Taiwan Tech Giant Targets 5% of EV
Manufacturing by 2025
·
Foxconn is about 40-45% of the overall
market share in PC and cellphone markets.
·
Tesla Inc (TSLA.O),
which did not immediately respond to a request for comment, Tesla Inc makes all
of its EVs in-house and has been rapidly expanding capacity.
·
Annual tech showcase takes place on the
birthday of the company's billionaire founder Terry Gou
Taiwanese tech giant Foxconn
(2317.TW), best
known for assembling Apple's (AAPL.O) iPhone,
said on Tuesday, 18 October 2022, it hopes to one day make cars for Tesla as it
ramps up electric vehicle (EV) manufacturing in a strategy to diversify its business.
Speaking at the company's
annual Tech Day, Chairman Liu Young-way said Foxconn, the world's biggest contract
electronics maker, wants to replicate its level of success in assembling consumer
gadgets as it expands into building EVs for auto brands.
Foxconn is about 40-45%
of the overall market share in PC and cellphone
markets. So, ambitions-wise, hopefully we are able to achieve the same kind of achievement
like in the ICT (information and communications technology) industry, but we will
start small, which is about 5% in 2025," Liu said.
"I hope one day we
can do Tesla cars for Tesla."
Tesla Inc (TSLA.O), which
did not immediately respond to a request for comment, Tesla Inc makes all of its
EVs in-house and has been rapidly expanding capacity.
Tesla's CEO Elon Musk
angered many in Taiwan this month when he suggested tensions between China and Taiwan
could be resolved by handing over some control of Taiwan to Beijing. read more
Liu said Foxconn is not
in the business of selling its own EV brands but wants its customers to sell "a
lot" of EVs, which will be made in Taiwan, Thailand and the United States.
Foxconn is negotiating with partners in Indonesia and India, Liu added.
The company expanded into
EVs and semiconductors in recent years, announcing deals with U.S. startup Fisker Inc (FSR.N) and
Indian conglomerate Vedanta Ltd (VDAN.NS).
Foxconn is leveraging
its "48-year-old roots in ICT manufacturing" to halve EV design times
and slash development costs by a third, Liu said.
Luxgen n7,
an EV built by Foxtron, a joint venture between Foxconn
and Taiwanese car maker Yulon Motor Co Ltd (2201.TW), received
15,000 pre-orders in less than two days, Liu added.
"Despite the challenges
of conflict in Europe and COVID globally, Foxconn has maintained our EV strategy,"
Liu said.
"Supply chain resilience
has always been Foxconn's DNA. Our global footprint in 24 countries gives us a huge
advantage to meet EV industry demands."
The annual tech showcase
takes place on the birthday of the company's billionaire founder Terry Gou. Introduced
as a special guest, Gou drove onstage in one of two prototypes unveiled this year,
the Model B sporty crossover hatchback.
The other prototype unveiled
was the Model V, an all-terrain pickup. Three prototypes - a SUV, a sedan and a
bus - were unveiled last year, and Foxtron's electric
buses are already in service in some Taiwanese cities.
"Our heartfelt hope
is that Taiwan can seize this once-in-a-hundred years, rare EV business opportunity,"
Liu said.
Foxconn's shares closed
down 1.4% on Tuesday, underperforming the benchmark index (.TWII), which
gained 1.2%. Its shares have dropped 0.5% this year, giving it a market value of
$45.5 billion.