Business

Not So Fast! After 2 Southern States Claim Foxconn Is Coming To Them, Taiwanese Manufacturing Giant Denies Any ‘Definitive’ Agreement — Yet

  • Two states suggested each was the favoured choice of Foxconn for any new expansion in India.
  • This seems like part of a familiar business-world scenario: get two or more parties competing for your business — that way you end up with a good deal.

Anand ParthasarathyMar 05, 2023, 04:02 PM | Updated 04:08 PM IST
Foxconn CEO Young Liu exchanging MOUs with Telangana Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao (top) and with Karnataka CM Basavaraj Bommai on consecutive days.

Foxconn CEO Young Liu exchanging MOUs with Telangana Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao (top) and with Karnataka CM Basavaraj Bommai on consecutive days.


‘There's many a slip 'twixt the cup and the lip’ runs a proverb attributed variously to ancient Britons and Greeks.  

A modern update could run thus — and it sounds very prescient indeed today: ‘An MOU or Memorandum of Understanding is not a done thing’.


Soon after a visit to Hyderabad, of Young Liu, chairman and CEO of Foxconn, the world’s largest technology products contract manufacturer, Telangana IT Minister KT Rama Rao tweeted:


Bloomberg added weight to the Karnataka government’s announcement with its own report, adding new detail: that Foxconn planned to invest about $700 million on a new plant to make iPhone parts on a 300-acre site close to Bengaluru airport, as well as, kickstarting an electric vehicle business. 

It repeated the projection that the new production site in India was expected to create about 100,000 jobs, adding that this may shift the crown of world’s largest producer of consumer electronics from China to India.

Reuters picked up the Bloomberg lead. And with two media heavyweights seemingly confirming the news, the ‘Foxconn to make iPhones in new Bengaluru plant’ story made the lead in almost all of Indian business media on 4 March and was retweeted by some in government including Union IT Minister Rajeev Chandrasekhar.

Some of this congratulatory coverage doubtless reached the Foxconn chief soon after he was back in his global headquarters in Taipei, at the weekend.

Jumped The Gun?

It would appear that both southern states might have jumped the gun.


In a statement released in Taiwan yesterday (4 March) which reached India through the news agency AFP, the company said:

"Foxconn has not entered into binding, definitive agreements for new investments during this trip", adding, "Negotiations and internal review are ongoing. Financial investment sums discussed in media are not information being released by Foxconn.”

Foxconn has manufacturing plants in ten countries — the maximum number in China.

It is true that Covid-related problems which continue to beset China, have affected the supply chain for Apple’s iPhones and Foxconn is in all probability looking at countries where it already has plants, to make up for  reduced manufacturing in China.  

In India Since 2015

In a Tamil Nadu-based electronics manufacturing plant of Foxconn's Indian subsidiary, Bharat FIH.

Foxconn has been in India since 2015 through its subsidiary, Bharat FIH, and operates three plants — at Sri City, Andhra Pradesh and at Sriperumbudur and Sunguvarchatram in Tamil Nadu, where it manufactures electronic products for multiple clients including Xiaomi  and Nokia.  

Since 2019, it has also been assembling iPhones in India at the Sriperumbudur plant, including the latest iPhone 14, so it makes sense that India would figure on its shortlist to expand iPhone manufacturing capability.


In Hyderabad, Liu inaugurated what is touted as India’s largest hardware prototyping centre, T-Works and donated a Surface Mount Technology (SMT) assembly line, useful for making high-end electronic circuit boards.  

Foxconn CEO Young Liu inspecting an assembly line in the T-Works hardware prototyping centre in Hyderabad.

But two states suggesting (and presumably believing), each was the favoured choice of Foxconn for any new expansion in India, seems like part of a familiar business-world scenario: get two or more parties competing for your business — that way you end up with a good deal.

Karnataka and Telangana way have some work to do, working on their respective fiscal and logistic packages, if Foxconn is to home on to one of them for its India expansion.


May the best state win. The deal ain’t done — yet.

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