Commentary / Analysis: Real men have fabs, but maybe not Infineon, NXP, TI and ST.
The first argument is the cost argment. Some say that, at $3bn, fabs are too expensive. But if you look at their cost in relation to the market size, their cost is the same.
A fab cost $40m in 1970 when the industry TAM was $2.4bn; they cost $330m in 1985 when the TAM was $21.5bn; they cost $3bn in 2005 when the TAM was $245bn. That’s a 14.1 per cent CAGR over 25 years fro both the market and the fab-cost. So there’s no change in cost.
“It’s just that you have to bet the company when you build a fab, and people have lost the stomach for betting the company”, said Future Horizons CEO, Malcolm Penn
![]() |
E-mail This Article | ![]() |
![]() |
Printer-Friendly Page |
Related News
- Analyst sours on Infineon, ST but touts ARM
- Analysis: Is the ST, NXP wireless JV the start of IDM break-up?
- Five Leading Semiconductor Industry Players Incorporate New Company, Quintauris, to Drive RISC-V Ecosystem Forward
- TSMC, Bosch, Infineon, and NXP Establish Joint Venture to Bring Advanced Semiconductor Manufacturing to Europe
- Leading Semiconductor Industry Players Join Forces to Accelerate RISC-V
Breaking News
- RISC-V International Promotes Andrea Gallo to CEO
- See the 2025 Best Edge AI Processor IP at the Embedded Vision Summit
- Andes Technology Showcases RISC-V AI Leadership at RISC-V Summit Europe 2025
- RISC-V Royalty-Driven Revenue to Exceed License Revenue by 2027
- Keysom Unveils Keysom Core Explorer V1.0
Most Popular
- RISC-V Royalty-Driven Revenue to Exceed License Revenue by 2027
- SiFive and Kinara Partner to Offer Bare Metal Access to RISC-V Vector Processors
- Imagination Announces E-Series: A New Era of On-Device AI and Graphics
- Siemens to accelerate customer time to market with advanced silicon IP through new Alphawave Semi partnership
- Cadence Unveils Millennium M2000 Supercomputer with NVIDIA Blackwell Systems to Transform AI-Driven Silicon, Systems and Drug Design