Intel will provide U.S. foundry services and manufacturing to the firm it tried to buy. Weeks after Intel’s proposed $5.4 billion acquisition of Israel-based Tower Semiconductor fell apart, the two firms announced plans for Intel to provide foundry services to its former acquisition target. As part of the deal, Tower will invest up to $300 million to acquire and own equipment and other fixed assets at Intel’s New Mexico fabrication plant. Tower will eventually have a capacity of over 600,000 photo layers per month to manufacture its analog CMOS chips. Tower already owns fabs in Israel, the U.S., and Japan, and it plans to launch in Italy soon. But the existing fabs create 200 mm wafers. The New Mexico facility will create 300 mm wafers, increasing production quantity. “We are excited to continue working with Intel,” Tower CEO Russell Ellwanger said in a statement. “This collaboration with Intel allows us to fulfill our customers’ demand roadmaps, with a particular focus on advanced power management and radio frequency silicon on insulator (RF SOI) solutions, with full process flow qualification planned in 2024. We see this as a first step towards multiple unique synergistic solutions with Intel.” Intel was unable score the acquisition, but this is the next best thing, says Glenn O’Donnell, vice president and research director with Forrester Research. “I do think the deal Intel and Tower consummated is a good move to save face after the failure of the acquisition. Both parties still get to enjoy the fruits of their original plan,” he said. “Is this the next best thing for Intel? It’s clearly a Plan B where both companies benefit,” said Steve Leibson, analyst with Tirias Research. Intel is getting Tower’s CMOS manufacturing, and Tower is footing all or most of the cost for the equipment needed to make it happen. Tower gets access to an operational, state-of the-art, 300mm fab without the expense and hassle of building one. Plus, Intel has access to Tower’s highly specialized sales force that Intel does not have, nor will it need to hire at this point. Intel and Tower first announced the proposed $5.4 billion acquisition in February 2022, and the deadline for completing the acquisition was extended twice as they waited for approval from China for the purchase. Finally, with no approval coming, the deal was scuttled last month. Related content news HPE, Dell launch another round of AI servers HPE unveils one server, and Dell launches several compute and storage products. By Andy Patrizio Oct 17, 2024 3 mins Servers Data Center news Dell updates servers with AMD AI accelerators The Dell PowerEdge XE9680 ships with Instinct MI300X accelerators, AMD's high-end GPU accelerators that are designed to compete with Nvidia Hopper processors. By Andy Patrizio Jul 17, 2024 3 mins Servers Data Center news Gartner: AI spurs 25% surge in data center systems spending Worldwide IT spending is expected to surpass $5 trillion in 2024, a 7.5% increase over 2023. Gartner's forecast reflects 'ravenous demand' for data center infrastructure. By Denise Dubie Jul 16, 2024 3 mins Generative AI Servers Data Center news Elon Musk’s Grok AI ‘compute factory’ will use Dell and Supermicro servers The factory’s location is still shrouded in mystery and shrink wrap. By John E. Dunn Jun 21, 2024 3 mins Generative AI Servers PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe