Barclays Capital said on Friday that it remains bearish about smartphone vendor HTC Corp’s (宏達電) earnings outlook amid fierce competition in the market, expecting the manufacturer to incur an operating loss in the fourth quarter and a net loss next year.
In a research note, the brokerage said it has maintained an “underweight” recommendation on HTC shares and had lowered its target price on the stock to NT$112 from NT$122.
HTC shares rose 1.5 percent to close at NT$135 on the Taiwan Stock Exchange on Friday, although it reported a quarterly net loss of NT$2.97 billion (US$101.2 million), or NT$3.58 per share, for the third quarter for the first time since the Taiwanese company launched its listing on the main board in March 2002.
The stock staged a technical rebound from its earlier losses caused by the third-quarter results, market analysts said, adding that as HTC shares had been depressed for some time by fears about losses, the results simply eliminated market uncertainty.
HTC missed its third-quarter sales target of between NT$50 billion and NT$60 billion and reported only NT$47 billion in consolidated sales for the three-month period, while incurring NT$3.5 billion in operating loss.
Barclays said that although HTC is planning to launch its new flagship model — the HTC One Max — later this month, the firm will still lag behind its global and Chinese rivals by one to two months in terms of new model launches.
“The sales volume of the HTC One Max for the fourth quarter could reach just 1 million units, as the momentum of the global high-end smartphone market is declining,” the brokerage said.
It said that due to a lack of production scale, HTC is likely to continue to post an operating loss in the fourth quarter, with its operating margin expected to stand at a minus-3 percent.
Barclays said HTC’s shipments for next year are expected to rise to 25 million units from 22 million units estimated for this year, but as the company owns just a 2 percent share in both the global and China markets, it could face some risks in component sourcing and encounter a component supply shortage.
The brokerage said HTC is expected to incur a net loss of NT$0.72 per share next year, a downward revision from an earlier estimate of NT$0.63 in earnings per share.
The New Taiwan dollar is on the verge of overtaking the yuan as Asia’s best carry-trade target given its lower risk of interest-rate and currency volatility. A strategy of borrowing the New Taiwan dollar to invest in higher-yielding alternatives has generated the second-highest return over the past month among Asian currencies behind the yuan, based on the Sharpe ratio that measures risk-adjusted relative returns. The New Taiwan dollar may soon replace its Chinese peer as the region’s favored carry trade tool, analysts say, citing Beijing’s efforts to support the yuan that can create wild swings in borrowing costs. In contrast,
Nvidia Corp’s demand for advanced packaging from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) remains strong though the kind of technology it needs is changing, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) said yesterday, after he was asked whether the company was cutting orders. Nvidia’s most advanced artificial intelligence (AI) chip, Blackwell, consists of multiple chips glued together using a complex chip-on-wafer-on-substrate (CoWoS) advanced packaging technology offered by TSMC, Nvidia’s main contract chipmaker. “As we move into Blackwell, we will use largely CoWoS-L. Of course, we’re still manufacturing Hopper, and Hopper will use CowoS-S. We will also transition the CoWoS-S capacity to CoWos-L,” Huang said
Nvidia Corp CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) is expected to miss the inauguration of US president-elect Donald Trump on Monday, bucking a trend among high-profile US technology leaders. Huang is visiting East Asia this week, as he typically does around the time of the Lunar New Year, a person familiar with the situation said. He has never previously attended a US presidential inauguration, said the person, who asked not to be identified, because the plans have not been announced. That makes Nvidia an exception among the most valuable technology companies, most of which are sending cofounders or CEOs to the event. That includes
INDUSTRY LEADER: TSMC aims to continue outperforming the industry’s growth and makes 2025 another strong growth year, chairman and CEO C.C. Wei says Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), a major chip supplier to Nvidia Corp and Apple Inc, yesterday said it aims to grow revenue by about 25 percent this year, driven by robust demand for artificial intelligence (AI) chips. That means TSMC would continue to outpace the foundry industry’s 10 percent annual growth this year based on the chipmaker’s estimate. The chipmaker expects revenue from AI-related chips to double this year, extending a three-fold increase last year. The growth would quicken over the next five years at a compound annual growth rate of 45 percent, fueled by strong demand for the high-performance computing