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Jul 14, 16:22
Treading the market slowdown: IT panel demand cools as Taiwan display makers pivot to AI

As early inventory stocking by brand customers winds down, China's 618 Shopping Festival delivers weaker-than-expected sales, and LCD TV panel prices begin to retreat, demand for monitor and notebook (NB) panels is cooling in the third quarter. Despite the slowdown, panel makers remain reluctant to cut prices amid elevated production costs, and IT panel prices are expected to remain flat in July as buyers and suppliers enter a period of pricing negotiations.

The global LCD TV panel market moved into a down cycle in July after prices held flat in the second quarter of 2026. With pre-build demand cooling among brands, sales from China's 618 Shopping Festival coming in weaker than expected, and panel factory utilization gradually recovering, the supply-demand relationship has shifted from tight to loose, dragging down prices across all LCD TV panel sizes and dimming what is usually a peak season in the third quarter.

Chinese display panel and materials companies are tapping capital markets to fund next-generation OLED, oxide and Mini LED technologies, drawing close attention from South Korea's display industry.
Amtran Technology reported a June 2026 consolidated revenue of NT$2.5 billion (US$78.0 million), up 23% from a year earlier, as the Taiwanese display and peripherals maker said its product mix transformation continued to support growth. The company also said that every month in the first half of 2026 delivered year-over-year gains.

Ennostar's planned gain from selling Global Communication Semiconductors shares may help the Taiwanese company return to profit in the second quarter, a development that would matter to investors tracking the wider semiconductor cycle. The transaction also highlights how capital allocation decisions can reshape earnings and cash flow across global chip supply chains.

The quiet death of a display program says more about where Apple is heading than any product launch: the company's ambition to sell an affordable, lightweight successor to the Vision Pro is dissolving into the supply chain, as a key panel effort is shelved and Apple's mixed-reality talent migrates toward AI-powered smart glasses.

Apple's supply chain for OLED display driver ICs (DDI) — the chips that control how a screen's pixels light up — is diversifying, loosening Samsung's exclusive hold on the segment, while a wave of new premium devices, including Apple's upcoming foldable devices, promises to expand the overall market.
Kinko Optical reported June revenue of NT$430 million (approx. US$13.39 million) on July 7, up 5.89% from May and 73.31% from a year earlier.
LED makers Ennostar and Everlight both posted year-over-year, month-over-month, and quarter-over-quarter revenue growth in June and in the second quarter of 2026, as the industry entered its traditional shipment peak season. Ennostar's quarterly revenue reached about NT$6.324 billion (approx. US$197.1 million), up more than 20% quarter-over-quarter, with profits also set to benefit from a NT$1.173 billion gain on the earlier sale of its Miaoli Zhunan plant.

While the overall mobile market outlook for the second half of 2026 is not especially strong, foldable phones are drawing attention because Apple's first foldable phone is finally expected to arrive. Industry watchers broadly believe the move will inject fresh momentum into the foldable phone market, with Samsung Electronics, Google, Huawei, Xiaomi, and other Android brands also expected to join the broader discussion around the segment.

Corning has unveiled an early-stage fiber-to-chip connector concept that could reshape optical packaging if it matures, though the company says the technology is still far from commercial use. GlassBridge is aimed at passive alignment in advanced systems, underscoring the convergence of AI infrastructure, photonics, and packaging.

The rapid expansion of AI applications is redefining what device makers need from display technology.