DuPont Co, the inventor of nylon, said it's shifting production of textile fibers to Asia so that its synthetic material unit will be more competitive as the company seeks investors for at least part of the business.
DuPont's Chief Executive Officer Charles Holliday told Bloomberg Television that in the past couple of years production of synthetic fibers has moved to Asia from the US and Europe faster than expected, prompting DuPont to join the trend.
"We're shifting our business to where our customers are," Holliday said. "Our customers are in China, in the Asean region and increasingly in India."
DuPont's nylon, polyester and Lycra businesses have been hurt by competition from producers, particularly in China, that can make the same fibers cheaper. Nylon is used in carpet and clothing. Lycra, a patented stretch fiber DuPont invented in 1958, and polyester are used in clothing.
The world's largest maker of synthetic fibers said in February it expects to separate its unit making the material from the parent by the end of next year. The unit makes US$6.5 billion worth of nylon, polyester and Lycra annually and contributes a quarter of DuPont's sales.
The company has factories in China and Singapore that make Lycra and plans to expand its Spandex brand of Lycra "rapidly" in Asia to meet surging demand in the region, Holliday said. At the same time, the company is cutting back its textile fiber operations in the US and announced in April it would fire 2,000 workers at is textile unit there.
The Wilmington, Delaware-based company's sales of nylon and synthetic fibers in Asia totaled about US$1 billion last year and may "easily grow 20 percent" in the next couple of years, DS Kim, president of DuPont's Asia Pacific unit told Bloomberg News.
DuPont last year opened its third Lycra plant in Singapore with an investment of US$80 million. Its first two Lycra plants cost US$334 million, and the company said it has invested US$1.3 billion in Singapore over the last 15 years.
The company also produces 4,000 tons of Lycra a year at a plant in Shanghai, China with plans to increase this to 10,000 tons when an expansion project is completed next year. The China plant and its expansion cost DuPont about US$180 million.
DuPont is also in talks with two local partners to build another Lycra plant in China, Morris Cranor, vice president of manufacturing for DuPont's textile unit, said in March.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), the world’s largest contract chipmaker, yesterday said its materials management head, Vanessa Lee (李文如), had tendered her resignation for personal reasons. The personnel adjustment takes effect tomorrow, TSMC said in a statement. The latest development came one month after Lee reportedly took leave from the middle of last month. Cliff Hou (侯永清), senior vice president and deputy cochief operating officer, is to concurrently take on the role of head of the materials management division, which has been under his supervision, TSMC said. Lee, who joined TSMC in 2022, was appointed senior director of materials management and
Nvidia Corp CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) on Thursday met with US President Donald Trump at the White House, days before a planned trip to China by the head of the world’s most valuable chipmaker, people familiar with the matter said. Details of what the two men discussed were not immediately available, and the people familiar with the meeting declined to elaborate on the agenda. Spokespeople for the White House had no immediate comment. Nvidia declined to comment. Nvidia’s CEO has been vocal about the need for US companies to access the world’s largest semiconductor market and is a frequent visitor to China.
Hypermarket chain Carrefour Taiwan and upscale supermarket chain Mia C’bon on Saturday announced the suspension of their partnership with Jkopay Co (街口支付), one of Taiwan’s largest digital payment providers, amid a lawsuit involving its parent company. Carrefour and Mia C’bon said they would notify customers once Jkopay services are reinstated. The two retailers joined an array of other firms in suspending their partnerships with Jkopay. On Friday night, popular beverage chain TP Tea (茶湯會) also suspended its use of the platform, urging customers to opt for alternative payment methods. Another drinks brand, Guiji (龜記), on Friday said that it is up to individual
STABLE RESULTS: Despite June’s lower consolidated revenue, second-quarter sales still reached a record high, driven by demand for chips for AI applications Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) yesterday reported consolidated sales of NT$263.71 billion (US$9.02 billion) for last month, its second-lowest monthly result this year. The world’s largest contract chipmaker said in a statement that its revenue last month only fared better than the NT$260.01 billion posted in February. Last month’s figure rose 26.9 percent from a year earlier, but slumped 17.7 percent from May, the company said. However, second-quarter revenue reached NT$933.8 billion, a record high for a single quarter, company data showed. The figure represented growth of 11.26 percent from the first quarter and 38.6 percent from a year earlier. Previously, TSMC said that