The Edge Singapore

Global review: Here to stay: Implicatio­ns and opportunit­ies from Taiwan’s semiconduc­tor edge

- BY KEVIN LIU, LOUIS CHENG AND ERIC Y.P. LIN Kevin Liu is head of domestic equity team, Louis Cheng is fund manager and Eric Y.P. Lin is head of overseas equity team. They are all from Eastspring Investment­s, Taiwan

Taiwan’s dominance of the global semiconduc­tor foundry industry comes from decades of intentiona­l policy design and private sector entreprene­urship. The winner takes all dynamics within the industry and has helped Taiwan develop a thriving ecosystem which presents attractive opportunit­ies for the active investor.

Over the past two decades, the mobile phone evolved from being just a mode of communicat­ion to today’s personal informatio­n platform. Consumers’ increasing demand for more safety, entertainm­ent and navigation features also helped drive a cross generation­al transforma­tion in the automobile’s interior and control system.

The semiconduc­tor chip or integrated circuit (IC), the brain behind every electronic device, has been key in enabling these changes.

Taiwan’s chip edge is here to stay

Semiconduc­tor chips are manufactur­ed in a foundry, which is also known as a fabricatio­n plant or fab. Taiwan, South Korea and China account for more than 90% of the global foundry capacity. The global semiconduc­tor foundry market was valued at US$42 billion last year and is expected to reach US$62 billion ($83.4 billion) by 2026.

Taiwan by itself controls more than 80% of the market for chips with the smallest and most efficient circuits. Taiwan’s dominance of the global foundry industry comes from decades of government support, intentiona­l policy design and private sector entreprene­urship. This dominance is unlikely to be easily chipped away (no pun intended).

Taiwan’s semiconduc­tor sector started in 1974, when the government was looking for a way out of the economic slump caused by the 1973 oil shock. Taiwan’s first three-inch fab was built in 1975, and in 1980, Taiwan establishe­d its first commercial semiconduc­tor company,

United Microelect­ronics Corporatio­n

(UMC).

At the start of 1990, the Taiwanese government was still undertakin­g a significan­t share (44%) of the R&D spending in the semiconduc­tor industry. By 1999, that percentage fell to 6.5% with the private sector starting to fund most of the research.

Today, it costs around US$3 to US$4 billion to build a fab to produce the chips that car makers need but companies need to continue to invest heavily not just in capacity, but also in R&D to develop new technologi­es to stay ahead.

Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Company (TSMC), one of the world’s leading dedicated semiconduc­tor foundry, recently announced that it will invest US$100 billion to expand its chip fabricatio­n capacity and address the growing demand for new technologi­es over the next three years.

Even before this, TSMC was already mass-producing chips using the cutting edge extreme ultraviole­t (EUV) lithograph­y technology which enables it to make smaller and faster chips at a lower cost.

With the rate at which market leaders are innovating, new entrants run the risk of creating a fab that is already behind the technology curve at the point of launch. Due to the high costs, fabs are designed to run at close to maximum capacity to be profitable. New entrants need to ensure that there will be enough demand for their chips on the onset in order to reduce their payback periods.

They would also need to collaborat­e with high tech suppliers such as semiconduc­tor capital equipment manufactur­ers which may already have establishe­d relationsh­ips with existing market leaders.

Currently, the top five semiconduc­tor capital equipment manufactur­ers make up 70% of the semiconduc­tor capital equipment market.

Besides the prohibitiv­e costs, talent is in short supply in the semiconduc­tor industry globally today. In the early days of Taiwan’s semiconduc­tor industry, R&D was largely carried out in the local universiti­es as well as in the Electronic­s Research and Service Organisati­on (ERSO) of the Industrial Technology Research Institute.

This laid a strong foundation for fostering the engineerin­g talent needed for the industry. For the US and Europe, the shortage of skilled workers for their semiconduc­tor industries is a result of decades of outsourced manufactur­ing to Asia, the lower number of students in science, technology, engineerin­g, and mathematic­s (STEM), as well as impediment­s to high-skilled migration.

According to McKinsey, the semiconduc­tor industry’s record of steady technologi­cal improvemen­t has created a winner-take-all dynamic that extends along the entire value chain, from equipment production to chip manufactur­e.

From their analysis of the economic profit generated by 254 semiconduc­tor companies from 2015 through 2019, the five companies with the largest average annual profit have a larger combined average annual profit than the other 249 companies (see figure 1).

Structural trends drive chip demand

While the current semiconduc­tor shortage is caused by the unexpected rise in cyclical demand for vehicles and the strong work from home demand for electronic­s, many of the drivers of chip demand are structural, driven by 5G, artificial intelligen­ce (AI), ADAS,

electric vehicles (EV) and Internet of Things (IoT) trends.

The sales of semiconduc­tor chips is expected to grow at a CAGR of 10.7% p.a. over 2020 to 2023, almost double its CAGR of 5.5% during 2015 to 2020 (see figure 2). Demand for semiconduc­tors should also rise as sales of 5G phones and investment­s in 5G infrastruc­ture accelerate.

Globally, the total investment in 5G infrastruc­ture is expected to reach US$350 billion, 30% more than the total global investment in 4G infrastruc­ture.

In addition, with the developmen­t of Advanced Driving Assistance Systems (ADAS), the value of semiconduc­tors in each vehicle will increase from US$170 to US$1,200. As a result of the rising popularity of EV, the EV-related segment of the automotive semiconduc­tor market is expected to enjoy a CAGR of 20% from 2020 to 2025.

Meanwhile, the gaming sector’s demand for high performing semiconduc­tor chips has also been rising as 5G, cloud and virtual reality (VR) lifts innovation and creates more immersive games.

Opportunit­ies within the semiconduc­tor ecosystem

Taiwan’s leadership position in the semiconduc­tor foundry industry creates a virtuous cycle — market leaders enjoy attractive margins and generate the cash flows needed to fund further R&D investment­s.

Deep pockets and strong balance sheets are key as investment­s need to continue despite downturns in the industry. A leadership position in the semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing industry has also created other industry clusters in Taiwan, including chip packaging companies as well as companies that supply substrates, lead frames and chemicals.

We expect the current chip shortage in mature nodes (used for driver IC, power management IC) to last longer than the advanced nodes (used for smartphone­s, AI and high performing computing). This is because the key players in the advanced nodes have aggressive capital expenditur­e plans for the next three years.

On the other hand, capacity expansion in the mature nodes is expected to be more discipline­d. Understand­ing these implicatio­ns helps us to identify potential winners and losers. When assessing the foundries, we examine expected utilisatio­n rates, quality of client base, depreciati­on policies, profitabil­ity and the technology gap versus their competitor­s.

Taiwan is not only home to tier one foundries, chip packaging and IC Design companies, it also has other small and mid-cap companies within the semiconduc­tor ecosystem which can provide investors with attractive opportunit­ies.

As active managers, we benefit from the flexibilit­y of investing in companies that may not be in the indexes or exchange traded funds or in promising companies that still have small exposures within the indexes.

We are on the constant lookout to identify areas of new value creation within the ecosystem in order to deliver alpha for investors. The ability to identify emerging technologi­es that will ultimately enjoy increasing adoption can produce outsized returns. This, however, can only be achieved through dynamic analysis, in-depth research and experience.

 ?? TAIWAN SEMICONDUC­TOR MANUFACTUR­ING COMPANY (TSMC) ?? The global semiconduc­tor foundry market was valued at US$42 billion last year and is expected to reach US$62 billion ($83.4 billion) by 2026
TAIWAN SEMICONDUC­TOR MANUFACTUR­ING COMPANY (TSMC) The global semiconduc­tor foundry market was valued at US$42 billion last year and is expected to reach US$62 billion ($83.4 billion) by 2026
 ??  ?? Figure 1: Average yearly profit of semiconduc­tor companies, 2015–2019 (US$ billion)
Figure 1: Average yearly profit of semiconduc­tor companies, 2015–2019 (US$ billion)
 ??  ?? Figure 2: Global semiconduc­tor sales (US$ billions)
Figure 2: Global semiconduc­tor sales (US$ billions)

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