Company: AMKR
Filing Date: 2025-10-28
Form Type: 10-Q
Source: 0001047127-25-000190
Chunk: 8

Company: AMKOR TECHNOLOGY, INC.
Filing Date: 2025-10-28
Form: 10-Q
Item: Part I, Item 3
Chunk 8
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 of raw materials, components, equipment and labor;

•inflation, including wage inflation, and fluctuations in commodity prices, including gold, copper and other precious metals;

•our ability to achieve our major growth objectives, including transitioning second-wave customers to advanced packages and increasing our share of the automotive and industrial end market;

•changes in our capacity and capacity utilization rates;

•fluctuations in interest rates and currency exchange rates;

•changes in average selling prices which can occur quickly due to the absence of long-term agreements on price;

•changes in the mix of the semiconductor packaging and test services that we sell;

•fluctuations in our manufacturing yields;

•the development, transition and ramp to high volume manufacture of more advanced silicon nodes and evolving wafer, packaging and test technologies may cause production delays, lower manufacturing yields and supply constraints for new wafers and other materials;

•the absence of backlog, the short-term nature of our customers’ commitments, double bookings by customers and deterioration in customer forecasts and the impact of these factors, including the possible delay, rescheduling and cancellation of large orders, or the timing and volume of orders relative to our production capacity;

•the timing of expenditures in anticipation of future orders;

•changes in effective tax rates;

•the availability and cost of financing;

•leverage and debt covenants;

•intellectual property transactions and disputes;

•warranty and product liability claims and the impact of quality excursions and customer disputes and returns;

•costs associated with legal claims, indemnification obligations, judgments and settlements;

•political instability, conflicts (such as the ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and Israel) and government shutdowns, civil disturbances and international events;

•environmental or natural disasters such as earthquakes, typhoons and volcanic eruptions;

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•pandemics or other widespread illnesses that may impact our labor force, operations, liquidity, supply chain and end-user demand for products which incorporate semiconductors;

•costs of acquisitions and divestitures and difficulties integrating acquisitions;

•our ability to attract and retain qualified personnel to support our global operations;

•our ability to penetrate new end markets or expand our business in existing end markets;

•dependence on key customers or concentration of customers in certain end markets, such as mobile communications and automotive; and

•restructuring charges, asset write-offs and impairments.

In recent years, the U.S. Bureau of Industry and Security has announced new export control regulations applicable to the sale of U.S. semiconductor technology in China (collectively,