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ATTENTION |
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CALL
YOUR SALES REP FOR HARD DRIVE
PRICING AS THE PRICES WILL BE
CHANGING CONSTANTLY |
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Thailand HDD
Production Down for Minimum 56 Days
This is a Press Release edited by
StorageNewsletter.com on Wed,
November 2nd, 2011
Says Iain Bowles from UK supplier
Probrand
Iain Bowles, from Probrand Ltd, a
multi-million pound supplier of
branded computer products (including
Seagate) has been in the IT industry
for several decades and has visited
the main ICT manufacturing
geographies many times in a previous
role as sales and marketing director
at Fujitsu. For example, he has
visited Japan's Tsunami effected
prefecture over 80 times. He is
known throughout private and senior
government circles for his
understanding of the IT supply chain
and cost structures.
As Thailand takes stock of the worst
flooding on record due to the
confluence of high tides over the
weekend, the supply of HDDs is
forecast to hit rock bottom as the
area producing around 70% of the
world's demand is set to be out of
action for 56 days.
And the global impact is forecast to
be massive shortages of this vital
product in the first quarter of 2012
as the disaster hits the supply
chain harder than the Japan Tsunami,
says Iain Bowles.
"At the start of the floods in
Bangkok, the IT industry had four
weeks or 28 days of finished disk
drive stock in the supply chain. If
the rains stop today it will be a
minimum of 56 days before production
can re-start. Thai authorities have
said it will take two to four weeks
to pump out flooded areas and that
is even before any actual clean up
can start," he says.
"In comparison, when the Japan
Tsunami struck, component stock in
the supply chain sat at over 80
days, enabling recovery time before
stock would become depleted. Stock
levels in the supply chain act as a
cushion for supply continuity but in
this case, the HDD stock 'buffer' of
finished products is simply too
small given most plants will remain
under dirty water for some time yet.
"Assuming the floods sub-side as
forecast, the IT industry and IT
buyers will feel the impact of this
event during the first quarter of
2012 and some of the recovery
process will still be influencing
the supply chain into the later part
of the second quarter.
"Global demand for HDDs continues to
grow and last quarter hit 177M
units, which equates to 59M units
per month, and is forecast to hit
180M next quarter. However, the
impact of the floods is expected to
cause a 20M unit shortfall over
demand per month. As a direct result
prices could rise by up to 25% for
hard disks and this will impact
finished products down the line as
well."
Manufacturer status is changing by
the hour but disruption is being
seen at the key HDD producers, which
include Western Digital, Seagate,
Hitachi Global Storage Technologies,
Toshiba/Fujitsu and Samsung
Electronics. Apple, Sony and Toshiba
have all confirmed they believe HDD
shortages will prevail.
Bowles concludes: "Thailand does not
have the same culture or
infrastructure as Japan, so recovery
may be slower than post-Tsunami."
"For manufacturers, I suspect we
will see attempts to move production
to other geographies such as
Malaysia. However, much of the
specialist machinery required to
switch production sites is under
water and cannot be accessed via
flooded roads. This truly is another
very testing time for the global ICT
supply chain and business needs to
be prepared for HDD shortages." |
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