TAIPEI, April 24 (Reuters) - Taiwanese chipmaker UMC
said on Wednesday it expected a rise in wafer
shipments in the second quarter as inventory levels for
computing, consumer and communications segments improved, but
warned of muted auto and industrial demand.
WHY IT'S IMPORTANT
Investors have been on edge about chip demand after UMC's
much larger peer TSMC shocked the market last week by
dialling back its expectations for the sector's growth this
year, especially in more mature technologies used in sectors
like autos.
United Microelectronics Corp ( UMC ) focuses on more mature
nodes, unlike Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co ( TSM ) , the
world's largest contract chipmaker, which is investing big in
the most advanced 2 and 1 nanometre technology to power
artificial intelligence (AI) applications.
THE DETAILS
UMC, in a first quarter earnings release, said the
inventory situation for the current quarter for the computing,
consumer and communications segments were improving to a
healthier level, which would bring a rise in wafer shipments.
But it said demand remained muted for the automotive and
industrial segments as the pace of inventory digestion had been
slower than anticipated.
KEY QUOTE
"While we still expect some lingering impact from macro
uncertainties and cost headwinds in the near term, we will
continue to invest in technology, capacity and people to ensure
UMC is ready to capture the next phase of growth driven by 5G
and AI innovations," company Co-president Jason Wang said in a
statement.
BY THE NUMBERS
UMC, whose clients include U.S. company Qualcomm Inc ( QCOM )
and Germany's Infineon, reported a 0.8%
year-on-year rise in first-quarter revenue to T$54.63 billion
($1.68 billion), down 0.6 % from the previous quarter.
Wafer shipments rose 4.5% quarter-on-quarter, while capacity
utilisation edged down to 65% from 66%.
The company also maintained its previous guidance for
capital spending for this year at $3.3 billion.
UMC's Taipei-listed shares have slid 4.6% so far this year,
underperforming a 12.3% rise in the broader market. They
closed up 3.1% on Wednesday before the earnings announcement.
($1 = 32.5650 Taiwan dollars)