The total pure-play foundry market is forecast to grow 6.1% to $44.9 billion in 2015. The entire increase in pure-play foundry sales is forecast to be due to sales of devices built using leading edge (<40nm) feature sizes. The <40nm pure-play foundry market is expected to increase 24% to $16.1 billion in 2015 compared to $13.0 billion in 2014 (Figure 1). In contrast, pure-play foundry sales of ≥40nm devices are forecast to decline 2% to $28.8 billion, based on findings presented in IC Insights’ September Update to the 2015 McClean Report.
Figure 1
Figure 2 shows sales of ≤45nm devices from the Big 4 pure-play foundries on a quarterly basis for 2014 and 2015. IC Insights forecasts that 63% of TSMC’s 2015 sales will be based on ICs built using ≤45nm technology. Furthermore, TSMC is forecast to have about $5.7 billion in sales of ≤20nm devices in 2015 ($5.1 billion from 20nm and about $0.6 billion from 16nm devices). That would be 2.7x more than the $2.1 billion worth of ≤20nm product the company sold in 2014. The company began volume shipments of its 16nm devices in 3Q15 and stated, “The ramping of our 16nm will be very steep, even steeper than our 20nm.”
Figure 2
As shown, the portion of ≤45nm sales at GlobalFoundries is expected to decrease five percentage points from 2Q15 to 3Q15. This drop is due to the inclusion of IBM’s chip sales, much of which is large feature size RF devices, in GlobalFoundries’ sales figures beginning in 3Q15 (the acquisition was finalized in July of this year).
One-third of UMC’s total sales are forecast to come from ≤45nm technology in 2015 and SMIC is expected to sell only $363 million worth of ≤45nm ICs in 2015, or only 2% of the level of TSMC’s ≤45nm sales forecast for this year.
Report Details: The 2015 McClean Report
Further details on the pure-play foundry market forecast are included in the September Update to The McClean Report—A Complete Analysis and Forecast of the Integrated Circuit Industry. A subscription to The McClean Report includes
free monthly updates from March through November, and
free access to subscriber-only webinars throughout the year. An individual-user license to the 2015 edition of The McClean Report is priced at $3,590 and includes an Internet access password. A multi-user worldwide corporate license is available for $6,590.