Scientech Corp (辛耘), which specializes in supplying advanced packaging equipment and reclaimed wafers, has clear order visibility through 2028, benefiting from explosive demand for chip manufacturing equipment used to produce artificial intelligence (AI) chips.
Reclaimed wafers are primarily used for monitoring, testing and calibrating semiconductor equipment rather than producing actual chips, said the company, which distributes semiconductor manufacturing equipment used in lithography, etching, thin-film processes from other brands.
Scientech on Wednesday said it booked as much as NT$13 billion (US$415 million) in contract liabilities, indicating brisk customer demand and potential revenue growth for the next few years after receiving advanced payments.
Photo: Grace Hung, Taipei Times
The growth momentum is fueled by strong demand for advanced chip packaging equipment used in the production of AI chips and high-performance computing (HPC) devices, the company said.
That has led to telescoping equipment delivery lead time to about eight to 12 months, it said. That is longer than an average delivery period of between four and six months for similar equipment.
“Our own-brand capacity has been fully booked this year. We are preparing for next year and the year after,” Scientech vice chairman M.T. Hsu (許明棋) told reporters at a media gathering in Taipei. “Customers’ demand for advanced packaging equipment used in AI and HPC-related applications is very strong. We cannot catch up with their pace.”
The semiconductor industry is growing at such an “overwhelming” pace, which has not previously been seen, the company said. The global semiconductor industry is likely to generate US$1 trillion this year, earlier than the 2030 or 2031 mark estimated by most industry research houses, it said.
To meet customer demand, Scientech is building new factories to expand advanced packaging equipment and reclaimed wafers capacity in Hsinchu County’s Hukou Township (湖口) and in Tainan. By 2028, the company would double its own-brand equipment capacity, it said.
The strong growth momentum is expected to boost its own-brand equipment and reclaimed wafer revenue share to more than 50 percent of its total revenue this year, compared with 40 percent in the past few years, Scientech said.
The company plans to create a new sales and services office in the US by the first half of next year to meet customer demand and align with a major customer’s new advanced packaging fab construction in Arizona, it said.
Scientech’s revenue last year grew 17.37 percent year-on-year to NT$11.37 billion, surpassing NT$10 billion for the first time and setting an all-time high.
Sweeping policy changes under US Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr are having a chilling effect on vaccine makers as anti-vaccine rhetoric has turned into concrete changes in inoculation schedules and recommendations, investors and executives said. The administration of US President Donald Trump has in the past year upended vaccine recommendations, with the country last month ending its longstanding guidance that all children receive inoculations against flu, hepatitis A and other diseases. The unprecedented changes have led to diminished vaccine usage, hurt the investment case for some biotechs, and created a drag that would likely dent revenues and
Macronix International Co (旺宏), the world’s biggest NOR flash memory supplier, yesterday said it would spend NT$22 billion (US$699.1 million) on capacity expansion this year to increase its production of mid-to-low-density memory chips as the world’s major memorychip suppliers are phasing out the market. The company said its planned capital expenditures are about 11 times higher than the NT$1.8 billion it spent on new facilities and equipment last year. A majority of this year’s outlay would be allocated to step up capacity of multi-level cell (MLC) NAND flash memory chips, which are used in embedded multimedia cards (eMMC), a managed
CULPRITS: Factors that affected the slip included falling global crude oil prices, wait-and-see consumer attitudes due to US tariffs and a different Lunar New Year holiday schedule Taiwan’s retail sales ended a nine-year growth streak last year, slipping 0.2 percent from a year earlier as uncertainty over US tariff policies affected demand for durable goods, data released on Friday by the Ministry of Economic Affairs showed. Last year’s retail sales totaled NT$4.84 trillion (US$153.27 billion), down about NT$9.5 billion, or 0.2 percent, from 2024. Despite the decline, the figure was still the second-highest annual sales total on record. Ministry statistics department deputy head Chen Yu-fang (陳玉芳) said sales of cars, motorcycles and related products, which accounted for 17.4 percent of total retail rales last year, fell NT$68.1 billion, or
In the wake of strong global demand for AI applications, Taiwan’s export-oriented economy accelerated with the composite index of economic indicators flashing the first “red” light in December for one year, indicating the economy is in booming mode, the National Development Council (NDC) said yesterday. Moreover, the index of leading indicators, which gauges the potential state of the economy over the next six months, also moved higher in December amid growing optimism over the outlook, the NDC said. In December, the index of economic indicators rose one point from a month earlier to 38, at the lower end of the “red” light.