foreigners among Kospi members in March.

The Samsung Electronic­s share price fell as much as 1.5% in Seoul, erasing an earlier gain. Peer SK Hynix was down as much as 2%.

Here are three charts with evidence that global chipmakers have better prospects than most industries this earnings season:

KOREAN EXPORTS

Korea’s preliminar­y semiconduc­tor exports gained further in March, extending a rebound from a low in late 2019, shrugging off the effects of the global coronaviru­s outbreak.

The advance contrasts with a slump in the Bloomberg Asia Semiconduc­tor index because of concern the virus would disrupt supply chains and destroy demand.

MICRON’S EARNINGS

Micron Technology’s forecastto­pping earnings and optimistic sales outlook bode well for other chipmakers in Asia and elsewhere, offsetting slow demand for smartphone­s and home appliances.

DRAM PRICES

The chipmaking industry’s earnings cycle has historical­ly moved in tandem with semiconduc­tor prices.

DRAMeXchan­ge has raised its DRAM server chip price forecast for the second quarter to a gain of 20%, up from its earlier forecast for a gain of 15%, citing growing demand from server manufactur­ers and cloud service providers.

 ??  ?? Hot chips: Micron Technology’s earnings beat market estimates by 24%, fuelling optimism about other chipmakers./Reuters
Hot chips: Micron Technology’s earnings beat market estimates by 24%, fuelling optimism about other chipmakers./Reuters

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