SemiMedia SemiMedia
  • Breaking News
  • MarketWatch
  • Distribution
  • Manufacturer
  • Video
  • About us
Home › MarketWatch › Nikkei: Chip lead times are still extending
  • 0

Nikkei: Chip lead times are still extending

SemiMediaEdit
February 14, 2022

According to Nikkei Asia, lead times for chip orders in February 2022 have increased by 5 to 15 weeks compared to October last year. Among them, the average lead time of general-purpose products for 16-bit processors was 44 weeks, an increase of 15 weeks from October, and the average lead time for power management chips was 37 weeks, an increase of 9 weeks. In addition, some processors have a maximum lead time of 99 weeks.

In addition to growing demand faster than supply, chipmakers are prioritizing shortages of cutting-edge chips over commodity products. The average price of chips such as processors has risen 15 percent or more in a year, according to Gartner, a U.S. market research firm.

The report quoted Japanese government data showing that air-conditioning production from October to December 2021 totaled 730,000 units, down 26% from the same period two years ago. Digital camera production fell 25% and passenger cars fell 16%.

Nikkei Asia noted that Sony Group halted orders for six mirrorless camera models in the last two months of 2021 and halted production three times due to a shortage of semiconductors for liquid crystal displays. The resulting production shortfall has dented Sony's market opportunity to sell cameras, with segment sales falling 4% in the October-December quarter.

"Some products are expected to be in short supply in the first half of fiscal 2022, so we will increase our inventory," said Hiroki Totoki, Sony's chief financial officer and executive vice president.

Related

Chip lead time electronic components news IC lead time IC shortage Nikkei
Infineon and SensiML enable sensor data capture and ML models for smart home, fitness and industry applications
Previous
SIA: Worldwide semiconductor sales and shipments hit record highs in 2021
Next

All Comments (0)

Back
No Comment.

Top Post

Mouser Electronics expands to the Philippines with local customer service center
Fire broke out at AKM factory in Japan
Qualcomm ranked first in the world's top ten IC design companies
TSMC’s CoWoS capacity to reach 75,000 wafers/month by end-2025
onsemi expects to produce 200mm SiC wafers by 2025
Analyze the key factors and prospects of electronic components shortage from the perspective of wafer industry

Subscribe SemiMedia

Please check your E-mail to confirm the subscribtion.

Related posts

Vishay launches compact proximity sensor with 600 mm detection

Vishay launches compact proximity sensor with 600 mm detection

May 7, 2026
0
AI demand keeps 3nm and CoWoS capacity tight through 2027

AI demand keeps 3nm and CoWoS capacity tight through 2027

May 7, 2026
0
Musk-backed Terafab chip project may reach $119 billion investment

Musk-backed Terafab chip project may reach $119 billion investment

May 7, 2026
0
Murata introduces bulk case packaging to replace T&R, improving MLCC supply chain efficiency

Murata introduces bulk case packaging to replace T&R, improving MLCC supply chain efficiency

May 6, 2026
0
Copyright © 2017-2026 SemiMedia. Designed by nicetheme.
  • Please set up your first menu at [Admin -> Appearance -> Menus]
  • electronic components news
  • Electronic components supplier
  • Electronic parts supplier
  • Infineon
  • Electronic component news
  • Electronic components distributor
  • Renesas
  • Vishay
  • STMicroelectronics
  • NXP

SemiMediaEdit

Administrator