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Foxconn dumps $19.5 bln Vedanta chip plan in blow to India

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Foxconn dumps $19.5 bln Vedanta chip plan in blow to India​

By Ben Blanchard, Munsif Vengattil and Aditya Kalra
July 11, 20238:32 AM GMT

TAIPEI/BENGALURU, July 10 (Reuters) - Taiwan's Foxconn has withdrawn from a $19.5 billion semiconductor joint venture with Indian metals-to-oil conglomerate Vedanta, it said on Monday, in a setback to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's chipmaking plans for India.

The world's largest contract electronics maker signed a pact with Vedanta last year to set up semiconductor and display production plants in Modi's home state of Gujarat.

"Foxconn (2354.TW) has determined it will not move forward on the joint venture with Vedanta," a Foxconn statement said without elaborating on the reasons.''

The company said it had worked with Vedanta for more than a year to bring "a great semiconductor idea to reality", but they had mutually decided to end the joint venture and it will remove its name from an entity that is now fully owned by Vedanta.

Vedanta said it is fully committed to its semiconductor project and had "lined up other partners to set up India’s first foundry". "Vedanta has redoubled its efforts" to fulfil Modi's vision, it added in a statement.

A source familiar with the matter said concerns about incentive approval delays by India's government had contributed to Foxconn's decision to pull out of the venture. New Delhi had also raised several questions on the cost estimates provided to request incentives from the government, the source added.

Modi has made chipmaking a top priority for India's economic strategy in pursuit of a "new era" in electronics manufacturing and Foxconn's move represents a blow to his ambitions of luring foreign investors to make chips locally for the first time.

“This deal falling through is definitely a setback for the ‘Make in India’ push,” said Neil Shah, Vice President of research at Counterpoint, adding that it also does not reflect well on Vedanta and "raises eyebrows and doubts for other companies".

Deputy IT minister Rajeev Chandrasekhar said Foxconn's decision had "no impact" on India's plans, adding that both companies were "valued investors" in the country.

He said it was not for the government to "get into why or how two private companies choose to partner or choose not to".

'IMPORTANT STEP'

Foxconn is best known for assembling iPhones and other Apple (AAPL.O) products but in recent years it has been expanding into chips to diversify its business.

Most of the world's chip output is limited to a few countries, such as Taiwan, with India a late entrant. The Vedanta-Foxconn venture announced its chipmaking plans in Gujarat last September, with Modi calling the project "an important step" in boosting India's chipmaking ambitions.

But his plan had been slow to take off. Among other problems encountered by the Vedanta-Foxconn project were deadlocked talks to involve European chipmaker STMicroelectronics (STMPA.PA) as a tech partner, Reuters has previously reported.

While Vedanta-Foxconn managed to get STMicro on board for licensing technology, India's government had made clear it wanted the European company to have more "skin in the game", such as a stake in the partnership.

STMicro was not keen on that and the talks remained in limbo, a source has said.

The Indian government has said it remains confident of attracting investors for chipmaking. Micron last month said it will invest up to $825 million in a chip testing and packaging unit, not for manufacturing. With support from India's federal government and the state of Gujarat, the total investment will be $2.75 billion.

India, which expects its semiconductor market to be worth $63 billion by 2026, last year received three applications to set up plants under a $10 billion incentive scheme.

These were from the Vedanta-Foxconn joint venture, Singapore-based IGSS Ventures and global consortium ISMC, which counts Tower Semiconductor (TSEM.TA) as a tech partner.

The $3 billion ISMC project has stalled, too, owing to Tower being acquired by Intel, while another $3 billion plan by IGSS was also halted because it wanted to re-submit its application.

India has re-invited applications for the incentive scheme from companies.


 
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Indians always count their chicken before they are hatched, they hyped a lot about this project recently in PDF.
They have been doing that for the last 30-odd years and today India is still the poorest country on the planet except on paper & twitter.
 
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Indians always count their chicken before they are hatched, they hyped a lot about this project recently in PDF.
We weren't hyping it, nor was anyone serious serious about this being successful, yep last years people were hopeful but Foxconn's track record of duping governments regarding semicon fabs has been long.
 
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We weren't hyping it, nor was anyone serious serious about this being successful, yep last years people were hopeful but Foxconn's track record of duping governments regarding semicon fabs has been long.
Can you tell me which large foreign company has been able to operate successfully in India for more than 10 years?
 
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Last month some Indians here told me that by the end of this decade, half of the Iphone will be made in India
 
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Foxconn says it will apply for PLI scheme after $19.5 billion joint venture pullout with Vedanta​



Taiwan-based Hon Hai Technology Group (better known as Foxconn) on Tuesday (July 11) said that it intended to submit an application under the modified Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme for semiconductors, a day after it announced the end of its joint venture (JV) with the Vedanta Group to build a $19.5 billion semiconductor plant in Gujarat.


“Foxconn is working toward submitting an application related to the ‘Modified Programme for Semiconductors and Display Fab Ecosystem,’” the firm said in an FAQ document shared with the media on Tuesday (July 11). Foxconn will require partners as it does not itself possess chip technology as a contract manufacturer. It is unclear if it has found any such partners yet.


 
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They have been doing that for the last 30-odd years and today India is still the poorest country on the planet except on paper & twitter.

Who needs reality when you got twitter and whatsapp? :lol:

These sanghi scumbags think that the whole world is dumb and dumber like their ilk.

Run their foul mouths like cannons and drown out all reality with bluster, BS and noise on social media.

"Mahaan" only in their deluded minds....

Have the worst nutrition level and hunger on the globe, but "win" with useless vanity mars and moon missions.

Cut up your rocket and feed to the hungry in India.

Too uppity to stitch apparel, they will go straight to chip-manufacturing juggernaut!

Education and skill levels be damned - notwithstanding.
 
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Last month some Indians here told me that by the end of this decade, half of the Iphone will be made in India

These people are seriously deluded. Some Indians also said that by 2017, India will be a superpower per IMF. :lol:

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Then the timeline slipped later, and later, and later....

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I don't think these bhakt rats have any clue whatsoever......

By now - it has become a bad joke. A hype to be made money from.

Feed your people first pujaris !!! And build them some decent toilets.

Super power will come in due time, if it ever does.

Let your economy be better than Bangladesh first.

1689611918003.png


Last month some Indians here told me that by the end of this decade, half of the Iphone will be made in India

They can't make basic cellphone items, like screens, Li-ion batteries, cameras. and of course are far from making any System on Chip (SoC).
 
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