TrendForce’s latest MLCC research report reveals that uncertainty surrounding the U.S.’ reciprocal tariffs—despite the 90-day grace period—continues to cloud the global economic outlook. Although MLCC suppliers have not been directly affected by the trade war, growing caution and risk aversion among businesses and end markets have disrupted supply-demand dynamics in the first half of 2025. This raises concerns that the typical seasonal boost in the second half may fail to materialize.
TrendForce’s latest “Human-Machine Technology Report” points out that although the 90-day delay on the U.S. reciprocal tariffs announced by the Trump administration in early April 2025 offers temporary relief, it has already triggered lasting shifts in global manufacturing and supply chain strategies. The post-pandemic landscape and geopolitical tensions had already prompted a move away from long, global supply chains toward shorter, regionalized models. The added uncertainty of tariffs is now forcing companies to reassess manufacturing footprints and supply risks as they accelerate the search for resilient strategies.
TrendForce’s latest research indicates that U.S. reciprocal tariffs are likely to drive TV brands to pass rising costs onto consumers through higher retail prices in the second half of 2025, further weakening consumer spending momentum. Meanwhile, China’s “trade-in” subsidy program in late 2024 had already pulled forward some demand, and despite the program’s extension into 2025, it is unlikely to stimulate additional purchases. Consequently, TrendForce projects global TV shipments in 2025 to decline by 0.7% YoY to 196.44 million units.
TrendForce’s latest investigation finds that China’s subsidy policies and rising concerns over reciprocal tariffs are reshaping brand strategies in the panel market, indirectly influencing price trends for panel driver ICs.
TrendForce’s latest research reveals that although the U.S. has granted a 90-day grace period before implementing reciprocal tariffs—offering temporary relief for notebook brands—the broader market remains clouded by policy and economic uncertainty. Brands began frontloading inventory in late 2024, pushing Q4 shipment growth to 5.1%, with 1Q25 seeing a 7.2% YoY increase.