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TSMC foundary growth slows


Monday, July 20, 2015

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. announced that its second-quarter profit growth had slowed to 33% year-on-year as sales fell for the second consecutive period. The biggest culprit: Weaker smartphone demand in China and other emerging markets.

The world’s biggest contract microchip maker in terms of revenue had posted 65% year-on-year growth in the first quarter.

TSMC’s slowdown comes as the company faces increased competition from regional rivals such as South Korea’s Samsung, and as China’s tech industry pushes for the development of domestic smartphone brands and homegrown hardware, including chips. Chips for communication including smartphones accounted for 62% of TSMC’s revenue in the second quarter.

“During the second quarter, we saw demand for smartphones become weaker than we expected due to slower demand in emerging markets and in China for mid to low-end smartphones,” said Mark Liu, co-chief executive officer of TSMC. “This weaker demand is probably due to a strong U.S. dollar to emerging market currencies and ... regional economic conditions.”

Although TSMC predicted an uptick for the third quarter, growth would remain “modest”.

“Slower demand in emerging markets and China, macroeconomic uncertainties, and cautious inventory management (are) behind our modest growth outlook in the third quarter,” he said.

Sales for the three months until June 30 rose 12.2% year-on-year to Tw$205.44 billion ($6.60 billion) but slid 7.5% when compared with the first quarter.

LTSMC expects a slight improvement in the third quarter, forecasting revenue to come in between Tw$207 billion and Tw$210 billion ($6.65 billion and $7.00 billion).

“We expect customer and market demand will improve in the second half,” Liu said. “Growth is expected to come from industrial and automotive (segments), and new iPhone launches and new Android high-end phones.”

Taiwan’s exports contracted 7.1% in the first half of 2015 due to weak overseas demand for electronic products, and falling oil and steel prices. Emergence of Chinese electronics supply chains is also eating into orders from mainland China, according to the government.

TSMC remains tight-lipped about its clients, refusing to officially confirm that it is an Apple chip supplier.

By: DocMemory
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