Editor's Choice


Charting China’s meteoric chip sales trajectory

28 February 2022 Editor's Choice News

The Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) has compiled a wealth of data showing the extent to which global chip sales from Chinese companies are on the rise. The SIA attributes this growth mainly to increasing US-China tensions and a whole-of-nation effort to advance China’s chip sector, including government subsidies, procurement preferences and other preferential policies.

Just five years ago, China’s semiconductor device sales were $13 billion, accounting for only 3,8% of global chip sales. In 2020, however, the Chinese semiconductor industry registered an unprecedented annual growth rate of 30,6% to reach $39,8 billion in total annual sales, according to an SIA analysis. The jump in growth helped China capture 9% of the global semiconductor market in 2020, surpassing Taiwan for two consecutive years and closely following Japan and the EU, which each took 10% of market share. Sales data for 2021 are not yet available.

If China’s semiconductor development continues its strong momentum – maintaining 30% CAGR (compound annual growth rate) over the next three years – and assuming growth rates of industries in other countries stay the same, the Chinese semiconductor industry could generate $116 billion in annual revenue by 2024, capturing upwards of 17,4% of global market share (Figure 1). This would place China behind only the United States and South Korea in global market share.

Figure 1. Global semiconductor market share, by major country.

Equally startling is the number of new firms in China rushing into the semiconductor industry. Nearly 15 000 Chinese firms registered as semiconductor enterprises in 2020. A large number of these new firms are fabless start-ups specialising in GPU, EDA, FPGA, AI computing and other higher-end chip design. Many of these firms are developing advanced chips, designing and taping out devices on bleeding-edge process nodes, as shown in Figure 2. Sales of Chinese high-end logic devices are also accelerating, with the combined revenue of China’s CPU, GPU and FPGA sectors growing at an annual rate of 128% to nearly $1 billion in revenue in 2020, up from a meagre $60 million in 2015.


Figure 2. Chinese advanced logic chip tapeouts, 2020-2021.

Chinese semiconductor firms post impressive growth

Across all four subsegments of the Chinese semiconductor supply chain – fabless, IDM, foundry and OSAT – Chinese firms recorded rapid increases in revenue last year, representing annual growth rates of 36%, 23%, 32% and 23%, respectively, based on an SIA analysis (Figure 3). Leading Chinese semiconductor firms are on track to expand domestically and even globally, in several submarkets.

Figure 3. 2020 top 10 Chinese semiconductor firms by revenue.

SIA analysis further shows that in 2020, China held an impressive 16% market share in the global fabless semiconductor segment, ranking third after the US and Taiwan and up from 10% in 2015. Benefiting from China’s massive consumer and 5G market, Huawei’s HiSilicon, China’s largest chip designer, generated nearly $10 billion in revenue in 2020, despite tightened export control restrictions (largely due to significant stockpiling suggested by official Chinese trade data).

Other Chinese fabless firms, such as communications chip supplier UNISOC, MCU and NOR Flash designer GigaDevice, fingerprint chip firm Goodix and image sensor designers Galaxycore and OmniVision (a US-headquartered corporation acquired by China) have all reported a 20-40% annual growth rate to become China’s top fabless firms. Moreover, in addition to supplying Chinese OEMs, GigaDevice, OmniVision and Goodix have entered the top three global smartphone vendors’ supply chains. See Figure 4 for a more detailed breakdown.

Figure 4. Chinese OEMs and their commercially available chip products.

Meanwhile, Chinese consumer electronics and home appliance OEMs and leading Internet firms have also been ramping up efforts to expand into the semiconductor sector by designing chips in-house and making investments in established semiconductor firms, with notable progress made in designing advanced chips and building domestic supply chains over the past two years.

China’s chip manufacturing expansion continues

China also maintains robust growth in building out its semiconductor manufacturing supply chain, with 28 additional fab construction projects totalling $26 billion in new planned funding announced in 2021. SMIC and other Chinese semiconductor leaders have further expanded their partnerships with local governments to construct additional joint venture fabs, with a focus on mature technology nodes (Figure 5). Wafer manufacturing startups are continuing to spring up in the trailing-edge fabrication field, backed by government incentives.

Figure 5. Planned Chinese fab projects announced in 2021.

On the chip manufacturing front, due to the inclusion of Huawei and SMIC on the US government’s ‘Entity List’ (China’s most advanced chip designer and foundry, respectively), the Chinese semiconductor industry has largely suspended advanced logic node manufacturing development and redirected most capital to mature fabrication technology. As a result of this change, from September 2020 to November 2021, Chinese wafer manufacturers have added nearly 500 000 wafer-per-month (WPM) capacities in trailing nodes (>=14 nm), and only an additional 10 000 in capacity for advanced nodes. China’s wafer capacity increase alone accounted for 26% of the worldwide total.

In 2021, China also started commercial shipments of indigenously manufactured mobile 19 nm DDR4 DRAM devices and 64-layer 3D NAND Flash chips and started 128-layer products. While the Chinese memory industry is still at an early stage of development, Chinese memory firms are expected to achieve a compound annual growth rate of 40-50% in output and become highly competitive over the next five years. Regarding backend production, China is a global leader in outsourced assembly, packaging and testing (OSAT), with its top three OSAT players collectively holding more than 35% of the global market share.

All indications are that China’s rapid growth in semiconductor chip sales is likely to continue, due in large part to the unwavering commitment from the central government and robust policy support in the face of deteriorating US-China relations. While there remains a long way to go for China to catch up with existing industry leaders – especially in advanced node foundry production, equipment and materials – the gap is expected to narrow over the next decade as Beijing sharpens its focus on semiconductor self-reliance during its current 14th ‘Five-Year Plan’.




Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

The trends driving uptake of IoT Platform as a Service
Trinity IoT Editor's Choice Telecoms, Datacoms, Wireless, IoT
IoT platforms, delivered as a service, are the key that will enable enterprises to leverage a number of growing trends within the IT space, and access a range of benefits that will help them grow their businesses.

Read more...
Interlynx-SA: Engineering SA’s digital backbone
Interlynx-SA Editor's Choice
At the heart of the industrial shift towards digitalisation lies the growing demand for telemetry, Industrial IoT (IIoT), advanced networking, and robust data solutions, and Interlynx-SA is meeting this demand.

Read more...
Converting high voltages without a transformer
Altron Arrow Editor's Choice Power Electronics / Power Management
With appropriate power converter ICs, such as the LTC7897 from Analog Devices, many applications can be suitably powered without having to use complex and cost-intensive transformers.

Read more...
Grinn Global: From design house to SoM innovator
Editor's Choice
From its beginnings as a small electronic design house, Grinn Global has moved into the spotlight as a system-on-module innovator working alongside technology giants like MediaTek.

Read more...
Active event tracking using a novel new technique
Editor's Choice
SPAES (single photon active event sensor) 3D sensing, developed by VoxelSensors, is a breakthrough technology that solves current critical depth sensing performance limitations for robotics applications.

Read more...
ABB commits to a more inclusive future as it empowers women and youth in engineering
ABB South Africa Editor's Choice
Through structured development, inclusive hiring, and focused empowerment, ABB Electrification is shaping a more equitable and dynamic future for the engineering industry.

Read more...
Unlocking the next frontier – women leading digital transformation in South Africa’s technology sector
Editor's Choice
As South Africa celebrates Women’s Month, it is an ideal time to reflect on the critical role women are playing in shaping the country’s technology sector.

Read more...
Why GNSS positioning precision is enabling the next wave of IoT applications
iCorp Technologies Editor's Choice Telecoms, Datacoms, Wireless, IoT
While high-performance GNSS implementations are achievable with few limitations, most real-world applications must balance power consumption, form factor and accuracy requirements.

Read more...
5G RedCap: Unlocking scalable IoT connectivity
iCorp Technologies Editor's Choice Telecoms, Datacoms, Wireless, IoT
As 2G and 3G networks rapidly sunset across the globe, the Internet of Things (IoT) market faces a critical challenge: how to maintain reliable cellular connectivity without the complexity or cost of full 5G.

Read more...
Is RFoIP technology the future for signal transportation for Satcom applications?
Accutronics Editor's Choice Telecoms, Datacoms, Wireless, IoT
RFoF technology continues to be used for successful IF signal transportation in the ground segment and there is widespread belief that it will be for some time to come, especially for critical communications applications.

Read more...









While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd | All Rights Reserved