Intel and Tower terminate $5.4bn deal

BY Richard Summerfield

Intel Corporation and Tower Semiconductor have announced the mutual termination of the previously announced $5.4bn deal which would have seen Intel acquire Tower. The termination is due to the companies’ inability to obtain the regulatory approvals required under the terms of the deal.

As per the terms of the previously agreed deal, Intel will now be required to pay a termination fee of $353m to Tower.

Intel announced its intentions to buy Tower – a contract chipmaker that manufactures semiconductors for other companies – in February 2022 for $5.4bn. However, the company was unable to secure approval for the deal from the Chinese antitrust authorities before the deadline passed. The deadline for the deal was midnight California time on 15 August.

“Tower was very excited to join Intel to enable Pat Gelsinger’s vision for Intel’s foundry business,” said Russell Ellwanger, chief executive of Tower. “We appreciate the efforts by all parties. During the past 18 months, we’ve made significant technological, operational, and business advancements. We are well positioned to continue to drive our strategic priorities and short-, mid- and long-term tactics with a continued focus on top and bottom-line growth.”

“Our foundry efforts are critical to unlocking the full potential of IDM 2.0, and we continue to drive forward on all facets of our strategy,” said Pat Gelsinger, chief executive of Intel. “We are executing well on our roadmap to regain transistor performance and power performance leadership by 2025, building momentum with customers and the broader ecosystem and investing to deliver the geographically diverse and resilient manufacturing footprint the world needs. Our respect for Tower has only grown through this process, and we will continue to look for opportunities to work together in the future.”

“Since its launch in 2021, Intel Foundry Services has gained traction with customers and partners, and we have made significant advancements toward our goal of becoming the second-largest global external foundry by the end of the decade,” said Stuart Pann, senior vice president and general manager of Intel Foundry Services. “We are building a differentiated customer value proposition as the world’s first open system foundry, with the technology portfolio and manufacturing expertise that includes packaging, chiplet standards and software, going beyond traditional wafer manufacturing.”​

Intel’s acquisition of Tower was a move designed to bolster its own contract chip-making business with enhanced manufacturing capacity and intellectual property, while also giving it a wider global reach. And while there was a possibility that the deal could have been completed without Chinese approval, since China represents a major part of Intel’s business and strategy, regulatory approval in China was deemed essential. The deal was approved by antitrust bodies in the US and Europe, however it ran into significant delays and obstacles in China, which is indicative of the challenges faced by US companies with ties to China in the current geopolitical climate. It is becoming increasingly difficult for companies to conduct business amid tensions between the two countries.

News: Intel scraps $5.4 bln Tower deal after China review delay

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