BenQ Corp (
"With slow demand in the third quarter, our handsets, LCD monitors and storage products, such as CD-ROMs and DVD-ROMs, all reported decreased production," said Alex Liou (劉維宇), chief financial officer for BenQ.
Between April and June, BenQ posted NT$22.61 billion in sales, a 15-percent drop from previous quarter's NT$26.65 billion, with NT$1.4 billion in net income, a 42 percent decline from the second quarter, it said.
BenQ, which owns about 15 percent of AU Optronics Corp (
AU Optronics made NT$870 million in profit in the third quarter, down almost 78 percent on the second quarter. Last week the company revised its annual net income forecast from NT$14.6 billion to NT$6 billion, citing cut-throat competition in the flat-panel industry.
BenQ's gross profit margin, nevertheless, rose 1.1 percent quarter-on-quarter to 16.2 percent.
"Increased shipments of our own-brand products and greater revenue from higher margin ODM products boosted our profit margin despite the price war among retailers," Liou said.
The CFO anticipates rising sales.
"We expect fourth-quarter sales to grow by around 15 percent [over the third quarter]," Liou said.
BenQ shares traded unchanged yesterday to close at NT$48.3 per share on the TAIEX.
An analyst said the company's target is realistic.
"Banking on a boost from holiday shopping, BenQ's handset and LCD-monitor shipments are set to soar," said Benny Lo (盧志恆), an analyst at Primasia Securities in Taipei.
The company is expected to ship 4 million handsets in the fourth quarter and 15 million units for the full year, Irwin Chen (陳盛穩), a vice president at BenQ, said.
BenQ is major manufacturing partner for Motorola Inc, with more than 80 percent of its shipment going to the US-based high-tech giant.
Fourt quarter LCD-monitor production is also expected to rise 40 percent over the third quarter, Liou said, reasoning that price cuts in LCD panel and LCD monitor markets will boost demand.
Another analyst, however, was skeptical about the company's fourth quarter revenue projections.
"Buyers know that LCD-panel prices will continue to decline," Lin Min-nung (
In terms of handsets, Lin said that BenQ is only making low-profit products.
"The C300 handset that BenQ makes for Motorola is a black-and-white model," he said. "But it's the color-screen handsets that result in higher profit margins."
A proposed 100 percent tariff on chip imports announced by US President Donald Trump could shift more of Taiwan’s semiconductor production overseas, a Taiwan Institute of Economic Research (TIER) researcher said yesterday. Trump’s tariff policy will accelerate the global semiconductor industry’s pace to establish roots in the US, leading to higher supply chain costs and ultimately raising prices of consumer electronics and creating uncertainty for future market demand, Arisa Liu (劉佩真) at the institute’s Taiwan Industry Economics Database said in a telephone interview. Trump’s move signals his intention to "restore the glory of the US semiconductor industry," Liu noted, saying that
On Ireland’s blustery western seaboard, researchers are gleefully flying giant kites — not for fun, but in the hope of generating renewable electricity and sparking a “revolution” in wind energy. “We use a kite to capture the wind and a generator at the bottom of it that captures the power,” said Padraic Doherty of Kitepower, the Dutch firm behind the venture. At its test site in operation since September 2023 near the small town of Bangor Erris, the team transports the vast 60-square-meter kite from a hangar across the lunar-like bogland to a generator. The kite is then attached by a
Foxconn Technology Co (鴻準精密), a metal casing supplier owned by Hon Hai Precision Industry Co (鴻海精密), yesterday announced plans to invest US$1 billion in the US over the next decade as part of its business transformation strategy. The Apple Inc supplier said in a statement that its board approved the investment on Thursday, as part of a transformation strategy focused on precision mold development, smart manufacturing, robotics and advanced automation. The strategy would have a strong emphasis on artificial intelligence (AI), the company added. The company said it aims to build a flexible, intelligent production ecosystem to boost competitiveness and sustainability. Foxconn
Leading Taiwanese bicycle brands Giant Manufacturing Co (巨大機械) and Merida Industry Co (美利達工業) on Sunday said that they have adopted measures to mitigate the impact of the tariff policies of US President Donald Trump’s administration. The US announced at the beginning of this month that it would impose a 20 percent tariff on imported goods made in Taiwan, effective on Thursday last week. The tariff would be added to other pre-existing most-favored-nation duties and industry-specific trade remedy levy, which would bring the overall tariff on Taiwan-made bicycles to between 25.5 percent and 31 percent. However, Giant did not seem too perturbed by the