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MICROCHIP COMPANIES STUMBLED OVER GOVERNMENT POLICY. In general, one aim of governments in democratic countries is to implement policies that promote solid and sustainable economic growth. Sometimes, a policy change—or the possibility of one—will ripple through financial markets. Last week, we saw two examples of this as companies that have benefited from enthusiasm around artificial intelligence saw their share prices drop sharply when it appeared that U.S. government policy might change.
1. Stricter limits could be imposed on some exports to China. In one case, a potential change in government policy caused the share price of a Dutch company to drop, reported Adam Clark of Barron’s. The company produces lithography machines that are necessary for semiconductor manufacturing. The company’s solid second quarter earnings report was overshadowed by news that President Biden may impose new restrictions on exports to China. Clark reported that the administration:
“…is considering more severe trade restrictions on exports to China if companies…continue selling chip-making machinery to the country. While the [lithography machinery] company is already restricted from selling its most advanced machines to Chinese customers, [the company] still generated 49% of its revenue from China in the second quarter, as buyers looked to stock up on older machinery.”
2. The United States’ relationship with Taiwan may change. In an interview with Bloomberg Businessweek, presidential candidate Donald Trump was asked about the United States’ relationship with Taiwan. He answered, “They did take about 100 [percent] of our chip business. I think, Taiwan should pay us for defense.”
After the remarks became public, the share price of Taiwan’s largest company—the world's largest maker of advanced chips—tumbled, reported George Glover of Barron’s. The share price fell even though the company had beaten quarterly estimates and lifted 2024 revenue projections, reported Jane Lanhee Lee of Bloomberg.
Other chip companies’ stocks moved lower, too, on concerns that a change in U.S. policy could result in new supply chain disruptions. “China’s ruling Communist Party has vowed to ‘reunify’ with Taiwan and has refused to rule out using military force to take back control of the country,” reported Glover.
It can be dismaying when the value of a stock or stock market index moves lower. However, falling share prices sometimes have silver linings. They sometimes create opportunities to invest in companies with solid fundamentals at attractive prices.
Weekly Focus – Think About It
“It's not what you look at that matters, it's what you see.”
―Henry David Thoreau, author
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