CONNECT WITH US
Apr 7, 16:08
From components to systems: Ennostar to highlight optical comms, automation tech at Touch Taiwan
As the optoelectronics industry shifts from competition in individual components toward systems integration and higher value-added applications, optoelectronics solution provider Ennostar is focusing on two emerging sectors with long-term growth potential at the Touch Taiwan 2026 exhibition, running from April 8-10: optical communications and sensing, and automation. The company is also integrating its two core technologies of microLED and miniLED with automotive optoelectronics, presenting a comprehensive layout across four high-value application segments.
Dixon Technologies is accelerating its push into display module manufacturing, backed by an INR11 billion (US$118.74 million) investment in a new facility in the Noida–Greater Noida region. The plant, approved under India's Electronics Component Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS), will serve as the company's first dedicated display module fabrication unit and marks a significant milestone in its backward integration strategy.
The annual Touch Taiwan exhibition will take place April 8-10, 2026, featuring over 300 companies from 12 countries across 820 booths. Jim Hung, chairman of the TDUA, highlighted that with the panel industry undergoing a full transformation, half of the exhibitors this year are non-display manufacturers. The event focuses heavily on new business opportunities in silicon photonics (SiPh) and advanced packaging amid the arrival of the "light over copper" era.
Taiwan's panel industry is undergoing a collective transformation, with its two major players adopting distinct technology paths.
Japan Display Inc. (JDI) signed a definitive agreement to sell its Tottori Fab to Yahata Touei Estate K.K., with handover scheduled for September 30, 2026; JDI said the transaction follows its March 2025 production halt and forms part of structural reforms that could influence global automotive display supply and the Japanese manufacturing consolidation industry.
China's late-March audited earnings cycle puts TCL Technology (TCLTech) in focus, with its 2025 results confirming a display panel recovery while exposing rising component cost risks across the supply chain, according to Yicai and Cninfo.
Apple's long-term push into OLED displays is beginning to reshape the competitive landscape for panel makers, opening new fronts even as it consolidates others.
Global TV buyers and manufacturers are facing higher prices and tighter availability after leading brands accelerated panel purchases in the first quarter of 2026 to meet sports-driven demand and absorb rising memory costs. This front-loading kept demand unusually strong despite typical seasonal softness, putting pressure on large-size LCD TV panels and influencing pricing across global markets.
Rising upstream costs and constrained fab capacity are driving increases in LCD monitor panel prices, with April hikes likely as display driver and timing-controller ICs gain. Tight IPS supply and brands' early stocking have exacerbated global shortages, while notebook panel declines have softened as memory and CPU tightness limit price declines.
E Ink Holdings has broken ground on a new production base in Taoyuan's Guanyin Industrial Park. This move could expand the global supply of large-sized electronic paper and support low‑power display adoption worldwide by scaling output, creating jobs, and advancing the company's energy‑efficient, sustainable manufacturing capabilities and investment opportunities globally.
Specialized display maker Data Image is eyeing year-on-year revenue growth in the first half of 2026, with results expected from several product lines. In addition, the company has officially begun projects for drone and unmanned ship control console displays in collaboration with Qisda, with volume shipments expected to begin in the fourth quarter of the year.
More than a decade after Taiwanese display makers were swept up in a global antitrust crackdown, officials in Taipei are again warning of the risks posed by expanding legal reach across borders—this time from China.