A Bull In A China Shop

June 18, 2018

In light of the developing trade war between the US and China, let’s review the all-important Semiconductor sector and in particular, the Semi Equipment segment, which is a key economic early bird (and canary in a coal mine).

Various sectors took hits on Friday as Trump moved forward with Tariffs on China. But most of those sectors and industries are follow-on aspects of the economic cycle, which got its start when the early bird chirped in early 2013.

With China in Trump’s crosshairs and China a very key player in Semi Fab Equipment, there is a fundamental reason that the Equipment companies are faltering. From SEMI by way of a post at nftrh.com in March.

SEMI predicts Samsung will lead the pack in fab equipment spending in both 2018 and 2019, even though it will invest less each year than in 2017. By contrast, China will dramatically increase its year-over-year (YOY) fab equipment spending for the next two years – by 57 percent in 2018 and 60 percent in 2019 – to support fab projects from both overseas and domestic companies. The China spending surge will thrust it past Korea as the top spending region in 2019.”

The rate of Semi Fab spending growth was easing and a heavy reliance was being put on China to pick up the slack. Here is a screenshot from that post…

With the delicate balance of the Semi industry’s global supply chain you might conjure an image of Trump’s head, stitched to the body of a bull and set loose in a China shop. Okay, I’ll play to the cheap seats for a laugh (source: capitaladvisorsltd.com)…

But SEMI’s concerns about this blunt force known as Trump are real, and serious.

More than 100 lines of the proposed tariff list directly impact the semiconductor supply chain, hitting fundamental components of the semiconductor manufacturing process. SEMI has fought back, strongly urging the removal of these tariff lines from the proposed tariff list. At a bare minimum, the tariffs against China will cost the U.S. tens of millions annually in additional taxes, create lost revenue as a result of reduced exports, threaten thousands of high-paying U.S. jobs, stifle innovation and curb U.S. technological leadership – all while not directly addressing U.S. concerns with China.”

I don’t want to pretend to be able to quantify what the gross effects will be across various industries, including the Semis. The bull is rampaging and glass is breaking everywhere. I often talk about how we should tune out inflammatory headlines, but as noted in last week’s updates, this trade stuff is real and it is fundamental. And SEMI is alarmed.

The general problem as I see it is that the bull is playing to a 1970s script. Back then the Semiconductor industry and all the technology it has enabled was just a glimmer in the eye of a few forward-looking engineers. As a kid in the 70s and as a manufacturing guy in the 80s (and beyond) I remember what US industry was like when it was fully industrial. I remember how strong and important our raw materials industries were. I am from the industrial world where families could make a good living and small towns thrived with the presence of solid industrial and/or materials corporations.

But that is over by and large. After Anthony Bourdain’s death I binged a bunch of Parts Unknown episodes, including one in Appalachia, coal country. It is home to some of the hardest working, most welcoming people on the planet. It had been passed by, as we all know. Trumponomics has resuscitated coal and other pockets of industry but now let’s picture what Semiconductors are and what they mean to the US and global economies. For better or worse (and I think there is a level of “worse” in the equation) we are fully digitized, electrified and connected through myriad systems and devices.

Semiconductors are in virtually everything vital to today’s information networks and the ‘internet of things’ operating in cars, homes and a million places in between. Pervasive is not a strong enough word when trying to quantify how important the Semi industry is to modern everyday life. I am not trying to be cruel or dismissive of people whom time has passed by; I am simply trying to convey that Trump – through his old fashioned scope of view – threatens to impair the 90% to a degree, while bailing out the 10%.

See this Business Insider article for the full and staggering lists of items to be hit by tariffs. There is much heavy industry and some items that require Semiconductors.

But the question is how will China react? With reference to the Semi Equipment Fab data noted above, and with Semi Equipment’s status of economic bellwether, I’d say we have ample reason why the (daily & weekly) charts below are doing what they are doing.

Now the question is whether or not the fundamentals being broken by the bull in the China shop will spread out to the rest of the economy just as the positive fundamental cycle that began in early 2013 did. Again, I am usually the one asking us to tune out the big, alarming stuff in the news. But Trump/China is fundamental and the bull is playing to a 1970s script. It is a recipe for disaster if the bull keeps charging.

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