Apple supplier Foxconn warns components shortage to last until 2022
over 4 years in The Irish Times
The global shortage of electronics components is worsening and is expected to last until next year, Apple supplier Foxconn has said, suggesting the shortfall squeezing global carmakers is starting to be felt by leading technology brands.
“In the first two months of the first quarter, the impact [of the shortage] was not so palpable, but we are gradually seeing that change,” Young Liu, Foxconn chair, told investors on an earnings call on Tuesday.
He added that the shortage would persist until 2022, quoting research reports from analysts.
Foxconn, which is listed on the Taiwan Stock Exchange under the name Hon Hai Precision Industry, is the world’s largest contract electronics manufacturer. The fact that it assembles electronics gadgets and makes components for all of the leading tech brands globally makes it a bellwether for trends in consumer electronics manufacturing.
Its assessment follows a warning from Samsung Electronics, one of the world’s largest technology companies, about a “serious imbalance” in global chip demand and supply two weeks ago.
Order volumes
Liu said that since Foxconn’s customers were among the leading companies in the electronics industry with the largest order volumes, they were suffering less from the shortage than some smaller peers.
Foxconn would not be able to fulfil less than 10 per cent of its orders because of the component shortage, he said.
“His comments are interesting because previously some PC companies suggested that the situation may be improving, but he appears to say the opposite,” said Patrick Chen, head of Taiwan research at CLSA, a brokerage.
Chen added that the components worst affected by the shortage included analogue integrated circuits (ICs), including those for display drivers and power management. Displays themselves, especially for notebook computers, have also been hit.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2021