Intel plans to make chips for Taiwan’s MediaTek to keep up with Asian manufacturing rivals

Intel plans to make chips for Taiwan’s MediaTek to keep up with Asian manufacturing rivals


Intel Foundry Services will manufacture multiple chips for MediaTek for a range of smart edge devices, the two companies said on Monday.

Fabian Bimmer | Reuters

Intel will manufacture semiconductors for Taiwan’s MediaTek, giving the U.S. company a big boost for its contract chipmaking business.

MediaTek is one of the biggest suppliers of smartphone processers and a rival to Qualcomm. Intel Foundry Services will manufacture multiple chips for MediaTek for a range of smart edge devices, the two companies said on Monday.

After taking over as CEO of Intel last year, Pat Gelsinger made revitalizing the foundry business a key priority in order to catch up with and break the dominance of its Asian rivals TSMC and Samsung. Via its foundry business, Intel will manufacture chips that other companies design. The U.S. giant plans to spend more than $40 billion building fabrication plants around the world.

“The agreement is designed to help MediaTek build a more balanced, resilient supply chain through the addition of a new foundry partner with significant capacity in the United States and Europe,” Intel said in a press release.

NS Tsai, a corporate senior vice president at MediaTek, said the partnership with Intel “provides value” to the company as it seeks “to create a more diversified supply chain.”

TSMC is MediaTek’s main manufacturing partner for chips. It’s unclear what MediaTek semiconductors Intel will be responsible for making.

MediaTek was not immediately available for comment when contacted by CNBC.

Chip companies around the world have been focusing on strengthening their supply chains and diversifying production amid a global chip shortage that has persisted since early 2021.

But the manufacturing of the most advanced chips is not something many companies can do and is in fact is dominated by TSMC and Samsung. These two companies account for more than 70% of global foundry revenue, according to TrendForce.

As demand continues to rise for chips, Intel and its Asian rivals plan to ramp up spending on foundries.

But Intel lags far behind, though gaining MediaTek as a customer will give the company a boost. MediaTek had 38% of the smartphone application processor market in the first quarter, making it the biggest company in the segment, according to Counterpoint Research.



Source

Musk v. Altman heads to court next week. Here’s what’s at stake
Technology

Musk v. Altman heads to court next week. Here’s what’s at stake

A yearslong legal brawl between Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman heads to court in Northern California on Monday in a dramatic showdown between two of the most high-profile names in the tech industry. In his $134 billion lawsuit, Musk claimed that OpenAI, Altman and the company’s president, Greg Brockman, […]

Read More
Meta will adopt hundreds of thousands of AWS Graviton chips in latest AI infrastructure grab
Technology

Meta will adopt hundreds of thousands of AWS Graviton chips in latest AI infrastructure grab

Around 3.6 billion people use Meta’s applications every day, and the social networking company will be operating 32 data centers to handle the load with the completion of a new one in Oklahoma. But that’s not enough. Amazon’s cloud unit said Friday that Meta has agreed to use Amazon’s general-purpose Graviton chips in a deal […]

Read More
Israel-Lebanon ceasefire, Microsoft’s first-ever buyouts, Starbucks’ loyalty program and more in Morning Squawk
Technology

Israel-Lebanon ceasefire, Microsoft’s first-ever buyouts, Starbucks’ loyalty program and more in Morning Squawk

This is CNBC’s Morning Squawk newsletter. Subscribe here to receive future editions in your inbox. Happy Friday. Congratulations to the NFL’s first-round draft picks. CNBC’s Alex Sherman spoke to No. 1 pick Fernando Mendoza ahead of his big night. Stock futures are mixed this morning after a negative day for all three major indexes. Here are five […]

Read More