S'pore semiconductor stocks soar, notch weekly surge on boost from domestic, global tailwinds
A buoyant sector outlook, pushback against tariff threats and the opening of a S$123 million facility enabling Singapore to produce the chips were among the developments that could prove favourable for semiconductors.
By late morning, AEM , UMS and Frencken were among the most heavily traded counters on the Singapore Exchange (SGX).
As at 11.21 am, UMS was up 7.9 per cent at S$1.36 with 12.6 million shares having changed hands, as AEM climbed 9.9 per cent to S$1.56 and Frencken advanced 5.7 per cent to S$1.29.
Grand Venture was also up by 1.6 per cent at S$0.95 and Venture rose 1.4 per cent to S$11.50.
On a weekly basis, AEM surged 26.8 per cent from its closing price last Friday, on Jun 20, of S$1.23. UMS was up 12.4 per cent from S$1.21 while Frencken gained 12.2 per cent from S$1.15.
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The launch of the National Semiconductor Translation and Innovation Centre for Gallium Nitride - dubbed NSTIC (GaN) - on Thursday is set to give local semiconductor firms a leg-up.
It comes as part of a broader national plan to uplift the semiconductor sector, which currently accounts for nearly 6 per cent of Singapore's gross domestic product.
At the launch of NSTIC (GaN), Minister-in-charge of Energy and Science & Technology Tan See Leng highlighted that the domestic semiconductor sector has potential to be more competitive globally.
For the month of May, semiconductors recorded the second largest jump in factory output among segments under the linchpin electronics sector, at 3.4 per cent, behind the infocomms and consumer electronics segment which recorded the largest jump of 42.6 per cent.
Earlier in June, semiconductor maker Frencken also announced plans to build a new S$63 million manufacturing facility in Kaki Bukit to scale up its business in Singapore.
On Thursday, semiconductor test solutions provider AEM lifted its revenue guidance for its first half ending June to between S$185 million and S$195 million, from an earlier range of S$155 million to S$170 million, following an unexpected pull-in of orders into FY2025.
Beyond Singapore, semiconductors also look set to see tailwinds.
A Morningstar Equity research report on Friday (Jun 27) noted the global semiconductor sector's upbeat outlook, on the back of booming artificial intelligence demand and recovery from 2024's cyclical downturn.
These factors could offset any tariff-related headwinds that semiconductors face, the report said, as it pointed to chip orders having rebounded from the 'tariff tantrum'.
Moreover, the US President Donald Trump's threats to lay tariffs on imported semiconductors have drawn far-reaching blowbacks from across the globe.
Stakeholders protested the potential move, which threatens to snarl supply lines and raise costs for consumers, given the ubiquity of the chips which are now found in nearly everything from microwaves to smartphones.

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