Semiconductor Equipment
Highlights Industry Deep-dive Report: The Semiconductor and Semiconductor Equipment Industry (“Semis”) has had a fantastic run over the past 12 months. We have been overweight it since June and the trade is ahead of the market by 14%. In this deep-dive report into the sector, we aim to decipher the outlook for 2022. To do so, we review the supply chain, target markets, macroeconomic backdrop, and fundamentals. Production Model: Semiconductor production is divided among IC designers and manufacturers. This separation of design and manufacturing is called the fabless model, which has grown in prominence as the pace of innovation made it increasingly difficult for firms to manage both the capital intensity of manufacturing and the high levels of R&D spending for design. Designed In The US, Made In Asia: The entire semiconductor industry depends on the cooperation between two regions: North America that houses global leaders in designing the most sophisticated chips, and Asia which is home to companies that have the technology to manufacture them. Geopolitical risks: As a result, the Semis are in the crosshairs of rising tensions between China and the US with both countries seeking chips independence and pushing for onshoring. Conventional end-demand markets span the entire US economy but can be grouped into several main categories. Computing or data processing electronics is one of the largest markets, followed by Communications, Consumer Electronics, and Autos. Growth rates vary across segments. The novel markets for semis came on the back of emerging technologies, such as IoT, 5G, automation, AI, self-driving vehicles, and others, all of which require increasing chip sophistication. These markets present a tremendous long-term opportunity for the industry. Global semis sales grew at 25 percent in 2021. In 2022, market growth is expected to slow to 10 percent. Earnings growth has also been slowing. The industry is not immune to rising costs of raw materials, labor shortages, and supply-chain disruptions. While earnings growth is slowing, operating margins are set to expand over the next 12 months. Valuations are extended: The semis' earnings growth expectations are on par with the S&P 500, but trade with a 14% premium to forward multiple. The macroeconomic backdrop is unfavorable: Tighter monetary policy, slowing economic growth, and a slowdown in China, are headwinds for this hyper-cyclical industry. Investment Outlook: We conclude that we are bullish on the industry on a structural basis but are more ambivalent about its prospects over the next 3-6 months downgrading our portfolio overweight to an equal-weight.
Chart 9
Feature Performance The Semiconductors and Semiconductor Equipment industry (“Semis”) has received an unexpected boost during the pandemic: Lockdowns, coupled with helicopter cash drops, have spurred demand for durable goods, and foundries could not work fast enough to produce chips, direly needed by autos, consumer electronics, and computer manufacturers. Since the beginning of the pandemic, Semis have outperformed the S&P 500 by roughly 62%, and the Tech sector by just under 30% (Chart 1). Only this year, Semis are almost 20% ahead of the market (Table 1). This poses a question – can this outperformance continue in 2022, or will the economic growth slowdown and waning demand for goods end this superior run? Chart 1Shortages Boosted Performance Of Semis
Shortages Boosted Performance Of Semis
Shortages Boosted Performance Of Semis
Sneak Preview: While we believe in Semis as a multi-year structural theme, we recommend a tactical equal weight. We have been overweight Semis since June and the trade is ahead of the market by 14.5%. We are closing the overweight on the back of a strong run, rich valuations, slowing earnings growth, and an unfavorable macroeconomic backdrop. Table 1Semis Had A Strong Run Over The Past 12 Months
Semiconductors: Aren't They Fab?!
Semiconductors: Aren't They Fab?!
Semiconductor Primer What Are Semiconductors? I have a confession to make – I have always had only the fuzziest idea of what is inside my computer or under the hood of my car. Well, apparently, it is semis, aka chips, that are the brains of any electronic device that we come across in our daily life. I like the comparison of chips to modern-day bricks, serving a wide range of industries. The American Semiconductor Association (ASA) calls them a “marvel of modern technology,” which they truly are, being a foundation of modern life, packed with up to tens of billions of transistors on a piece of silicon the size of a quarter. Chips power not only our phones and vacuum cleaners, but also innovative medical devices, robots, and wireless internet. Semiconductors make all sectors of the US economy, from farming to manufacturing, more efficient. The number of applications of semis is innumerable, and recent shortages made all of us more aware of these, behind-the-scenes, engines of our daily life. The US Semis Brag Sheet The US semiconductor industry is the worldwide industry leader with about half of the global market share (47%) and sales of $208B in 2020.1 The industry employs over a quarter-million people and supports nearly 1.6 million additional US jobs. Semis are a top-five US export, with more than 80% of industry sales going to overseas customers. The US exported $49B in semiconductors in 2020. Rapid innovation has allowed the industry to produce exponentially more products at a lower cost, a principle known as Moore’s law. How Are Semiconductors Made? R&D is the first step in the production process. Firms involved in semiconductor design develop nanometer-scale integrated circuits that perform the critical tasks that make electronic devices work, such as connectivity to networks, computing, storage, and power management. Chip designers must use highly advanced electronic design automation (EDA) software and reusable architectural building blocks (“IP cores”) to do this task.2 The process requires significant investment: Developing a new chip can cost over 100M dollars and requires many years of work by hundreds of engineers. As chips have become increasingly complex, development costs have rapidly risen. Design is the part of the process that differentiates one type of chips from another and constitutes a competitive moat for the companies that design them. Design is chiefly knowledge- and skill-intensive, accounting for 65% of the total industry R&D and has the highest value-add of the entire production process. Manufacturing is a complex process. Once chips are designed, the process moves to production. Often the chip production starts with processing sand that contains a large amount of silicon. Sand is purified and melted into solid cylinders, that are then sliced into very thin silicon discs, polished to a flawless finish, called “blank wafer.” Wafers are then printed with intricated circuit designs, which are later divided into tiny individual semiconductors, called dies. Dies are later packaged into finished semiconductors that can be embedded into electronic devices. This process is summarized in Chart 2.
Chart 2
Cross-Border Supply Chains Types Of Semiconductor Production Companies The chip production process is usually divided between the three types of players that operate in the different segments of the supply chain. IC designing companies or fabless firms focus only on design and outsource fabrication to pure-play foundries and outsourced assembly and test (OSAT) firms. This segment of the value chain is dominated by the US firms such as Qualcomm, Broadcom, Nvidia, and AMD, which account for roughly 60% of all global fabless firm sales (Chart 3). Semiconductor manufacturing companies, aka foundries, receive orders from the IC designing companies and purchase raw materials and equipment to proceed in the chip manufacturing process. TSMC, Global Foundries, and United Microelectronics Corporation (UMC) are some of the largest and are located in Asia. The share of chips manufactured in China, South Korea, Southeast Asia, Taiwan, and other regions in East Asia has soared to 75% (Chart 4). Integrated Device Manufacturers (IDM) cover the entire production process from design to manufacturing. In terms of revenue, Samsung, Intel, and SK Hynix are the world’s three top IDM companies. Recently, there was a global push towards reintegration for geopolitical reasons (more about that later).
Chart 3
Chart 4
The fabless model, or separation of chip design and manufacturing, has grown along with the demand for semiconductors since the 1990s, as the pace of innovation made it increasingly difficult for many firms to manage both the capital intensity of manufacturing and the high levels of R&D spending for design. Since China joined the WTO in late 2001, global manufacturing offshoring switched to a higher gear with the semiconductor industry becoming a poster child for the movement. Except for Intel, which is the only US company that both designs and manufacturers chips, other US corporations completely outsourced their manufacturing to Asia. Designed In The US, Made In Asia As of 2020, the US market share of the global semiconductor market was 47% (Chart 5), dominated by fabless firms. Given the importance of semiconductor design in terms of value-added in the manufacturing process, the US must remain a leader in this stage of production. The US firms spend 17% of sales on R&D, more than any other country, to maintain a competitive edge (Chart 6). And this decisive advantage translates into a disproportionate share of industry revenue.
Chart 5
Chart 6
While specializing in chip design creates a competitive moat for the US semi companies, it also makes them vulnerable to supply-chain disruptions: At present only a little over 10% of all chips are manufactured in the US compared to 37% back in the ‘nineties (Chart 7), with the lion’s share of the most sophisticated chips manufactured in Asia. With the separation of design and manufacturing, the US, which is a leader in design, is falling behind as a location for manufacturing technology. As a result, the entire semiconductor industry depends on the cooperation between two regions: North America that houses global leaders in designing the most sophisticated chips, and Asia that is home to companies that have the technology to manufacture the most complex of chips. Both ends (design and manufacturing) of the semiconductor industry also have high barriers to entry due to the technology required to compete in the field, which creates a big problem since major geopolitical players now aim to break down existing supply-chains and to push their corporations towards domestic vertical integration.
Chart 7
Supply Chain Fragility The fragility of the semiconductor supply chains was best revealed during the pandemic-induced shutdown. With the global economy coming to a virtual hold, various industries had to cancel their semi orders, and foundries took some of the capacity offline. However, demand for goods rebounded unexpectedly and sharply, jump-started by global fiscal and monetary stimulus. It is important to note that a semiconductor manufacturing plant cannot be simply turned on after a period of inactivity. Not only does it require time to be brought back to life, but also the chip production itself is a month-long process. Semiconductor companies did their best during the lockdown to meet demand and even got an exemption from government-imposed lockdowns as “essential” businesses. The industry managed to increase production to address high demand, shipping more semiconductors every month than ever before by the middle of 2021 (Chart 8). However, chip shortages ensued, because supply, despite its best efforts, could not keep pace with the demand. Expanding semi manufacturing capacity was not an option: Building a fab and bringing it up to full capacity can take anywhere from 24 to 42 months at a price tag of anywhere from $1.7bn to $5.4bn, depending on the quality of the chips manufactured.3 Most industry analysts expect the shortage to linger into 2022.4 Chart 8The Industry Worked Hard To Meet Demand For Chips
The Industry Worked Hard To Meet Demand For Chips
The Industry Worked Hard To Meet Demand For Chips
Geopolitics Semiconductor Industry Is At The Epicenter Of Geopolitical Tensions The semi shortages also came within the broader context of the changing world order and the resulting competition for the key resource. As a result, governments around the globe took action to secure the key commodity for themselves and to establish its production on domestic soil. In the US, once semi-conductor shortages started crippling US manufacturing back in April 2021, President Biden held a semiconductor summit at the White House. In addition, he signed an executive order calling for a 100-day review of the US supply chains. In June, the US Senate passed the bipartisan US Innovation and Competition Act, which includes $52 billion in federal investments for semiconductors (building from the CHIPS for America Act announced in January). The House of Representatives excluded the $52 billion from its version of the bill but most of this semiconductor funding will likely be reinstated in the final compromise version of the bill. We expect the funding to help US-based firms, like Intel, as well as non-US firms, such as Taiwan Semiconductor, which is putting billions of dollars into its next-generation production plant in Arizona. And last, the administration agreed with Japan to cooperate on semiconductor development and supply chains.5 Moving east, the European Commission also expressed its concerns that the Old Continent was naïve to outsource chip manufacturing and now plans to double the EU’s share of global chip production from the current 10% to 20% by 2030 under its new Digital Compass plan which aims to boost “digital sovereignty” by funding various high-tech initiatives. In China, policymakers realized the importance of semis in 2013, and while China will not achieve full self-sufficiency anytime soon, ongoing US sanctions and political pressure will only accelerate the Middle Kingdom’s push for semiconductor supply independence. Already, the new five-year plan that was released this year, prioritizes technological innovation including in the semiconductor space. Japan and South Korea are also devoting state resources to the industry, and global policymakers are seeking ways to reduce dependency on Taiwan due to the risk of conflict over the long run. The broader implication of the global semiconductor production onshoring is two-fold. First, existing supply chains will come under pressure as nations will force their respective semiconductor companies to undergo a complete vertical integration, resulting in much steeper chip prices, unless governments come out with further extravagant subsidies. This transformation also implies higher demand for the output of semiconductor equipment manufacturers as nations are scrambling to build onshore manufacturing facilities. Target Markets Most industries are run on chips, but overall usage can be grouped into several key categories, such as Computers, Communications, Consumer Goods, Autos. These traditional markets account for most of the demand for chips. Conventional Chip Uses Computing aka Data Processing Electronics is one of the largest segments and comprises nearly one-third of all semiconductor usage. This segment represents the demand for chips used for personal computers, servers, and cloud storage. This is one of the fastest-growing categories, which SIA projects to grow at 21% per year6 (Chart 9). While this expected rate of growth is impressive, it is set to slow in the coming year as demand for personal computers is starting to decelerate (Chart 10). On the upside, annual growth in servers continues to rebound, with the year-on-year increase in global server shipments close to 15% (Chart 11).
Chart 9
Chart 10Demand For PCs Is Coming Off High Levels...
Demand For PCs Is Coming Off High Levels...
Demand For PCs Is Coming Off High Levels...
Chart 11While Demand For Servers Is On The Rise
While Demand For Servers Is On The Rise
While Demand For Servers Is On The Rise
Communications Electronics is the second largest chips market. These chips power wireless communications and are getting a boost from the rollout of 5G networks. This segment also benefits from the recently passed US Infrastructure Bill, which has funds earmarked for wireless communication. However, communications chips expect tepid growth of just 1% as the speed of the 5G rollout is disappointing, and many consumers are unwilling to upgrade their phones: Demand for smartphones has only recently turned up (Chart 12). Consumer Electronics is a segment that is expected to contract in the coming year as spending on consumer goods has already exceeded the pre-pandemic trend and has turned down (Chart 13). Chart 12Demand For Smart Phones Has Started To Pick Up
Demand For Smart Phones Has Started To Pick Up
Demand For Smart Phones Has Started To Pick Up
Chart 13Demand For Consumer Goods Is Waning
Demand For Consumer Goods Is Waning
Demand For Consumer Goods Is Waning
Automotive segment – Modern vehicles are increasingly reliant on chips for advanced brakes, steering systems, fuel efficiency, safety, and other features. So missing chips can easily stall production. While the segment is only 12% of the total, it has gotten the industry’s most negative rap. Auto manufacturers, for example, could experience a $61bn loss in revenue due to supply constraints in 2021.7 However, this segment is expected to grow in the high single digits due to significant pent-up demand for autos (Chart 14). Interestingly, EV makers that deploy the most sophisticated chips were somewhat spared from shortages, which afflicted mostly mainstream chip categories. Chart 14Auto Segment Is Expected To Grow Due To Pent-Up Demand For Cars
Auto Segment Is Expected To Grow Due To Pent-Up Demand For Cars
Auto Segment Is Expected To Grow Due To Pent-Up Demand For Cars
Chips Power The Fourth Industrial Revolution Besides these well-established markets, Semis are also intrinsically a play on every single emerging technology theme. Semiconductors are at the core of disruptive technologies and the fourth industrial revolution. Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML) rely heavily on computing power delivered by sophisticated chips to process massive datasets looking for insights. As AI becomes widely deployed in a wide range of industries, demand for powerful chips is bound to soar: The size of the AI chip market is forecast to increase eight-fold from an estimated $10.14bn in 2020 to $83.25bn by 2027.8 Internet of Things (IoT), or interconnectedness of electronics, is another source of demand for chips. However, to realize the full potential of this new-generation technology, processors, modems, and other communication infrastructure must be modernized. 5G adoption is starting to accelerate as new applications are being developed such as the metaverse, immersive gaming, and virtual reality. The higher data rates and lower latencies made possible by 5G are expected to be a driver of demand for advanced semiconductors. In a 2021 KPMG survey, 53% of semiconductor companies believe 5G will become a significant driver of revenue growth in one to two years, and 19% believe it could happen in less than a year.9 Automation: Be it self-driving cars or the installation of manufacturing assembly robots, both require semiconductors. Recent labor shortages and rising wages are another reason automation is to come to the fore: US manufacturers are a case in point, lagging their European and Asian counterparts in new robot installation and in dire need of catching up. While it’s true that automation does not bring an explosive demand shock like IoT and AI do, we would not underestimate the power of that structural force (Chart 15).
Chart 15
Fundamentals Sales Growth And Profitability According to the WSTS, the worldwide semiconductor market is expected to show an outstanding growth rate of 25 percent in 2021. The largest growth contributors are Memory with 37.1 percent, followed by Analog with 29.1 percent, and Logic with 26.2 percent. By 2022, the global semiconductor market growth is expected to slow and is projected to grow by 10.1 percent. Americas are expected to grow at 12% next year.10 These forecasts align rather well with bottom-up sales growth forecasts by street analysts at 10.8% (Chart 16), which exceed projected nominal GDP growth of 7.6% and expected sales growth of the S&P 500. This industry continues to be powered by pent-up demand, backlogs of orders, and adoption of brand-new technologies. Earnings growth has recently slowed (Chart 17). Semis is an R&D intense industry, especially for the fabless US companies, which continue to plow funds into research and design of chips to retain a competitive edge. After a pandemic hiatus, the industry now is starting to ramp up its Capex outlays (Chart 18). Chart 16Sales Growth Is To Stay Robust...
Sales Growth Is To Stay Robust...
Sales Growth Is To Stay Robust...
Chart 17But Earnings Growth Is Set To Decelerate
But Earnings Growth Is Set To Decelerate
But Earnings Growth Is Set To Decelerate
Recent labor shortages and rising wages have not bypassed highly educated segments of the labor market, cutting into the profitability of these high-tech labor-intensive businesses. And of course, this industry is not immune to rising costs of raw materials and supply-chain disruptions, albeit less so than many businesses further downstream in the value chain, such as Autos. Chart 18After Pandemic Hiatus, Capex Is On The Way Back
After Pandemic Hiatus, Capex Is On The Way Back
After Pandemic Hiatus, Capex Is On The Way Back
Chart 19Margins Are Expected To Expand Further
Margins Are Expected To Expand Further
Margins Are Expected To Expand Further
Despite all the production challenges, Semis is one of the few industries that are projected to further expand its margins in the coming year (Chart 19). However, just like many other industries, their pricing power is overextended (Chart 20) and is likely to mean revert, constraining companies to pass on higher costs of design, raw materials, and manufacturing to customers. Chart 20Pricing Power Is Extreme And Is Likely To Mean Revert
Pricing Power Is Extreme And Is Likely To Mean Revert
Pricing Power Is Extreme And Is Likely To Mean Revert
Valuations Semis is an industry whose earnings are expected to grow at 8% over the next 12 months, which is on par with the S&P 500. However, Semis are trading at 24x forward earnings, or with a 14% premium to the S&P 500 (21.3x) (Chart 21). Further, earnings growth is decelerating. It is hard to justify this valuation premium, especially in the context of imminent rate hikes. Of course, valuations may reflect the fact that demand for chips is still extremely strong both from conventional markets and nascent technology applications. The industry is also highly profitable, and margins are expected to expand in 2022. To break the tie, we will turn to the analysis of the macroeconomic backdrop in 2022 and whether it is going to be favorable for the industry. Chart 21Valuations Are Overextended
Valuations Are Overextended
Valuations Are Overextended
Macroeconomic Backdrop Semiconductor stocks as a group aren’t just highly sensitive to economic growth, they’re nearly immediately so, sniffing out economic rebounds and downturns before they become evident in broad market data. As a result, investors have to remain on their guard and be very nimble. Subtle shifts in the economic outlook can have a big impact on relative performance. At the moment, several macro trends constitute a headwind for the outperformance of the industry: Global bond yields are expected to rise due to the concerted action of Central Banks, dampening demand for chips, dragging down the sales growth of the Semis, and diminishing future cash flows (Chart 22). The US ISM Manufacturing index has peaked, while the ISM New Orders index is in a downward trend, suggesting an emerging decline in production and diminished demand for chips (Chart 23) Chinese growth is slowing and BCA Research’s house view is that a rebound is not likely until later in 2022. Chart 22Rising Bond Yields Will Be A Headwind For Semis
Rising Bond Yields Will Be A Headwind For Semis
Rising Bond Yields Will Be A Headwind For Semis
Chart 23Decline In The ISM New Orders Signal Less Demand For Semis
Decline In The ISM New Orders Signal Less Demand For Semis
Decline In The ISM New Orders Signal Less Demand For Semis
Therefore, we conclude that, while economic growth is to remain strong in 2022, and will provide a tailwind for many cyclical sectors, semiconductor growth is set to slow, and valuations are likely to compress as a reaction to rising bond yields. The macroeconomic outlook for the industry is contingent upon the direction of the interest rates and is sensitive to economic growth disappointments. In short, the macroeconomic backdrop is unfavorable. Investment Implications The semiconductor industry is positioned at the very core of the global economy. It is one of the key growth engines of the US economy, and one of its top exports. This is an industry highly geared to economic growth and exposed to a variety of emerging technology themes, such as 5G, self-driving vehicles, and the metaverse among many others. It is R&D and Capex intensive and sophisticated. We believe in Semis as a long-term structural theme. Tactically, we are concerned that in 2022 this industry may face macroeconomic headwinds being highly sensitive to slowing growth and rising rates, which are detrimental to the performance of this growth-oriented and cyclical sector. From a fundamental standpoint, sales and earnings growth are slowing and are on par with that of a broad market, yet Semis are trading with a premium to the S&P 500. Tactically, we are neutral on a sector, but structurally we are bullish. We recommend investors with longer holding horizons explore the following ETFs (Table 2), that are designed to capture Semis as an investment theme. Table 2Semis ETFs
Semiconductors: Aren't They Fab?!
Semiconductors: Aren't They Fab?!
Bottom Line In this deep-dive report on the Semiconductor industry, we review the supply chain, the key labor division between fabless chip designers and chips manufacturers, and the issues underpinning a recent push towards onshoring. We explore target markets and look at sales growth rates and fundamentals. We conclude that we are bullish on the industry on a structural basis but are more ambivalent about its prospects over the next 3-6 months downgrading our portfolio overweight to an equal-weight. Irene Tunkel Chief Strategist, US Equity Strategy irene.tunkel@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) "2021 Industry Facts" May 19, 2021 2 Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) "2021 STATE OF THE U.S. SEMICONDUCTOR INDUSTRY" 3 Global X "Putting the Chip Shortage into the Context of Long-Term Trends" May 24, 2021 4 Ibid 5 Ibid 6 Ibid 7 Bloomberg, “Chip Shortage: Taiwan, South Korea’s Manufacturing Lead Worries U.S., China” March 3, 2021 8 Ibid 9 Ibid 10 World Semiconductor Trade Statistics "Semiconductor Market Forecast Fall 2021" November 30, 2021 Recommended Allocation
Is The Chip Shortage A Boon or Doom?
Is The Chip Shortage A Boon or Doom?
Overweight Today we are upgrading the Semiconductor industry group to an overweight. Semis received a lot of bad press this year as chip shortages became a major production bottleneck for a range of industries from autos to gaming computers. Semiconductor manufacturers have reduced their capacity during the pandemic and were struggling to ramp up production to meet pent up demand. This industry is highly cyclical and is a high beta play on the global recovery. The chart on the right illustrates that historically, US Semi earnings have been joined at the hip with the global sales and inventory cycles. Global inventories are at all time lows, and a new restocking cycle is in its infancy. A shortage of chips translates into higher prices and strong earnings growth, which is likely to continue far into the future. Street consensus expects 18% EPS growth over the next 12 months. Further, semis stocks have been in a consolidation mode for the first half of 2021 and have accumulated enough dry powder for a new leg higher. This industry group is trading with a 7% discount to the S&P 500 forward earnings multiple (19.8x vs 21.3x) Importantly, as our BCA colleague, Arthur Budaghyan, observed, semiconductor chip manufacturing is becoming a strategic asset, especially in a standoff between China and the US, and the country that controls the production of semis controls the production of most tech goods. This view highlight structural importance of this investment theme. Bottom Line: We are upgrading the S&P Semiconductors & Semiconductor equipment index to overweight from neutral allocation.
Highlights President Biden has called for the US intelligence community to investigate the origins of COVID-19 and one of Biden’s top diplomats has stated the obvious: the era of “engagement” with China is over. This clinches our long-held view that any Democratic president would be a hawk like President Trump. The US-China conflict – and global geopolitical risk – will revive and undermine global risk appetite. China faces a confluence of geopolitical and macroeconomic challenges, suggesting that its equity underperformance will continue. Domestic Chinese investors should stay long government bonds. Foreign investors should sell into the bond rally to reduce exposure to any future sanctions. The impending agreement of a global minimum corporate tax rate has limited concrete implications that are not already known but it symbolizes the return of Big Government in the western world. Our updated GeoRisk Indicators are available in the Appendix, as well as our monthly geopolitical calendar. Feature In our quarterly webcast, “Geopolitics And Bull Markets,” we argued that geopolitical themes matter to investors when they have a demonstrable relationship with the macroeconomic backdrop. When geopolitics and macro are synchronized, a simple yet powerful investment thesis can be discerned. The US war on terror, Russia’s resurgence, the EU debt crisis, and Brexit each provided cases in which a geopolitically informed macro view was both accessible and actionable at an early stage. Investors generally did well if they sold the relevant country’s currency and disfavored its equities on a relative basis. Chart 1China's Decade Of Troubles
China's Decade Of Troubles
China's Decade Of Troubles
Of course, the market takeaway is not always so clear. When geopolitics and macroeconomics are desynchronized, the trick is to determine which framework will prevail over the financial markets and for how long. Sometimes the market moves to its own rhythm. The goal is not to trade on geopolitics but rather to invest with geopolitics. One of our key views for this year – headwinds for China – is an example of synchronization. Two weeks ago we discussed China’s macroeconomic challenge. In this report we discuss China’s foreign policy challenge: geopolitical pressure from the US and its allies. In particular we address President Biden’s call for a deeper intelligence dive into the origins of COVID-19. The takeaway is negative for China’s currency and risk assets. The Great Recession dealt a painful blow to the Chinese version of the East Asian economic miracle. By 2015, China’s financial turmoil and currency devaluation should have convinced even bullish investors to keep their distance from Chinese stocks and the renminbi. If investors stuck with this bearish view despite the post-2016 rally, on fear of trade war, they were rewarded in 2018-19. Only with China’s containment of COVID-19 and large economic stimulus in 2020 has CNY-USD threatened to break out (Chart 1). We expect the renminbi to weaken anew, especially once the Fed begins to taper asset purchases. Our cyclical view is still bullish but US-China relations are unstable so we remain tactically defensive. Forget Biden’s China Review, He’s A Hawk Chinese financial markets face a host of challenges this year, despite the positive factors for China’s manufacturing sector amid the global recovery. At home these challenges consist of a structural economic slowdown, a withdrawal of policy stimulus, bearish sentiment among households, and an ongoing government crackdown on systemic risk. Abroad the Democratic Party’s return to power in Washington means that the US will bring more allies to bear in its attempt to curb China’s rise. This combination of factors presents a headwind for Chinese equities and a tailwind for government bonds (Chart 2). This is true at least until the government should hit its pain threshold and re-stimulate. Chart 2Global Investors Still Wary
Global Investors Still Wary
Global Investors Still Wary
New stimulus may not occur in 2022. The Communist Party’s leadership rotation merely requires economic stability, not rapid growth. While the central government has a record of stimulating when its pain threshold is hit, even under the economically hawkish President Xi Jinping, a financial market riot is usually part of this threshold. This implies near-term downside, particularly for global commodities and metals, which are also facing a Chinese regulatory backlash to deter speculation. In this context, President Biden’s call for a deeper US intelligence investigation into the origin of COVID-19 is an important confirming signal of the US’s hawkish turn toward China. Biden gave 90 days for the intelligence community to report back to him. We will not enter into the debate about COVID-19’s origins. From a geopolitical point of view it is a moot point. The facts of the virus origin may never be established. According to Biden’s statement, at least one US intelligence agency believes the “lab leak theory” is the most likely source of the virus (while two other agencies decided in favor of animal-to-human transmission). Meanwhile Chinese government spokespeople continue to push the theory that the virus originated at the US’s Fort Detrick in Maryland or at a US-affiliated global research center. What is certain is that the first major outbreak of a highly contagious disease occurred in Wuhan. Both sides are demanding greater transparency and will reject each other’s claims based on a lack of transparency. If the US intelligence report concludes that COVID originated from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, the Chinese government and media will reject the report. If the report exonerates the Wuhan laboratory, at least half of the US public will disbelieve it and it will not deter Biden from drawing a hard line on more macro-relevant policy disputes with China. The US’s hawkish bipartisan consensus on China took shape before COVID. Biden’s decision to order the fresh report introduces skepticism regarding the World Health Organization’s narrative, which was until now the mainstream media’s narrative. Previously this skepticism was ghettoized in US public discourse: indeed, until Biden’s announcement on May 26, the social media company Facebook suppressed claims that the virus came from a lab accident or human failure. Thus Biden’s action will ensure that a large swathe of the American public will always tend to support this theory regardless of the next report’s findings. At the same time Biden discontinued a State Department effort to prove the lab leak theory, which shows that it is not a foregone conclusion what his administration will decide. The good news is that even if the report concluded in favor of the lab leak, the Biden administration would remain highly unlikely to demand that China pay “reparations,” like the Trump administration demanded in 2020. This demand, if actualized, would be explosive. The bad news is that a future nationalist administration could conceivably use the investigation as a basis to demand reparations. Nationalism is a force to be reckoned with in both countries and the dispute over COVID’s origin will exacerbate it. Traditionally the presidents of both countries would tamp down nationalism or attempt to keep it harnessed. But in the post-Xi, post-Trump era it is harder to control. The death toll of COVID-19 will be a permanent source of popular grievance around the world and a wedge between the US and China (Chart 3). China’s international image suffered dramatically in 2020. So far in 2021 China has not regained any diplomatic ground. Chart 3Death Toll Of COVID-19
Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update)
Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update)
The US is repairing its image via a return to multilateralism while the Europeans have put their Comprehensive Agreement on Investment with China on hold due to a spat over sanctions arising from western accusations of genocide (a subject on which China pointedly answered that it did not need to be lectured by Europeans). Notably Biden’s Department of State also endorsed its predecessor’s accusation of genocide in Xinjiang. Any authoritative US intelligence review that solidifies doubts about the WHO’s initial investigation – even if it should not affirm the lab leak theory – would give Biden more ammunition in global opinion to form a democratic alliance to pressure China (for example, in Europe). An important factor that enables the US to remain hawkish on China is fiscal stimulus. While stimulus helps bring about economic recovery, it also lowers the bar to political confrontation (Chart 4). Countries with supercharged domestic demand do not have as much to fear from punitive trade measures. The Biden administration has not taken new punitive measures against China but it is clearly not worried about Chinese retaliation. Chart 4Large Fiscal Stimulus Lowers The Bar To Geopolitical Conflict
Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update)
Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update)
China’s stimulus is underrated in this chart (which excludes non-fiscal measures) but it is still true that China’s policy has been somewhat restrained and it will need to stimulate its economy again in response to any new punitive measures or any global loss of confidence. At least China is limited in its ability to tighten policy due to the threat of US pressure and western trade protectionism. Simultaneous with Biden’s announcement on COVID-19, his administration’s coordinator for Indo-Pacific affairs, Kurt Campbell, proclaimed in a speech that the era of “engagement” with China is officially over and the new paradigm is one of “competition.” By now Campbell is stating the obvious. But this tone is a change both from his tone while serving in President Obama’s Department of State and from his article in Foreign Affairs last year (when he was basically auditioning for his current role in the Biden administration).1 Campbell even said in his latest remarks that the Trump administration was right about the “direction” of China policy (though not the “execution”), which is candid. Campbell was speaking at Stanford University but his comments were obviously aimed for broader consumption. Investors no longer need to wait for the outcome of the Biden administration’s comprehensive review of policy toward China. The answer is known: the Biden administration’s hawkishness is confirmed. The Department of Defense report on China policy, due in June, is very unlikely to strike a more dovish posture than the president’s health policy. Now investors must worry about how rapidly tensions will escalate and put a drag on global sentiment. Bottom Line: US-China relations are unstable and pose an immediate threat to global risk appetite. The fundamental geopolitical assessment of US-China relations has been confirmed yet again. The US is seeking to constrain China’s rise because China is the only country capable of rivaling the US for supremacy in Asia and the world. Meanwhile China is rejecting liberalization in favor of economic self-sufficiency and maintaining an offensive foreign policy as it is wary of US containment and interference. Presidents Biden and Xi Jinping are still capable of stabilizing relations in the medium term but they are unlikely to substantially de-escalate tensions. And at the moment tensions are escalating. China’s Reaction: The Example Of Australia How will China respond to Biden’s new inquiry into COVID’s origins? Obviously Beijing will react negatively but we would not expect anything concrete to occur until the result of the inquiry is released in 90 days. China will be more constrained in its response to the US than it has been with Australia, which called for an international inquiry early last year, as the US is a superior power. Australia was the first to ban Chinese telecom company Huawei from its 5G network (back in 2018) and it was the first to call for a COVID probe. Relations between China and Australia have deteriorated steadily since then, but macro trends have clearly driven the Aussie dollar. The AUD-JPY exchange rate is a good measure for global risk appetite and it is wavering in recent weeks (Chart 5). Chart 5Australian Dollar Follows Macro Trends, Rallies Amid China Trade Spat
Australian Dollar Follows Macro Trends, Rallies Amid China Trade Spat
Australian Dollar Follows Macro Trends, Rallies Amid China Trade Spat
Tensions have also escalated due to China’s dependency on Australian commodity exports at a time of spiking commodity prices. This is a recurring theme going back to the Stern Hu affair. The COVID spat led China to impose a series of sanctions against Australian beef, barley, wine, and coal. But because China cannot replace Australian resources (at least, not in the short term), its punitive measures are limited. It faces rising producer prices as a result of its trade restrictions (Chart 6). This dependency is a bigger problem for China today than it was in previous cycles so China will try to diversify. Chart 6Constraints On China's Tarrifs On Australia
Constraints On China's Tarrifs On Australia
Constraints On China's Tarrifs On Australia
By contrast, China is not likely to impose sanctions on the US in response to Biden’s investigation, unless Biden attacks first. China’s imports from the US are booming and its currency is appreciating sharply. Despite Beijing’s efforts to keep the Phase One trade deal from collapsing, Biden is maintaining Trump’s tariffs and the US-China trade divorce is proceeding (Chart 7). Bilateral tariff rates are still 16-17 percentage points higher than they were in 2018, with US tariffs on China at 19% (versus 3% on the rest of the world) while Chinese tariffs on the US stand at 21% (versus 6% on the rest of the world). The Biden administration timed this week’s hawkish statements to coincide with the first meeting of US trade negotiators with China, which was a more civil affair. Both countries acknowledged that the relationship is important and trade needs to be continued. However, US Trade Representative Katherine Tai’s comments were not overly optimistic (she told Reuters that the relationship is “very, very challenging”). She has also been explicit about maintaining policy continuity with the Trump administration. We highly doubt that China’s share of US imports will ever surpass its pre-Trump peaks. The Biden administration has also refrained so far from loosening export controls on high-tech trade with China. This has caused a bull market in Taiwan while causing problems for Chinese semiconductor stocks’ relative performance (Chart 8). If Biden’s policy review does not lead to any relaxation of export controls on commercial items then it will mark a further escalation in tensions. Chart 7US Tarrifs Reduce China In Trade Deficit
US Tarrifs Reduce China In Trade Deficit
US Tarrifs Reduce China In Trade Deficit
Bottom Line: Until Presidents Biden and Xi stabilize relations at the top, the trade negotiations over implementing the Phase One trade deal – and any new Phase Two talks – cannot bring major positive surprises for financial markets. Chart 8US Export Controls Amid Chip Shortage
US Export Controls Amid Chip Shortage
US Export Controls Amid Chip Shortage
Congress Is More Hawkish Than Biden Biden’s ability to reduce frictions with China, should he seek to, will also be limited by Congress and public opinion. With the US deeply politically divided, and polarization at historically high levels, China has emerged as one of the few areas of agreement. The hawkish consensus is symbolized by new legislation such as the Strategic Competition Act, which is making its way through the Senate rapidly. Congress is also trying to boost US competitiveness through bills such as the Endless Frontier Act. These bills would subject China to scrutiny and potential punitive measures over a broad range of issues but most of all they would ignite US industrial policy , STEM education, and R&D, and diversify the US’s supply chains. We would highlight three key points with regard to the global impact of this legislation: Global supply chains are shifting regardless: This trend is fairly well established in tech, defense, and pharmaceuticals. It will continue unless we see a major policy reversal from China to try to court western powers and reduce frictions. The EU and India are less enthusiastic than the US and Australia about removing China from supply chains but they are not opposed. The EU Commission has recommended new defensive economic measures that cover supply chains in batteries, cloud services, hydrogen energy, pharmaceuticals, materials, and semiconductors. As mentioned, the EU is also hesitating to ratify the Comprehensive Agreement on Investment with China. Hence the EU is moving in the US’s direction independently of proposed US laws. After all, China’s rise up the tech value chain (and its decision to stop cutting back the size of its manufacturing sector) ultimately threatens the EU’s comparative advantage. The EU is also aligned with the US on democratic values and network security. India has taken a harder stance on China than usual, which marks an important break with the past. India’s decision to exclude Huawei from its 5G network is not final but it is likely to be at least partially implemented. A working group of democracies is forming regardless. The Strategic Competition Act calls for the creation of a working group of democracies but the truth is that this is already happening through more effective forums like the G7 and bilateral summits. Just as the implementation of the act would will ultimately depend on President Biden, so the willingness of other countries to adopt the recommendations of the working group would depend on their own executives. Allies have leeway as Biden will not use punitive measures against them: Any policy change from the EU, UK, India, and Australia will be independent of the US Congress passing the Strategic Competition Act. These countries will be self-directed. The US would have to devote diplomatic energy to maintaining a sustained effort by these states to counter China in the face of economic costs. This will be limited by the fact that the Biden administration will be very reluctant to impose punitive measures on allies to insist on their cooperation. The allies will set the pace of pressure on China rather than the United States. This gives the EU an important position, particularly Germany. And yet the trends in Germany suggest that the government will be more hawkish on China after the federal elections in September. Bottom Line: The Biden administration is unlikely to use punitive measures against allies so new US laws are less important than overall US diplomacy with each of the allies. Some allies will be less compliant with US policies given their need for trade with China. But so far there appears to be a common position taking shape even with the EU that is prejudicial to China’s involvement in key sectors of emerging technologies. If China does not respond by reducing its foreign policy assertiveness, then China’s economic growth will suffer. That drag would have to be offset by new supply chain construction in Southeast Asia and other countries. Investment Takeaways The foregoing highlights the international risks facing China even at a time when its trend growth is slowing (Chart 9) and its ongoing struggle with domestic financial imbalances is intensifying. China’s debt-service costs have risen sharply and Beijing is putting pressure on corporations and local governments to straighten out their finances (Chart 10), resulting in a wave of defaults. This backdrop is worrisome for investors until policymakers reassure them that government support will continue. Chart 9China's Growth Potential Slowing
China's Growth Potential Slowing
China's Growth Potential Slowing
Chart 10China's Leaders Struggle With Debt
China's Leaders Struggle With Debt
China's Leaders Struggle With Debt
China’s domestic stability is a key indicator of whether geopolitical risks could spiral out of control. In particular we think aggressive action in the Taiwan Strait is likely to be delayed as long as the Chinese economy and regime are stable. China has rattled sabers over the strait this year in a warning to the United States not to cross its red line (Chart 11). It is not yet clear how Biden’s policy continuity with the Trump administration will affect cross-strait stability. We see no basis yet for changing our view that there is a 60% chance of a market-negative geopolitical incident in 2021-22 and a 5% chance of full-scale war in the short run. Chart 11China PLA Flights Over Taiwan Strait
Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update)
Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update)
Putting all of the above together, we see substantial support for two key market-relevant geopolitical risks: Chinese domestic politics (including policy tightening) and persistent US-China tensions (including but not limited to the Taiwan Strait). We remain tactically defensive, a stance supported by several recent turns in global markets: The global stock-to-bond ratio has rolled over. China is a negative factor for global risk appetite (Chart 12). Global cyclical equities are no longer outperforming defensives. There is a stark divergence between Chinese cyclicals and global cyclicals stemming from the painful transition in China’s bloated industrial economy (Chart 13). Global large caps are catching a bid relative to small caps (Chart 14). Chart 12Global Stock-To-Bond Ratio Rolled Over
Global Stock-To-Bond Ratio Rolled Over
Global Stock-To-Bond Ratio Rolled Over
Chart 13Global Cyclicals-To-Defensives Pause
Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update)
Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update)
Chart 14Global Large Caps Catch A Bid Versus Small Caps
Global Large Caps Catch A Bid Versus Small Caps
Global Large Caps Catch A Bid Versus Small Caps
Cyclically the global economic recovery should continue as the pandemic wanes. China will eventually relax policy to prevent too abrupt of a slowdown. Therefore our strategic portfolio reflects our high-conviction view that the current global economic expansion will continue even as it faces hurdles from the secular rise in geopolitical risk, especially US-China cold war. Measurable geopolitical risk and policy uncertainty are likely to rebound sooner rather than later, with a negative impact on high-beta risk assets. Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Coda: Global Minimum Tax Symbolizes Return Of Big Government On Thursday, the US Treasury Department released a proposal to set the global minimum corporate tax rate at 15%. The plan is to stop what Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has referred to as a global “race to the bottom” and create the basis for a rehabilitation of government budgets damaged by pandemic-era stimulus. Although the newly proposed 15% rate is significantly below President Biden’s bid to raise the US Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income (GILTI) rate to 21% from 10.5%, it is the same rate as his proposed minimum tax on corporate book income. Biden is also raising the headline corporate tax rate from 21% to around 25% (or at highest 28%). Negotiators at the OECD were initially discussing a 12.5% global minimum rate. The finance ministers of both France and Germany – where the corporate income tax rates are 32.0% and 29.9%, respectively – both responded positively to the announcement. However, Ireland, which uses low corporate taxes as an economic development strategy, is obviously more comfortable with a minimum closer to its own 12.5% rate. Discussions are likely to occur when G7 finance ministers meet on June 4-5. Countries are hoping to establish a broad outline for the proposal by the G20 meeting in early July. It is highly likely that the OECD will come to an agreement. However, it is not a truly “global” minimum as there will still be tax havens. Compliance and enforcement will vary across countries. A close look at the domestic political capital of the relevant countries shows that while many countries have the raw parliamentary majorities necessary to raise taxes, most countries have substantial conservative contingents capable of preventing stiff corporate tax hikes (Table 1, in the Appendix). Our Geopolitical strategists highlight that the Biden administration’s compromise on the minimum rate reflects its pragmatism as well as emphasis on multilateralism. Any global deal will be non-binding but the two most important low-tax players are already committed to raising corporate rates well above this level: Biden’s plan is noted above, while the UK’s budget for March includes a jump in the business rate to 25% in April 2023 from the current 19%. Ireland and Hungary are the only outliers but they may eventually be forced to yield to such a large coalition of bigger economies (Chart 15). Chart 15Global Minimum Corporate Tax Impact Is Symbolic Rather Than Concrete
Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update)
Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update)
Thus a nominal minimum corporate tax rate is likely to be forged but it will not be truly global and it will not change the corporate rate for most countries. The reality of what companies pay will also depend on loopholes, tax havens, and the effective tax rate. Bottom Line: On a structural horizon, the global minimum corporate tax is significant for showing a paradigm shift in global macro policy: western governments are starting to raise taxes and revenue after decades of cutting taxes. The experiment with limited government has ended and Big Government is making a comeback. On a cyclical horizon, the US concession on global minimum tax is that the Biden administration aims to be pragmatic and “get things done.” Biden is also working with Republicans to pass bills covering some bipartisan aspects of his domestic agenda, such as trade, manufacturing, and China. The takeaway from a global point of view is that Biden may prove to be a compromiser rather than an ideologue, unlike his predecessors. Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Roukaya Ibrahim Vice President Daily Insights RoukayaI@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Kurt M. Campbell and Jake Sullivan, "Competition Without Catastrophe," Foreign Affairs, September/October 2019, foreignaffairs.com. Section II: Appendix Table 1OECD: Which Countries Are Willing And Able To Raise Corporate Tax Rates?
Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update)
Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update)
GeoRisk Indicator China
China: GeoRisk Indicator
China: GeoRisk Indicator
Russia
Russia: GeoRisk Indicator
Russia: GeoRisk Indicator
UK
UK: GeoRisk Indicator
UK: GeoRisk Indicator
Germany
Germany: GeoRisk Indicator
Germany: GeoRisk Indicator
France
France: GeoRisk Indicator
France: GeoRisk Indicator
Italy
Italy: GeoRisk Indicator
Italy: GeoRisk Indicator
Canada
Canada: GeoRisk Indicator
Canada: GeoRisk Indicator
Spain
Spain: GeoRisk Indicator
Spain: GeoRisk Indicator
Taiwan – Province Of China
Taiwan-Province of China: GeoRisk Indicator
Taiwan-Province of China: GeoRisk Indicator
Korea
Korea: GeoRisk Indicator
Korea: GeoRisk Indicator
Turkey
Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator
Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator
Brazil
Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator
Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator
Australia
Australia: GeoRisk Indicator
Australia: GeoRisk Indicator
Section III: Geopolitical Calendar
While the Fed’s dots dovishly surprised, the FOMC’s output and inflation projections were on the hawkish side. Adding the committee’s core PCE price inflation estimate for 2021 to their real GDP forecast results in a roughly 9% nominal GDP estimate, assuming the PCE and GDP deflators approximate one another. The last time the US economy hit such a high mark on a q/q annualized basis (ex-2020) was in late-2003 (Chart 1). Back then the Bush tax cuts were signed into law in late May 2003 turbocharging the economy. Chart 2 shows that the fed funds rate was pegged at 1% and the bond market was in selloff mode, with both the 10-year US Treasury yields surging violently and inflation breakevens galloping higher. While the S&P eventually shrugged off the bond market’s new equilibrium yield, drilling beneath the surface is revealing. Chart 1
Shades Of 2003/4?
Shades Of 2003/4?
Chart 2
Shades Of 2003/4?
Shades Of 2003/4?
As a reminder, back then the Fed was actually sowing the seeds of the housing bubble by keeping rates at 1%, which resulted in an economy running on steroids. Deep cyclical sectors outperformed the SPX and defensives significantly lagged the broad market especially as the economic data caught on fire in 2004 (see Appendix Charts A1, A2, A3, ). Financials were range bound and relative tech performance slumped in 2004 (for inclusion purposes Charts A4-A9 in the Appendix also show GICS2 sector relative performance). Bottom Line: Using the 2003/4 parallel as a guidepost we remain comfortable with our current positioning of preferring industrials and energy to consumer staples and communication services. Appendix Chart A1
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A2
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A3
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A4
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A5
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A6
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A7
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A8
Appendix
Appendix
Chart A9
Appendix
Appendix
The global semiconductor industry has been experiencing a record amount of IPOs and M&A deals in recent months. A flurry of IPOs and M&As in any industry often serves as a sign of a top in share prices (Chart 1). Chat 1Will Booming Semiconductor IPOs And M&As Mark A Peak In Share Prices?
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
The basis is that IPO and M&A booms usually occur when investor sentiment on that industry is super optimistic, which often coincides with a top in share prices. Does this mean that semiconductor stocks in general, and the ones in Taiwan and Korea in particular, are at their zenith? Our broad judgement is that semi stocks have not reached a secular peak. First, as we argued in a recent Special Report, the semiconductor industry is in a structural uptrend due to the continuing rollout of 5G networks and phones, a wider adoption of data centers, further technological advancements in artificial intelligence, cloud computing, edge computing and smaller nodes for chip manufacturing. Second, it is critical to differentiate a macro call on semiconductors from a bottom-up call on individual stocks. Not all semi companies have rallied in recent years, i.e., there has been great divergence among global semi stocks as shown in Chart 2. Chat 2The Performance Of Semiconductor Stocks Has Varied Greatly
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Several semiconductor companies – like TSMC, Nvidia and AMD – have achieved technological breakthroughs, putting them in a position to enjoy high order volumes and charge higher prices. Not surprisingly, revenues of these companies have outpaced the industry average by a wide margin (Chart 3). Chat 3Semiconductor Companies' Revenues Have Diverged
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Others – like Intel and Analog Devices - have posted inferior revenue gains because they have fallen behind technologically or because they are specializing in certain types of semiconductors for which demand and pricing have been lackluster. Chat 4One-Off Surge In Demand For Semis Might Be Over
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Finally, if the global reflation trade resumes and global stocks continue advancing, as the first post-US election day suggests, there is little reason for global semiconductor stocks to falter at this moment. From the macro perspective, lower interest rates in the long run will support not-so-cheap semiconductor stock valuations. In addition, companies with access to unique technological capabilities will be able to raise their product prices benefiting their profits. That said, there are also several signs that the global semi demand cycle might have entered a period of indigestion: The one-off demand surge for personal computers and gadgets and one-off ramp up of global server shipments due to the pandemic might be drawing to a close (Chart 4, top panel). Digitimes Research has reported that global server shipments are estimated to have slipped 6% sequentially in Q3 from Q2 and are projected to drop another 12% in Q4 (Chart 4, bottom panel). Unlike those in March-April, renewed lockdowns are unlikely to produce another surge in demand for digital equipment and, hence, for semis. Many people and companies have already settled into working from home. In short, as the effect of the one-off demand surge for digital hardware fades, global semi demand will moderate. Semiconductor companies in general, and the ones in Korea and Taiwan in particular, have greatly benefited from China having stockpiled semiconductors in 2019 and 2020 in preparation for US sanctions on Huawei that went into effect on September 15, 2020 (Chart 5). The US supply ban on semiconductors to China for 5G technology will remain in place regardless of the outcome of the US presidential elections. Restrictions on semi sales to China will weigh on certain semi producers. In addition, smartphone sales in China generally, including 5G smartphone sales, have plunged as of late (Chart 6). Chat 5China Has Been Accumulating Semis Inventories
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Chat 6China: Smartphone Shipments, Including 5G, Are Weak
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Finally, the PMI new orders sub-index for Taiwan’s electronic industry has rolled over, signaling a slowdown in its growth rate (Chart 7). Similarly, the memory chip revenue indicator has recently rolled over, signaling a potential risk to memory stocks such as Samsung and Hynix which make up the Korean technology index (Chart 8). Chat 7A Moderation In The Taiwanese Semis Industry?
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Chat 8Proxy for Value Of Memory Chips And Korean Tech Stocks
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
Asian Semi Stocks: Upgrade Korea But Not Taiwan
We have been advocating a neutral allocation to both the Korean and Taiwanese stock markets within the EM equity universe. One of our arguments for this strategy has been a potential escalation in the US-China confrontation going into the US elections. However, this risk has not materialized. We are upgrading the Korean bourse to overweight. As to Taiwan, a contested US election and the resulting vacuum of power in the next couple of months might lead to a rise in all types of geopolitical risks around the world. Taiwan could be one of these. We maintain a neutral allocation to the Taiwanese bourse within an EM equity portfolio. Bottom Line: In absolute terms, Korean and Taiwanese equity performance depends on the direction of global stocks. We will discuss the outlook for global and EM stocks in a Strategy Report to be published early next week when there is more clarity on the outcome of the US presidential elections. Within an EM equity universe, we are upgrading Korean stocks from neutral to overweight but keeping Taiwan’s allocation at neutral. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthur@bcaresearch.com Ellen JingYuan He Associate Vice President ellenj@bcaresearch.com Footnotes
Continue To Avoid Semi Cap Names
Continue To Avoid Semi Cap Names
Underweight We are currently underweight the S&P semi equipment index in line with our broader strategy of preferring defensive software & services tech stocks at the expense of the more aggressive hardware & equipment tech stocks. Recent news of the Trump administration’s potential tightening of the noose on Chinese chip company SMIC (the country’s largest foundry) was a net negative for US semi cap names. It also was a wake up call for investors with regard to the sector’s vulnerability to a flare up in the US/China trade tensions, especially given the sell-side’s extremely optimistic sales and earnings projections (see chart). Bottom Line: Stay underweight the S&P semiconductor equipment index. For more details, please refer to this Monday’s Weekly Report. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG S5SEEQ – AMAT, KLAC, LRCX.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy We opt to stay patient and refrain from deploying fresh capital especially in the tech sector in the near-term; a better entry point will likely materialize between now and the end of the year. The softening demand backdrop that is weighing on selling prices, the rekindling of the US/China tech-related trade war and the risk of a reflex rebound in the US dollar, all warn to shy away from semi cap stocks. A balanced outlook keeps us on the sidelines in the S&P home improvement retail (HIR) index. Recent Changes There are no changes to the portfolio this week. Table 1
Churning
Churning
Feature Equities tried to regain their footing last week, but risks still lingering on the (geo)political front should sustain the tug of war between bulls and bears and rekindle volatility. While monetary and fiscal policies will remain loose, the intensity of easing is waning as both the Fed’s impulse (i.e. second derivative) of asset purchases has ground to a halt and Congress has hit a stalemate over the next round of stimulus. Crudely put, the thrust of monetary and fiscal policies is at heightened risk of shifting from stimulative to contractive (Chart 1). As a result, we remain patient with fresh capital and will wait to deploy it when the dust settles hopefully by the end of the year. Turning to equity market internals and other high frequency financial market data is instructive in order to get a clearer picture of the direction of the broad equity market. The value line arithmetic and geometric indexes and small cap stocks that led the March 23 SPX trough are emitting a distress signal (Chart 2). Chart 1Running Out Of Thrust
Running Out Of Thrust
Running Out Of Thrust
Chart 2Market Internals...
Market Internals...
Market Internals...
Drilling deeper on a sector basis, hypersensitive chip stocks, energy shares, and discretionary versus staples equities will likely weigh on the prospects of the broad equity market (Chart 3). The VIX index, the vol curve and the yield curve, all excellent leading indicators of the S&P 500, have crested and warn that the shakeout phase has yet to run its course (VIX shown inverted ,Chart 4). Chart 3...Say It Is Prudent...
...Say It Is Prudent...
...Say It Is Prudent...
Chart 4...To Remain On The Sidelines
...To Remain On The Sidelines
...To Remain On The Sidelines
Trying to quantify the SPX drawdown, we turn to CBOE’s equity put/call (EPC) ratio. The EPC ratio is nowhere near recent extreme readings. SPX pullbacks since the early-2018 “Volmageddon” have corresponded to significantly higher EPC ratio readings. In the past 10 such iterations, the median EPC ratio has been 0.86, the mean 0.93, with a range of 0.77 to 1.28 (Table 2). Currently, the EPC ratio is hovering near 0.58 suggesting that downside risks persist (EPC ratio shown inverted, Chart 5). Chart 5Downside Risks Persist
Downside Risks Persist
Downside Risks Persist
Table 2Equity Put/Call (EPC) Ratio During Pullbacks Since 2018
Churning
Churning
Finally, the commodity complex is also firing warnings shots. Lumber has collapsed nearly $300/tbf from the recent peak, oil is trailing gold bullion and silver is also cresting versus the yellow metal, iron ore is petering out and the Baltic dry index is wobbling. True, copper and materials stocks are holding their own, but overwhelmingly commodity market internals are waving a yellow flag (Chart 6). Chart 6Commodity Yellow Flags
Commodity Yellow Flags
Commodity Yellow Flags
Netting it all out, we opt to stay patient and refrain from deploying fresh capital especially in the tech space in the near-term; a better entry point will likely materialize between now and the end of the year. This week we reiterate our underweight stance in a niche technology index and shed more light on our recent downgrade to neutral of a key consumer discretionary subgroup. Chip Equipment Update: Tangled Up In The Trade War We remain committed to our intra-tech strategy of preferring defensive software and services tech names to aggressive hardware and equipment tech stocks. In that light, we reiterate our underweight stance in the niche S&P semi equipment index. Recent news of the Trump administration’s potential tightening of the noose on Chinese chip company SMIC (the country’s largest foundry) was a net negative for US semi cap names, similar to export restrictions of American technology to Huawei was a net negative for US semi cap names. As a reminder, these manufacturers count China as one of their largest export market alongside Taiwan and South Korea. Thus, this flare up in the US/Sino trade war bodes ill for semi cap companies’ future sales and profit growth projections (Chart 7). There are high odds that relative share prices have plateaued earlier this month and a fresh down cycle has commenced. Under such a backdrop, this hyper-sensitive manufacturing group will likely overshoot to the down side as is evident in the historical tight correlation with the ISM manufacturing survey: these violent oscillations are warning that a cooling off in the ISM will be severely felt in this niche manufacturing intense index (Chart 8). Chart 7Lofty Expectations
Lofty Expectations
Lofty Expectations
Chart 8Violent Oscillations
Violent Oscillations
Violent Oscillations
On the global demand front, there is an element that COVID-19 is stealing sales from the future and bringing demand forward. Already global semi sales are rolling over, and a couple of industry pricing power proxies are deflating at an accelerating pace: Asian DRAM prices are topping out in the contraction zone and Taiwanese export prices are sinking like a stone, warning that a deficient demand down cycle will squeeze semi cap profit margins (Chart 9). Importantly, Taiwanese tech capex, which TSMC dominates, has crested, warning that all the euphoria behind 5G deployment and uptake is likely baked in the relative share price ratio. The implication is that semi cap names remain vulnerable to any global 5G-related hiccups (top panel, Chart 10). Chart 9Waning Selling Price Backdrop
Waning Selling Price Backdrop
Waning Selling Price Backdrop
Chart 10Cresting
Cresting
Cresting
Finally, the tight positive correlation between Bitcoin prices and the relative share price ratio remains intact. Were a knee-jerk rebound in the US dollar to knock down Bitcoin, at least temporarily, it would serve as a catalyst to shed chip equipment stocks (bottom panel, Chart 10). Moreover, 90% of the industry’s sales originate abroad, thus a rise in the greenback would eat into their P&L via FX translation losses. Adding it all up, a softening demand backdrop that is weighing on selling prices, the rekindling of the US/China tech-related trade war and a reflex rebound in the US dollar, all warn to shy away from semi cap stocks. Bottom Line: Stay underweight the S&P semiconductor equipment index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG S5SEEQ – AMAT, KLAC, LRCX. Home Improvement Retailers: Stay On The Sidelines Two weeks ago our trailing stop was triggered in the S&P home improvement retail index (HIR) and we monetized gains of 15% since the mid-April inception and moved to the sidelines. Today we reiterate our benchmark allocation in this consumer discretionary sub group. Clearly, HIR was a major beneficiary of the lockdown as the US and Canadian governments deemed these retailers “essential” and allowed them to stay open during the peak of the pandemic. These Big Box retailers saw their sales soar as the fiscal easing package replenished consumers’ wallets, and coupled with the lockdown, caused a surge in DIY remodeling activity. Our portfolio also greatly benefited from the stellar performance of the S&P HIR index, as existing home sales staged a significant comeback and inventories of homes for sale receded substantially thus further tightening the residential real estate market (top & middle panels, Chart 11). As reminder, historically a vibrant housing market is synonymous with handsome returns in relative share prices and vice versa. But now a number of stiff headwinds, which our HIR model encapsulates, signal that a lateral digestive move is in store in the coming months (Chart 12). Chart 11Unsustainable Front Running
Unsustainable Front Running
Unsustainable Front Running
Chart 12Stiff Headwinds
Stiff Headwinds
Stiff Headwinds
First, a repeat of the spike in demand for home improvement projects is highly unlikely, especially given that demand was brought forward. Also during the autumn and winter months there is a natural slowdown in the take-up of remodeling projects until the spring home selling season arrives. Second, the industry’s sales-to-inventories (S/I) ratio is literally off the charts (bottom panel, Chart 11). An inventory build-up and easing in demand will bring back the S/I ratio back to a more reasonable level. Lastly, lumber prices have taken a beating of late collapsing from over $900/tbf to below $600/tbf. This drubbing of this economically hypersensitive commodity directly cuts into HIR earnings. These Big Box retailers make a set margin on lumber sales so as prices fall they take a big bite out of profits (bottom panel, Chart 13). Nevertheless, a few offsets prevent us from turning outright bearish in this early cyclical retailers. Namely, the industry’s profit growth bar is on a par with the broad market and thus does not pose a large hurdle to overcome. Importantly, given that HIR earnings have kept pace with the massive run-up in stock prices (second panel, Chart 14), they have kept relative valuations at bay. While, the S&P HIR 12-month forward P/E trades at a market multiple, the relative forward P/E changes hands at a 20% discount to the historical mean. Thus, HIR enjoy a significant valuation cushion (bottom panel, Chart 14). Chart 13Timber!
Timber!
Timber!
Chart 14But There Are Powerful Offsets
But There Are Powerful Offsets
But There Are Powerful Offsets
Finally, the Fed just explicitly committed to stay on the zero interest rate line until 2023! This easy monetary policy as far as the eye can see is a powerful tonic to early cyclical and interest rate-sensitive home improvement retailers (fed funds rate shown inverted, top panel, Chart 14). Netting it all out, a balanced outlook keeps us on the sidelines in the S&P HIR index. Bottom Line: Stick with a benchmark allocation in the S&P home improvement retail index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG S5HOMI – HD, LOW. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations
Drilling Deeper Into Earnings
Drilling Deeper Into Earnings
Size And Style Views July 27, 2020 Overweight cyclicals over defensives April 28, 2020 Stay neutral large over small caps June 11, 2018 Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, V). January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth
Highlights The strength in global semiconductor sales in recent months has been due to one-off factors stemming from pandemic-related lockdowns. As the one-off demand surge subsides, global semiconductor sales will decline modestly toward the end of this year. In the near term, global semiconductor stock prices are vulnerable due to overbought conditions, excessive valuations and demand disappointment. The global semiconductor industry is at the epicenter of the US-China confrontation, and more US restrictions on chips sales to China are probable. This is another risk for this sector's share prices. Nevertheless, the structural outlook for global semiconductor demand is constructive. Its CAGR may rise from 3% during 2014-2019 to 5% during 2020-2024. Feature Investor euphoria has taken hold of semiconductor stocks. Global semiconductor stock prices have skyrocketed by 68% from March lows and 96% from December 2018 lows. Meanwhile, global semiconductor sales during March-June rose only by 5% from a year ago. As a result, the ratio of market cap for global semiconductor stocks relative to global semiconductor sales has reached its highest level since at least the inception of data in 2003 (Chart II-1). Chart II-1Global Semi Sector: Market Cap-To-Sales Ratio Has Surged
Global Semi Sector: Market Cap-To-Sales Ratio Has Surged
Global Semi Sector: Market Cap-To-Sales Ratio Has Surged
With semi equity multiples very elevated, their share prices have become even more sensitive to global semiconductor demand growth. Hence, the focus of this report is to try to gauge the strength of global semiconductor demand, both in the near term and structurally. The strength in global semiconductor sales in recent months has been due to one-off factors stemming from the lockdowns. Near-term semiconductor stock prices could disappoint due to weak chip demand from the smartphone sector and diminishing purchases of personal computers (PCs) and servers. However, structurally, we are positive on global semiconductor demand, which is underpinned by the continuing rollout of 5G networks and phones, a wider adoption of data centers, and further technological advancements in artificial intelligence (AI), cloud computing, edge computing and smaller nodes for chip manufacturing (Box II-1). Box II-1 Key Technologies Underpinning Potential Global Semiconductor Demand AI refers to the simulation of human intelligence in machines, for example, computers that play chess and self-driving cars. The goals of AI include learning, reasoning and perception. Cloud computing is the delivery of computing services – including servers, storage, databases, networking, software, analytics and intelligence – over the Internet (“the cloud”) to offer faster innovation, flexible resources and economies of scale. Edge computing is a form of distributed computing, which brings computation and data storage closer to where it is needed, to improve response times and save bandwidth. Technology node refers to the width of line that can be processed with a minimum width in the semiconductor manufacturing industry, such as technology nodes of 10 nanometers (nm), 7nm, 5nm and 3nm. The smaller the nodes are, the more advanced they are. Near-Term Headwinds Semiconductor demand worldwide grew by 6% year-on-year in the first half of this year. There has been a remarkable divergence between world semiconductor sales and the global business cycle (Chart II-2). The divergence between semiconductor sales and economic activity was most striking in the US and China. Semiconductor sales in China rose by 5% year-on-year in Q12020, and in the US they grew by 29% year-on-year in Q22020, despite a contraction in their aggregate demand during the same period. By contrast, Q2 annual growth of semiconductors sales was -2.2% for Japan, -17% for Europe and 1.8% for Asia ex. China and Japan (Chart II-3). Chart II-2World Semi Sales Diverged From The Global Business Cycle
World Semi Sales Diverged From The Global Business Cycle
World Semi Sales Diverged From The Global Business Cycle
Chart II-3Strong Semi Sales In The US And China, But Not Elsewhere
Strong Semi Sales In The US And China, But Not Elsewhere
Strong Semi Sales In The US And China, But Not Elsewhere
The reasons why the US and China posted a surge in semiconductor demand while Europe and Japan experienced a contraction in domestic semiconductor sales are as follows: Most data center investment is occurring in the US and China. Chart II-4 shows that 40% of global hyperscale data centers are operating in the US, much larger than any other countries/regions. China, in turn, ranked second, with a global share of 8%. Chart II-4The US Has The Most Global Hyperscale Data Centers
September 2020
September 2020
Demand contraction in Europe and Japan is due to semiconductor demand in these regions mainly originating from the automobile sector, where production was severely hit by the global pandemic. About 37% of European semiconductor sales were from last year’s automotive market. We believe the divergence between global economic activity and semiconductor sales, as demonstrated by Chart II-2 on page 3, has been due to one-off factors, as the global pandemic lockdowns have spurred semiconductor demand. Such a one-off demand boost will likely dissipate in the coming months. Traditional PCs and tablets: There has been a surge in demand for traditional PCs1 and tablets in the past six months. This was due to the significant increase in online activities, such as working from home, education, e-commerce, gaming and entertainment. Data from the International Data Corporation (IDC) has revealed that shipments of traditional PCs and tablets in volume terms had a strong year-on-year growth of 11.2% and 18.6%, respectively, in the period of April-June (Chart II-5). Looking forward, even renewed lockdowns will not lead to a similar rush to buy these products. Many households are already equipped to work from home and for other online activities. With many countries gradually opening their economies, such demand will diminish. The traditional PC and tablet sectors together account for about 13% of global chip demand (Chart II-6). Chart II-5Personal Computers Sales Have Surged Amid Lockdowns
Personal Computers Sales Have Surged Amid Lockdowns
Personal Computers Sales Have Surged Amid Lockdowns
Server demand: Another major semiconductor demand contribution in Q2020 was from the server sector, which spiked by 21% year-on-year (Chart II-7). The surge in online activities triggered a strong demand for cloud services and remote work applications, both of which require computer servers to run on. Chart II-6The Breakdown Of Global Semiconductor Sales By Type Of Usage
September 2020
September 2020
However, demand from the server sector is also set to diminish in 2H2020 and Q1 2021. Provided the inventories at major data center operators, including Microsoft, Google and Amazon, remain at high levels,2 global cloud service providers will likely reduce their orders of servers next quarter.3 Enterprises will also likely cut their investment in computer servers in 2H2020, as many of them had already increased their purchases of servers to prepare employees and business processes for remote working. We expect global server demand growth to soften in 2H2020. The Digitimes Research forecasted a 5.6% quarter-on-quarter contraction in 3Q2020 and a further cut in global sever shipment in the 4Q2020.2 The global server sector accounts for about 10% of global chip demand and, together with PCs and tablets, they make for 23% (please refer to Chart II-6 on page 5). Further, the smartphone sector – accounting for 27% of global semiconductor demand – will continue struggling in H2 this year. Chart II-7Server Sales Have Surged Amid Lockdowns
Server Sales Have Surged Amid Lockdowns
Server Sales Have Surged Amid Lockdowns
Chart II-8Global Smartphone Shipments Will Likely Remain Weak In 2020H2
Global Smartphone Shipments Will Likely Remain Weak In 2020H2
Global Smartphone Shipments Will Likely Remain Weak In 2020H2
The global total smartphone demand has been hit severely, as households delayed their new smartphone purchases. According to Canalys’ data, global smartphone shipments dropped by 13% and 14% year-on-year in Q1 and Q2, respectively. We expect smartphone shipments to continue contracting over the next three-to-six months (Chart II-8). We believe global consumers will remain cautious in their spending on discretionary goods, such as smartphones, due to lowered incomes and increased job uncertainty. The IDC also forecasted that global smartphone shipments would not grow until 1Q2021.4 The Chinese smartphone sales showed a considerable weakness in July, with a 35% year-on-year contraction, which is much deeper than the 20% decline in H1 this year. 5G smartphone shipments also slowed last month, with a 21% drop from the previous month. The global semiconductor industry is at the epicenter of the US-China confrontation. Bottom Line: The strength in global semiconductor sales in recent months has been due to one-off factors stemming from the lockdowns. As this one-off demand subsides, global semiconductor sales will decline modestly toward the end of this year. Given the overbought conditions and the elevated equity valuations, global semiconductor stocks are currently vulnerable to near-term disappointments in semiconductor demand. At The Epicenter Of The US-China Rivalry Semiconductors are at the epicenter of the US-China confrontation. Ultimately, the US-China contention is about future technological dominance. That is access to technology and the capability to develop new technologies. China currently accounts for about 35% of the global semiconductor demand. US restrictions on semi producers worldwide to supply semiconductors to Chinese buyers constitute a major risk to semiconductor stock prices. On August 17, the US announced fresh sanctions that restrict all US and foreign semiconductor companies from selling chips developed or produced using US software or technology to Huawei, without first obtaining a license. In May, the US had already limited companies, such as the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), from making and supplying Huawei with its self-designed chips. In addition, the US recently threatened bans on Chinese-owned apps TikTok and WeChat, and signaled that it could soon restrict Alibaba’s operations in the US. Chart II-9Global Semi Companies' Sales To China Are Substantial
September 2020
September 2020
The global semiconductor sector is highly vulnerable to further escalation in the tension between these two superpowers. Major global semiconductor companies’ sales are heavily exposed to China, and their revenue from China ranges from 16% to 50% of total (Chart II-9). We have been puzzled why global semi share prices have been rallying in spite of US limitations on semiconductor shipments to Huawei and its affiliated entities. One explanation could be that the Chinese companies that are not affiliated with Huawei are able to import semiconductors and then supply them to Huawei. If this is true, the US will have no other choice but to limit all semiconductor sales to China. This will be devastating for global semi producers given their large exposure to China. In anticipation of US punitive policies limiting its access to semiconductors, China had boosted its semiconductor imports over the past 12 months (Chart II-10, top panel). Chinese imports of integrated circuits rose by 12% year-on-year in 1H2020, which is much higher than the 5% year-on-year increase in Chinese semiconductor demand during the same period (Chart II-10, bottom panel). This gap suggests the country had restocked its semiconductor inventories. China has particularly restocked its imports of non-memory chips with imports of processor & controller and other non-memory chips in H1, surging by 30% and 20%, respectively, in US dollar terms (Chart II-11). For memory chips, the contraction in Chinese imports was mainly due to a decline in global memory chip prices. Chart II-10China Had Likely Restocked Its Semi Inventories
China Had Likely Restocked Its Semi Inventories
China Had Likely Restocked Its Semi Inventories
Chart II-11Strong Chinese Imports In Non-Memory Chips
Strong Chinese Imports In Non-Memory Chips
Strong Chinese Imports In Non-Memory Chips
Bottom Line: The global semiconductor industry is at the epicenter of the US-China confrontation, and more restrictions on sales to China are probable. In turn, the restocked semiconductor inventory in China raises the odds of weakening mainland semiconductor import demand in H2 of this year. Structural Tailwinds Table II-1Global Semiconductor Demand CAGR Forecast Over 2020-2024 By Device
September 2020
September 2020
We are optimistic on structural global semiconductor demand. Its nominal CAGR may rise from 3% during 2014-2019 to 5% during 2020-2024 in US dollar terms. Table II-1 shows our demand growth forecasts for global chips in the main consuming sectors over the next five years. The major contributing sectors during 2020-2024 will be 5G smartphones, servers, industrials, electronics and automotive manufacturing. The underlying driving forces are the continuing rollout of 5G networks and phones, the development of data centers, and further technological advancements in AI, cloud computing and edge computing. Currently, the world is still in the early stages of 5G network development. AI, cloud computing and edge computing are constantly evolving. With increasing adoption of 5G smartphones, computer servers and IoT devices, global semiconductor demand is in a structural uptrend (Box II-2). Box II-2 Key Components For The Virtual World In Development Data centers and cloud computing allow data to be stored and applications to be running off-premises and to be accessed remotely through the internet. Edge computing allows data from Internet of things (IoT) devices to be analyzed at the edge of the network before being sent to a data center or cloud. IoT devices contain sensors and mini-computer processors that act on the data collected by the sensors via machine learning. The IoT is a growing system of billions of devices — or things — worldwide that connect to the internet and to each other through wireless networks. AI technology empowers cloud computing, edge computing and IoT devices. 5G is at the heart of the IoT industry transformation, making a world of everything connected possible. Chart II-125G Phone Shipments In China Will Continue To Rise
5G Phone Shipments In China Will Continue To Rise
5G Phone Shipments In China Will Continue To Rise
5G Smartphone Currently, China is the world’s largest 5G-smartphone consumer and the leading 5G-adopter in the world. According to Digitimes Research, global 5G smartphone shipments will reach over 250 million units in 2020, with 170 million (68%) in China and only 80 million units in the world ex. China. Looking forward, 5G smartphone shipments are set to accelerate worldwide over the coming years. The 5G phone shipments in China will continue to rise. The 5G phone sales penetration rate in China is likely to rise from 60% in July to 95% by the end of 2022. In such a case, we estimate that the monthly Chinese 5G phone shipments will increase from the current 16 million units to about 25-30 million units in 2022 (Chart II-12). In the rest of the world, the 5G smartphone adoption pace will also likely speed up over the next five years. The 5G phone selling prices in the world outside China will drop, as more models are introduced and become more affordable. 5G smartphone prices have already fallen in China and will inevitably fall elsewhere. Chinese 5G smartphone producers will ship their low-priced 5G phones overseas, putting pressure on other producers to lower their prices. The 5G infrastructure development is accelerating in China and will accelerate in the rest of the world. Both China and South Korea have been very aggressive in their respective 5G network development. As of the end of June, China's top three carriers: China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom – which together serve more than 1.6 billion mobile users in the country – had installed 400,000 5G base stations against an annual target of 500,000. In comparison, as of April 2020, American carriers had only put up about 10,000 5G base stations.5 As the US is competing with China on the 5G front, the country will likely boost its investment in 5G network development aggressively over the next five years in order to catch up to, or even exceed, China. Importantly, the 5G smartphone has more silicon content than 4G smartphones. More silicon content means higher semiconductor value. Rising 5G smartphone sales and higher silicon content together will more than offset the loss in semiconductor sales due to falling global 4G smartphone shipments. Overall, global semiconductor stock prices have diverged from their sales and profits. Based on our analysis, we expect a CAGR growth of 4% in semiconductor demand from the global smartphone sector over the next five years, slightly lower than the 5% in previous five years (Table II-1 on page 10). This also takes into consideration that the 5G network will be more difficult and more expensive to develop than the 4G network. Servers Global server shipment growth will be highly dependent on both the pace and the scale of data center development (Box II-3). Data centers account for over 60% of global server demand. Box II-3 Data Centers There are four main types of data centers – enterprise data centers, managed services data centers, colocation data centers, and cloud data centers. Data centers can have a wide range of number of servers. Corporate data centers tend to have either 200 (small companies), or 1000 servers (large companies). In comparison, a hyperscale data center usually has a minimum of 5,000 servers linked with an ultra-high speed, high fiber count network. Outsourcing and a move towards the cloud are driving the growth of the hyperscale data center. Instead of companies investing in physical hardware, they can rent server space from a cloud provider to both save their data and reduce costs. Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Apple and Alibaba are all top global cloud service providers. The more hyperscales to be built up, the higher the demand for servers. In 2019, about 13% of the total number of data centers in China were of the hyperscale and large-scale varieties. The plan of new infrastructure development announced earlier this year by Beijing was aiming to increase the number of hyperscale and large-scale data centers in China. Among current data centers either under construction or to be developed in the near future, 36% of them are hyperscale and large-scale data centers. The future growth of data centers is promising. The global trend of data localization6 due to the concerns of data privacy and national security will also bolster a boom of data centers over the next five years. A growing number of countries are adopting data localization requirements, such as China, Russia, Indonesia, Nigeria, Vietnam and some EU countries. While the Chinese data center market is expected to expand by a CAGR of about 28% over 2020-2022,7 a report recently released by Technavio forecasted the global data center industry’s CAGR at over 17% during 2019-2023. We forecast that the global semiconductor demand from servers will grow at a CAGR of 12% over 2020-2024. IoTs Technological advancements in AI, cloud computing and edge computing, in combination with 5G network development, will facilitate the IoTs adoption. According to the GSMA,8 46 operators in 24 markets had launched commercially available 5G networks by 30 January 2020. It forecasted that global IoT connections will be increased from 12 billion mobile devices in 2019 to 25 billion in 2025 with a CAGR at 13%.9 IoTs chips include the Artificial Intelligence of Things (AIoT) – a powerful convergence of AI and the IoT. IoTs is an interconnected network of physical devices. Every device in the IoT is capable of collecting and transferring data through the network. Looking forward, global demand of AI chips and IoT chips will have significant potential to grow with creation of “smarter manufacturing”, “smarter buildings”, “smarter cities”, etc. AI applications can be used in manufacturing processes to render them smarter and more automated. Productivity will be enhanced as machines achieve significantly improved uptime while also reducing labor costs. There are plenty of upsides in industrial semiconductor demand (Chart II-13). We expect the CAGR of industrial electronics to increase from 3.4% during 2014-2019 to 8% during 2020-2024. AI applications can create smart buildings by increasing connectivity across enterprise assets, enabling home network infrastructure (e.g., routers and extenders) and employing home-security devices (e.g., cameras, alarms and locks). AI applications can be used to create smart cities. A smart city is an urban area that uses different types of IoT electronic sensors to collect data. Insights gained from that data are used to manage assets, resources and services efficiently; in return, that data is used improve operations across the city. China has already developed about 750 trial sites of smart cities with different degrees of smartness in the past decade. As AI and 5G technology advances, the existing smart cities’ “smartness” will be upgraded and new trial smart cities will be implemented. Based on IDC data, China’s investment in smart cities will rise at a CAGR of 13.5% over 2020-2023 (Chart II-14). Globally, the U.S., Japan, European countries and other nations are also actively developing smart cities. According to a new study conducted by Grand View Research, the global smart cities market size is expected to grow at a CAGR of 24.7% from 2020 to 2027.10 Chart II-13Plenty Of Upside In Industrial Semi Demand
Plenty Of Upside In Industrial Semi Demand
Plenty Of Upside In Industrial Semi Demand
Chart II-14China’s Investment In Smart Cities Will Continue To Grow
September 2020
September 2020
Automotive We expect the global automotive chip market to grow at a CAGR of 9% during 2020-2024, as in 2014-2019. The increase in consumption of semiconductors by the auto industry will continue to be driven by the market evolution toward autonomous, connected, electric and shared mobility. Most new vehicles now include some level of advanced driver assist systems (ADAS), such as adaptive cruise control, automatic brakes, blind spot monitoring, and parallel parking. The whole industry is progressing toward fully autonomous vehicles in the coming years. Increasing adoption of automotive chips and recovering car sales will revive automotive chip sales. In addition, rising penetration of new energy vehicles (NEVs) is beneficial to semiconductor sales, as NEVs contain higher semiconductor content than conventional vehicles. Conventional vehicles contain an average of a $330 value of semiconductor content while hybrid electric vehicles can contain up to $1,000 and $3,500 worth of semiconductors.11 Regarding other sectors, we are also positive on structural demand of storage and consumer electronics. AI applications generate vast volumes of data — about 80 exabytes per year, which is expected to increase by about tenfold to 845 exabytes by 2025.12 In addition, developers are now using more data in AI and deep learning (DL) training, which also increases storage requirements. With massive potential demand for storage, we estimate a CAGR of 7% over 2020-2024 (Table II-1 on page 10). A recent report from ABI Research predicts that the COVID-19 pandemic will increase global sales of wearables (such as a Fitbit or Apple Watch) by 29% to 30 million shipments of the devices this year. With contribution from wearables, we expect global semiconductor demand from the consumer sector to grow at a CAGR of 3% over 2020-2024, the same rate as in the previous five years. Bottom Line: Continuing rollout of 5G networks and phones, development of data centers, and further technological advancements in AI and cloud computing will provide tailwinds to structural global semiconductor demand, accelerating its CAGR growth from 3% during 2014-2019 to 5% during 2020-2024. Valuations And Investment Conclusions Most global semiconductor stocks are currently over-hyped. Critically, both DRAM and NAND prices have been deflating since January, reflecting weak demand for memory chips. Yet, share prices of memory producers have rallied (Chart II-15). Overall, global semiconductor stock prices have diverged from their sales and profits (Chart II-16). Chart II-15Falling Memory Prices Pose Risk To Memory Stocks
Falling Memory Prices Pose Risk To Memory Stocks
Falling Memory Prices Pose Risk To Memory Stocks
Chart II-16Global Semiconductor Stocks Have Deviated From Profits
Global Semiconductor Stocks Have Deviated From Profits
Global Semiconductor Stocks Have Deviated From Profits
Consequently, the multiples of semiconductor stocks have spiked to multi-year highs (Chart II-17). Even after adjusting for negative US real bond yields, valuations of semiconductor stocks are not cheap. Chart II-18 illustrates the equity risk premium for global semiconductor stocks is at the lower end of its range of the past 10 years. The ERP is calculated as forward earnings yield minus 10-year US TIPS yields. Chart II-17Global Semi Stocks: Elevated Valuations
Global Semi Stocks: Elevated Valuations
Global Semi Stocks: Elevated Valuations
Chart II-18Equity Risk Premium For Global Semi Stocks Is Historically Low
Equity Risk Premium For Global Semi Stocks Is Historically Low
Equity Risk Premium For Global Semi Stocks Is Historically Low
It is impossible to time a correction or know what the trigger would be (US-China tensions have been our best guess). Nevertheless, we do not recommend chasing semiconductor stocks higher due to their overstretched technicals and valuations on the one hand and potential weakening demand in H2 on the other. In addition, the ratio of global semi equipment stock prices relative to the semi equity index correlates with absolute share prices of global semi companies. This is because equipment producers are higher-beta as they outperform during growth accelerations and underperform during growth slumps. The basis is that semi manufacturers have to purchase equipment if there is actual strong demand coming up and vice versa. The recent underperformance by global semi equipment stocks relative to the semi equity index might be an early sign of a potential reversal in semi share prices in absolute terms (Chart II-19). Chart II-19A Signal Of A Potential Reversal In Semi Share Prices
A Signal Of A Potential Reversal In Semi Share Prices
A Signal Of A Potential Reversal In Semi Share Prices
Meanwhile, we believe the subsector- memory chip stocks - will outperform the overall semiconductor index amidst the potential correction, because they have lagged and are less over-extended. Finally, we remain neutral on Taiwanese and Korean bourses within the EM equity space for now. Escalation in US-China confrontation, as well as their exposure to semiconductors, put these bourses at near-term risk. That said, we are reluctant to underweight these markets because fundamentals in EM outside North Asia remain challenging. Ellen JingYuan He Associate Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy Footnotes 1 Traditional PCs are comprised of desktops, notebooks, and workstations. 2 Global server shipments to contract 5.6% sequentially in 3Q2020, says Digitimes Research 3 Global server shipments forecast to increase by 5% this year: TrendForce 4 IDC Expects Worldwide Smartphone Shipments to Plummet 11.9% in 2020 Fueled by Ongoing COVID-19 Challenges 5 America does not want China to dominate 5G mobile networks 6 “Data localization” can be defined as the act of storing data on a device that is physically located within the country where the data was created. Data localization requirements are governmental obligations that explicitly mandate local storage of personal information or strongly encourage local storage through data protection laws that erect stringent legal compliance obligations on cross-border data transfers. 7 The big data center industry ushered in another outbreak 8 The GSMA represents the interests of mobile operators worldwide, uniting more than 750 operators with almost 400 companies in the broader mobile ecosystem, including handset and device makers, software companies, equipment providers and internet companies, as well as organizations in adjacent industry sectors. 9 GSMA: 5G Moves from Hype to Reality – but 4G Still King 10 Smart Cities Market Size Worth $463.9 billion By 2027 11 The Automotive Semiconductor Market – Key Determinants of U.S. Firm Competitiveness 12 AI is data Pac-Man. Winning requires a flashy new storage strategy.
Highlights The strength in global semiconductor sales in recent months has been due to one-off factors stemming from pandemic-related lockdowns. As the one-off demand surge subsides, global semiconductor sales will decline modestly toward the end of this year. In the near term, global semiconductor stock prices are vulnerable due to overbought conditions, excessive valuations and demand disappointment. The global semiconductor industry is at the epicenter of the US-China confrontation, and more US restrictions on chips sales to China are probable. This is another risk for this sector's share prices. Nevertheless, the structural outlook for global semiconductor demand is constructive. Its CAGR may rise from 3% during 2014-2019 to 5% during 2020-2024. Feature Investor euphoria has taken hold of semiconductor stocks. Global semiconductor stock prices have skyrocketed by 68% from March lows and 96% from December 2018 lows. Meanwhile, global semiconductor sales during March-June rose only by 5% from a year ago. As a result, the ratio of market cap for global semiconductor stocks relative to global semiconductor sales has reached its highest level since at least the inception of data in 2003 (Chart 1). Chart 1Global Semiconductor Sector: Market Cap-To-Sales Ratio Has Surged
Global Semiconductor Sector: Market Cap-To-Sales Ratio Has Surged
Global Semiconductor Sector: Market Cap-To-Sales Ratio Has Surged
With semi equity multiples very elevated, their share prices have become even more sensitive to global semiconductor demand growth. Hence, the focus of this report is to try to gauge the strength of global semiconductor demand, both in the near term and structurally. Near-term semiconductor stock prices could disappoint due to weak chip demand from the smartphone sector and diminishing purchases of personal computers (PCs) and servers. However, structurally, we are positive on global semiconductor demand, which is underpinned by the continuing rollout of 5G networks and phones, a wider adoption of data centers, and further technological advancements in artificial intelligence (AI), cloud computing, edge computing and smaller nodes for chip manufacturing (Box 1). Box 1 Key Technologies Underpinning Potential Global Semiconductor Demand AI refers to the simulation of human intelligence in machines, for example, computers that play chess and self-driving cars. The goals of AI include learning, reasoning and perception. Cloud computing is the delivery of computing services – including servers, storage, databases, networking, software, analytics and intelligence – over the Internet (“the cloud”) to offer faster innovation, flexible resources and economies of scale. Edge computing is a form of distributed computing, which brings computation and data storage closer to where it is needed, to improve response times and save bandwidth. Technology node refers to the width of line that can be processed with a minimum width in the semiconductor manufacturing industry, such as technology nodes of 10 nanometers (nm), 7nm, 5nm and 3nm. The smaller the nodes are, the more advanced they are. Near-Term Headwinds Chart 2World Semiconductor Sales Diverged From The Global Business Cycle
World Semiconductor Sales Diverged From The Global Business Cycle
World Semiconductor Sales Diverged From The Global Business Cycle
Semiconductor demand worldwide grew by 6% year-on-year in the first half of this year. There has been a remarkable divergence between world semiconductor sales and the global business cycle (Chart 2). The divergence between semiconductor sales and economic activity was most striking in the US and China. Semiconductor sales in China rose by 5% year-on-year in Q12020, and in the US they grew by 29% year-on-year in Q22020, despite a contraction in their aggregate demand during the same period. By contrast, Q2 annual growth of semiconductors sales was -2.2% for Japan, -17% for Europe and 1.8% for Asia ex. China and Japan (Chart 3). The reasons why the US and China posted a surge in semiconductor demand while Europe and Japan experienced a contraction in domestic semiconductor sales are as follows: Most data center investment is occurring in the US and China. Chart 4 shows that 40% of global hyperscale data centers are operating in the US, much larger than any other countries/regions. China, in turn, ranked second, with a global share of 8%. Chart 3Strong Semiconductor Sales In The US And China, But Not Elsewhere
Strong Semiconductor Sales In The US And China, But Not Elsewhere
Strong Semiconductor Sales In The US And China, But Not Elsewhere
Chart 4The US Has The Most Global Hyperscale Data Centers
Global Semiconductor Stocks: A Hiatus Is Overdue In A Structural Bull Market
Global Semiconductor Stocks: A Hiatus Is Overdue In A Structural Bull Market
Demand contraction in Europe and Japan is due to semiconductor demand in these regions mainly originating from the automobile sector, where production was severely hit by the global pandemic. About 37% of European semiconductor sales were from last year’s automotive market. We believe the divergence between global economic activity and semiconductor sales, as demonstrated by Chart 2 on page 3, has been due to one-off factors, as the global pandemic lockdowns have spurred semiconductor demand. Such a one-off demand boost will likely dissipate in the coming months. Traditional PCs and tablets: There has been a surge in demand for traditional PCs1 and tablets in the past six months. This was due to the significant increase in online activities, such as working from home, education, e-commerce, gaming and entertainment. Data from the International Data Corporation (IDC) has revealed that shipments of traditional PCs and tablets in volume terms had a strong year-on-year growth of 11.2% and 18.6%, respectively, in the period of April-June (Chart 5). Looking forward, even renewed lockdowns will not lead to a similar rush to buy these products. Many households are already equipped to work from home and for other online activities. With many countries gradually opening their economies, such demand will diminish. The traditional PC and tablet sectors together account for about 13% of global chip demand (Chart 6). Chart 5Personal Computers Sales Have Surged Amid Lockdowns
Personal Computers Sales Have Surged Amid Lockdowns
Personal Computers Sales Have Surged Amid Lockdowns
Chart 6The Breakdown Of Global Semiconductor Sales By Type Of Usage
Global Semiconductor Stocks: A Hiatus Is Overdue In A Structural Bull Market
Global Semiconductor Stocks: A Hiatus Is Overdue In A Structural Bull Market
Chart 7Server Sales Have Surged Amid Lockdowns
Server Sales Have Surged Amid Lockdowns
Server Sales Have Surged Amid Lockdowns
Server demand: Another major semiconductor demand contribution in Q2020 was from the server sector, which spiked by 21% year-on-year (Chart 7). The surge in online activities triggered a strong demand for cloud services and remote work applications, both of which require computer servers to run on. However, demand from the server sector is also set to diminish in 2H2020 and Q1 2021. Provided the inventories at major data center operators, including Microsoft, Google and Amazon, remain at high levels,2 global cloud service providers will likely reduce their orders of servers next quarter.3 Enterprises will also likely cut their investment in computer servers in 2H2020, as many of them had already increased their purchases of servers to prepare employees and business processes for remote working. We expect global server demand growth to soften in 2H2020. The Digitimes Research forecasted a 5.6% quarter-on-quarter contraction in 3Q2020 and a further cut in global sever shipment in the 4Q2020.2 The global server sector accounts for about 10% of global chip demand and, together with PCs and tablets, they make for 23% (please refer to Chart 6 on page 5). Further, the smartphone sector – accounting for 27% of global semiconductor demand – will continue struggling in H2 this year. The global total smartphone demand has been hit severely, as households delayed their new smartphone purchases. According to Canalys’ data, global smartphone shipments dropped by 13% and 14% year-on-year in Q1 and Q2, respectively. The strength in global semiconductor sales in recent months has been due to one-off factors stemming from the lockdowns. Chart 8Global Smartphone Shipments Will Likely Remain Weak In 2020H2
Global Smartphone Shipments Will Likely Remain Weak In 2020H2
Global Smartphone Shipments Will Likely Remain Weak In 2020H2
We expect smartphone shipments to continue contracting over the next three-to-six months (Chart 8). We believe global consumers will remain cautious in their spending on discretionary goods, such as smartphones, due to lowered incomes and increased job uncertainty. The IDC also forecasted that global smartphone shipments would not grow until 1Q2021.4 The Chinese smartphone sales showed a considerable weakness in July, with a 35% year-on-year contraction, which is much deeper than the 20% decline in H1 this year. 5G smartphone shipments also slowed last month, with a 21% drop from the previous month. Bottom Line: The strength in global semiconductor sales in recent months has been due to one-off factors stemming from the lockdowns. As this one-off demand subsides, global semiconductor sales will decline modestly toward the end of this year. Given the overbought conditions and the elevated equity valuations, global semiconductor stocks are currently vulnerable to near-term disappointments in semiconductor demand. At The Epicenter Of The US-China Rivalry Semiconductors are at the epicenter of the US-China confrontation. Ultimately, the US-China contention is about future technological dominance. That is access to technology and the capability to develop new technologies. The global semiconductor industry is at the epicenter of the US-China confrontation. China currently accounts for about 35% of the global semiconductor demand. US restrictions on semi producers worldwide to supply semiconductors to Chinese buyers constitute a major risk to semiconductor stock prices. On August 17, the US announced fresh sanctions that restrict all US and foreign semiconductor companies from selling chips developed or produced using US software or technology to Huawei, without first obtaining a license. In May, the US had already limited companies, such as the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), from making and supplying Huawei with its self-designed chips. In addition, the US recently threatened bans on Chinese-owned apps TikTok and WeChat, and signaled that it could soon restrict Alibaba’s operations in the US. Chart 9Global Semi Companies' Sales To China Are Substantial
Global Semiconductor Stocks: A Hiatus Is Overdue In A Structural Bull Market
Global Semiconductor Stocks: A Hiatus Is Overdue In A Structural Bull Market
The global semiconductor sector is highly vulnerable to further escalation in the tension between these two superpowers. Major global semiconductor companies’ sales are heavily exposed to China, and their revenue from China ranges from 16% to 50% of total (Chart 9). We have been puzzled why global semi share prices have been rallying in spite of US limitations on semiconductor shipments to Huawei and its affiliated entities. One explanation could be that the Chinese companies that are not affiliated with Huawei are able to import semiconductors and then supply them to Huawei. If this is true, the US will have no other choice but to limit all semiconductor sales to China. This will be devastating for global semi producers given their large exposure to China. In anticipation of US punitive policies limiting its access to semiconductors, China had boosted its semiconductor imports over the past 12 months (Chart 10, top panel). Chinese imports of integrated circuits rose by 12% year-on-year in 1H2020, which is much higher than the 5% year-on-year increase in Chinese semiconductor demand during the same period (Chart 10, bottom panel). This gap suggests the country had restocked its semiconductor inventories. China has particularly restocked its imports of non-memory chips with imports of processor & controller and other non-memory chips in H1, surging by 30% and 20%, respectively, in US dollar terms (Chart 11). For memory chips, the contraction in Chinese imports was mainly due to a decline in global memory chip prices. Chart 10China Had Likely Restocked Its Semi Inventories
China Had Likely Restocked Its Semi Inventories
China Had Likely Restocked Its Semi Inventories
Chart 11Strong Chinese Imports In Non-Memory Chips
Strong Chinese Imports In Non-Memory Chips
Strong Chinese Imports In Non-Memory Chips
Bottom Line: The global semiconductor industry is at the epicenter of the US-China confrontation, and more restrictions on sales to China are probable. In turn, the restocked semiconductor inventory in China raises the odds of weakening mainland semiconductor import demand in H2 of this year. Structural Tailwinds Table 1Global Semiconductor Demand CAGR Forecast Over 2020-2024 By Device
Global Semiconductor Stocks: A Hiatus Is Overdue In A Structural Bull Market
Global Semiconductor Stocks: A Hiatus Is Overdue In A Structural Bull Market
We are optimistic on structural global semiconductor demand. Its nominal CAGR may rise from 3% during 2014-2019 to 5% during 2020-2024 in US dollar terms. Table 1 shows our demand growth forecasts for global chips in the main consuming sectors over the next five years. The major contributing sectors during 2020-2024 will be 5G smartphones, servers, industrials, electronics and automotive manufacturing. The underlying driving forces are the continuing rollout of 5G networks and phones, the development of data centers, and further technological advancements in AI, cloud computing and edge computing. Currently, the world is still in the early stages of 5G network development. AI, cloud computing and edge computing are constantly evolving. With increasing adoption of 5G smartphones, computer servers and IoT devices, global semiconductor demand is in a structural uptrend (Box 2). Box 2 Key Components For The Virtual World In Development Data centers and cloud computing allow data to be stored and applications to be running off-premises and to be accessed remotely through the internet. Edge computing allows data from Internet of things (IoT) devices to be analyzed at the edge of the network before being sent to a data center or cloud. IoT devices contain sensors and mini-computer processors that act on the data collected by the sensors via machine learning. The IoT is a growing system of billions of devices — or things — worldwide that connect to the internet and to each other through wireless networks. AI technology empowers cloud computing, edge computing and IoT devices. 5G is at the heart of the IoT industry transformation, making a world of everything connected possible. 5G Smartphone Currently, China is the world’s largest 5G-smartphone consumer and the leading 5G-adopter in the world. According to Digitimes Research, global 5G smartphone shipments will reach over 250 million units in 2020, with 170 million (68%) in China and only 80 million units in the world ex. China. Looking forward, 5G smartphone shipments are set to accelerate worldwide over the coming years. Chart 125G Phone Shipments In China Will Continue To Rise
5G Phone Shipments In China Will Continue To Rise
5G Phone Shipments In China Will Continue To Rise
The 5G phone shipments in China will continue to rise. The 5G phone sales penetration rate in China is likely to rise from 60% in July to 95% by the end of 2022. In such a case, we estimate that the monthly Chinese 5G phone shipments will increase from the current 16 million units to about 25-30 million units in 2022 (Chart 12). In the rest of the world, the 5G smartphone adoption pace will also likely speed up over the next five years. The 5G phone selling prices in the world outside China will drop, as more models are introduced and become more affordable. 5G smartphone prices have already fallen in China and will inevitably fall elsewhere. Chinese 5G smartphone producers will ship their low-priced 5G phones overseas, putting pressure on other producers to lower their prices. The 5G infrastructure development is accelerating in China and will accelerate in the rest of the world. Both China and South Korea have been very aggressive in their respective 5G network development. As of the end of June, China's top three carriers: China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom – which together serve more than 1.6 billion mobile users in the country – had installed 400,000 5G base stations against an annual target of 500,000. In comparison, as of April 2020, American carriers had only put up about 10,000 5G base stations.5 As the US is competing with China on the 5G front, the country will likely boost its investment in 5G network development aggressively over the next five years in order to catch up to, or even exceed, China. Importantly, the 5G smartphone has more silicon content than 4G smartphones. More silicon content means higher semiconductor value. Rising 5G smartphone sales and higher silicon content together will more than offset the loss in semiconductor sales due to falling global 4G smartphone shipments. Based on our analysis, we expect a CAGR growth of 4% in semiconductor demand from the global smartphone sector over the next five years, slightly lower than the 5% in previous five years (Table 1 on page 10). This also takes into consideration that the 5G network will be more difficult and more expensive to develop than the 4G network. Servers Global server shipment growth will be highly dependent on both the pace and the scale of data center development (Box 3). Data centers account for over 60% of global server demand. The future growth of data centers is promising. The global trend of data localization6 due to the concerns of data privacy and national security will also bolster a boom of data centers over the next five years. A growing number of countries are adopting data localization requirements, such as China, Russia, Indonesia, Nigeria, Vietnam and some EU countries. While the Chinese data center market is expected to expand by a CAGR of about 28% over 2020-2022,7 a report recently released by Technavio forecasted the global data center industry’s CAGR at over 17% during 2019-2023. We forecast that the global semiconductor demand from servers will grow at a CAGR of 12% over 2020-2024. Box 3 Data Centers There are four main types of data centers – enterprise data centers, managed services data centers, colocation data centers, and cloud data centers. Data centers can have a wide range of number of servers. Corporate data centers tend to have either 200 (small companies), or 1000 servers (large companies). In comparison, a hyperscale data center usually has a minimum of 5,000 servers linked with an ultra-high speed, high fiber count network. Outsourcing and a move towards the cloud are driving the growth of the hyperscale data center. Instead of companies investing in physical hardware, they can rent server space from a cloud provider to both save their data and reduce costs. Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Apple and Alibaba are all top global cloud service providers. The more hyperscales to be built up, the higher the demand for servers. In 2019, about 13% of the total number of data centers in China were of the hyperscale and large-scale varieties. The plan of new infrastructure development announced earlier this year by Beijing was aiming to increase the number of hyperscale and large-scale data centers in China. Among current data centers either under construction or to be developed in the near future, 36% of them are hyperscale and large-scale data centers. IoTs Technological advancements in AI, cloud computing and edge computing, in combination with 5G network development, will facilitate the IoTs adoption. According to the GSMA,8 46 operators in 24 markets had launched commercially available 5G networks by 30 January 2020. It forecasted that global IoT connections will be increased from 12 billion mobile devices in 2019 to 25 billion in 2025 with a CAGR at 13%.9 IoTs chips include the Artificial Intelligence of Things (AIoT) – a powerful convergence of AI and the IoT. IoTs is an interconnected network of physical devices. Every device in the IoT is capable of collecting and transferring data through the network. Looking forward, global demand of AI chips and IoT chips will have significant potential to grow with creation of “smarter manufacturing”, “smarter buildings”, “smarter cities”, etc. AI applications can be used in manufacturing processes to render them smarter and more automated. Productivity will be enhanced as machines achieve significantly improved uptime while also reducing labor costs. There are plenty of upsides in industrial semiconductor demand (Chart 13). We expect the CAGR of industrial electronics to increase from 3.4% during 2014-2019 to 8% during 2020-2024. AI applications can create smart buildings by increasing connectivity across enterprise assets, enabling home network infrastructure (e.g., routers and extenders) and employing home-security devices (e.g., cameras, alarms and locks). AI applications can be used to create smart cities. A smart city is an urban area that uses different types of IoT electronic sensors to collect data. Insights gained from that data are used to manage assets, resources and services efficiently; in return, that data is used improve operations across the city. China has already developed about 750 trial sites of smart cities with different degrees of smartness in the past decade. As AI and 5G technology advances, the existing smart cities’ “smartness” will be upgraded and new trial smart cities will be implemented. Based on IDC data, China’s investment in smart cities will rise at a CAGR of 13.5% over 2020-2023 (Chart 14). Globally, the U.S., Japan, European countries and other nations are also actively developing smart cities. According to a new study conducted by Grand View Research, the global smart cities market size is expected to grow at a CAGR of 24.7% from 2020 to 2027.10 Chart 13Plenty Of Upside In Industrial Semiconductor Demand
Plenty Of Upside In Industrial Semiconductor Demand
Plenty Of Upside In Industrial Semiconductor Demand
Chart 14China’s Investment In Smart Cities Will Continue To Grow
Global Semiconductor Stocks: A Hiatus Is Overdue In A Structural Bull Market
Global Semiconductor Stocks: A Hiatus Is Overdue In A Structural Bull Market
Automotive We expect the global automotive chip market to grow at a CAGR of 9% during 2020-2024, as in 2014-2019. The increase in consumption of semiconductors by the auto industry will continue to be driven by the market evolution toward autonomous, connected, electric and shared mobility. Most new vehicles now include some level of advanced driver assist systems (ADAS), such as adaptive cruise control, automatic brakes, blind spot monitoring, and parallel parking. The whole industry is progressing toward fully autonomous vehicles in the coming years. Increasing adoption of automotive chips and recovering car sales will revive automotive chip sales. In addition, rising penetration of new energy vehicles (NEVs) is beneficial to semiconductor sales, as NEVs contain higher semiconductor content than conventional vehicles. Conventional vehicles contain an average of a $330 value of semiconductor content while hybrid electric vehicles can contain up to $1,000 and $3,500 worth of semiconductors.11 Regarding other sectors, we are also positive on structural demand of storage and consumer electronics. AI applications generate vast volumes of data—about 80 exabytes per year, which is expected to increase by about tenfold to 845 exabytes by 2025.12 In addition, developers are now using more data in AI and deep learning (DL) training, which also increases storage requirements. With massive potential demand for storage, we estimate a CAGR of 7% over 2020-2024 (Table 1 on page 10). A recent report from ABI Research predicts that the COVID-19 pandemic will increase global sales of wearables (such as a Fitbit or Apple Watch) by 29% to 30 million shipments of the devices this year. With contribution from wearables, we expect global semiconductor demand from the consumer sector to grow at a CAGR of 3% over 2020-2024, the same rate as in the previous five years. Bottom Line: Continuing rollout of 5G networks and phones, development of data centers, and further technological advancements in AI and cloud computing will provide tailwinds to structural global semiconductor demand, accelerating its CAGR growth from 3% during 2014-2019 to 5% during 2020-2024. Valuations And Investment Conclusions Most global semiconductor stocks are currently over-hyped. Critically, both DRAM and NAND prices have been deflating since January, reflecting weak demand for memory chips. Yet, share prices of memory producers have rallied (Chart 15). Overall, global semiconductor stock prices have diverged from their sales and profits. Overall, global semiconductor stock prices have diverged from their sales and profits (Chart 16). Chart 15Falling Memory Prices Pose Risk To Memory Stocks
Falling Memory Prices Pose Risk To Memory Stocks
Falling Memory Prices Pose Risk To Memory Stocks
Chart 16Global Semiconductor Stocks Have Deviated From Profits
Global Semiconductor Stocks Have Deviated From Its Profits
Global Semiconductor Stocks Have Deviated From Its Profits
Consequently, the multiples of semiconductor stocks have spiked to multi-year highs (Chart 17). Even after adjusting for negative US real bond yields, valuations of semiconductor stocks are not cheap. Chart 18 illustrates the equity risk premium for global semiconductor stocks is at the lower end of its range of the past 10 years. The ERP is calculated as forward earnings yield minus 10-year US TIPS yields. It is impossible to time a correction or know what the trigger would be (US-China tensions have been our best guess). Nevertheless, we do not recommend chasing semiconductor stocks higher due to their overstretched technicals and valuations on the one hand and potential weakening demand in H2 on the other. Chart 17Global Semiconductor Stocks: Elevated Valuations
Global Semiconductor Stocks: Elevated Valuations
Global Semiconductor Stocks: Elevated Valuations
Chart 18Equity Risk Premium For Global Semi Stocks Is Historically Low
Equity Risk Premium For Global Semi Stocks Is Historically Low
Equity Risk Premium For Global Semi Stocks Is Historically Low
In addition, the ratio of global semi equipment stock prices relative to the semi equity index correlates with absolute share prices of global semi companies. This is because equipment producers are higher-beta as they outperform during growth accelerations and underperform during growth slumps. The basis is that semi manufacturers have to purchase equipment if there is actual strong demand coming up and vice versa. The recent underperformance by global semi equipment stocks relative to the semi equity index might be an early sign of a potential reversal in semi share prices in absolute terms (Chart 19). Chart 19A Signal Of A Potential Reversal In Semi Share Prices
A Signal Of A Potential Reversal In Semi Share Prices
A Signal Of A Potential Reversal In Semi Share Prices
Meanwhile, we believe the subsector- memory chip stocks - will outperform the overall semiconductor index amidst the potential correction, because they have lagged and are less over-extended. Finally, we remain neutral on Taiwanese and Korean bourses within the EM equity space for now. Escalation in US-China confrontation, as well as their exposure to semiconductors, put these bourses at near-term risk. That said, we are reluctant to underweight these markets because fundamentals in EM outside North Asia remain challenging. Ellen JingYuan He Associate Vice President ellenj@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1Traditional PCs are comprised of desktops, notebooks, and workstations. 2Global server shipments to contract 5.6% sequentially in 3Q2020, says Digitimes Research 3Global server shipments forecast to increase by 5% this year: TrendForce 4IDC Expects Worldwide Smartphone Shipments to Plummet 11.9% in 2020 Fueled by Ongoing COVID-19 Challenges 5America does not want China to dominate 5G mobile networks 6“Data localization” can be defined as the act of storing data on a device that is physically located within the country where the data was created. Data localization requirements are governmental obligations that explicitly mandate local storage of personal information or strongly encourage local storage through data protection laws that erect stringent legal compliance obligations on cross-border data transfers. 7The big data center industry ushered in another outbreak 8The GSMA represents the interests of mobile operators worldwide, uniting more than 750 operators with almost 400 companies in the broader mobile ecosystem, including handset and device makers, software companies, equipment providers and internet companies, as well as organizations in adjacent industry sectors. 9GSMA: 5G Moves from Hype to Reality – but 4G Still King 10Smart Cities Market Size Worth $463.9 billion By 2027 11The Automotive Semiconductor Market – Key Determinants of U.S. Firm Competitiveness 12AI is data Pac-Man. Winning requires a flashy new storage strategy.
2020 High-Conviction Calls: S&P Semi Equipment
2020 High-Conviction Calls: S&P Semi Equipment
Underweight While year-to-date chip equipment stocks are the best performing index in the SPX, we deem them a mania, and include them in our high-conviction underweight basket for 2020. The top panel shows this irrational exuberance that has permeated the semi equipment universe is similar to the dotcom era excesses. Back in the late-1990s relative profit growth was sky high, but today it is flirting with the zero line, warning that gravity will pull these stocks back down to earth. The contracting ISM manufacturing survey signals that relative share price momentum running at a breakneck pace is unwarranted. The same holds true for relative forward profit and revenue growth expectations, especially given the ongoing contraction in global semi sales. This deficient demand for semis and therefore semi equipment manufacturers is also apparent in deflating DRAM prices, our industry pricing power proxy. Historically, relative profit expectations and pricing power have moved in lockstep and the current message is to fade sell-side analysts’ buoyancy. Net earnings revisions have slingshot from extreme pessimism to extreme optimism during the past quarter and are vulnerable to disappointment. In sum, lack of profit growth, deficient industry demand, perky valuations and extremely overbought conditions all suggest that the mania in the S&P chip equipment index will likely turn into a panic next year. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG – S5SEEQ – AMAT, LRCX, KLAC.