pwshub.com

Texas Instruments wins $4.6B in CHIPS Act financing for three new fabs

Chipmaker Texas Instruments Inc. today announced that it has secured $4.6 billion in federal financing to upgrade its manufacturing infrastructure.

The new funds will enable the company to build three new semiconductor plants, or fabs, in Texas and Utah. Construction on the facilities has already begun. Chip production is expected to start as soon as next year.

Nasdaq-listed Texas Instruments is a major provider of embedded processors. Those are low-power chips that are used to equip systems such as smart home appliances, cars and industrial machines with a limited amount of onboard computing capacity. A robotic arm at an auto plant, for example, might use an embedded processor to translate work instructions into motion.

Texas Instruments also sells analog chips. Such circuits are used not for processing tasks, but rather to measure or manage physical phenomena. Applications for analog chips range from measuring the temperature to managing the flow of electricity inside batteries to prevent voltage surges.

Analog chips and standard processors differ significantly in their architecture. A processor carries out computations using so-called discrete electric signals, which each represent either a one or a zero. Analog chips work with more complex electric signals that lend themselves better to representing data about heat, illumination and other physical properties.

Texas Instruments makes embedded processors and analog chips using a network of 15 manufacturing sites. The CHIPS Act financing that the company secured today will enable it to build three more plants.

The first two fabs are being constructed in the city of Sherman, Texas, which is about an hour-and-a-half drive from Texas Instruments’ Dallas headquarters. The facilities are part of a manufacturing complex that is eventually expected to host as many as four chip plants. Once it reaches full capacity, the campus is planned to produce more than 100 million chips per day.

Texas Instruments’ third new fab is being built in Lehi, Utah immediately next to one of its existing plants. Together, the two facilities will make tens of millions of analog chips and embedded processors per day once production is in full swing.

Texas Instruments will use its new CHIPS Act financing to build cleanrooms for one of the new Sherman fabs and the Lehi facility. The cleanroom is the section of a chip plant that houses its semiconductor production equipment. The remaining funds will be used to build the second Sherman fab’s shell, or external structure. The company expects its Sherman manufacturing complex to start making chips as early next year, while the Lehi fab is scheduled to follow suit in 2026.

The new facilities are part of a long-term investment plan that will see Texas Instruments spend more than $30 billion to upgrade its manufacturing infrastructure in Texas and Utah. The $4.6B in CHIPS Act financing that the company has won to support the project includes $3 billion worth of loans and $1.6 billion in direct funding from the Commerce Department. Additionally, it will receive tax credits with an expected value of up to $8 billion.

Texas Instruments joins the growing list of semiconductor companies that have received funding through the CHIPS Act in recent months. Intel Corp., Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd. and Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. have collectively won more than $25 billion worth of federal financing to date. GlobalFoundries Inc., which makes chips using less advanced manufacturing technologies, also received $1.5 billion in CHIPS Act funding earlier this year. 

Source: siliconangle.com

Related stories
1 month ago - Vice President Kamala Harris’ presumed ascension to the Democratic presidential nomination following President Joe Biden’s withdrawal scrambled this week certainly scrambled the race, but it also set everyone in tech wondering what a...
1 month ago - The funding, under the CHIPS and Science Act, will help the company build two factories in Texas and one in Utah. Texas Instruments has pledged $18 billion in investment through 2029 to the projects, which are expected to create 2,000...
1 month ago - AmEx downgraded, Texas Instruments upgraded: Wall Street's top analyst callsThe most talked about and market moving research calls around Wall...
2 weeks ago - Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) was one of the world's most valuable chipmakers. But today, it's worth $94 billion, making it far less valuable than Advanced...
1 month ago - The appointment comes after months of deliberation from Boeing as it tries to salvage its reputation and addresses questions around safety after an Alaska Airlines operated MAX 9 jet experienced a mid-air panel blowout. WHO IS ORTBERG? ...
Other stories
36 minutes ago - Tom Lee has called for a stock rally after rate cuts, but even after the Fed cut 50 basis points, he's wary on stocks ahead of the election.
37 minutes ago - With the lockup period set to expire, Trump could start offloading his nearly $2 billion worth of stock, though the former president has said he wouldn't sell.
2 hours ago - (Bloomberg) -- Skechers U.S.A. Inc. shares delivered their worst daily performance since February after the footwear company’s chief financial officer told an industry conference that China sales will be under pressure the rest of the...
3 hours ago - The Fed's cutting cycle in 1995 sparked an economic boom, with the stock market more than doubling in value by the end of the decade.
3 hours ago - There's nothing like a potentially massive government contract to win the hearts of both investors and analysts.