Foxconn and HCL Group Collaborate to Establish Chip-Packaging and Testing Factory in India

Foxconn and HCL Group Collaborate to Establish Chip-Packaging and Testing Factory in India

Taiwanese technology manufacturer Foxconn is partnering with Indian software and engineering firm HCL‍ Group to set ‌up a semiconductor packaging and​ testing venture in India⁢ in a deal ⁣worth​ $37.2 ‌million.

The move, revealed in a regulatory⁢ filing⁣ with Taiwan’s stock exchange, comes about six months after Foxconn — also known as Hon Hai Precision — pulled out of a planned semiconductor fabrication joint venture ⁢with Indian firm Vedanta Group.

Under the terms of the deal, Foxconn’s Hon Hai Technology India Mega Development unit will get a 40% stake in ajoint chip⁢ packaging and testing venturem — known colloquially as ‍OSAT —⁤ with HCL Group.

In a statement, Foxconn said it looks forward to setting up⁤ the ⁣operations ⁤in India ⁤with HCL ⁢Group. “Through this investment, the ⁢partners aim to build an ecosystem and foster supply chain resilience for the domestic industry,”⁢ Foxconn said. The company also will deploy its build-operate-localize, or BOL model, to support local communities in⁤ the region.

Diversifying operations

Foxconn’s largest customer ‍is Apple, for which it fabricates⁣ iPhones and myriad other widely sold products. In ⁣fact, Foxconn is ‍India’s leading manufacturer of ‍iPhones and is responsible for 68% of production.

The deal shows Foxconn trying to⁢ pivot to⁣ new markets as it aims to cement its place in India’s evolving semiconductor ecosystem, said Gaurav Gupta, ‍vice president ‌analyst in Gartner‍ Group’s emerging tends and technologies team.

“Foxconn ​is known more⁢ as an EMS [electronic manufacturing services]/ODM [original design manufacturer] company,‌ and they are trying to diversify,” Gupta said.

Foxconn has gained unwanted publicity over the years due to‌ inhumane working conditions in the Chinese factories ​that produce Apple products — reports that have negatively affected Apple⁢ and raised tensions.

The companies have since started moving production out of China to gain more of a foothold in‌ India. As part ​of⁤ this, Foxconn last year committed to investing $500 million in setting up a⁢ new Apple AirPod manufacturing unit in the Indian state of Telangana.

Changing directions in India

Now, Foxconn⁣ is eyeing an ‍investment in India’s burgeoning semiconductor market, which was buoyed by its previous proposed deal with Vedanta to set⁣ up a chip fabrication ​plant in Gujarat.

The company’s India plans seemed to⁢ go off the rails after Foxconn pulled out, citing a change in the company’s strategy after its initial application and⁤ plan for developing 28-nanometer chips with Vedanta ⁢didn’t go through, an industry analyst ⁤said at the time.

Plans seem back on track now that the company has found a⁣ well-established Indian tech partner in ⁤HCL Group. Moreover, setting up an OSAT ​is a smaller, less ambitious investment than the original Vedanta deal, making it “a low-barrier‍ entry for Foxconn,” Gupta said.

“India has a strong consumer base and with a large population, it is a big market⁤ for electronics, so entering India is…

2024-01-18 01:41:03
Link from www.computerworld.com rnrn

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