Top Toyota supplier Denso mulls US$3 bil chip unit spinoff

Top Toyota supplier Denso mulls US$3 bil chip unit spinoff

The company's focus for the time being is on meeting internal demand.

Denso Corp is not currently considering utilising a potential spin-off of its chip business to raise fresh funds for other investments.
AICHI:
Denso Corp, one of the world’s top automotive semiconductor manufacturers and a key supplier to Toyota Motor Corp, may consider spinning off its chip business, which generates around ¥420 billion (US$3.1 billion) in sales, the company’s chief technology officer today.

Well known as the world’s second-biggest auto-parts maker, Denso has also quietly built up a presence in automotive chips. Now, with semiconductor-related capital expenditures totaling around  ¥160 billion over the past three years, Denso ranks as the world’s fifth-largest supplier of automotive chips by sales.

“We need to think about whether the time will come when we sell semiconductors, alone, externally,” CTO Yoshifumi Kato said in an interview at Denso’s headquarters in Aichi prefecture. “It’s worth looking into whether that kind of structure is possible.”

Today, the semiconductors Denso makes in-house go into automotive parts that it then sells to carmakers or other suppliers. When examining the possibility of supplying semiconductors on their own, Denso will consider whether the semiconductor division is better positioned outside of the company, Kato said.

To date, nothing has been decided regarding a split, Kato said, adding that Denso’s focus for the time being is on meeting internal chip demand. The company is also not currently considering utilising a potential spin-off of its chip business to raise fresh funds for other investments, he said.

A shortage of chips used in cars first began in late 2020, when Covid-induced lockdowns of millions of people around the world spurred a huge uptick in the purchase of consumer electronics goods, resulting in semiconductors being diverted away from automakers. Their dearth quickly became symptomatic of a broader supply chain crisis that’s upended the smooth delivery of goods globally.

Chip supply now seems to be getting back to normal in some places, amid concerns around how well consumer demand can hold up against the backdrop of accelerating inflation and higher interest rates.

According to Kato, demand for automotive semiconductors, on a tear amid the industry’s shift to electric, internet-connected and autonomous cars, is likely to continue going from strength to strength.

Denso said at a briefing earlier this month that it’s targeting ¥500 billion in sales from its in-house power and analog chip business, up from around ¥420 billion currently.

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