SEMI: July book-to-bill at 0.84
By Colleen Taylor, Contributing Editor -- 8/17/2007
The book-to-bill ratio for North American-based manufacturers of semiconductor equipment dipped well below parity in July to 0.84, according to the latest research from global industry association SEMI.
SEMI said that equipment makers posted $1.44 billion in orders in July on a three month average basis, down 10 percent from the final June level of $1.61 billion and 17 percent less than the $1.73 billion in orders posted in July 2006.
Meanwhile, the three-month average of worldwide billings in July was $1.71 billion, down 3 percent from the final June level of $1.77 billion and 4 percent higher than the July 2006 billings level of $1.64 billion.
Accordingly, July's book-to-bill ratio was 0.84; a book-to-bill of 0.84 means that $84 worth of orders were received for every $100 of product billed for the month.
"The declining book-to-bill ratio is based on lower order levels for new semiconductor manufacturing equipment," Stanley T. Myers, president and CEO of SEMI, said in a statement. "Orders have slowed from the strong levels observed in the first part of this year and are at levels last seen in November of 2006."
The North American region is not the only equipment market seeing a slowdown in orders of late. SEMI reported earlier this week that the worldwide semiconductor equipment industry's book-to-bill ratio stayed below parity at 0.92 in Q2, with $10.22 billion in orders and $11.06 billion in billings.
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