KEY POINTS
  • Foxconn is best known as the main assembler of Apple's iPhones. But in last couple of years, the Taiwanese firm has made a push into semiconductors.
  • Foxconn agreed last year with Indian metals-to-oil conglomerate Vedanta to set up a semiconductor and display production plant in India as part of a $19.5 billion joint venture.
  • But the joint venture failed, highlighting the difficulty for new players to enter a market dominated by established firms with huge experience and a highly intricate supply chain.

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This month, Foxconn pulled out of its joint venture with Vedanta. The two sides "mutually agreed to part ways," Foxconn said in a statement at the time.

Foxconn is best known as the main assembler of Apple's iPhones. But in last couple of years, the Taiwanese firm has made a push into semiconductors, betting that the rise of technologies like artificial intelligence will boost demand for these chips.

But Foxconn's semiconductor foray has had a tough start, highlighting the difficulty for new players to enter a market dominated by established firms with huge experience and a highly intricate supply chain.

In this article