Off-Prem

Channel

Foxconn’s latest Indian foray is a chip packaging JV with HCL Group

Fending off ransomware at home in Taiwan as it continues diversification into semiconductors


Updated Taiwan’s contract manufacturer to the stars, Foxconn aka Hon Hai Technology Group , has teamed with India’s HCL Group to create a semiconductor assembly and testing facility in India.

“Foxconn looks forward to jointly setting up [Outsourced Semiconductor Assembly and Test] OSAT operations in India with HCL. Through this investment, the partners aim to build an ecosystem and foster supply chain resilience for the domestic industry. Foxconn will deploy its BOL, or build-operate-localize, model to support local communities,” read a Foxconn statement.

OSAT facilities typically package, assemble and tests wafers. The joint project will be Foxconn’s first India-based OSAT.

According to a Taiwan Stock Exchange regulatory filing, Foxconn’s India unit will pay $37.2 million to own a 40 percent stake in the joint venture.

India has in recent years lured more of the semiconductor industry, and tech industry at large, to its shores using tools like the $10 billion India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) to attract OSATs, fabs and other chip-related endeavors.

Foxconn has been amenable to India’s offers, promising to expand in the nation to diversify away from China.

Things have not always gone 100 percent to plan. Foxconn backed out of a $19.5 billion semiconductor and display joint venture with Indian mining and power generation company Vedanta and also saw itself slapped with a tax audit from Beijing last October.

HCL Group has also reportedly applied for India’ subsidies under the country’s Scheme for Compound Semiconductors, where subsidiary HCL Technologies will assist in chip processing. According to an exec in March 2023, HCL Technologies plans to double its semiconductor business over three to four years 2023.

At the time, HCL Group planned a chip wafer fabrication unit for 65 nanometre nodes. ®

Updated to add

In a statement from Foxconn, it said it "looks forward to jointly setting up OSAT operations in India with HCL. Through this investment, the partners aim to build an ecosystem and foster supply chain resilience for the domestic industry. Foxconn will deploy its BOL, or build-operate-localize, model to support local communities."

Send us news
Post a comment

China ramps up semiconductor patents amid US export restrictions

AI innovation and geopolitical tensions push Middle Kingdom filings up 42%

ASML faces turbulence amid stock drop, customer delays

Samsung halts fab orders, deliveries slow, China restrictions continue – but company expects Beijing sales bounce

Uncle Sam extends 25% CHIPS Act tax credit to wafer, solar panel manufacturing

Meanwhile, Infinera snags up to $93M of the dwindling subsidies

US leans on Japan to curb sales of chipmaking equipment to China

Tokyo between a rock and a hard place as Beijing threatens to retaliate

Uncle Sam lays out plans for $825M EUV R&D site in New York

Given the cost of EUV litho machines, the Netherlands' ASML might be the real winner here

Equinix to pad Thai coffers with $500 million investment

Another Asian country declares ambition to be a tech hub

Mature node chip output to surge 6% in 2025

TrendForce reports significant capacity gains as Beijing targets reduced reliance on imported semiconductors

AI's energy appetite has Taiwan reconsidering the nuclear option

Premier indicates possible shift in post-Fukushima policy

Samsung blames 'one-off costs' as Q3 chip profits plummet 40%

Unexpected expenses in semiconductor division overshadow revenue gains

Brit Apple semi supplier IQE's CEO departs amid reshuffle

Big personnel changes happening as semiconductor materials seller looks set to list Taiwan biz in 2025

TSMC blows whistle on potential sanctions-busting shenanigans from Huawei

Chip giant tells Uncle Sam someone could be making orders on the sly

India, Nvidia, discuss jointly developed AI chip

Current capabilities mean local manufacturing is not likely – but a chip tuned to Indian needs could work