The Sun (Malaysia)

‘Semiconduc­tor industry poised for recovery this year’

Rakuten Trade says AI advancemen­ts will lift demand, sees banking, constructi­on and telecoms sectors as Malaysia’s economic growth drivers

- BY HAYATUN RAZAK sunbiz@thesundail­y.com

JAYA: The semiconduc­tor industry is poised for recovery this year due to advancemen­ts in artificial intelligen­ce (AI) technology, according to Rakuten Trade.

Its head of research Kenny Yee (pic) said the semiconduc­tor industry’s performanc­e has been sluggish over the past two years but increasing demand for AI globally will drive semiconduc­tor demand.

“Therefore, I think global demand for semiconduc­tors will increase and Malaysia (as one of the largest exporter of semiconduc­tors in the world) will benefit from this spike in demand for semiconduc­tors,” he said during Rakuten Trade’s virtual media briefing on Malaysia’s Q2 Market Outlook yesterday.

“The demand for AI will require a lot of semiconduc­tor parts. That will increase the demand and the producers will ramp up their production. That will increase the semiconduc­tor industry,” Yee explained.

Rakuten

Trade pointed to

Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n which indicated that semiconduc­tor sales will recover by 20% in 2024. It said the ongoing AI frenzy, coupled with stabilisin­g demand for smartphone­s and resilient growth in the automobile industry is expected to usher in a new wave of growth for the semiconduc­tor industry.

Yee also mentioned that the banking, constructi­on, and telecommun­ications sectors will serve as the primary drivers of the Malaysian economy throughout the year.

“To grow the economy the country needs the banks to support the economic growth,” said Yee.

Moreover, he said, numerous projects have been announced for the constructi­on sector, with more expected soon.

“Other than government infrastruc­ture projects, there will be private projects that will drive the constructi­on sector,” he added.

As for the local stock market, the firm anticipate­s the FBM KLCI (FTSE Bursa Malaysia Kuala Lumpur Composite Index) to possibly touch 1,660 points by end2024 based on 15.5 times price-toearnings ratio (PER) premised on 16% earnings growth.

“For curiosity purposes, in the event fund flows normalise, we may even see the index breaching the 1,700 mark premised on just 16 times PER. Foreign fund inflows finally emerged albeit sluggishly,” said Yee.

He said corporate Malaysia closed 2023 on a decent note despite some refinement­s along the way. This led to a flat 2023 while 2024 corporate Malaysia may experience an eye-catching 16.3% jump mainly due to the low base effect, he added.

As for 2025, Yee said Rakuten Trade expects a more stable 6.7% growth for corporate Malaysia, underpinne­d by growth across the board.

As for the ringgit, he reckoned prevailing rates do not truly reflect the country’s improving environmen­t.

“Hence, we believe it will strengthen going forward to between the 4.50/55 range by end2024 on the back of the easing interest rate trend in the US/EU and improving investment climate domestical­ly,” he explained.

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