Foreign investors net sold NT$25.5B (~US$780M) on the Taiwan market for a third consecutive session, trimming PSMC (6770) by 35k lots and Winbond (2344) by 25k lots in the memory segment. They simultaneously rotated into display panels, accumulating a combined 207k lots in Innolux (3481) and AUO (2409), which topped the foreign buy list; proprietary dealers added another 13k lots in the same pair. The TAIEX fell 224 points to close at 46,556, breaking the 5-day MA after an intraday swing approaching 1,000 points.
Why it matters: Single-session institutional flow data capturing a notable memory-to-panel rotation, but no earnings, capex, or contract catalyst is present, making this a positioning signal rather than a valuation-moving event.
Open source articleTaiwan's TAIEX opened up over 600 points on July 6, reclaiming the 47,000 level on estimated turnover of NT$1.07T (~$33B), with TSMC (2330) touching NT$2,500 intraday (+0.82% at open). OSAT names led sectoral gains — ASE Technology (3711) +4%, Powertech +6% — while memory stocks Nanya Tech (2408) and Winbond (2344) each surged over 8%, and display panel makers AUO (2409) and Innolux (3481) both climbed more than half a limit-up. PCB was the pronounced laggard: Taiflex (2383) plunged ~9% near limit-down, Nanya PCB (8046) fell ~8%, while passive component bellwether Yageo (2327) shed over 5% back below NT$1,000.
Why it matters: Intraday market-open summary providing sector rotation and price-move data useful for sentiment gauging, but no discrete stock-moving catalyst (capex, contract award, earnings guidance) is reported.
Open source articleTaiwan's three major panel makers are repositioning around glass-substrate advanced packaging as organic substrates hit physical limits in AI/HPC applications. Innolux (3481) is furthest along—entering proof-of-concept for TGV-based FOPLP on 510×515mm glass panels with an estimated NT$20–30B (~US$620–930M) capex requirement—while AUO (2409) is pursuing a differentiated play via LEO satellite antennas and Micro LED CPO modules. Analysts caution that meaningful revenue contribution from advanced packaging is unlikely before 2028, and with both stocks trading at new-high valuations, advise against chasing; near-term profits remain driven by traditional large-panel pricing.
Why it matters: Named capex commitments and proof-of-concept milestones mark a concrete strategy update for panel stocks, but the 2028 revenue timeline and analyst warnings about stretched valuations prevent this from qualifying as an immediate stock-moving catalyst.
Open source articleTaiwan's TAIEX eked out a 0.08% gain to 46,781 on July 3 while foreigners net-sold NT$77.8B (≈US$2.4B) — a second straight session of heavy outflows — pushing the week's cumulative foreign net selling to NT$141.0B (≈US$4.4B). Both foreign investors and domestic investment trusts coordinated selling in memory stocks: Winbond (2344) and PSMC (6770) were hit by both camps, Nanya Tech (5347) by investment trusts alone, while panel maker Innolux (3481) saw the largest single-name foreign outflow at 57,000 lots. Investment trusts offered a partial offset — their ninth consecutive day of net buying at NT$7.6B — but concentrated purchases in financials and logistics rather than semis.
Why it matters: Coordinated institutional selling of Taiwan memory and display stocks across two investor categories is a meaningful demand-signal for the DRAM/NAND supply chain including Korean peers, but the article contains no discrete earnings, capex, or contract event to qualify as high.
Open source articleIntel and TSMC are accelerating adoption of Fan-Out Panel-Level Packaging (FO-PLP) and glass substrates to handle oversized AI chips (Nvidia Blackwell, Rubin) that exceed traditional reticle limits. TSMC targets VisEra pilot production in 2026 and mass production in 2028H2, with AI/HPC applications expected to represent 46% of the $8B+ global market by 2030. Glass substrates address warping issues in large packages while improving yield; Korean suppliers (Samsung Electro-Mechanics, LG Innotek) are forming JVs with material partners.
Why it matters: TSMC and Innolux are driving a major packaging technology shift with concrete timelines (2028 mass production), but implementation is 18+ months out; Korean companies are forming enabling partnerships rather than leading the adoption curve.
Open source articleApplied Materials surged 10.82% to an all-time high on June 29, driven by accelerating capex from TSMC and memory makers expanding advanced-node capacity. TSMC has scheduled its Q2 earnings call for July 16; the market is watching whether Q2 gross margin (guided 65.5–67.5%) can be revised higher, whether the full-year USD revenue growth target (30%+) will be lifted, and whether the $52–56B capex range will be nudged up. Key TSMC supply-chain beneficiaries flagged include ASE (3711) in advanced packaging, MPI (6223) for 2nm GAA test consumables, and Unimicron (3037) and Innolux (3481) across CoWoS and glass-substrate themes.
Why it matters: Analyst commentary aggregating known TSMC earnings preview metrics and supply-chain positioning; informative for sector mapping but no primary corporate announcement or contract disclosure.
Open source articleAUO (2409) and Innolux (3481) led the Taiwan Stock Exchange by trading volume on June 30 as the broader TAIEX surged 1,500+ points back above 46,000. AUO rose over 8% intraday to NT$33.25, breaking its prior swing high to a fresh 4-year peak with estimated full-day volume exceeding 900K lots; Innolux gained over half its daily limit to NT$71 on ~480K lots. Both moves are tied to technology transformation themes — AUO pivoting into CPO and silicon photonics via Micro LED, and Innolux entering fan-out panel-level packaging (FOPLP).
Why it matters: Stock-price and volume momentum story driven by a broad market rally and technology transformation themes (CPO, FOPLP), not a specific contract award, capex commitment, or earnings catalyst.
Open source articleTaiwan's TAIEX closed at 44,999 (+428 pts) but gains were capped by technical resistance and Middle East tensions; institutional consensus previews TSMC Q3 revenue +7–10% QoQ with gross margin targeting 68–70% ahead of the July earnings call. HBM capacity is described as nearly fully allocated, with tight supply expected through 2027–28, driving valuation re-rating for Winbond (2344) and Nanya Tech (2408). Taiwan's May export orders hit a record ~$89.5 B (+47.2% YoY), with North American hyperscaler AI capex projected to exceed $1 trillion by 2027.
Why it matters: Contains actionable signals—TSMC Q3 earnings preview and HBM supply tightness through 2027—but the source is a promotional investment advisory newsletter, not a primary corporate disclosure or first-hand news report.
Open source articleTaiwan's TAIEX closed up 428 points (+0.96%) at 44,999 on June 29, briefly surpassing the monthly moving average intraday (peak 45,521) before fading on NT$997.5B (~US$30.8B) in turnover. Electronics heavyweights led gains — TSMC +1.28% to NT$2,370, Delta Electronics surged over half the daily limit, MediaTek +0.77%, Quanta +1%; Hon Hai and ASE slipped modestly while UMC was flat. Panel duo AUO (over half limit) and Innolux (+3%) outperformed after Innolux announced entry into FOPLP (fan-out panel-level packaging), while a NT$230B (~US$7.1B) government drone budget approval drove sharp gains in drone and defense names.
Why it matters: Daily market wrap with notable sector catalysts — Innolux FOPLP entry is a packaging technology development and the NT$230B drone budget is a policy catalyst — but no single large capex, major contract, or earnings event for core tracked semiconductor names.
Open source articleTaiwan's TAIEX fell 4% last week after hitting a record 48,219, as foreign investors sold NT$331.2B (~USD 10.5B) in a single week — one of the two largest weekly outflows on record — driven by a hawkish Fed pivot and Korea's circuit-breaker event. Analyst Du Jinlong flags the market structure as abnormal: 'bento stocks' like UMC and Innolux failed to hold, Delta Electronics lost over 20% on the wave, and MediaTek and Yageo both hit limit-down, a pattern he says signals a genuine correction rather than the usual V-recovery. Du models an additional 4,000–8,000-point downside to the 40,000 level, though a minority view holds that AI fundamentals remain intact and the pullback is a routine overbought reset.
Why it matters: Market-wide correction commentary with named stock-level signals — MediaTek and Yageo limit-down, Delta >20% wave decline, record foreign outflows — but no discrete stock-moving corporate event such as earnings, capex, or contract news.
Open source articleInnolux (3481) has updated its Chip-Last/CoPoS technology roadmap, unveiling two new platform variants — CoPoS-R and CoPoS-L — optimized for Chiplets and HPC applications, while confirming active glass substrate co-validation with TSMC and Japanese substrate maker Ibiden. The company's G3.5 glass panel (620×750mm) achieves >95% material utilization vs. ~70–80% for round wafers, and its 10M10P RDL architecture (10 metal + 10 passivation layers) targets TB/s-class HBM interconnects for AI servers. TGV (Through-Glass Via) mass production is guided for 2028–2030, with the next two to three years framed as the critical window for glass substrate commercialization within TSMC's CoPoS platform.
Why it matters: A supply-chain roadmap and validation story — Innolux reveals new CoPoS variants and confirms TSMC/Ibiden collaboration, but no binding contract, capex commitment, or near-term revenue event is disclosed.
Open source articleOriginal: 【量大強漲股整理】台股血腥大屠殺!還會繼續跌嗎?有撿鑽石的機會嗎?
TAIEX fell 1,057 points (-2.2%) to 46,043 on NT$1.45T turnover as foreigners sold a net NT$177.4B amid pre-Micron-earnings risk-off, dragging TSMC, MediaTek, Delta and Hon Hai lower. Money rotated into low-base names: UMC (2303) hit a record NT$185.5 on deeper Intel cooperation reports, Innolux (3481) and AUO (2409) rallied, while Formosa Plastics group (1301/1326/1303/8046) and heavy-electric plays (1503/1519) bucked the sell-off.
Why it matters: Names a concrete stock-moving catalyst — UMC-Intel deeper cooperation report driving 2303 to an all-time high and clear sector rotation into Formosa group and panel makers — beyond generic market commentary.
Open source articleOriginal: 〈日月光股東會〉同時蓋15座廠還不夠 吳田玉暗示:資本支出要再上調
ASE Holdings COO Tien Wu told the AGM that the group is simultaneously building 15 facilities this year — roughly 6 ASE greenfields, 7 SPIL greenfields plus acquired Innolux (3481) sites — and still can't keep up with AI packaging demand, hinting capex may be raised a third time after already jumping from $2B historically to $5.3B in 2025 and $8.5B set in April. The capacity is being built for 2029-2030 demand, signaling sustained multi-year AI back-end tightness that benefits TSMC's advanced-packaging supply chain.
Why it matters: Concrete capex guidance hike (third raise of 2026) from the back-end packaging leader with multi-year demand signal for the TSMC advanced-packaging chain.
Open source articleCounterpoint Research forecasts the global fan-out panel-level packaging (FOPLP) and glass substrate market will exceed $8.1B by 2030, a 1,146% jump from roughly $650M in 2024, with AI/HPC applications driving 45.6% of FOPLP revenue. Taiwan, Japan and China are projected to hold 84.8% of panel-level packaging capacity by 2030, with Japan's glass substrate capex expected to deliver outsized growth. Glass is positioned to displace organic substrates in next-gen chiplet and large AI processor packaging.
Why it matters: Sector-level market sizing and capacity outlook from a third-party research house — directional read on advanced packaging and substrate makers, but no company-specific contract, capex, or earnings catalyst.
Open source articleTAIEX opened down 1,053 points (-2%) to 46,047, breaking below 47,000 after the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index crashed 7.87% overnight. TSMC fell 2.81% to NT$2,420, Delta Electronics -4.57%, ASE -5%+, while UMC bucked the trend +7% on strong May earnings and panel/LEO satellite names like AUO and Innolux hit limit-up on optical communications exposure.
Why it matters: Broad market sell-off driven by overnight SOX crash affects entire TW semi complex but is a macro/tape reaction rather than a company-specific stock-moving event.
Open source articleOriginal: 〈台股盤前要聞〉台積電市值衝上65兆元、DRAM缺貨漲價潮延燒到DDR2
TSMC closed at NT$2,510 (market cap NT$65.09T / ~US$2T) as CoPoS 310x310 advanced-packaging tools begin shipping to its Longtan fab for trial production, with mass production targeted for 2028. Separately, TrendForce sees DDR2 contract prices rising 55-60% in Q2 and another 35-40% in Q3 as Winbond exits DDR2 to reallocate capacity to higher-margin DDR3/DDR4/LPDDR4, tightening legacy DRAM supply.
Why it matters: Concrete CoPoS equipment delivery timeline for TSMC plus quantified DDR2 pricing surge and Winbond capacity reallocation are stock-moving signals across advanced packaging and legacy DRAM.
Open source articleForeign investors net bought NT$68.4B (~US$2.1B) of Taiwan stocks on June 22 as the TAIEX surged 2.75% to a record 47,741, with TSMC (2330) adding 14,300 lots of foreign buying. However, foreigners dumped over 100,000 lots each of Innolux (3481) and Winbond (2344), while net futures short positions hit a record 70,290 contracts — signaling hedged positioning despite the cash-market rally.
Why it matters: Daily flow/market-data story with named TSMC, Innolux, and Winbond flows but no fundamental catalyst — useful supply-demand signal rather than stock-moving event.
Open source articleInnolux (3481-TW) posted April net profit of NT$2.16B, up 26x YoY, with EPS of NT$0.27 — already exceeding the full Q1 result. Gains were driven by higher large-size TV panel prices ahead of the World Cup and recognition of disposal gains from the Tainan plant sale. Peer Hannstar (6116-TW, not in universe) also swung to a May profit of NT$103M.
Why it matters: Strong monthly earnings print for Innolux with one-off disposal gain and panel price tailwind — material for the name but a single-month self-reported figure rather than a sector-wide catalyst.
Taiwan's MOEA confirmed the 3-year 50% discount on water consumption fees expires after fiscal 2025, with full-rate billing notices to be mailed before July 31 to roughly 1,300 large users consuming over 9,000 m3/month — covering semiconductor, chemical, panel and textile industries. Cumulative water savings have reached 75M tons since the levy began in 2023, but foundries and panel makers face higher utility costs from 2026 onward, reinforcing pressure to invest in recycled water and process recovery.
Why it matters: Sector-wide Taiwan regulatory cost change affecting semiconductor, foundry and panel makers — meaningful for cost structure but not an immediate stock-moving event.
Open source articleA Taiwan brokerage note frames TSMC's shift from CoWoS to CoPoS (panel-level) and glass core substrates as a 5-year capex super-cycle peaking 2028-2032, with material utilization rising from 50-65% to 75-95% and AI chip density per panel jumping from ~4 to 9-16 units. Named Taiwan equipment beneficiaries include Sunyne (3583), Gallant Precision (3131), and All Ring Tech (6187) as POR candidates, with ABF substrate makers Unimicron (3037), Nan Ya PCB (8046), Kinsus (3189) and panel makers Innolux (3481), AUO (2409) framed as coexistence (not replacement) winners. Note is commentary/promotional from a Taiwan investment advisory, not a confirmed order or capex announcement.
Why it matters: Sector/roadmap commentary on TSMC's advanced packaging transition with named beneficiaries, but no confirmed orders, capex figures, or earnings catalysts — and the source is a promotional advisory note rather than a primary disclosure.
Open source articleThe TAIEX rebounded over 800 points to retake 44,300 on Jun 9, tracking a US tech bounce and Jensen Huang's remark in Seoul that stocks are now cheap to buy, with full-day turnover seen at NT$1.2T. TSMC (2330) opened +0.44% at NT$2,305, MediaTek (2454) surged over 8%, Delta (2308) rose more than 3%, Hon Hai (2317) and ASE (3711) also advanced, while Innolux (3481) and Asia Vital (3017) lagged with 3% declines.
Why it matters: Broad index-level rebound story with named large-cap moves across TSMC, MediaTek, Delta and Hon Hai, but driven by sentiment (Huang comment + US bounce) rather than a specific stock-moving catalyst.
Open source articleTaiwan's 2025 M&A count rose to a record 148 deals (71 domestic, 61 outbound) even as total value fell ~30% YoY to $11.4B amid no mega-deals, per PwC's 2026 Taiwan M&A White Paper. Outbound deals into Japan reached $2.6B, ~60% of all outbound value, with notable tech tie-ups including Innolux's Pioneer acquisition and Yageo's Shibaura Electronics takeover signaling a structural Taiwan-Japan integration trend in auto and smart-tech.
Why it matters: Sector-level M&A statistics with named deals (Yageo-Shibaura, Innolux-Pioneer) relevant to passive component and display names, but no fresh stock-moving catalyst.
Open source articleForeign investors net-bought NT$60.34B (~US$2B) of Taiwan equities on May 21, the 9th-largest single-day inflow on record, as the TAIEX surged 1,347 points (+3.4%) to 41,368 on AI-driven momentum with turnover hitting NT$1.01T. Buying concentrated on sub-NT$100 laggards led by panel names Innolux (157K lots), AUO (98K) and Hannstar (32K), plus UMC (44K lots) and a reversal to net-buy 13.7K lots of TSMC after 4 sessions of selling; financials dominated the sell side.
Why it matters: Market-flow story showing foreign positioning shift into panel/laggard names and a TSMC buy-reversal — sector-level signal for TW supply chain, not a single stock-moving catalyst.
Open source article