Stocks fell yesterday on concerns demand for electronics remain depressed after LG Philips Displays said it will close two factories on in Taiwan as sales dropped.
Asustek Computer Inc (華碩電腦) and other electronic parts makers led declines.
The TAIEX fell 104.66, or 2.2 percent, to 4,739.16, after falling as much as 2.7 percent. Eight stocks fell for every one that rose. Trade yesterday was just off the year's low at NT$28.9 billion (US$840 million).
"We will need to see evidence of an improvement in demand, reflected in lower inventory levels, before the index can begin to make a sustainable move upwards," said Spencer White, the head of research at Merrill Lynch Taiwan Ltd.
The venture between Korea's LG Group and Royal Philips Electronics NV of the Netherlands said Tuesday it will also fire 1,200 workers in Taiwan as falling demand for computers and competition from flat-panel monitors hurt sales.
Electronic parts and computer makers fell after LG Philips, which says it's the biggest maker of color picture tubes for televisions and computers, said it plans to shut the factories at the end of July, putting 1,000 Taiwanese and 200 overseas employees out of work.
Asustek Computer, Taiwan's biggest motherboard maker, fell NT$2.50, or 1.7 percent, to NT$142.50. Hon Hai Precision Industry Ltd (鴻海精密), a maker of connectors and cable assemblies, fell NT$1.50, or 1 percent, to NT$147.50.
Acer Display Technology Inc, a maker of flat panel liquid crystal displays, fell NT$2.10, or 6.9 percent, to NT$28.30. Quanta Computer Inc, a notebook computer maker, fell NT$2, or 1.7 percent, to NT$115.50. Unipac Optoelectronics Corp (聯友光電), a maker of flat panel liquid crystal displays, fell NT$1.50, or 6.8 percent, to NT$20.70.
First Commercial Bank (第一商銀) fell NT$1, or 5.1 percent, to NT$18.80. Taiwan's third-biggest lender by market value said it will pursue a merger with Pan Asia Bank Co (泛亞銀行) after talks for a three-way combination with Dah-An Commercial Bank (大安商銀) stalled. Dah An fell NT$0.15, or 2.4 percent, to NT$6. Pan Asia fell NT$0.04, or 1.8 percent, to NT$2.25.
Lenders dropped on concern the government's efforts to reform the banking system is stymied by its insistence banks should keep lending even as banks try to lower their bad debt. China Development Industrial Bank (中華開發工銀), Taiwan's biggest bank by market value, fell NT$0.90, or 3.3 percent to NT$26.70.
Chinatrust Commercial Bank (中國信託商銀), the second biggest, fell NT$0.90, or 3.7 percent, to NT$23.60. Hua Nan Commercial Bank (華南商銀), the fourth biggest, fell NT$0.70, or 3.5 percent, to NT$19.60.
China Steel Corp (
China Steel said Chairman Kuo Yen-tu (郭炎土) and other executives will visit NKK Corp, Kawasaki Steel Corp, Nippon Steel Corp, Sumitomo Metal Industries Ltd and Kobe Steel Ltd after July 20.
China Steel's new mill would boost its capacity to more than 20 million metric tons a year, from output of 10.3 million tons last year.
United Microelectronics Corp (
An Emirates flight from Dubai arrived at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport yesterday afternoon, the first service of the airline since the US and Israel launched strikes against Iran on Saturday. Flight EK366 took off from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) at 3:51am yesterday and landed at 4:02pm before taxiing to the airport’s D6 gate at Terminal 2 at 4:08pm, data from the airport and FlightAware, a global flight tracking site, showed. Of the 501 passengers on the flight, 275 were Taiwanese, including 96 group tour travelers, the data showed. Tourism Administration Deputy Director-General Huang He-ting (黃荷婷) greeted Taiwanese passengers at the airport and
POSSIBILITIES EMERGE: With Taiwan’s victory and Japan’s narrow win over Australia, Taiwan now have a chance to advance if South Korea also beat the Aussies Taiwan has high hopes that the national baseball team would advance to the World Baseball Classic (WBC) quarter-finals after clinching a crucial 5-4 victory over South Korea in a nail-biting extra-inning game at the Tokyo Dome yesterday. Boosted by three home runs — two solo shots by Yu Chang (張育成) and Cheng Tsung-che (鄭宗哲) and a two-run homer by Stuart Fairchild — the triumph gave Taiwan a much-needed second victory in the five-team Pool C, where only the top two finishers would advance to the knockout stage in Miami, Florida. Entering extra innings with the game tied at four apiece, Taiwan scored
STRAIT OF HORMUZ: In the case of a prolonged blockade by Iran, Taiwan would look to sources of LNG outside the Middle East, including Australia and the US Taiwan would not have to ration power due to a shortage of natural gas, Minister of Economic Affairs Kung Ming-hsin (龔明鑫) said yesterday, after reports that the Strait of Hormuz was closed amid the conflict in the Middle East. The government has secured liquefied natural gas (LNG) supplies for this month and contingency measures are in place if the conflict extends into next month, Kung told lawmakers. Saying that 25 percent of Taiwan’s natural gas supplies are from Qatar, Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) caucus secretary-general Lin Pei-hsiang (林沛祥) asked about the situation in light of the conflict. There would be “no problems” with
MISSION OF PEACE: The foreign minister urged Beijing to respect Taiwan’s existence as an independent nation, and work together to ensure peace and stability in the region Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍) yesterday rejected Chinese Minister of Foreign Affairs Wang Yi’s (王毅) comments about Taiwan, criticizing China as a “troublemaker” in the international community and a disruptor of cross-strait peace. Speaking at a news conference on the sidelines of the Chinese National People’s Congress, Wang said that Taiwan has always been a territory of China and that it would be impossible for it to become its own country. The “return” of Taiwan to China was the natural outcome of the Chinese people’s resistance against Japan in World War II, and that any pursuit of independence was “doomed