Contract chipmaker Powerchip Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp (力積電) yesterday said revenue would gradually pick up in the second half of this year due to restocking demand and an optimized product portfolio in response to growing demand for artificial intelligence (AI) applications.
The Hsinchu-based chipmaker has been adjusting its product portfolios for the past two years with the aim of meeting demand from major customers, who were diversifying from China amid geopolitical risks, Powerchip president Brian Shieh (謝再居) told shareholders during the company’s annual general meeting in Hsinchu yesterday.
Powerchip is also developing a new process technology to make power management chips, vying for business opportunities in the Internet of Things (IoT), AI, high-performance computing and electric vehicle arenas, he said.
Photo: Grace Hung, Taipei Times
“With all those preparations and product line adjustments, we hope the effect will emerge from the second half to the first half of next year after customers reduce their inventory to normal levels,” Shieh said. “With capacity from the new fab in [Miaoli County’s] Tongluo Township (銅鑼) coming online in the second half, we anticipate the company’s revenue would gradually recover.”
Powerchip’s revenue fell 5.3 percent year-on-year to NT$14.5 billion (US$449 million) in the first four months of this year, following a 42 percent annual decline to NT$44 billion last year due to inventory adjustments.
Through product optimization, Powerchip is also looking to fend off rising competition from Chinese chipmakers, Shieh said.
China’s biggest chipmaker, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (中芯), and Nexchip Semiconductor Corp (晶合) are major rivals to Powerchip.
Chinese companies expanded their capacity last year to produce display ICs, CMOS image sensors and power management chips using mature process technologies, but they had to drastically slash prices to compete for market share, Powerchip said.
Powerchip is also developing advanced “wafer-on-wafer” packaging technology as demand for devices such as PCs and smartphones with generative AI applications increases, Shieh said.
Powerchip plans to expand its product offerings to match customers’ demand for “single-level-cell” NAND and high-density NOR flash memory chips used in networking, mobile phones, IoT and computer peripherals, he said.
The company also plans to produce gallium nitride chips by rejuvenating its less-advanced 8-inch fabs, as well as power semiconductors including metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors and insulated gate bipolar transistors, he added.
Powerchip shareholders yesterday approved a proposal not to pay a cash dividend after the chipmaker lost NT$1.6 billion, or losses per share of NT$0.4, last year.
The company also booked NT$10.3 billion in idled manufacturing equipment losses and expenditures of NT$2.4 billion for the opening of the new fab in Tongluo Township.
The company last month said that it was approaching the break-even level last quarter as customers have reduced their inventory of chips used in consumer electronics such as smartphones, PCs and TVs to healthy levels.
Automotive and industrial chips were still in the process of inventory digestion, it said.
The US dollar was trading at NT$29.7 at 10am today on the Taipei Foreign Exchange, as the New Taiwan dollar gained NT$1.364 from the previous close last week. The NT dollar continued to rise today, after surging 3.07 percent on Friday. After opening at NT$30.91, the NT dollar gained more than NT$1 in just 15 minutes, briefly passing the NT$30 mark. Before the US Department of the Treasury's semi-annual currency report came out, expectations that the NT dollar would keep rising were already building. The NT dollar on Friday closed at NT$31.064, up by NT$0.953 — a 3.07 percent single-day gain. Today,
‘SHORT TERM’: The local currency would likely remain strong in the near term, driven by anticipated US trade pressure, capital inflows and expectations of a US Fed rate cut The US dollar is expected to fall below NT$30 in the near term, as traders anticipate increased pressure from Washington for Taiwan to allow the New Taiwan dollar to appreciate, Cathay United Bank (國泰世華銀行) chief economist Lin Chi-chao (林啟超) said. Following a sharp drop in the greenback against the NT dollar on Friday, Lin told the Central News Agency that the local currency is likely to remain strong in the short term, driven in part by market psychology surrounding anticipated US policy pressure. On Friday, the US dollar fell NT$0.953, or 3.07 percent, closing at NT$31.064 — its lowest level since Jan.
The New Taiwan dollar and Taiwanese stocks surged on signs that trade tensions between the world’s top two economies might start easing and as US tech earnings boosted the outlook of the nation’s semiconductor exports. The NT dollar strengthened as much as 3.8 percent versus the US dollar to 30.815, the biggest intraday gain since January 2011, closing at NT$31.064. The benchmark TAIEX jumped 2.73 percent to outperform the region’s equity gauges. Outlook for global trade improved after China said it is assessing possible trade talks with the US, providing a boost for the nation’s currency and shares. As the NT dollar
PRESSURE EXPECTED: The appreciation of the NT dollar reflected expectations that Washington would press Taiwan to boost its currency against the US dollar, dealers said Taiwan’s export-oriented semiconductor and auto part manufacturers are expecting their margins to be affected by large foreign exchange losses as the New Taiwan dollar continued to appreciate sharply against the US dollar yesterday. Among major semiconductor manufacturers, ASE Technology Holding Co (日月光), the world’s largest integrated circuit (IC) packaging and testing services provider, said that whenever the NT dollar rises NT$1 against the greenback, its gross margin is cut by about 1.5 percent. The NT dollar traded as strong as NT$29.59 per US dollar before trimming gains to close NT$0.919, or 2.96 percent, higher at NT$30.145 yesterday in Taipei trading