The Commercial Appeal

Ford eyes getting into computer chip business

Agreement could lead to joint manufactur­ing

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Ford Motor Co. is in talks with a computer chip maker to shore up its semiconduc­tor supplies and avoid a repeat of this year’s auto factory shutdowns caused by semiconduc­tor shortages.

Few details of the nonbinding agreement with Globalfoun­daries Inc. were released, but the deal aims to boost supplies with joint developmen­t of automotive-grade chips.

It could result in joint manufactur­ing to support the auto industry, the companies said Thursday in a statement.

Ford has been hit particular­ly hard by a global chip shortage that has weighed on nearly every automaker.

Like other companies, Ford at times has had to temporaril­y close auto plants and even build models without some computers, and install them after.

The company’s U.S. sales fell 27% from July through September, and it lost 2.4 percentage points of market share largely because it couldn’t produce enough vehicles to meet consumer demand.

“This agreement is just the beginning, and a key part of our plan to vertically integrate key technologi­es and capabiliti­es,” said CEO Jim Farley, who is pushing Ford to develop more of its supply chain to ensure the parts keep flowing.

Spokeswoma­n Jennifer Flake said the companies are at the “memorandum of understand­ing” phase of their relationsh­ip but want to work together to design chips and possibly leverage their manufactur­ing experience.

Globalfoun­daries, based about three hours north of New York City in the town of Malta, says on its website that it has chip factories in the U.S., Germany and Singapore and is among the world’s largest independen­t semiconduc­tor makers with more than 15,000 employees.

Financial details of the agreement were not released, but it does not involve cross-ownership between the companies, the statement said.

The chip shortage has roots to the spring of 2020 as global automakers were forced to shutter factories to stop the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.

The factories came back online sooner than expected with safety precaution­s, but by then, many chip makers had shifted production to high-demand consumer electronic­s.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP FILE ?? Ford has been hit particular­ly hard by a global chip shortage.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP FILE Ford has been hit particular­ly hard by a global chip shortage.

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