Apple Supplier IQE to Launch Strategic Review as It Warns of Flat Revenue This Year

Apple iPhones are seen inside India's first Apple retail store during a media preview, a day ahead of its launch in Mumbai, India, April 17, 2023. (Reuters)
Apple iPhones are seen inside India's first Apple retail store during a media preview, a day ahead of its launch in Mumbai, India, April 17, 2023. (Reuters)
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Apple Supplier IQE to Launch Strategic Review as It Warns of Flat Revenue This Year

Apple iPhones are seen inside India's first Apple retail store during a media preview, a day ahead of its launch in Mumbai, India, April 17, 2023. (Reuters)
Apple iPhones are seen inside India's first Apple retail store during a media preview, a day ahead of its launch in Mumbai, India, April 17, 2023. (Reuters)

British semiconductor wafer maker IQE said on Monday it would start a strategic review of its assets and consider a full sale of its Taiwan operations, as it warned that group revenue would not grow this year due to a weaker-than-expected sector recovery.

The Apple supplier had announced in July plans to launch an initial public offering for its Taiwan business on the local stock exchange, while retaining control of the unit, but said on Monday that it was now looking at all options.

Shares of the company skidded 15% to 9.02 pence in early trading. They have dropped about 54% this year.

"We will continue to further optimize our operations, restructuring and right-sizing our business," an IQE spokesperson said.

The company, which last month announced the immediate departure of CEO Americo Lemos, has been navigating a challenging financial environment with a sluggish recovery in the semiconductor industry and the growing significance of supply chain security over cost, amplified by rising US-China tensions.

Its peers, including US-based Apple supplier Skyworks Solutions and Chipmaker Qorvo, have all reported soft quarters and guidance over the quarter.

IQE had earlier expected both annual revenue and adjusted core profit to grow.

IQE, whose 'epi-wafers' are used in the Apple iPhone's facial recognition sensors, said it expects 2024 revenue to be around 115 million pounds ($145.27 million), or flat year-on-year.

An LSEG poll of three analysts had forecast full-year revenue of 132.59 million pounds.

IQE said it expects full year adjusted core profit of at least 5 million pounds. Analysts, on average, had forecast core profit of about 12.5 million pounds, according to the LSEG poll.



Taiwan Tech Giant Foxconn’s 2024 Profit Misses Forecasts 

The logo of Foxconn is on display during the Smart City Summit & Expo pre-event press conference in Taipei, Taiwan, 11 March 2025. (EPA)
The logo of Foxconn is on display during the Smart City Summit & Expo pre-event press conference in Taipei, Taiwan, 11 March 2025. (EPA)
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Taiwan Tech Giant Foxconn’s 2024 Profit Misses Forecasts 

The logo of Foxconn is on display during the Smart City Summit & Expo pre-event press conference in Taipei, Taiwan, 11 March 2025. (EPA)
The logo of Foxconn is on display during the Smart City Summit & Expo pre-event press conference in Taipei, Taiwan, 11 March 2025. (EPA)

Taiwanese tech giant Foxconn reported on Friday a lower-than-expected net profit for 2024 as consumer electronic gadgets underperformed, although demand for its artificial intelligence servers remained robust.

The world's largest contract electronics manufacturer has been moving beyond assembling devices such as Apple's iPhones into areas ranging from electric vehicles to AI servers.

The company said full-year net profit rose seven percent to NT$152.7 billion (US$4.6 billion).

That compares with an average forecast of NT$159.4 billion, according to a Bloomberg News survey of analysts.

Full-year revenue rose 11 percent to NT$6.9 trillion, beating the market forecast of NT$6.8 trillion.

Foxconn, also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry, has been riding a wave of global demand for generative AI in recent years.

The company reported a "strong performance" in its AI server business, with revenue up 150 percent, according to documents released ahead of an earnings call with analysts.

This year would be the "Year of AI", the company said, with shipments increasing in every quarter.

The earnings announcement comes as US President Donald Trump imposed tariffs against major trading partners including China, Canada and Mexico, igniting trade wars and causing markets to fall.

While Foxconn has plants around the world, the bulk of its operations is based in China, which has been hit by 20 percent levies on products shipped to the United States.

Foxconn is building a mega-AI server plant in Mexico, which a local official told Bloomberg recently would be completed in a year despite Trump's tariff threats.

The $900 million assembly plant near Guadalajara will become the world's largest to be powered by Nvidia's GB200 AI chips, Jalisco Governor Pablo Lemus Navarro said.

Foxconn has also been in the spotlight over potential cooperation with Japanese automaker Nissan after its merger talks with rival Honda fell through in February.

Chairman Young Liu said previously that Foxconn was open to buying French auto giant Renault's stake in Nissan and was looking into a cooperation with Nissan, not a merger.

Foxconn has been looking to expand into the Japanese EV market and Liu said last month the company would announce "good news" in EVs within one or two months.