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Panasonic to sell its chip unit to Taiwan’s Nuvoton

Loss-making company is going for Us$250mil

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TOKYO: Panasonic Corp said it would sell its loss-making semiconduc­tor unit to Taiwan’s Nuvoton Technology Corp for Us$250mil as the Japanese electronic­s giant struggles to lift its profit amid a lack of growth drivers.

The sale is part of Panasonic’s plans to cut fixed costs by 100 billion yen (Us$920mil) by the year ending in March 2022 by consolidat­ing production sites and overhaulin­g loss-making businesses.

Panasonic has already divested most of its chip business as it lost to more nimble South Korean and Taiwanese rivals, and has shut down or shifted its manufactur­ing facilities to its joint venture (JV) with Israel’s Tower Semiconduc­tor.

Its semiconduc­tor unit currently focuses on designing power-management chips and sensors for smartphone­s, cars and security cameras.

It sold part of the power management chip business to Japan’s Rohm Co this month.

The latest deal includes the sale of the entire JV, which is owned 51% by Tower and 49% by the Panasonic chip unit.

The JV operates three Japanese chipmaking facilities.

Panasonic said the sale would not have any significan­t impact on its earnings.

The value of the deal that Panasonic has announced excludes the amount Nuvoton would pay for Tower Semiconduc­tor’s stake in the joint venture.

Nuvoton, which was spun off from

Winbond Electronic­s Corp in 2008, supplies chips for electronic devices including computers and audio products.

Panasonic has turned its focus away from low-margin consumer electronic­s and bet on businesses that sell to automakers, as well as to corporatio­ns such as factory-owners and firms that automate processes.

But the shift has failed to lift profit at a time when the Us-china trade war has hit industrial purchases and output, and the global car market is contractin­g.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Cost-cutting: The sale is part of Panasonic’s plans to cut fixed costs by 100 billion yen (Us$920mil) by the year ending in March 2022 by consolidat­ing production sites and overhaulin­g loss-making businesses.
— Reuters Cost-cutting: The sale is part of Panasonic’s plans to cut fixed costs by 100 billion yen (Us$920mil) by the year ending in March 2022 by consolidat­ing production sites and overhaulin­g loss-making businesses.

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