Japanese chipmaker goes bankrupt amid pressure from Chinese rivals originally appeared on TheStreet.
A once-promising Japanese chipmaker has collapsed under mounting debt, a slowdown in electric vehicle (EV) sales, and a surge in supply from Chinese rivals. The company filed for bankruptcy protection last week, less than three years after its widely heralded launch in late 2022.
The firm was backed by Japanese government-linked financial institutions and focused on producing power semiconductors critical to power electronics markets, including electric vehicles (EVs), industrial equipment, and home appliances.
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With strong public support and a refurbished factory previously operated by a major U.S. chipmaker, the company appeared poised to become a key domestic player in an industry viewed as essential to Japan’s national security and economic development.
But faced with mounting debt driven by deteriorating electric vehicle demand and a flood of low-cost components from fast-growing Chinese rivals, the startup’s business model proved unsustainable.
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Tokyo-based chipmaker JS Foundry, also known as JS Fab, launched in December 2022 with the backing of a fund run by the Development Bank of Japan and created by Mercuria Investment and Sangyo Sosei Advisory.
JS Foundry filed for bankruptcy protection with the Tokyo District Court last week, leaving behind an estimated $110 million in outstanding debt.
In a bid to minimize upfront costs, JS Foundry inherited its manufacturing facility, a 41-year-old fab in Niigata Prefecture, from U.S.-based On Semiconductor (ON) .
The legacy infrastructure proved inadequate for the demanding process requirements of silicon carbide (SiC) device fabrication — a notoriously capital-intensive industry — possibly compounding JS Foundry’s financial woes.
JS Foundry’s revenue surged in 2023, with sales swelling to around 10 billion yen (nearly $68 million) in its first year. Yet in 2024, revenue plummeted to 2.6 billion yen (around $17.6 million).
This sharp decline followed the end of a production arrangement with On Semiconductor (stemming from On’s divestment of its Japan facility in late 2022).
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