Although the semiconductor chip and capital equipment markets performed well in the first half of 2020, many of the electronic equipment end markets struggled globally. World electronic equipment sales declined almost 10% in 2Q’20 vs. 2Q’19 (chart 1).
Better mid-year end market demand
However, world business conditions are improving. The global purchasing managers index, a measure of broad manufacturing activity, rose to 51.8 in August, its highest point since November 2017 (chart 2).
The automotive industry, hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting plant shutdowns, is recovering. In the United States automotive production rebounded sharply in August to its highest level of car and truck output on record (chart 3). Admittedly, the industry was playing catch-up following the pandemic plunge but factory output has resumed.
Autumn busy season
The computer industry has also rebounded (chart 4), thanks to work-at-home and study-at-home driven demand for desktops, notebooks, and media tablets and strong second-quarter server shipments.
The global electronic equipment industry is now in its very predictable fall busy season driven by pre-holiday inventory buildup of consumer-driven goods. Global electronic equipment shipments were up 5.5% in August 2020 vs. August 2019 (chart 5) and will likely peak in November or December.
We are not out of the woods, but things are looking brighter.