-
Font Size:
-
Print
- TweetThis
The Street this morning agrees on the obvious conclusion of the latest SIA data: it was weak. “Weak February results,” “shipments weaker than typical,” “weakness in both units and pricing,” “data appears generally weak,” “weaker than normal seasonality,” said analysts this morning at J.P. Morgan, Wedbush Morgan, Robert W. Baird, Lehman Brothers and UBS, respectively. But there is also a growing consensus that we are at or near a bottom in semi fundamentals, and that a recovery is just around the corner; it is a theory tied to the notion that the recent inventory correction in the sector is nearly completed.
Oh, really? Here’s a chart we’d like the analysts Eric quoted to look at, which is a total semiconductor sales on a trailing 12-month basis since 1995, based on data from the Semiconductor Industry Association:
So, Christopher Danely, analyst at J.P. Morgan, Craig Berger, of Wedbush Morgan, Lehman’s Tim Luke, and Uche Orji, of UBS: can you tell me why this looks like a bottom to you?
Related Articles
|


























