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.
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.
LED packaging firm Brightek Optoelectronics completed its factory relocation in 2025 and secured approval from major clients. Brightek general manager CH Tzeng said the company will reduce low-margin products in 2026 and focus on high-value areas including robotics technology collaboration with US customers, boosting infrared (IR) sensor revenue to 20%, and entering the 1.6T high-speed optical communication module market with samples expected in the third quarter. Brightek anticipates double-digit growth in 2026.
The near-eye display market is rapidly recovering from a low point in 2025, driven by an influx of next-generation mixed reality (MR) and smart glasses launches. Industry forecasts point to significant growth in 2026, fueled by major international brands releasing new products and creating key opportunities for Taiwan's display and optoelectronics supply chain.
The US Patent and Trademark Office has rejected an attempt by Tianma Microelectronics to challenge a patent held by LG Display, citing concerns that the Chinese company may be under the influence of a foreign government.
As March nears its end, the smartphone panel market has yet to see a post-Lunar New Year replenishment cycle. With upstream costs rising and end demand softening, overall market conditions continue to deteriorate.
Sony's deal to sell off a majority stake of its television business to rival TCL is reportedly nearing completion. The proposed US$1 billion transaction reflects the long decline of Japan's television giants at the hands of rising Chinese competitors like TCL.
Given the escalating geopolitical tensions and intensifying competition in the global display market, recent developments indicate a significant reshaping of supply chains and pricing strategies across the OLED ecosystem, with ripple effects across smartphones, IT devices, and TVs.
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