EE Times reports that despite the economic downturn and the severe effect of the financial crisis on the high tech industry, TSMC is continuing to invest for the future while remaining cautious about the presence.
Amid one of the toughest periods in its illustrious history, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd. (TSMC) remains cautiously optimistic about the IC industry and vowed that it will continue to invest in R&D despite the downturn.
TSMC (Hsinchu, Taiwan) plans to hire more engineers. The world's largest foundry provider also reiterated plans to equip and ramp up its 40-nm fab lines this year. It is readying new and separate 3-D and CMOS image sensor technologies. And it is also planning to move the IC-equipment in its R&D fab for the 22-nm node.
Rick Tsai, president and chief executive of TSMC, reiterated industry reports that the silicon foundry giant is seeing new order activity, but he also warned that there are still challenges ahead in the market.
Among those challenges include the overall economy, product demand and margin pressures. "This recession is bad," Tsai said at TSMC's Technology Symposium here. "This is a difficult time for all of us."
Indeed, it has been a humbling time for TSMC. After strong growth in the first three quarters of 2008, TSMC's business fell off the cliff in the fourth quarter of last year.
As a result, the company is expected to report a loss in Q1. It also recently cut about 200 jobs, implemented furloughs and slowed its wafer starts.
Now, there are some positive signs for the company and the overall industry. Inventories are low. Activity in China is picking up. "We are seeing what we call rush orders," Tsai said.
Still, the overall IC market is expected to fall in 2009. "We will see a dip in 2009," he said. "We will see moderate growth in 2010." [...More]
We have argued more times than not in this blog that despite the economic downturn, companies must continue to invest in their future and develop strategic plans that will pull ready them for when the slump is over.
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