The Taiex fell for a sixth day, led by Winbond Electronics Corp (
Rick Hsu, an analyst at Nomura Securities Co. said, "we anticipate quite a sizeable additional supply of chips from March as companies [such as Samsung Electronics Co and Micron Technology Inc] finish their conversion to high-speed memory chips."
AU Optronics Corp (友達光電) advanced on expectations that sales at makers of computer parts will rise as US spending recovers.
The TWSE Index shed 10.92, or 0.2 percent, to 5499.79, paring a 2.2 percent gain. The index has fallen 7.9 percent in the last six trading sessions. Within the index, 323 stocks fell and 159 rose. Shares worth NT$93.1 billion (US$2.7 billion) traded, in line with the six-month daily average of NT$94.3 billion.
Winbond and other chipmakers fell on concern larger Korean and US rivals will boost supply of high-speed memory chips in the second quarter, driving down prices and squeezing profit margins at smaller chipmakers with higher production costs.
Samsung Electronics and Micron Technology account for more than half the computer-memory chip market, while Taiwan's chipmakers account for less than a fifth.
Winbond fell NT$0.50, or 2 percent, to NT$24.50. Powerchip Semiconductor Corp (力晶半導體) fell NT$1.10, or 4.2 percent, to NT$24.90.
ProMos Technologies Inc (
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