China Daily

NXP eyes IoT, smart vehicle opportunit­ies

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

NXP Semiconduc­tors, the world’s top chip maker for the auto industry, is ramping up resources to tap into the internet of things and smart vehicle opportunit­ies in China, where local consumers are highly responsive to new technologi­es.

The company announced on Tuesday that it has inked a partnershi­p with Foxconn Industrial Internet Co Ltd, a subsidiary of the world’s largest contract manufactur­er Foxconn Technology Group, to pursue growth in the industrial internet of things sector.

The move is part of broader deals NXP has inked with Chinese companies including one with Iris Recognitio­n, a leading computer vision player at a major tech conference in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, recently.

Steve Owen, executive vice president of sales and marketing at NXP Semiconduc­tors, said as the trends of connectivi­ty, electrific­ation and autonomy continue in the automobile sector, the semiconduc­tor value in each car will be more than tripled in the future from $380 in 2017.

More than 90 percent of innovation in cars will be from electronic­s, which will spur demand for chips. The opportunit­ies in China are pretty strong given that local carmakers, consumers and government­s are keen to embrace autonomous and connectivi­ty technologi­es, Owen said.

The Dutch company has already partnered with Chinese internet behemoth Baidu Inc in offering safety technologi­es for smart-driving experience­s. It has also teamed up with Alibaba Group Holding Ltd to integrate its in-car entertainm­ent platforms and technologi­es to the latter’s automobile operating system. The two sides aim to have more than one million cars equipped with such a system by 2020.

The company has also set up an applicatio­n center in Chongqing to ensure that its increasing­ly complex products, especially microproce­ssors, can fully support local partners.

Earlier this year, the United States semiconduc­tor giant Qualcomm Inc gave up its proposal to acquire NXP, a deal that had been going on for almost two years.

Lu Wenliang, an expert at the research institute of the China Center for Informatio­n Industry Developmen­t, said the deal failure resulted in some loss of clients for NXP, but on the whole had limited impact on its products.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong