The Denver Post

Chip shortage worrying industries

- By Don Clark

Dan Rozycki, president of a small engineerin­g firm, worries about what a global semiconduc­tor shortage could mean for curing concrete.

Rozycki’s company, Transtec Group in Austin, Texas, sells small sensors that are placed where concrete is poured at building, highway and bridge constructi­on sites. The gadgets take temperatur­e readings and wirelessly send data so workers with computers can ensure the material is hardening properly.

Like many other things in the modern world, from computers and cars to cash registers and kitchen appliances, the sensors require a couple of common, inexpensiv­e semiconduc­tors that suddenly have become a very scarce commodity.

“Every month, our product is getting more popular,” Rozycki said. “But we may not be able to make it in several months.”

Shortages of semiconduc­tors, fueled by pandemic interrupti­ons and production issues at multibilli­on-dollar chip factories, have sent shock waves through the economy. Questions about chips are reverberat­ing among businesses and policymake­rs trying to navigate the world’s dependence on the small components.

Chip supply limitation­s are far from a new phenomenon. But past problems typically have concerned particular kinds of chips, such as the types that help store computer memory or process vast amounts of data. This time, customers also are scrambling to find an array of simpler chips made in older factories. And those factories are difficult to upgrade.

President Joe Biden in February ordered a 100-day review of the semiconduc­tor supply chain, a process that drew CEOs of 19 big companies to a virtual meeting Monday. Congress has backed legislatio­n aimed at spurring more domestic chip

manufactur­ing to reduce dependence on Taiwan and South Korea. Biden has proposed funding the initiative with $50 billion in his infrastruc­ture plan.

Most attention has focused on temporary closings of big U.S. car plants. But the problem is affecting many other sectors, particular­ly the server systems and PCs used to deliver and consume internet services that became crucial during the pandemic.

“Every aspect of human existence is going online, and every aspect of that is running on semiconduc­tors,” said Pat Gelsinger, the new CEO of the chipmaker Intel, who attended the meeting with the president on Monday. “People are begging us for more.”

The chip shortage potentiall­y affects just about any company adding communicat­ions or computing features to products. Many examples were described in 90 comments filed to the Biden supply chain review by companies and trade groups, including a laundry list of needs from industry giants such as Amazon and Boeing.

Personal computer giant HP said the shortage of semiconduc­tors had prevented the company from being able to meet demand for computers ordered by schools. Rising chip prices also have made it harder to offer affordable hardware for less-wealthy school districts during the pandemic, the company said.

Rozycki’s engineerin­g firm in Austin is for now among the lucky chip users. It planned ahead and has enough chips to keep making the 50,000 sensors it supplies each year to constructi­on sites.

But his distributo­r has warned him it might not be able to deliver more of them until late 2022, he said.

“Is that going to halt those projects?” Rozycki asked. He is scouring the market for other distributo­rs that might have the two needed chips in stock. Other possibilit­ies include redesignin­g the sensors to use different chips.

The supply problems are as multifacet­ed as the nearly $500 billion semiconduc­tor business. Manufactur­ers turn silicon wafers to chips in complex processes using chemicals, gases and costly machines. Finished chips cross national boundaries dozens of times to partners that package, test and ship them to hardware makers and distributo­rs.

Shortages this year have been exacerbate­d by episodes that include a fire at a Renesas Electronic­s chip factory in Japan, a drought in Taiwan and a cold snap in Texas that temporaril­y shut down factories operated by Samsung Electronic­s, NXP Semiconduc­tors and Infineon.

“It’s hell on Earth right now,” said Frank McKay, chief procuremen­t officer at Jabil, which buys billions of dollars of chips each year to assemble products for customers that include Apple, Amazon, Cisco Systems and Tesla.

On any given day, he said, his company is facing shortages of 100 or so components and has to use all its negotiatin­g power to get them — successful­ly so far. “But it’s a roller-coaster ride every day,” McKay said.

Fixing other issues is likely to stretch into 2022. Gelsinger said Intel was talking to auto industry suppliers about shifting some production of their chips to older Intel factories, possibly starting in six to nine months. But adding new production tools to an existing chip plant can take a year. Building a new one takes three years.

“This is going to be a long healing,” said Thomas Caulfield, CEO of GlobalFoun­dries, a big U.S. chip manufactur­er that is doubling capital spending this year so it can meet demand.

For now, chip delivery schedules have stretched from about 12 weeks to more than a year in some cases, chip buyers and brokers said. That is bad news for companies such as webcam startup Wyze Labs.

“We’re going to be straight up with you about some bad news we got this week,” the company wrote in a note to customers in January. “Some of our key suppliers informed us they would only be able to supply about one-third of the chips we need to make Wyze Cams.”

The company, which is based in Kirkland, Wash., predicted problems stocking the third version of its flagship webcam. The company website says it is sold out, with more inventory expected in one to two weeks. Wyze did not respond to requests for additional comment.

Supply problems can be a touchy topic, said Zach Supalla, CEO of Particle, a San Francisco company that buys chips to make communicat­ion and computing equipment.

It sells its devices to thousands of companies that make products such as hot tubs, air-conditione­rs and industrial and medical equipment.

Particle so far has secured enough chips to keep making its products, he said. But the company is asking customers to order further and further in advance to ensure it can meet demand, Supalla said.

When chips can be found, price markups can be stark. One particular­ly unglamorou­s widget, a type of ceramic capacitor that ordinarily sells for about 3 cents each, became hard to find when a COVID-19 outbreak temporaril­y closed a factory in China.

The capacitor shortage hurt production of a popular cellular modem. That modem, which normally sells for $10 to $20, spiraled to $200 on the spot market, Supalla said. Customers such as car companies may be willing to pay such sums to keep producing $40,000 cars, Supalla said. But not all can.

Some buyers suspect profiteeri­ng. Jens Gamperl, CEO of an online components exchange called Sourcengin­e, recounted a call from an executive who fumed that a chip normally priced at $1 each was listed for sale by the exchange at $32. Gamperl had to explain that his own company had been forced to pay $28 for the component.

“That is the kind of craziness that we see left and right now,” he said.

Besides the direct effect on hardware makers, chip shortages can reduce shipments and raise the cost of servers and networking equipment to offer services like streaming entertainm­ent, remote learning and medicine. They also can affect software makers.

Tripp, a Los Angeles startup that makes a kind of meditation app that exploits virtual reality headsets from Sony and others, was banking on the new PlayStatio­n 5 to lift software demand, said Nanea Reeves, Tripp’s CEO.

But chip shortages helped to hobble that console launch.

“We were expecting a bigger bump from the PS5,” she said. The company is hoping more consoles arrive in the second quarter.

 ?? Doug Mills, © The New York Times Co. ?? President Joe Biden holds a semiconduc­tor in Feburary at the White House. Shortages of semiconduc­tors, fueled by pandemic interrupti­ons and production issues at factories, have sent shock waves through the economy.
Doug Mills, © The New York Times Co. President Joe Biden holds a semiconduc­tor in Feburary at the White House. Shortages of semiconduc­tors, fueled by pandemic interrupti­ons and production issues at factories, have sent shock waves through the economy.
 ?? Ilana Panich-Linsman, © The New York Times Co. ?? Transtec Group workers use devices such as this to read sensors in concrete.
Ilana Panich-Linsman, © The New York Times Co. Transtec Group workers use devices such as this to read sensors in concrete.

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