Kyocera, Fujifilm join growing list of investors eyeing Rapidus

Following megabanks' loan commitments, Kyocera, Fujifilm Holdings and others including Honda, Fujitsu and Canon are considering equity stakes in Rapidus to support its 2027 semiconductor mass production goals, targeting ¥130 billion in new private investments by March 2026.

Building on recent announcements of up to ¥2 trillion in loans from Japan's three megabanks and prior equity investments totaling ¥7.3 billion from firms like MUFG Bank, Toyota, Sony and SoftBank, additional Japanese companies are poised to bolster Rapidus.

Kyocera, Fujifilm Holdings, Honda Motor, Fujitsu and Canon are among those eyeing stakes, per sources. Other potentials include Nagase & Co., which supplies materials to Rapidus' Hokkaido plant, and Argo Graphics, a semiconductor software developer.

The three megabanks—MUFG, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking and Mizuho—plus the Development Bank of Japan plan up to ¥25 billion in new investments. Regional banks like North Pacific Bank and Higo Bank are also considering participation.

Japan's government has pledged around ¥1.7 trillion, including ¥100 billion last month, to spur private funding and enhance national semiconductor competitiveness via Rapidus' Hokkaido operations.

Verwandte Artikel

US government officials investing in quantum computing companies for a news article
Bild generiert von KI

US government to take $2 billion equity stake in quantum firms

Von KI berichtet Bild generiert von KI

The US commerce department announced it will take equity stakes totaling $2 billion in nine quantum computing companies. The move includes funding for firms like IBM and GlobalFoundries as well as startups with ties to prominent investors.

Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) and commercial banks plan to lend $2.2 billion for three U.S.-based projects. The loans form the first tranche of a total $36 billion investment. The move underscores U.S.-Japan relations.

Von KI berichtet

Following Toshiba's announcement and a Denso acquisition offer for Rohm, Rohm, Toshiba, and Mitsubishi Electric have begun discussions to integrate power chip operations, signaling realignment in Japan's sector.

Ein neuer Bericht von Pax und Ican zeigt, dass die Anzahl der Finanzinstitute, die in die Atomwaffenindustrie investieren, um 15 Prozent auf 301 gestiegen ist. Aktien- und Fondsanlagen belaufen sich mittlerweile auf über 709 Milliarden Dollar. „Dies ist die gefährlichste Zeit meines Lebens im Hinblick auf Atomwaffen“, sagt Susi Snyder, Programmleiterin bei ICAN.

Von KI berichtet

Many major Japanese companies have agreed in full to unions' pay hike demands in this year's shunto negotiations. Close attention is on whether this momentum will spread to small companies, which employ about 70% of Japan's workers.

Diese Website verwendet Cookies

Wir verwenden Cookies für Analysen, um unsere Website zu verbessern. Lesen Sie unsere Datenschutzrichtlinie für weitere Informationen.
Ablehnen