Analysts: Industry Impacts of Western Digital Acquisition of Hitachi Storage

March 8, 2011

On Monday March 7 Western Digital (WD) announced that the company had reached an agreement to purchase Hitachi Global Storage Technologies (HGST) for $4.3 billion in cash and common stock. The deal has already been approved by both companies’ boards and is expected to close in the third quarter assuming regulatory approval.

HGST’s parent Hitachi will retain a 10% stake in the combined company and HGST’s current CEO, Steve Milligan, will be president of the new business reporting to WD president and CEO John Coyne. The merger will impact the HDD industry including component and equipment suppliers and change the landscape for enterprise SSDs.

Biggest in HDDs

From a unit shipment perspective WD and HGST are the largest and third largest manufacturers of hard disk drives (HDDs). Today Seagate remains the revenue leader, thanks to the company’s dominance of the enterprise SSD market. The pending merger will push WD’s revenues ahead of Seagate’s.

WD is already the unit shipment leader, having surpassed Seagate’s unit shipments over a year ago. Combined unit shipments for WD and HGST account for nearly 48% of the world HDD market.

Hitachi GST was formed by the merger of IBM and Hitachi’s HDD units in 2003. After many years of losses HGST turned profitable for most of the last two years. Although the division is profitable, Hitachi was rumored to have been looking to divest itself of its HDD unit for several years. In 2010 and even in 2009 rumors reported that Hitachi was shopping for a buyer for the division with WD mentioned as one of the suitors. WD was also rumored to have been interested in Fujitsu’s HDD business before that company was acquired by Toshiba.

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Objective Analysis Expects Flash Memory Shortage, Higher Prices And SSD Industry To Consolidate

August 13, 2009
Objective Analysis principal Jim Handy sees a viable flash memory business for the near term

Objective Analysis believe SSDs will never reach prices of HDDs

In his presentation at the Flash Memory Summit today, Objective Analysis principal Jim Handy was quite optimistic on the future of the NAND flash memory market; for the near term.

Flash memory market business to remain viable until 2011

Handy pointed to current product shortages and price stability that will probably last until 2010-2011 due to growing demand combined with production and capital investments cutbacks; which is music to the ears for the 5 Flash memory makers left (Hynix, Micron, Samsung, Sandisk, Toshiba) in the market which are still recovering from their deep losses in 2008.

Looking at SSDs, Handy believes this market is ripe for consolidation; which will go from the 171+ Flash-based drive makers of today to just a handful. “Remember that there were 282 companies that used to make disk drives before the market consolidates to about 5 today,” recalls DISK/TREND founder Jim Porter.

Handy also expects SSDs to stay weak in the PC market due to higher costs compare to hard-disk drives and the upcoming launch of Braidwood, the codename for Intel’s update of its Turbo Memory technology, a flash-based caching technology that should improve disk access performance which is scheduled to be featured on mainstream motherboards in 2010.

To add insult to injury, Handy doesn’t see a price crossover between SSDs and HDDs… actually this may never happen.

Here’s a video excerpt of Handy’s presentation:


Analyst: Solid State Drives Will Never Match Hard Disks In Price And Capacity

March 18, 2009

Analyst Jim Handy does not expect prices for SSDs to match HDDs

Last week, Brian Beard, a Samsung executive, went out and predicted that solid state drives (SSD) will soon be as cheap if not even cheaper than hard disk drives.

For now, it looks like a far out shot as currently a 256GB SSD – the highest capacity commercially available – costs around $489 for the Super Talent SSD, versus less than $80 for the equivalent disk drive. That’s 6 times less!

For Jim Handy, Objective Analysis’ analyst covering the Flash industry, the price parity between SSDs and HDDs sounds indeed like a pipe dream.

“Samsung does make both HDDs and SSDs, so these comments should be balanced, but I suspect the HDD side is regretting Brian Beard’s comments right now [Beard is in the SSD group],” said Handy.

However, Beard has a point. If the 60 per cent annual megabyte price decline of NAND continues – versus 40 to 45 per cent for HDDs – it’s just a matter of a few years before the dollar-per-gigabyte price parity is reached.

The problem is that the 60 per cent per year price reduction is not sustainable by cost reductions alone, according to SanDisk’s CEO, Eli Harari.

So what to believe? Here’s what Jim Handy had to say on the issue raised by Beard.

Price parity will never happen as long as HDD prices keep pace with SSD’s

If you ask when an SSD will cost the same as an HDD, well, that has always been the case, as long as the SSD is significantly smaller than an HDD.  If you want to know when an SSD will match the price AND the capacity of an HDD, that is unlikely to occur for at least for another decade, if ever.  HDD price per gigabyte drops at a rate that is between 40 to 50 per cent per year. So it’s keeping pace with SSDs and it’s projected to continue to do that over the long term.

NAND Flash is selling below cost, but it’s bouncing back

Something that many people don’t seem to realize is that manufacturing cost really does limit the speed at which prices can fall.  When the market moves from profitability to losses (during the transition from an undersupply to an oversupply) prices drop very quickly to absorb all the margins.

During this time a 60 per cent price drop is possible – even normal.  Once prices have reached manufacturing costs the fall will slow to match the speed at which costs decline.  For NAND that rate is 40 per cent per year.  We are actually in a market today where NAND has sold below cost, but it’s bouncing back up to cost.

Micron might file an anti-dumping suit against Asian rivals

It is very likely that Micron, in a year or two, will file an anti-dumping complaint against other NAND makers for the period during which NAND was selling for below $2.00/GB, since most manufacturers’ cost is about $2.00 today. The treat of such lawsuits forces NAND (or DRAM) makers to keep their prices above costs.

NAND Flash pricing is very predictable

NAND pricing is actually pretty predictable to anyone who has lived through a number of down cycles in commodity memory markets and has come to understand the very predictable path this pricing follows.


Memory Markets To Grow 20% In 2009, Analyst predicts

December 26, 2008
Jim Handy, analyst, Objective Analysis

Objective Analysis' analyst Jim Handy expects the memory market to rebound in the second half of 2009

Prices for memory chips are rising, in part due to recent production cuts from suppliers like Hynix, Micron and Sandisk/Toshiba.

This could signal a rebound for both the DRAM and the Flash-memory markets which heavily suffered from this year downturn.

Growth to return in second half of 2009

“We have been telling our clients that, baring a collapse in demand from general economic woes, the memory markets could grow 15-20% in 2009, driving low growth for the semiconductor industry as a whole,” says Objective Analysis analyst, Jim Handy.

Handy attributes the return of growth “in dollars” to the fact that capital spending was stopped in late 2007, which usually drives revenue growth 2 years later.


First Toshiba 512GB Solid State Drive Is Too Slow And Expensive, analyst says

December 19, 2008
At $600, Toshiba's 512GB SSD will still be 10 times the price of an equivalent disk drive

At $600, Toshiba's 512GB SSD will still be about 6 times the price of an equivalent disk drive, when it ships in 2010!

In announcing this week a 512GB solid state drive, Toshiba is showing some marketing prowess.

First, because it’s twice the capacity of its fierce Korean competitor Samsung’s best drive. Then, it’s hitting the highest capacity point of any current 2.5-inch magnetic disk drive. And more importantly – and conveniently forgotten by the media – is that the Toshiba drive will not be widely available before the second quarter of next year, at the earliest.

That is, if the Japanese maker doesn’t decide to cut even further its production of Flash memory.

By then, Samsung and others will certainly have also announced their own higher capacity drives; which could happen as early as next month at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

Slow speed and high price are still keeping SSDs off consumer laptops!

The Toshiba 512GB drive has slightly better performance than the current 256GB drive from Samsung with
read/write speeds of 240 MBps/200 MBps versus 220 MBps/200 MBps.

But even if those numbers appear better “in theory” than current notebook drives, they’re still not faster in real life!

“Write speed is the slow spec in an SSD, and sequential writes tend to be a lot faster than small random writes. Unfortunately, most operating systems perform a whole lot of small random writes,” explains Jim Handy, analyst at Objective Analysis. “Lately companies – like Intel and Micron – have been adding DRAM to their SSDs to try to fix this.”

Although Toshiba did not divulge the price for its 512GB SSD, Jim Handy had done the math for us and estimates that it would cost around $600 to a PC manufacturer, while the 256GB version would be about half that.

“But double those numbers for retail. These things are still very expensive!” adds Handy.


Spansion Files Suit Against Samsung Over 10 Flash-Memory Patents; Could Halt Sales Of iPod/iPhone, Blackberry Phones

November 17, 2008
Silicon Valley chip maker Spansion wants to set an example with its suit against Samsung

Silicon Valley chip maker Spansion wants to set an example with its suit against Samsung

Later today, Flash memory-maker Spansion filed a lawsuit against Samsung Electronics seeking to block U.S. imports of over 100 million hit products using the Korean company memory, including iPods, iPhones, BlackBerrys and Sony Ericsson mobile phones.

The Spansion patents named in these lawsuits are related to floating gate technology, which is the foundation for approximately 90 percent of the Flash memory market and a charge-trapping technology, which is expected to replace floating gate technology in the future.

Flash memory companies including Samsung have publicly announced their plans to transition to charge-trapping type technologies for their future generation products.

“Samsung treated Spansion the same way they treated SanDisk – they suddenly stopped negotiating with them.  Must be a new tactic!
Spansion’s response was to look at some key Samsung parts to look for infringement of Spansion patents. They claim to have found several. They now plan to make an example out of Samsung to help other prospective licensees to understand the wisdom of working out a fair deal,” explains Jim Handy, a market researcher at the firm Objective Analysis.

But the odds that the Sunnyvale, Calif., chip maker suit will affect this year’s holiday sales are slim as it will take several months before any decision, especially on an import ban, to take into effect.


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