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Taiwan’s UMC sees headwinds, but predicts resilient demand and will raise prices

By Thomson Reuters Apr 29, 2026 | 4:16 AM

TAIPEI, April 29 (Reuters) – Taiwanese chipmaker UMC said on Wednesday that it continues to see resilient market demand despite headwinds from memory chip supply shortages and ​the impact of the Iran war, and it ‌will raise prices from the second half of this year.

• Going into the second quarter, the company expects strong wafer shipments supported by a rebound in demand in the communications segment as well ‌as ​healthy demand across computer, consumer and ⁠industrial markets, UMC said in ⁠an earnings statement.

• “While the current memory supply shortage and the ongoing conflict in the Middle East are creating certain headwinds and market volatility, UMC continues to foresee ​resilient market demand,” CEO Jason Wang said in a statement.

• “We will implement a wafer price adjustment in the ⁠second half of 2026, which will ⁠set up a more favourable position for the ​upcoming 2027. So the pricing reflects both the evolving supply ​and demand environment and the continued investment required ‌to support our customers’ growth,” Chief Financial Officer Chitung Liu told an earnings call.

• United Microelectronics Corp (UMC) focuses on more mature nodes, unlike Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, the world’s ⁠largest contract chipmaker, which is investing big in the most advanced 2 and 1 nanometre technology to power artificial intelligence applications.

• On ⁠Wednesday, UMC reported ‌first-quarter revenue of T$61.04 billion ($1.93 billion), up ⁠5.5% from a year earlier, while net ​income ‌was up 108% at T$16.17 billion.

• UMC’s ​shares have ⁠risen 51% so far this year, outperforming a 36% gain in the broader market. The company’s shares closed down 0.8% on Wednesday ahead of its earnings release.

($1 = 31.5650 Taiwan dollars)

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard and Wen-Yee Lee, Editing by Louise Heavens ​and Joe Bavier)