July 7, 2022

Tore Svanberg, Semiconductor sector analyst, managing director, Stifel Financial

Tore Svanberg is an analyst and managing director at Stifel Financial Corp specializing in the semiconductor sector. He joined the company with the acquisition of Thomas Weisel Partners LLC in 2010.

He is part of the technology group, covering semiconductors with a focus on analog, connectivity and processor semiconductors.

He has been recognized for his work by The Wall Street Journal’s “Best on the Street” Analyst Survey.

Earlier, he was a senior analyst and managing director at Piper Jaffray.

He began his career as an analyst at Robertson Stephens. He received a degree in international relations from Franklin University in Switzerland. He also received an M.A. degree in international policy studies from the Middlebury Institute of International Studies in California.

“I think the good thing about what’s been happening — you could call it a good thing — because demand has outstripped supply for so long, pricing has gone up a lot, probably the most I’ve ever seen. I’ve been covering the industry for 23 years.

And now that prices obviously are this high, that causes demand to trail off. And I think that is something that you’re seeing basically with the global economy anyway.

So with all this inflation, you’re really starting to see demand deteriorate, because prices are so high. And I would say the same thing is happening on the semiconductor side.

We started already seeing things like PCs and smartphones slowing down and those are obviously more tied to consumer spending. With that slowdown, supply is starting to free up somewhat based on the demand level that’s out there…

I think with the pandemic, those markets had a bit of a resurgence, when we had things like work from home. All of a sudden, everybody bought more PCs and more smartphones. But I would say that that was probably a very temporary phenomenon, driven by the pandemic.

If you look at it longer term, I think the markets that are perhaps more interesting for semiconductor companies would be automotive.

There’s obviously a lot of electronic content growth happening in the automotive market. I would say in broadband — and broadband would basically cover various different subsegments all the way from hyperscale infrastructure to 5G to better Wi-Fi. And then, on the industrial side, there’s also a lot of interesting subsectors that are seeing a lot of innovation, including the medical end market, robotics.

And then obviously, there’s this term AI, artificial intelligence, which can also be sort of an umbrella for a lot of different subsegments within those end markets.”

The semiconductor sector manufacturing is mostly in Taiwan, but there is an “in-sourcing” trend to bring manufacturing back to the USA.

“Keep in mind that most design companies, the companies that design these very compelling chips, they are U.S.-based companies. But they don’t manufacture the chips.

The chips are manufactured primarily in Taiwan, and to a certain extent in China, where a lot of the wafer manufacturing happens. And that’s basically a very natural outsourcing that the U.S. has been doing for the last 30 years, not just in semiconductors, but the U.S. has been outsourcing manufacturing everywhere, not just in semiconductors but in other parts of technology and other parts of industrial manufacturing and so …….

Source: https://www.twst.com/news/semiconductor-sector-stocks/

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *