Compal Electronics Inc (
The gain represented the company's first profit increase in six quarters, with net income advancing 13 percent to NT$1.83 billion, or NT$0.53 a share, from NT$1.63 billion, or NT$0.48, in the previous quarter.
Net sales grew 3 percent quarter-on-quarter to NT$51.7 billion in the second quarter. The company's second-quarter gross margin climbed to 6.2 percent from 5.8 percent in the previous quarter, according to the company.
"We are bullish about the market in the next half of the year and even more optimistic about next year," Ray Chen (
With new models to be mass-produced in the fourth quarter of the year, Compal plans to ship 13 million to 14 million notebook computers next year, an increase of 15 percent to 20 percent from this year's level, Chen said.
As more computer users tend to replace their desktop computers with laptop computers because the rapid development of wireless Internet access gives them more mobility, the growth momentum of notebook computers will remain in the double-digit percentages through 2010, Chen said. By that time, the number of notebook computers will be half of that of desktops, he said.
Shares of Compal remained unchanged from Wednesday and closed at NT$31.45 yesterday on the Taiwan Stock Exchange.
Compal's performance in the second quarter is not bad, and will continue to climb next year with orders poached from its larger rival Quanta Computer Inc (廣達電腦), said Allen Pu (卜正倫), an analyst at SinoPac Securities Corp (建華證券).
The cut-throat notebook price wars, although eating into manu-facturers' profits, also helped to boost sales significantly, Pu said.
As a result of fierce competition, Compal's profit margin is likely to decline next year, therefore the company needs to work harder on cost control to maintain the margin at its current high level, he said.
To gain more market share, Chen said Compal plans to focus more on mainstream products -- which account for 30 percent of total notebook computer shipments -- as well as popular low-cost models that made up 30 percent to 40 percent of shipments.
In addition to notebook computers that account for 80 percent of Compal's sales revenue, the company plans to further expand its communications, Internet applications and TV products, Chen said.
For the first half of the year, Compal shipped 130,000 units of liquid-crystal-display (LCD) and plasma-display-panel (PDP) TVs. The number is expected to reach 300,000 units by the end of the year and 400,000 to 500,000 units next year, Chen said.
Responding to questions about Compal Communications Inc (華寶通訊), a handset division that spun off from the company at the end of June, Chen said margins might rise in the first quarter of next year after new models have hit the market. The imminent boom in third-generation handsets also bodes well for the company, he said.
Napoleon Osorio is proud of being the first taxi driver to have accepted payment in bitcoin in the first country in the world to make the cryptocurrency legal tender: El Salvador. He credits Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele’s decision to bank on bitcoin three years ago with changing his life. “Before I was unemployed... And now I have my own business,” said the 39-year-old businessman, who uses an app to charge for rides in bitcoin and now runs his own car rental company. Three years ago the leader of the Central American nation took a huge gamble when he put bitcoin
TECH RACE: The Chinese firm showed off its new Mate XT hours after the latest iPhone launch, but its price tag and limited supply could be drawbacks China’s Huawei Technologies Co (華為) yesterday unveiled the world’s first tri-foldable phone, as it seeks to expand its lead in the world’s biggest smartphone market and steal the spotlight from Apple Inc hours after it debuted a new iPhone. The Chinese tech giant showed off its new Mate XT, which users can fold three ways like an accordion screen door, during a launch ceremony in Shenzhen. The Mate XT comes in red and black and has a 10.2-inch display screen. At 3.6mm thick, it is the world’s slimmest foldable smartphone, Huawei said. The company’s Web site showed that it has garnered more than
Demand for artificial intelligence (AI) chips should spur growth for the semiconductor industry over the next few years, the CEO of a major supplier to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) said, dismissing concerns that investors had misjudged the pace and extent of spending on AI. While the global chip market has grown about 8 percent annually over the past 20 years, AI semiconductors should grow at a much higher rate going forward, Scientech Corp (辛耘) chief executive officer Hsu Ming-chi (許明琪) told Bloomberg Television. “This booming of the AI industry has just begun,” Hsu said. “For the most prominent
PARTNERSHIPS: TSMC said it has been working with multiple memorychip makers for more than two years to provide a full spectrum of solutions to address AI demand Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) yesterday said it has been collaborating with multiple memorychip makers in high-bandwidth memory (HBM) used in artificial intelligence (AI) applications for more than two years, refuting South Korean media report's about an unprecedented partnership with Samsung Electronics Co. As Samsung is competing with TSMC for a bigger foundry business, any cooperation between the two technology heavyweights would catch the eyes of investors and experts in the semiconductor industry. “We have been working with memory partners, including Micron, Samsung Memory and SK Hynix, on HBM solutions for more than two years, aiming to advance 3D integrated circuit