SEMI: North American equipment orders continue downward trend
By Suzanne Deffree, News Editor -- 9/20/2007
North American-based manufacturers of semiconductor equipment posted $1.39 billion in orders in August on a three-month average and a book-to-bill ratio of 0.83, according to San Jose-based industry association Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International (SEMI).
A book-to-bill of 0.83 means that $83 worth of orders were received for every $100 of product billed for the month.
The three-month average of worldwide bookings for the month was $1.39 billion, down about 1 percent from the final July level of $1.41 billion and a stark 19 percent less than the $1.73 billion in orders posted in August 2006.
Meanwhile, the three-month average of worldwide billings in August was $1.69 billion, even with July’s level of $1.69 billion and down 3 percent compared to August 2006 billings of $1.74 billion. July’s book-to-bill ratio for North American-based manufacturers of semiconductor equipment was 0.84.
Bookings hit $1.67 billion in May, a month that the industry association reported a book-to-bill of 1.0 for North American equipment companies.
SEMI does not seem concerned by the year-over-year decreases, however. “Total worldwide 2007 equipment revenues remain on course to be comparable to 2006 sales,” Myers said.
SEMI’s forecast for a flat year is nothing new. The group’s mid-year capital equipment consensus forecast also indicated just 1 percent growth for the semiconductor manufacturing equipment market to $40.9 billion, following 23 percent growth in 2006.
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