Taiwan’s Foxconn raises full-year outlook on strong tech demand

Taiwan’s Foxconn raises full-year outlook on strong tech demand


The Foxconn logo displayed on a Foxconn building in Taipei on 31 January 2019. Taiwan’s Foxconn, the world’s largest contract electronics maker, raised its full-year business outlook on Monday thanks to strong sales of smartphones and servers despite concerns of slowing demand due to rising inflation.

Sam Yeh | AFP | Getty Images

Taiwan’s Foxconn, the world’s largest contract electronics maker, raised its full-year business outlook on Monday thanks to strong sales of smartphones and servers despite concerns of slowing demand due to rising inflation.

Like other global manufacturers, the Taiwanese firm has grappled with a severe shortage of chips, which has hurt smartphone production including for its major client Apple, partly due to COVID-19 lockdowns in China.

But the company said in a statement late on Monday that June sales jumped 31% from a year earlier to a record high for the month, thanks to appropriate supply chain management and rising sales of consumer electronics. Smartphones make up the bulk of its revenue.

Foxconn’s better-than-expected June sales come at a time when investors are concerned about slowing tech demand during a downturn in major markets due to high inflation and the war in Ukraine.

Chip stocks across the world tumbled on Friday after memory chip maker Micron Technology forecast on Thursday significantly worse-than-expected revenue for the current quarter and said the market had “weakened considerably in a very short period of time.”

Foxconn said it was optimistic about its business in the third quarter, adding it could see “significant growth” compared with a year earlier.

For 2022, Foxconn said the outlook has improved compared with earlier expectations for no growth, without providing details.

The company, formally called Hon Hai Precision Industry, said it has seen double-digit yearly growth in sales from servers and telecommunications products so far this year.

The company has said that COVID-19 controls in China only had a limited impact on its production as it kept workers on-site in a “closed loop” system.

Analysts at Daiwa Capital Markets in Taipei said in a report demand for servers from U.S.-based cloud service providers helped propel double-digit growth for the sector. They expected Foxconn’s operating profit to grow 12-19% this year.

Morgan Stanley analysts said Foxconn’s upbeat guidance for the third quarter showed that strong demand for cloud servers and iPhone assembly will continue.

The company’s shares rose about 3% in Tuesday morning trade, outperforming the broader market which was up around 1%.

They have dropped nearly 1% so far this year, giving the firm a market value of $46.52 billion.



Source

Nine of the largest pharma companies ink deals with Trump to lower drug prices
World

Nine of the largest pharma companies ink deals with Trump to lower drug prices

President Donald Trump signs an executive order aimed at reducing the cost of prescription drugs and pharmaceuticals by 30% to 80% during an event in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on May 12, 2025, in Washington, DC. Andrew Harnik | Getty Images Several of the largest U.S. and European-based drugmakers inked deals with […]

Read More
Google’s boomerang year: 20% of AI software engineers hired in 2025 were ex-employees
World

Google’s boomerang year: 20% of AI software engineers hired in 2025 were ex-employees

Sundar Pichai, chief executive officer of Alphabet Inc., during the Bloomberg Tech conference in San Francisco, California, US, on Wednesday, June 4, 2025. David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images With the AI talent wars heating up between companies like OpenAI, Meta and Anthropic, one way Google has been competing is by aggressively rehiring […]

Read More
Claire’s new owner Ames Watson feuds with Asia-based suppliers over millions in unpaid debt
World

Claire’s new owner Ames Watson feuds with Asia-based suppliers over millions in unpaid debt

Chris Ratcliffe | Bloomberg | Getty Images Tween retailer Claire’s is facing legal challenges from some of its Asia-based suppliers over millions in unpaid debts as it tries to emerge from a second bankruptcy under new ownership, according to claims the suppliers filed in Hong Kong.  The clash with vendors comes as private equity firm […]

Read More