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Chip-equip orders signal recovery

Orders for semiconductor equipment eked out a small increase in January, indicating that the industry is embarking on a slow recovery, says an industry trade group.

John G. Spooner Staff Writer, CNET News.com
John Spooner
covers the PC market, chips and automotive technology.
John G. Spooner
Orders for semiconductor equipment eked out a small increase in January.

The North American semiconductor equipment industry posted a preliminary book-to-bill ratio of 0.81 for the month, according to data released Wednesday by the trade group Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International. December 2001's revised book-to-bill ratio was 0.78.

The book-to-bill ratio, published by SEMI, is a three-month average that compares the number of new orders received with the amount of new equipment shipped. January's 0.81 ratio means that new orders worth $81 were received for every $100 worth of equipment shipped. Generally, a book-to-bill ratio over 1 indicates that the industry is receiving more orders than it can fulfill--a good sign for manufacturers.

SEMI also said the average value of orders posted in January rose 1.3 percent to $636.9 million from December's $628.5 million.

Together, the increases in orders and value are evidence that the industry is embarking on a slow recovery, SEMI said in a statement.

After December's book-to-bill ratio was released, analysts theorized that 2002 equipment purchases from chipmakers such as IBM, Intel and Texas Instruments would spark a recovery in the first half of the year.

Despite January's increases, the chip-equipment industry still faces a difficult climb back to its previous levels. Last month's $636.9 million in orders was still 66 percent lower than January 2001's $1.85 billion, according to SEMI.