Automotive Microcontroller Unit (MCU) Industry Report 2023: Chinese MCUs Take the Fast Lane
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Dublin, March 30, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Automotive Microcontroller Unit (MCU) Industry Report, 2023" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

MCU Industry Research: Automotive high-end MCU will still be in short supply, and how OEMs can break the situation.

The publisher has released `Automotive Microcontroller Unit (MCU) Industry Report, 2023`, highlighting the following:

  • Automotive MCU industry (overview, market size, competitive pattern, chip shortage and response strategies, etc.);

  • Application sub-scenarios of automotive MCU (body control, autonomous driving, intelligent cockpit, power and chassis control, central computing and zonal controller scenarios, etc.), major MCU players, product selection, localization, etc.;

  • Key technologies of automotive MCU: development trends of production process (front end and back end), evolution of MCU functional safety, MCU integration and usage modes, etc.;

  • Foreign automotive MCU vendors (product layout, planning, and deployment of new products);

  • Chinese automotive MCU vendors (product layout, planning, and deployment of new products).

The shortage of automotive MCUs will continue, and how OEMs can break the situation.

Although the panic about the severe lack of automotive chips has come to an end, the boom of new energy vehicles has led to tight supply of some automotive MCUs, especially high-end 32-bit MCUs which will be still undersupplied in 2023.

At present, automotive chip IDMs outsource about 15% of their products, mainly MCUs. Despite being IDMs, NXP, Infineon, Renesas and the like still adopt a foundry model in MCU production. For example, NXP which has built its own fabs still outsources 90nm and above products such as i.MXRT1170, a 28nm high specification MCU that needs to be fabricated by a foundry.

In terms of foundries, TSMC manufactures about 70% of automotive MCU products, and is also working to expand its 28nm mature process capacity in Nanjing of China and Japan. All major vendors are trying hard to expand their capacity. Yet from the capacity expansion plans of TSMC and major MCU vendors, it can be seen that a still limited amount of new MCU capacity of major IDMs and wafer foundries will be released in the short term.

The shortage and higher price of automotive MCU not only push up the cost of OEMs but bring about reduced vehicle production. OEMs therefore hope to establish a safer chip supply chain system.

OEMs seek tight bonds with MCU vendors to achieve chip standardization and supply chain safety.

Volkswagen: in July 2022, Volkswagen's software company CARIAD forged a tight bond with STMicroelectronics (ST) to jointly develop automotive chips, which will be fabricated by the wafer foundry TSMC. The customized chips will be expanded on the basis of ST's Stellar MCU family architecture. In the future, all the Tier 1 suppliers of Volkswagen Group will only use the chips co-developed by both companies (AU1 family), or ST's Stellar family standard MCUs.