Samsung Sells Record US$1.7 Billion Of Phones Over India Holiday
As the Diwali season is often an indicator of domestic demand, it may have outsold other brands over the festive period.
Samsung’s Smartphone Shipments Drop By 8 Percent In Global Markets In Q3 2022
The latest report by Counterpoint Research brings some bad news for smartphone brands, including Samsung.
Apple To Move 25% iPhone Production To India by 2025, 20% iPad & Apple Watch To Vietnam
Apple began assembling some of its devices in India and Vietnam a few years ago, slowly cutting its reliance on China. The Cupertino-giant is now gearing up to make the two nations key global manufacturing hubs, according to analysts at JP Morgan.
India’s Consumer Electronics Industry Is Set On The Path To Industry 5.0
By 2025, the manufacturing sector will breach the US$1 trillion mark, positioning India on the global manufacturing map. Even as the pandemic exposed the vulnerabilities of economies, it is time to analyse India’s manufacturing playbook and see it transition from Industry 4.0 to Industry 5.0, comprising smart artificial intelligence-enabled factories.
The Samsung Galaxy S23 Is Tipped To Go All-In On Snapdragon Processors
The expected arrival of the Samsung Galaxy S23 isn’t all that far off now – it should be showing up around January time – and the latest prediction from those in the know is that the phone series could use Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipsets exclusively.
The Chip Supply Chain Is Getting Harder To Trade
It’s getting complicated for investors in semiconductor stocks, with last year’s big chip shortage morphing into an inventory glut for some companies, and others getting caught up in geopolitics.
What Can We Learn From The Great Chip Famine?
On 19 August 2021, Toyota, the world’s largest car manufacturer by volume, announced it would cut its production by 40 percent in September, in response to the global shortage of microchips. For some experts, this announcement confirms the worst is yet to come from the great chip famine. Here, John Young, APAC sales director at automation parts supplier EU Automation, assesses what’s in store next for manufacturing.

John Young, APAC sales director, EU Automation
The automotive sector has been hit especially hard, but few will escape the clutches of the global chip shortage. Recent predictions, unfortunately, suggest the worst might be yet to come. Singapore-based Flex, the world’s third-largest electronics contract manufacturer, recently released a pessimistic forecast predicting the crisis will last for at least another year. A similar prediction was made by the head of Intel, which itself manufactures chips. So, how did we end up like this?
Anatomy of a perfect storm
The COVID-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc in global value chains but is only one factor in this multifaceted drama. The current situation is the outcome of a perfect storm of demand and supply factors, a storm that has decimated what with hindsight looks like a house of cards.
On the supply side of the equation, the following statistic demonstrates the scale of reliance on a small number of Asian chip manufacturers. As much as 70 percent of the world’s semiconductors are manufactured by just two companies, Taiwan Semiconductor (TSMC) and Samsung. In retrospect, economic historians will probably baulk at the world’s over-reliance on one or two companies for the supply of a component that is crucial to so many technologies.
The supply has also been disrupted by an unfortunate series of disasters, from a drought in Taiwan to a flood in Texas, to a fire in Japan. It may be disputed whether these were natural disasters or consequences of climate change brought about by human action. One supply-side factor that is certainly man-made is the ongoing US-China trade war. In anticipation of the measures introduced by President Trump, Chinese tech giants like Huawei had been stockpiling chips in preparation for future shortages.
On the demand side of the equation, we can see the impact of COVID-19 more clearly. Lockdowns led to a surge in demand for consumer electronics, while automakers scaled back production, expecting that the economic downturn would mean fewer sales of new cars.
When demand for new cars rebounded strongly at the end of 2020, the automotive sector, which relies on a fragile just-in-time supply chain, moved to rebook the orders it had previously cancelled. However, the foundries were already operating at full capacity to meet the increased demand and automakers found themselves queuing behind the electronics manufacturers who had taken their place.
The final straw on the demand side of the equation was the sharp rise in Bitcoin prices in early 2021. This had a knock-on effect on demand for the graphics processing units that are used for mining the digital currency, adding further strain to the semiconductor shortages.
What’s next for manufacturing?
The crisis is not expected to abate any time soon, with some of the more gloomy forecasts predicting that these supply and demand issues will not be resolved fully until 2023. Actions by Western governments are indicative of one potential outcome: a move toward reshoring production.
However, semiconductor manufacturing is uniquely complex and expensive. The entry barriers are astronomically high, with upfront investments of over 10 billion USD required to set up a foundry and a minimum wait of three years to become production-ready.
Over 90 percent of the world’s advanced chips are produced in Asia and recent moves suggest that the region will remain the powerhouse for many years to come. US semiconductor manufacturer GlobalFoundries, the third-largest chipmaker in the world, recently announced a fresh four billion USD investment in Singapore.
With no quick fix solution on the horizon, manufacturers might find they have to halt or slow production, but they might also change their approach to equipment purchases. The price of new equipment that uses semiconductors is set to rise. Manufacturers could consider postponing expensive equipment upgrades, by adopting alternative strategies.
Now is a pressing time to make sure your factory’s obsolescence management plan is up to date. If equipment is set to rise in cost due to the chip shortage, then postponing or delaying full system overhauls for the next year or two, until the situation recovers a level of normalcy, might be a preferable option.
Carry out a full audit of all equipment and components, so you can plan ahead for potential shortages of parts. Pairing with a reliable automation parts supplier like EU Automation will mean you can source obsolete equipment parts and keep legacy equipment running longer.
Another viable strategy is to retrofit your legacy equipment. Many automation parts like variable speed drives or smart sensors can be retrofitted to existing legacy equipment, giving your facility the benefits of greater automation without the higher capital costs of full system overhauls.
Of course, the wider lesson in all of this is to diversify your supply chain. Although extensive reshoring might not be likely, there is some talk or regionalization emerging in response to this crisis. We have seen the benefits of having sites in four strategic locations – the UK, the US, Germany and Singapore, allowing us to remain agile in the face of shocks to our supply.
In every crisis lies a lesson and an opportunity. Toyota was able to hold on without halting production for longer than many other manufacturers, in part because it revised its strategy following the Fukushima nuclear disaster of 2011. Let’s hope that manufacturers can derive important lessons from the great chip famine of 2021 and leave global value chains better prepared for the next storm that will inevitably come.
To discover more, visit euautomation.com
Source_EU Automation
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IBM And Samsung Unveil Semiconductor Breakthrough
IBM (NYSE: IBM) and Samsung Electronics jointly announced a breakthrough in semiconductor design utilizing a new vertical transistor architecture that demonstrates a path to scaling beyond nanosheet, and has the potential to reduce energy usage by 85 percent compared to a scaled fin field-effect transistor (finFET)1.
Samsung Working To Develop Its Vietnamese Supply Chain Networks
According to Shim Won Hwan, Samsung Vietnam’s CEO, Samsung is scouting for local companies to join its consulting programmes in order to enhance the company’s supply chain networks. This is a programme that the company had previously collaborated with the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT), government agencies as well as local associations in order to source for qualified local companies that would be able to join.
In comparison with the localisation rate of 25 percent in 2014, Samsung’s current rate has increased to 58 percent this year and the number of local companies that rank as Samsung Vietnam’s tier-1 vendors have increased from 4 in 2014 to 35 in 2018 and this number is expected to reach 50 by 2020.
In fact, over the past ten years, Samsung has invested a upwards of US$17 billion in Vietnam and employed 160,000 locals. In 2017, Vietnam’s export turnover reached US$214 billion, of which Samsung alone contributed over US$54 billion to that figure. Additionally, the company’s four subsidiaries in Vietnam have a combined revenue of US$20.5 billion and a profit of US$2.08 billion in the first quarter this year alone and the same figures have experienced a 50 percent year-on-year increase, according to the company’s quarterly financial statements.
50 percent of Samsung’s smartphones and tablets are now manufactured in Vietnam and exported to 128 countries and territories, including the US, Europe, Russia and Southeast Asia. And since April 2018, Samsung has worked with the MoIT to provide training courses to 200 Vietnamese consultants so that they would be better able to advise local companies on how productivity can be improved and this will in turn help to develop Vietnam’s support industry.
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