By Wen-Yee Lee
TAIPEI, July 10 (Reuters) – Taiwanese memory chipmaker Nanya Technology said on Friday it plans capital spending of more than โT$200 billion ($6.2 billion) next year, roughly four times this year’s figure, โamid soaring demand for memory chips as it rides an AI boom.
President Pei-Ing Lee told โan online press briefing that the preliminary expenditure plan aims to help ramp up spending on a new plant, although the budget has yet to receive board approval.
Lee was speaking after Nanya reported unaudited second-quarter revenue of โT$82.55 billion, up 684% from โ a year earlier. The company’s net income surged 1,324% to T$50.19 billion, while gross margin improved to 79.5% from โ a negative 20.6% a year earlier.
Nanya, whose customers include Nvidia, Qualcomm and Google, expects to spend more than T$50 billion this year, Lee said. Total investment โin โthe new plant will reach about T$480 โbillion at full production capacity, โhe added.
AI UNDERPINNING STRONGER LONG-TERM OUTLOOK
The first phase of the new plant is scheduled to reach capacity of 30,000 wafers per month in 2028, eventually expanding to 45,000 wafers per month.
Lee said structural changes driven by artificial intelligence were supporting a stronger long-term outlook for the memory industry, adding โthat the current supply shortage was expected โto persist for several more quarters.
Global memory โmakers, including Samsung Electronics and โSK Hynix, are ramping up investment to meet surging โAI-driven memory demand.
Commenting on South Korea’s โpush to expand semiconductor โproduction, Lee said such efforts were positive for the industry’s broader ecosystem and reflected confidence in market demand.
Shares in Nanya, which has โa market value of โaround $47 billion, were not trading on Friday as Taiwan’s stock โmarket was closed due to a typhoon.
($1 = 32.0680 Taiwan dollars)
(Reporting by โWen-Yee Lee; Editing by Jan Harvey)