There is sometimes a silver lining in any tragedy. After disasters, rebuilding takes place. Factory disruptions in one land can mean a boost in business in another land. That is the global economy at work, and YES this is about Japan and its tragedy and how this is helping some and hurting others. With today being the end of the first calendar quarter, companies either already know or will know very soon if t
he first quarter came out okay and whether the second quarter will be much higher or lower than expectations.
DRAMeXchange.com sent out its weekly research in the middle of the night and there are some broad implications here in both DRAM and NAND Flash for companies such as SanDisk Corporation (NASDAQ: SNDK) and Micron Technology Inc. (NASDAQ: MU). We are also considering some changes that could help or hurt Intel Corporation (NASDAQ: INTC) and NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ: NVDA) as they get into devices behind QUALCOMM Incorporated (NASDAQ: QCOM) and ARM Holdings plc (NASDAQ: ARMH) due to the gains that these companies had made in smartphones and in other devices before Japan’s woes came into play. The moves in the shares of each of these have not exactly been universal as you will see below. Some are winners, some are losers.
The research noted, “In 2Q, uncertainty factors will continue to affect the demand and supply in NAND Flash market. In regard to supply: 1.) On account of the fact that the loss of WIPs at Toshiba and SanDisk’s Yokkaichi plants and that a possible shortage of silicon wafer supply in the second half of 2Q, DRAMeXchange estimates the bit output of Yokkaichi plants will decrease up to 10% in 2Q, which will likely cause up to 4% decrease in global NAND Flash bit output in 2Q.”
We have to also include MEMC Electronic Materials Inc. (NYSE: WFR) as DRAMexchange noted, “As for the supply of upstream silicon wafer in 2Q, the shutdown of Shin-Etsu Chemical’s Shirakawa plant will cause significant harm, because its capacity accounts for about 20% of global silicon wafer capacity. Due to equipment examination and electrical brownouts, there is still no definite date for its production to resume. As for SUMCO’s Yonezawa plant and MEMC’s Utsunomiya plant, although they are temporary shut down due to electrical brownouts, but their capacities are comparatively smaller, so the effects they cause to silicon wafer supply in 2Q are limited.”
When it comes to materials, the research noted “Mitsubishi Gas Chemical and Hitachi Chemical, the main suppliers of BT resin used in semiconductor products, plan to resume part of their production lines in affected areas at the end of March. Therefore, DRAMeXchange expects the shortage effects on BT resin supply to be eased in the beginning of May.”
Why does this matter so much for Intel Corporation (NASDAQ: INTC) and NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ: NVDA)? Without stating the obvious, any delays of new tablets will not slow down the manufacturers from continuing to develop second-generations of their tablets, smartphones, and other devices. Intel and NVIDIA are both coming late into the consumer electronic devices market. We cannot argue that this will give the companies a huge leg up to competing against ARM Holdings plc (NASDAQ: ARMH) and QUALCOMM Incorporated (NASDAQ: QCOM). There are still just too many moving parts to predict if there is going to be any real market share changes.
