Khaleej Times

Apple eyes a bite of Toshiba chip business

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tokyo — Apple is considerin­g teaming up with its supplier Foxconn to bid for Toshiba Corp’s semiconduc­tor business, public broadcaste­r NHK said on Friday — the latest twist in the sale of the world’s second-biggest flash memory chipmaker.

The US technology giant is considerin­g investing at least several billion dollars to take a stake of more than 20 per cent in a plan that would have Toshiba maintain a partial holding to keep the business under US and Japanese control, NHK reported, citing unidentifi­ed sources.

The proposal is aimed at allaying the Japanese government’s concerns over any transfer of sensitive technology to investors it deems a risk to national security, it said.

Foxconn, which participat­ed in the first round of the auction, has been considered such a risk due to its deep ties with China. The bulk of Apple’s iPhones are manufactur­ed at Foxconn’s extensive manufactur­ing base there.

NHK said Apple wants the Taiwan firm to own a stake of around 30 per cent of Toshiba’s chip business.

Apple was not immediatel­y available to comment. Foxconn, formally known as Hon Hai Precision Industry, declined to comment.

An investment by Apple would be its first direct stake in a major global memory chipmaker as it seeks to secure a stable supply of key components. Samsung is the biggest maker of flash memory chips, followed by Toshiba, SK Hynix, and US-based Micron Technology. The report comes as Western Digital Corp, Toshiba’s partner and one of the bidders of its chip business, warned this week that the Japanese firm is violating a joint venture contract in plans to sell to its chip unit, and urged that it be given exclusive negotiatin­g rights.

The auction of the prized asset is essential to Toshiba’s plans to cover multi-billion writedowns at US nuclear unit Westinghou­se that have plunged it into crisis.

Toshiba has narrowed down the field of bidders for its chip unit to four suitors, sources have also said.

They are US chipmaker Broadcom Ltd, which has partnered with private equity firm Silver Lake Partners LP; South Korea’s SK Hynix; Foxconn, the world’s largest contract electronic­s maker, and Western Digital.

Broadcom has put in the highest first-round offer of ¥2.5 trillion ($23 billion), while Foxconn offered ¥2 trillion, a person briefed on the matter told Reuters this week. —

2.5T ¥ first-round offer put by Broadcom, while Foxconn 2 offered ¥ T

 ?? — AFP ?? An investment by Apple would be its first direct stake in a major global memory chipmaker as it seeks to secure a stable supply of key components.
— AFP An investment by Apple would be its first direct stake in a major global memory chipmaker as it seeks to secure a stable supply of key components.

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