Taiwan iPhone maker Foxconn sets its sights on the ever more crowded EV 
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		 [January 13, 2025]  By 
		ELAINE KURTENBACH 
						
		BANGKOK (AP) — Auto industry newcomers like Taiwan-based iPhone maker 
		Foxconn and China's Huawei Technologies are maneuvering to gain an edge 
		in the electric vehicle sector, prompting automakers like Japan's Nissan 
		and Honda to announce plans to join forces against a flood of ambitious 
		competitors. 
		 
		Also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry, Foxconn has been snapping up 
		links in the automotive supply chain, one of a growing number of 
		technology companies that are leveraging their knowhow in electronics 
		and communications. 
		 
		Foxconn's auto venture with Taiwan automaker and importer Yulon Motor 
		Co., Foxtron, showcased its Model B, a sleek EV hatchback, as well as 
		its automotive electronics, at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las 
		Vegas last week. 
		 
		Honda and Nissan announced in December that they plan to seek a merger, 
		a move that reports said may have partly been driven by Foxconn's 
		interest in Nissan. 
		 
		Here's an update on Foxconn's auto ambitions. 
		 
		From iPhones to electric vehicles 
		 
		Whether or not Foxconn wanted to make a bid for Nissan, it has big 
		ambitions, saying it eventually intends to make four of every 10 EVs 
		sold in the world. The contract manufacturer has invested nearly $1.3 
		billion in auto-related acquisitions in the past decade, according to 
		Mergermarket, a merger and acquisitions research firm. 
						
		
		  
						
		In addition to Foxtron, its automaking joint venture with Taiwan's Yulon 
		Motor, it has a 50% joint venture with Stellantis NV to design and sell 
		automotive semiconductors and a 50% joint venture with Germany’s ZF 
		Friedrichshafen AG, a major auto supplier, to make passenger car 
		chassis. It has invested in Indigo Technologies, which is 
		commercializing a road sensing system developed at MIT. It also has a 
		collaboration agreement with Blue Solutions to develop solid state 
		batteries and has a collaboration with Italian auto designer Pininfarina. 
		 
		Foxconn holds a 34% stake in Japanese electronics company Sharp, which 
		has been inching toward the automotive sector. This year, Foxconn and 
		Sharp introduced an LDK+ (living, dining, kitchen) concept vehicle, a 
		boxy minivan that converts to a living space with solar and storage 
		battery and a big LCD screen. 
		 
		“Leveraging a plug-and-play strategy similar to its electronics 
		operations, Foxconn’s foray into electric vehicles is a pre-emptive move 
		in anticipation of the increasing convergence of electronics and 
		automotive technologies,” Vivian Wong, head of Mergermarkets’ M&A 
		Analytics for the Asia Pacific, said in an emailed comment. 
		 
		Other new tech companies turned automakers 
		 
		China’s Huawei Technologies, smartphone and appliance maker Xiaomi and 
		e-commerce giant Alibaba and Baidu also are scaling up their EV 
		operations, relying on their scale and strength in advanced technologies 
		as vehicles become ever more computerized. 
		 
		Huawei has several EV joint ventures in what it has dubbed its Harmony 
		Intelligent Mobility Alliance, including Luxeed brand EVs with Chery 
		Automobile and Aito brand EVs with Seres Group. Its joint venture with 
		JAC Motor, an automaker based in eastern China's Anhui province, has 
		announced plans to compete with luxury brands such as Rolls-Royce and 
		Mercedes Benz AG. 
		 
		
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            A logo of Foxconn is displayed during the Hon Hai Tech Day (HHTD 24) 
			at the Nangang Exhibition Center in Taipei, Taiwan, Oct. 8, 2024. 
			(AP Photo/Chiang Ying-ying, File) 
            
			
			
			  Some Japanese electronics companies 
			also are jumping on the bandwagon. Apart from Sharp's partnership 
			with Foxconn, entertainment and technology giant Sony Corp. has an 
			EV joint venture with Honda that plans to introduce the EV Afeela 
			sedan for pre-sale this year. 
			 
			The increasing reliance on connectivity between cars, phones, 
			laptops and televisions has lured such companies into a market that 
			is quickly being transformed by electrification, even if inroads 
			into some markets have stalled due to tariffs and other factors. 
			 
			What about Nissan? 
			 
			Nissan introduced the Leaf, the first mass-market EV, in 2010 and 
			has strong EV technology, vehicle platforms and sales capacity that 
			would appeal to a newcomer like Foxconn. 
			 
			Reports by Japanese media and by Taiwan’s Central News Agency said 
			Hon Hai’s chief strategy officer, Nissan veteran executive Jun Seki, 
			visited France for talks with France’s Renault SA, which holds a 15% 
			stake in Nissan and more shares held in a French trust. Seki is a 
			former chief operating officer of Nissan and former president of 
			Dongfeng Nissan, a joint venture in China. 
			 
			In formally announcing plans to attempt a merger with Honda, Nissan 
			Motor Corp. CEO Makoto Uchida said Foxconn had not directly 
			approached his company about a possible merger. Foxconn did not 
			respond to requests for comment. 
			 
			Nissan’s internal woes are a small part of the bigger challenge 
			posed to all major automakers by the ascent of Tesla, which makes 
			more than half of its EVs in China, and Chinese automakers like BYD 
			in an industry so competitive that more than a dozen Chinese EV 
			makers have already folded, bested by bigger and stronger companies 
			that got into the game before them. 
			 
			So far, the road's not been smooth 
			 
			As the pace of sales growth slows, with car buyers questioning the 
			affordability and convenience of switching to electrics, the going 
			has been rough, and Foxconn has a long way to go before it can 
			compete with industry leaders like BYD and Tesla. 
			
			
			  
			It was set to manufacture the Endurance battery EV truck at a former 
			General Motors plant in Lordstown, Ohio, which it acquired in 2023. 
			Lordstown Motors Corp. then filed for bankruptcy. Foxconn also set 
			up a partnership in 2021 with Fisker Inc., maker of the Ocean EV 
			truck, that called for making up to 250,000 vehicles. Fisker filed 
			for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in June. 
			 
			But the company appears undaunted. 
			 
			Foxconn lists six models of EVs on its website, including its Model 
			T bus, Model V pickup truck, Moden N van, its Model B, and its 
			“luxury flagship” Model E sedan. 
			
			
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