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A 300mm silicon wafer in the semiconductor clean rooms at the GlobalFoundries fab in Dresden, Germany. Photo: Bloomberg

GlobalFoundries CEO says chip maker sticking to 2022 IPO plan, Intel takeover bid is ‘speculation’

  • Intel has studied the feasibility of buying US-based GlobalFoundries, people familiar with the matter said last week
  • But no formal takeover approach has been made and the two sides are not engaged in active talks, the people said

GlobalFoundries, a chip maker owned by an investment arm of the Abu Dhabi government, is sticking with its plan for an initial public offering next year, according to Chief Executive Officer Tom Caulfield.

Reports that GlobalFoundries is the subject of a takeover bid by Intel Corp are speculation, he said.

“There’s nothing there in that discussion,” Caulfield said Monday in an interview with Bloomberg Television. Because the chip maker is moving toward a share sale, “you can expect a lot of speculation to take place,” he said.

Intel has studied the feasibility of buying US-based GlobalFoundries, people familiar with the matter said last week, asking not to be identified because deliberations are private.

But no formal takeover approach has been made to GlobalFoundries owner Mubadala Investment Co. and the two sides are not engaged in active talks, the people said.

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Mubadala created GlobalFoundries by purchasing the manufacturing operations of Advanced Micro Devices in 2009 and later combining it with Singapore’s Chartered Semiconductor. The fund continues to work with advisers on plans to list the business at a value of around US$30 billion, the people said.

“I think they are interested in holding onto GF,” Caulfield said. “They think this asset has become a star in their portfolio.”

Last week a spokesperson for Malta, New York-based GlobalFoundries said there are no talks with Intel.

Representatives for Intel and Mubadala declined to comment following a report by The Wall Street Journal that the world’s largest chip maker was planning a bid.

Contract chip makers like GlobalFoundries fabricate semiconductors for large technology companies such as Apple, Nvidia and Amazon. Intel, under Chief Executive Office Pat Gelsinger, has stated its ambition to spend heavily to get into that market and challenge Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co and Samsung Electronics, two companies that have taken the US company’s manufacturing lead.

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