Air Freight News

Taiwan’s January export orders jump 49%, beating estimates

Overseas orders placed with Taiwanese exporters surged by the most in 11 years in January as global demand for semiconductors shows no sign of abating.

Export orders rose 49.3% to $52.7 billion in January, Taiwan’s Ministry of Economic Affairs said Wednesday. That was the biggest increase since January 2010 and compares to a median estimate of 45% in a Bloomberg survey of economists.

The increase marks a third straight month of strong, double-digit growth and the 11th monthly increase for export orders as manufacturers of everything from smartphones to autos scramble to secure a stable supply of semiconductors. The ministry expects orders to rise between 43% and 48.2% in February.

Officials from the U.S., Japan and Europe have sought the Taiwanese government’s help in recent weeks to resolve the chip shortage that’s hindering their automotive manufacturing. The world’s largest contract chipmaker, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., plans to increase capital expenditure this year to as much as $28 billion to help address the shortage.

The government delivered a bullish economic outlook for 2021 on Saturday, forecasting exports would likely rise almost 10% throughout the year, fueled largely by demand for chips.

Officials also warned however that this may well put further upward pressure on the Taiwan dollar. The currency has appreciated 8.5% against the U.S. dollar over the past 12 months.

Bloomberg
Bloomberg

{afn_job_title}

© Bloomberg
The author’s opinion are not necessarily the opinions of the American Journal of Transportation (AJOT).

Similar Stories

Biden-Harris Administration announces preliminary terms with Micron to onshore leading-edge memory chip production in U.S.

• U.S. Department of Commerce proposes up to roughly $6.14 billion for Micron to expand domestic DRAM chip production in Idaho and New York • Micron’s full vision would create…

View Article
https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/Anthony_Blinken.jpg
Blinken raises US concerns on unfair trade practices in China
View Article
https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/currency.jpg
Dollar wrecking ball forces investors to seek cover in exporters
View Article
https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/FDI_chart.jpg
TikTok ultimatum makes US firms a target for China retaliation
View Article
Colombian steelmaker Paz del Río Bets on tariff hike as China imports surge

Colombian steelmaker Paz del Río is betting authorities will raise import tariffs soon and help return the company to profitability as an influx of Chinese alloy floods Latin American markets.

View Article
https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/solar_panel_production.jpg
US solar makers seek additional tariffs on panel imports from Asia
View Article