Apple Supplier Foxconn Sees Challenges Ahead in China COVID Curbs, Inflation
Apple supplier Foxconn warned that current-quarter revenue for its electronics business including smartphones could slip as growth slowed amid rising inflation, cooling demand and escalating supply chain issues partly due to lockdowns in China.
The Taiwanese firm, the world’s largest contract electronics maker, has grappled with a severe shortage of chips like other global manufacturers, which has hurt smartphone production including for its major client Apple.
While the company reiterated that COVID-19 controls in China only had a limited impact on its production as it kept workers on-site in a “closed loop” system, demand for its products in the country has suffered as people remain shut in. The slowdown has recently been exacerbated with a downturn in major markets due to high inflation and the war in Ukraine.
The predictions reinforce the urgency for Foxconn to reduce its reliance on smartphones and consumer electronics, which make up slightly more than half of its total revenue, and diversify into areas such as electric vehicle (EV) manufacturing which it sees as a $34 billion business by 2025.
“There are many uncertainties in the market at the moment,” Foxconn Chairman Liu Young-way told a post-earnings call, citing the pandemic, geopolitical risks and inflation among them for the year.
“They are presenting quite some challenges to demand and supply,” Liu said.
The slight decline estimated in consumer electronics revenue for the second quarter was due to a higher base last year and before new product launches later this year, he said.
Liu said inflation is hitting demand for lower-end consumer electronics but the impact on the company so far has been limited as most of its products are higher end.
“We are closely watching when inflation will impact mid and high end products,” he said.
The company, formally called Hon Hai Precision Industry Co Ltd, expects overall revenue to be flat for the current quarter and for the full year. It did not provide a numerical outlook, but projected strong growth for its other businesses such as components, computing products and cloud and networking products.
In the first quarter ended in March, Foxconn’s revenue rose 4 percent. Net profit grew 5 percent to T$29.45 billion ($985.48 million) and was largely in line with an average analyst estimate of T$29.76 billion, according to Refinitiv.
In autos, Foxconn said it will develop new vehicles with struggling U.S. EV maker Lordstown Motors Corp. On Wednesday, the Taiwan company said it completed a deal to buy a factory in Ohio from Lordstown for $230 million.
The two companies will also form a joint venture to make vehicles, with Lordstown owning a 45 percent stake and Foxconn owning the rest.
Liu said gross profit margins for assembling EVs are relatively low, similar to its smartphone assembly business. That is why Foxconn plans to develop more profitable EV components such as auto chips and batteries, he said.
“Only in this way can we achieve double-digit gross profit margins.”
Foxconn shares closed 1 percent lower ahead of the earnings release, versus a 2.4 percent drop in the broader market. They have fallen about 2 percent so far this year, giving the company a market value of $48.1 billion.
($1 = 29.8430 Taiwan dollars)
TAIPEI (Reuters)