Taiwan July export orders unexpectedly slip, outlook mixed

    • Downtown Taipei, with the Taipei 101 building in the backdrop. Export orders, a bellwether for global techology demand, fell 1.9 per cent from a year earlier to US$54.26 billion, Taiwan's Ministry of Economic Affairs said on Monday (Aug 22). Analysts had expected 3.6 per cent growth.
    • Downtown Taipei, with the Taipei 101 building in the backdrop. Export orders, a bellwether for global techology demand, fell 1.9 per cent from a year earlier to US$54.26 billion, Taiwan's Ministry of Economic Affairs said on Monday (Aug 22). Analysts had expected 3.6 per cent growth. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
    Published Mon, Aug 22, 2022 · 05:12 PM

    TAIWAN’S export orders unexpectedly fell in July on weakening demand for technology and continued economic troubles in its largest market, China, and the government said the outlook for tech demand was mixed, though not totally negative.

    Export orders, a bellwether for global technology demand, last month fell 1.9 per cent from a year earlier to US$54.26 billion, the Ministry of Economic Affairs said on Monday (Aug 22). Analysts had expected 3.6 per cent growth.

    July’s drop followed a 9.5 per cent annual expansion in June. April logged the first fall since February 2020, when the pandemic had just begun sweeping the world.

    Orders for telecommunications products in July slipped 0.8 per cent from the year before on the back of weaker end-consumer demand, but also off a high base from last year, the ministry said.

    However, orders for electronic products jumped 8.8 per cent, driven by semiconductor demand for high-end computing, automobiles and other appliances, it said.

    The trend towards working and studying from home has fuelled growth in orders for Taiwanese electronics for more than 2 years, more recently reinforced by a global semiconductor shortage that has filled Taiwanese chipmakers’ order books.

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    The ministry said it expected August export orders to be between 0.9 per cent and 3.7 per cent lower than those of August 2021.

    Looking ahead, it said that new consumer products released in the second half of the year and stock building of these goods – typically ahead of the year-end holiday season in Western countries – could help support export order momentum.

    The ministry added that global inflation remains high, end-consumer demand continues to be weak, there are increased geopolitical risks and the emergence of new Covid-19 strains, all of which are uncertainties pressuring export order growth.

    Woods Chen, head of macroeconomics at Yuanta Securities Investment Consulting in Taipei, said export orders would likely register more falls as the year progressed.

    “What we don’t know though, is just how weak it will get,” he added.

    Taiwanese companies such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing are major suppliers to Apple Inc, Qualcomm Inc and other global tech firms.

    Taiwan’s July orders from China plummeted 22.6 per cent from a year earlier, compared with an annual fall of 14.5 per cent in June. Month-on-month, orders from China fell 9.7 per cent.

    Orders from the United States rose 6.9 per cent from the year before, but at a weaker pace than the previous 13.3 per cent rise.

    Export orders from Europe fell 5.1 per cent, versus an annual expansion of 18.8 per cent in June, while those from Japan rose just 0.1 per cent. REUTERS

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