MA-tek plans new Japan lab – 台北時報

Materials Analysis Technology Inc (MA-tek, 閎康) yesterday said it plans to build a new laboratory in Hokkaido, Japan, to satisfy customers’ growing demand amid the Japanese government’s push for a semiconductor manufacturing revival.
The laboratory would be the third lab operated by Materials Analysis Technology in Japan.
It also has labs in Kumamoto and Nagoya.
Photo: CNA
Capacity expansions are also planned for the existing fabs to meet customer demand, the company said.
The expansions in Japan aim “to grasp business opportunities deriving from Japan’s semiconductor revival plan and to assist customers to step up research-and-development,” Materials Analysis said in a statement.
The company has been considering setting up a new lab in the northern area of Japan since September last year after Rapidus Corp, a chipmaker backed by the Japanese government, held a groundbreaking ceremony for its first chip manufacturing factory in Chitose, Hokkaido.
The Japanese semiconductor start-up plans to start a pilot production line at the fab in April next year before beginning volume production of 2-nanometer chips in 2027.
In China, Materials Analysis also plans to build its new lab in Suzhou, the fourth in the country, catering to increasing Chinese customers’ demand for chip analysis for third-generation semiconductors that use materials such as gallium nitride or silicon carbide to replace silicon.
Beijing’s push for semiconductor self-sufficiency also drove up demand, the company said.
Materials Analysis Technology said it is seriously evaluating whether to build more labs in Europe or the US, following the steps of its key customers to provide efficient and local services.
Materials Analysis Technology counts chipmakers and foundry companies as its main customers, including Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), Intel Corp and Advanced Micro Devices Inc, providing material and chip reliability analysis.
TSMC plans to construct a new chip plant in Dresden, Germany, in the fourth quarter of this year together with its partners.
The company said it would capitalize on global footprint expansions to drive next-wave growth, as semiconductor manufacturing is becoming increasingly localized due to national security concerns and geopolitical tensions.
At home, Materials Analysis Technology would concentrate on providing analysis services for advanced process technologies and advanced chip packaging technologies.
The company raised its capital expenditures for this year by 17 percent to between NT$1.2 billion and NT$1.4 billion (US$37.1 million and US$43.3 million), compared with NT$1.2 billion spent last year.
About half of the investment would be earmarked for its expansion in Taiwan.
With the new capacity expansions worldwide, Materials Analysis said it expects net profits to grow this year.
Last year, net profits rose 9.38 percent year-over-year to NT$686.21 million from NT$627.37 million the previous year, setting an all-time high. That translated into earrings of NT$10.81, up from NT$10.12 a year ago.
The company’s shareholders yesterday approved the distribution of a record-high cash dividend of NT$9 per common share. That represented a payout ratio of about 83 percent.
DISAGREEMENT: German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has spoken out against the tariffs, as it would affect his country’s auto industry, which benefits from business in China Volvo Car AB has started to shift manufacturing of Chinese-made electric vehicles (EVs) to Belgium as the EU prepares to impose tariffs on China-made EVs, the Times reported. On top of transferring production of Volvo’s EX30 and EX90 models to Belgium, the automaker might also move assembly of some Volvo models bound for the UK, the report said, citing unidentified people. Volvo, which is owned by Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co (吉利控股集團), is seen as the most exposed among western automakers to the potential tariffs, the Times said. Trade frictions between the EU and China have led to a barrage of anti-dumping probes
European Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (ESMC), a subsidiary of contract chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), will hire almost 2,000, from Germany and other European countries, ESMC president Christian Koitzsch said on Monday. At the Taiwan-Europe semiconductor cooperation forum in Berlin, Koitzsch said ESMC would utilize TSMC’s advanced technologies, talent in Europe and good work ethic in Germany to build a world-class talent pool for the semiconductor industry. In August last year, TSMC announced it would team up with Robert Bosch GmbH, Infineon Technologies AG and NXP Semiconductors NV to set up ESMC, in which the Taiwanese partner would hold a
Amazon Web Services (AWS) is planning to invest billions of dollars over the next 15 years to build data centers in Taiwan and create an infrastructure region in the country by early next year, the Amazon.com Inc cloud computing subsidiary said yesterday. The new “AWS Asia Pacific (Taipei) Region” aims to help customers and AWS partners in Taiwan store their content securely and run cloud-enabled workloads with lower latency from data centers in Taiwan, the company said. The project reflects AWS’ long-term commitment to Taiwan and the Asia-Pacific region amid growing demand for cloud services, it said. The move comes as Taiwan has
LAGGING: The chasm between the two firms’ share prices shows the challenges facing China’s largest chip investment fund, which is focused on growing the local sector The share price gap between Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) and China’s biggest chipmaker is almost at its widest in nearly two decades, highlighting the difficulty Beijing faces in building up its domestic chip industry. Bolstered partly by state-of-the-art chipmaking capabilities, TSMC has soared 48 percent this year in Taipei while Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC, 中芯國際) lost 7.5 percent, leaving the gap between the two stocks’ annual performance poised to be the biggest since 2005. The chasm has occurred even as China’s largest semiconductor investment fund, known as Big Fund III, aims to develop the local sector amid US

source

Facebook Comments Box

Trả lời

Email của bạn sẽ không được hiển thị công khai. Các trường bắt buộc được đánh dấu *