According to iSuppli Corp., revenue from   global shipments of core ICs—applicationspecific   standard products (ASSPs), applicationspecific   ICs (ASICs), and programmable logic   devices (PLDs)—will see a weak finish to 2008   and decline in 2009. While global core silicon   saw $101.3 billion in revenue in 2008, which is   a modest 1.8% rise from 2007’s $99.5 billion   total, it will decline by 9.9% in 2009 to drop to   $91.2 billion.
ASIC shipments depend on a handful of   systems. Video games, iSuppli says, consume   almost 30% of all logic ASICs—or somewhat   less when analog and DSP ASICs are aggregated.   Falling console shipments and the   consumer shift from high-priced Microsoft Xbox   360s and Sony PlayStation3s to less expensive   Nintendo Wiis will cause the ASIC market to   drop by several percentage points compared to   previous forecasts.
Similarly, hard-disk drives (HDDs) account   for more than 18% of all ASIC use. According to   iSuppli’s preliminary forecasts, unit shipments   of rigid disk drives will fall by 11 million units in   2009, compared to 2008. As HDD street prices   fall to a level where storage is virtually unlimited   and essentially free, ASIC prices will fall, compounding   the falling unit volumes.
Considering these declines, iSuppli now   expects 2009 ASIC revenue to fall slightly, representing   a second consecutive year of decline.   The company currently expects shrinkage of   approximately 8.5%. “Such application-specific   semiconductors, whose sales grow in concert   with high-volume applications, shrink with those   applications when the tide turns,” said Jordan   Selburn, principal analyst, semiconductor   design, for iSuppli.
Databeans, another market research firm,   says the combined PLD and standard-cell ASIC   market will shift as PLDs and field-programmable   gate arrays (FPGAs) migrate into major   consuming application segments. For 2008, the   company estimates a market of $11.7 billion   on 1.3 billion PLD and standard-cell ASIC units   shipped. Over the next five years, Databeans   expects unit growth to outpace revenue growth   slightly, due to increased efficiencies and lower   manufacturing costs.
Richard Gawel