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Deep & Far Newsletter 2023 ©
Jul (1)
Taiwan IP Updates ¡V July 2023 By Lyndon ¡@ Taiwan Chips Act Sets Research and Development Spending at NT6 Billion The Ministry of Economic Affairs sets the research and development investment threshold at NT6 billion for companies to qualify for tax incentives under recently approved amendments to the Act for Industrial Innovation – Taiwan’s version of the US Chips and Science Act. The announcement was made on May 2, 2023. That sum was slightly less than the government’s original threshold of between NT5 billion and NT10 billion. However, it is much higher than the average annual R & D expenditure of NT3 billion that the nation’s top 100 companies have committed to over the past few years. Another requirement is that companies need to set aside at least 6% of their revenue for R & D in order to receive the tax incentives. The targets of the government’s initiative are those companies in Taiwan that are strategically important to global supply chains. It is also hoped that the program will encourage more overseas Taiwanese businesses to invest back home. Besides semiconductor firms, the program is also applicable to companies that are capable of developing world-leading or innovative and scalable technology in strategic industries such as 5G, electric vehicles and low Earth Orbit Satellites. The new tax incentives will be in place for seven years, starting this year, and the ministry will start accepting applications next year based on their investments this year. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. is widely considered to be on top of what is likely to be a short list of companies eligible for tax breaks as the world’s biggest contract chipmaker plans to allocate about 8% of its annual revenue to R & D.
TSMC Accounts for 30% of Non-Memory Chips Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. accounted for 30% of the sales in the global IC industry last year the company stated in a report to shareholders in May. It was the first time that the company’s revenue made up 30% of the global total and represents a 4% increase. It was also the 13th consecutive year of record revenue showing strong growth. At the end of last year, TSMC began the commercial production of chips that were made using its advanced 3 nanometer process. The company expects the chips to contribute significantly to its revenue in the third quarter of this year. Advanced technologies, meaning 7 nanometers and below, made up 53% of TSMC’s total wafer in 2022, up from 50% in 2021. Net profit last year totaled NT 1.01 trillion, up 70.4% from a year earlier, on the back of robust global demand for emerging technologies, such as automotive electronics, 5G applications and high-performance computing devices. The company said it shipped about 15.30 million 12-inch equivalent wafers last year, up 1.1 million units from a year earlier. The increase came after the company deployed 288 distinct process technologies and rolled out 12,698 products for 532 customers. The chipmaker is developing the more sophisticated 2 nanometer process, which is expected to enter commercial production in 2025, with a trial run scheduled for next year. TSMC said the process would be the most advanced semiconductor technology in the global IC industry in density and energy efficiency. However, this year TSMC has had to face ongoing inventory adjustments in the global semiconductor industry amid weakening demand from end users. In April, TSMC told investors that sales this year would likely fall 1-6% from 2022 in U.S. dollar terms.
Taiwan Promotes the Accelerated Examination Program (AEP) The Taiwan Intellectual Property Office has promoted the Accelerated Examination Program to expedite the examination process of invention applications, allow applicants to experience a swifter examination process and obtain patent rights in a shorter period of time. There are several possible conditions that must be met in order to qualify, as follows:.
New Additions to the Amendments to the Taiwan Trademark Act On May 9, 2023, Taiwan’s Congress passed a draft amendment to the Trademark Act. Some recent additions include:
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