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Oct 28, 2001
According to Victor
Tsan, managing director of the Market Intelligence Center (MIC),
exports of IT products will likely decline by 15% this year. The
MIC's previous forecast showed an 8% decline, while to new downward
moficiation is due to consumer resistance following the recent terrorist
attacks in the US.
The U.S. is not
only the largest buyer of Taiwan's IT products, it is also a major
supplier of high value key components and industrial raw materials
to Taiwan's IT industry. The US annually takes 30 t0 40% of Taiwan's
total IT exports.
The institute said
that obstacles in air traffic would delay delivery of key components
and result in soaring component costs. Beside general deterioration
of the world economy, the worst factor at the moment is the continuously
weakening U.S. consumer confidence in the wake of the terrorist
attacks, while the US economy is already suffering from a general
downturn since two years, having lead to massive spending cuts by
consumers and corporate users.
According to the
MIC, in the first half of this year, the share of the US in Taiwan's
IT exports accounted for 39% of the desktop PC exports; notebook
computers 39,8%; severs 30 to 35%; PC motherboards 22.1%; CRT monitors
38.5%; LCD monitors 21.8%; CD-ROM drives 32.1%; digitral cameras
64.2%; and TFT-LCD panels 30%.
Taiwan exported
2.48 million notebook PCs and 4.68 million desktop PCs in the first
half of this year, PC motherboards 8.05 million pieces; CRT monitors
8.66 million sets; digital cameras 3.15 million units and TFT-LCD
panels 1.2 million pieces.
The MIC had previously
forecast that the IT market would have recovered in the fourth quarter
but has revised this expected due to the WTC incident.
The weakened consumer
confidence may also hurt DRAM an SRAM makers. Leading memory chip
suppliers reported that prices of 128 Mb SRAMs declined to US$1,28
from its previous threshold price of US$ 1,30.
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