Asustek expects weak Q2 PC shipments – ????

0
733

Asustek Computer Inc (??) yesterday reported a 14 percent sequential decline in net profit to NT$10.43 billion (US$351.1 million) last quarter and forecast that Chinese lockdowns and geopolitical risks in Europe would reduce its PC shipments by 10 percent this quarter.
Shipments of PC-related components, including motherboards and graphics cards, are expected to dip by between 10 and 15 percent sequentially this quarter, the company said.
PCs accounted for 66 percent of Asustek’s total revenue last quarter, while components contributed 33 percent, company data showed.
Photo: CNA
The company, headquartered in Taipei’s Beitou District (??), also factored in the impact from rising inflation, logistics snarls and flagging consumption prospects.
“The impact of the Russia-Ukraine war is spreading to other countries in Europe due to [rising] energy prices,”Asustek co-CEO Samsun Hu (???) told an online investors’ conference in Taipei. “In some European countries, electricity bills have surged three times, which is squeezing demand for PCs and other goods. We saw weakening PC momentum in Europe in the past two months.”
COVID-19 restrictions in China, surging inflation and monetary tightening in the US are also dampening demand for PCs, Hu said.
To stimulate demand, Asustek is in discussion with its CPU suppliers and retail partners to launch promotional campaigns, Hu said.
Commenting on key component supply constraints, Hu said chip supply has improved.
With China stubbornly sticking to its “zero COVID-19” policy, shortages of precision electronics and modules have overtaken chips to become the new “gating items,” Hu said.
Asustek said it is cautiously optimistic about the second half of the year, when shipments could pick up due to back-to-school purchases, pandemic-related pent-up demand and the year-end holiday shopping spree.
The company kept its key financial targets for this year unchanged, except for a short-term dip in the current quarter, saying that revenue would increase more than 10 percent annually this year and operating margin would be above 6 percent.
Net profit last quarter fell 14 percent quarter-on-quarter from NT$12.06 billion.
On an annual basis, it expanded 7 percent from NT$979 million.
Earnings per share fell to NT$14 from NT$16.2 in the prior quarter, but rose from NT$13.2 a year earlier.
Operating margin fell to 7.87 percent, compared with 8.69 percent in the previous quarter and 10.69 percent in the same period last year.
To recruit and retain talent, Asustek said it plans to raise employee pay in the first half of the year.
In addition, the company is looking at setting up an employee stock ownership trust this year at the earliest, it said.
China has ordered central government agencies and state-backed corporations to replace foreign-branded personal computers with domestic alternatives within two years, marking one of Beijing’s most aggressive efforts to eradicate key overseas technology from within sensitive institutions. Staff were asked after the week-long International Workers’ Day break, from last Saturday to Wednesday, to turn in foreign PCs for local alternatives that use operating software developed domestically, people familiar with the plan said. The exercise, which was mandated by central government authorities, is eventually to replace about 50 million computers within the government, and more in state-connected firms, the sources said. The decision advances
US Federal Reserve hikes, decades-high inflation and COVID-19 lockdowns in China are only adding to investor bets that Southeast Asia’s stock markets could be one of the best places to park their money right now. Buyers are touting an economic reopening and the region’s attraction as a hedge against higher commodity prices, which is helping the MSCI ASEAN Index break out of a three-year relative downtrend versus its global peer. Foreign funds have been net buying Southeast Asia shares every month of this year, with total inflows of US$10 billion so far, data showed. “There has definitely been a pickup in interest
Quanta Shanghai Manufacturing City (QSMC, ???????) would seem like an ideal site to implement China’s “closed loop” management system, meant to prevent the spread of COVID-19, that requires staff to live and work on-site in a secure bubble. Sprawled over land the size of 20 football fields, the campus houses factories, living quarters for 40,000 workers and a supermarket. Yet as COVID-19 breached Quanta’s defenses, the system turned into chaos on Thursday. Videos posted online showed more than 100 Quanta workers physically overwhelming security guards in hazmat suits and vaulting over factory gates to avoid being trapped inside the factory amid rumors that
The Indonesian Navy has seized a tanker that was carrying palm oil out of the country in contravention of an export ban, a spokesman said on Saturday. Indonesia, the world’s largest producer of palm oil, prohibited its export last week to rein in skyrocketing domestic prices and shortages. An Indonesian warship on Wednesday intercepted the Singapore-flagged MV Mathu Bhum, which was carrying 34 containers of palm olein, as it headed for Malaysia, navy spokesman Agung Prasetiawan said in a statement. Indonesia produces about 60 percent of the world’s palm oil, which is used in a range of products such as cosmetics and chocolate

source