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EDA Industry Expands into China

Rita Glover, EDA Today, L.C.
March 2002

Semiconductor industry forecasts say that by 2005, a full 25 percent of all semiconductors worldwide will be fabricated in China.  This makes China is a very exciting and growing market opportunity for the electronic design automation industry. 

Any manufacturing business typically seeds industrial clusters.  Therefore, as the semiconductor industry takes root in China, it can be expected to attract peripheral high-technology businesses and move upstream.  Just as has happened in the rest of Asia, specialty IC design work will become available in China at a much lower cost than in other regions.

According to the World Semiconductor Trade Statistics organization (WSTS), worldwide chip revenues will increase by only 2.6% in 2002, after dropping 32.1 percent in 2001.  The only area in the struggling worldwide chip industry that is forecast to show growth is the Asia-Pacific region, which is forecast to grow by 12.4 percent.  All other regions are expected to show flat to slightly lower growth rates.

Taking heed of these forecasts, EDA vendors are expanding their operations in China.  Cadence Design Systems, for example, has announced plans to open up direct sales offices in Shanghai, Beijing, Chengdu, and Shenzhen.

Cadence is also in the process of setting up research and development (R&D) in China this year to tailor and customize products for the local environment.  “That’s the feedback we’ve gotten from customers,” said Kevin Kimball, vice president of corporate marketing at Cadence.  “They are asking for local research and development support to tailor products for their particular needs and requirements.  So while the main product might be developed in the U.S., our Chinese R&D group will translate it and do whatever is necessary to customize it for the local marketplace.”

Historically, Cadence has been the only EDA vendor with an end-to-end design flow, from initial logic design and simulation, through synthesis to back-end IC placement and routing.  But the coming merger of Synopsys with Avant! Corporation (assuming it is approved by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission) will marry the Synopsys strength in the front end market with Avant!’s strong presence in the back-end IC design market.  Since Avant! has been investing much more aggressively in China, this may be a significant competitive factor behind Cadence’s push into the region.

Avant! employs around 300 R&D people in Shanghai, and over 100 in Taiwan.  Since China does not have the history in electronics development and EDA tools development that the U.S. does, EDA companies cannot find local candidates with experience in every needed category.  But there are many things that can be done in China, such as library development, software quality assurance, and customization of graphical user interfaces.  Most of these engineers have been trained in China, and others who were trained and are currently working in other countries are being lured back to the mainland.

EDA companies are leading efforts toward more engineering education in China.  Cadence, for example, is in discussions with Beijing University about developing a software university in China to train engineering talent there.

One challenge is that new engineers who are just getting out of school need to have contact with more experienced engineers.  “Unless an experience base exists in a certain place, or is built up, it’s very difficult to develop enough of a critical mass,” said Dennis Heller, head of U.S. corporate marketing for Avant!.  “That’s just now getting formed in China, but I think it will grow over time, due to the fact that they have a lot of very smart, highly educated engineers, and it is certainly a very attractive business area.”

Avant! had invested in a Chinese semiconductor manufacturing company, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC), but sold the investment six months ago to pay off a US$195 million restitution settlement to Cadence over their widely publicized intellectual property lawsuit.

Synopsys, on the other hand, opened up a direct office in Shanghai back in 1995 after offering a sales and support in China for many years.  The president and chief operating officer of Synopsys, Dr. Chi Foon Chan, was born in Taiwan, raised in Hong Kong, and has been in the United States since 1968.  He speaks Cantonese, Taiwanese, and Mandarin, and travels frequently to the region.  We spoke with him before he left on a trip to China.

“So far, we have been cautiously growing, and building good customer relationships and contacts within China.  We had not yet been doing R&D in that area — it had been mostly sales, support, and design services,” said Dr. Chan.  “Now we are inheriting a very large R&D group in China, and I want to go there and spend time with them.  This is a gigantic step for us.  We will now have three or four hundred people in China and Taiwan.”

Because the yearly salary of an engineer in China is much less than in Silicon Valley — somewhere between one-seventh and one-ninth of a Silicon Valley engineer’s pay — companies will have a great deal of motivation to get work done in China from a cost perspective.  As a result, software companies of all types will look to do much more work in China. 

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