Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Tata hires Intel’s Thakur to push chip-making bi

- Varun Sood

The Tata Group has roped in Intel Corp’s chief supply officer and head of chip business Randhir Thakur as a director at its subsidiary Tata Electronic­s in the conglomera­te’s most ambitious bet yet to make chips—increasing­ly the bedrock of the century’s technologi­cal revolution.

Thakur is a semi-conductor veteran who was entrusted by Intel boss Pat Gelsinger to head the American chip maker’s standalone foundry business in March this year. His induction is aimed at helping Tata Electronic­s gain the expertise needed to design and manufactur­e chips, according to people familiar with the developmen­t.

The move comes amid a global shortage of semiconduc­tor chips on account of conflicts with their leading supplier China. In India the automative industry has been a major casualty.

For now, it is not clear if Tata

Electronic­s will make these chips or design them or both, as the company is still in the process of completing a planned $750 million-facility for making electronic­s components in Hosur, Tamil Nadu.

Neither is it clear if Thakur’s appointmen­t on the Board of Tata Electronic­s signals a deeper partnershi­p with the largest chip maker by sales.

Calls and a text message sent to Thakur seeking comment went unanswered.

Nipun Aggarwal, a senior vice president at Tata Sons who oversees strategy and M&A for the steel, infrastruc­ture and defence business, Banmali Agrawala, president, infrastruc­ture and defence & aerospace at Tata Sons, and Ajoy Mukherjee, former HR head at Tata Consultanc­y Services Ltd, are the three other directors at Tata Electronic­s.

“The Group has entered into electronic­s and semi-conductor business and we are taking baby steps,” said an executive at the Tata Group on the condition of anonymity.

Earlier this week, Tata S chairman N. Chandrasek­a said the Group was workin tap into the business offere high-tech manufactur­in electronic­s and also poss semi-conductors.

“India can significan­tly b fit from the geopolitic­al s that we are seeing. At the gr we have already set up a b ness to seize the promis high-tech manufactur­in electronic­s,” Chandrasek­a said.

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