Arab Times

Foxconn’s head pledges turnaround at Sharp after takeover

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The head of Taiwanese contract manufactur­er Foxconn pledged Saturday to turn around Japan’s Sharp Corp by driving change at the struggling LCD panel and home appliance maker, as the two companies signed a takeover deal after a one-month delay.

Foxconn, also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co, is buying a 66 percent share in Sharp for 389 billion yen ($3.5 billion) in the first foreign takeover of a major Japanese electronic­s company. A giant in contract manu- facturing, Foxconn assembles Apple iPhones and other products for namebrand companies.

The two companies held a signing ceremony Saturday at a large-screen LCD panel factory that they have jointly managed outside the west Japanese city of Osaka since 2012. “I see us as a catalyst for change,” Foxconn founder and chairman Terry Gou said at a news conference following the ceremony. “If we cannot drive change in Sharp, our global competitor­s will eat us alive.” Sharp, a leader in LCD technology and a maker of flat-screen television­s and smart appliances, has been hit hard by fierce price competitio­n for LCD displays.

Kozo Takahashi, the president of the 104-year-old Japanese company, said the infusion of capital from Foxconn would improve Sharp’s financial situation and allow it to “invest in the new growth initiative­s that were suppressed due to the financial challenges we have been facing in recent years.”

 ??  ?? From left, Hon Hai Precision Industry Co Ltd, also known as Foxconn, Vice-Chairman Tai Jeng-wu, Chairman Terry Gou and Sharp President Kozo Takahashi pose for photos after they made a contract in Sakai, Osaka, western Japan on April 2. The leaders of the two companies met Saturday in Japan to sign agreements for Foxconn to buy a 66 percent share inthe 104-year-old Japanese firm.
From left, Hon Hai Precision Industry Co Ltd, also known as Foxconn, Vice-Chairman Tai Jeng-wu, Chairman Terry Gou and Sharp President Kozo Takahashi pose for photos after they made a contract in Sakai, Osaka, western Japan on April 2. The leaders of the two companies met Saturday in Japan to sign agreements for Foxconn to buy a 66 percent share inthe 104-year-old Japanese firm.

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