
Foxconn agrees $375 million Lordstown plant sale to pivot towards data centres
Foxconn, which makes data center products for Nvidia and assembles iPhones for Apple, did not elaborate on products to be manufactured at the plant, but said the cloud and networking product business in particularly showed "significant growth".
A source with direct knowledge of the matter said the Ohio site would support artificial intelligence data centers and that at more than 6 million square feet (557,000 sqm), it was six times larger than a plant Foxconn is building in Houston to manufacture Nvidia's GB300 AI servers. The source did not give more details.
Foxconn purchased the plant, a former General Motors small-car factory named after the town in Ohio where it is located, in 2022 from now-bankrupt U.S. electric vehicle startup Lordstown Motors Corp for $230 million, as part of its efforts to expand into EVs.
Foxconn also invested in Lordstown and the companies started making electric pickup trucks there. But the partnership later soured, with Lordstown going out of business and suing Foxconn.
Foxconn said on Monday it sold the factory to an "existing business partner", without giving details.
It also said the company remained committed to automotive customers in the U.S. and said it would be able to rapidly ramp up automotive production to meet customer demand when required.
Foxconn has expanded beyond its traditional role as an iPhone assembler. Last week it formed a strategic partnership with industrial motor maker TECO Electric & Machinery to build data centres.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNA
12 minutes ago
- CNA
Firefly aims for up to $6 billion valuation in US IPO after bumping up price range
Firefly is targeting a valuation of up to $6.04 billion in its U.S. listing, the company said in a filing on Monday, raising its pricing range amid heightened interest in space companies. The company is seeking to raise up to $696.6 million by offering 16.2 million shares priced between $41 and $43 each. It had last week launched its IPO roadshow and was initially aiming to raise as much as $631.8 million at a $5.5 billion valuation at the top of its range.


CNA
42 minutes ago
- CNA
Tesla Grants Elon Musk New $29 Billion Share Award to Secure CEO Rol
NEW YORK: Tesla has approved a fresh share award worth about US$29 billion for CEO Elon Musk in an effort to keep him at the helm as the company pivots from its core electric vehicle (EV) business to emerging ventures such as robotaxis and humanoid robots, the company said on Monday (Aug 4). The award, which grants Musk 96 million new shares, was described as a 'good faith' gesture to honour the spirit of a US$50 billion pay package from 2018 that was struck down by a Delaware court last year. Musk can only claim the new award if he remains in a key executive position at Tesla for at least two more years and the Delaware courts do not reinstate the 2018 plan. Tesla said the shares, priced at US$23.34 each, will be subject to a five-year holding period. The company said it will seek shareholder approval of a longer-term compensation plan at its investor meeting on Nov 6. TESLA BOARD SHOWS SUPPORT The move underscores the board's continued support for Musk, despite recent controversies surrounding his political activity and involvement in outside ventures including artificial intelligence startup xAI. 'While we recognise Elon's business ventures, interests and other potential demands on his time and attention are extensive and wide-ranging... we are confident this award will incentivise Elon to remain at Tesla,' said a special committee composed of board chair Robyn Denholm and independent director Kathleen Wilson-Thompson. The new shares will be forfeited or offset if Musk's voided 2018 award is reinstated, effectively preventing any 'double dip,' the committee said. The company said it would not recognise compensation expense for the award at this time, as it does not currently expect the performance condition to be met. It will re-evaluate the situation if that changes after the two-year vesting period. STOCK CLIMBS, INVESTORS REACT Tesla shares rose nearly 2 per cent in early trading on Monday, easing concerns over Musk's long-term commitment and the future leadership of the EV pioneer. The stock has lost about 25 per cent this year, as of Friday's close. "Under normal circumstances, a compensation package in the billions would raise some eyebrows. (But) clearly investors have benefited from Musk's stewardship of Tesla," said Camelthorn Investments adviser Shawn Campbell. 'This stock grant will bind Musk to Tesla for the next two years.' Musk's new award boosts his stake in the company to more than 15 per cent, up from 12.7 per cent, according to Reuters calculations based on LSEG data. 2018 PACKAGE APPEAL ONGOING The Delaware court's January ruling invalidated Musk's 2018 pay plan, which was the largest in US corporate history. The court cited procedural flaws and found the package to be unfair to shareholders. Musk has appealed the decision, arguing that the package spurred tremendous value creation and was twice approved by investors. Tesla shares have surged nearly 2,000 per cent over the past decade, compared to a 200 per cent rise in the benchmark S&P 500 index. Still, some governance experts questioned the latest move. "This is simply a repackaged version of what was done years ago and was ruled improper by a judge. It renders the Delaware court decision effectively meaningless," said Charles Elson, founding director of the Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware.


CNA
an hour ago
- CNA
Amazon overhauls Wondery podcast studio, cuts 110 jobs
is restructuring the Wondery podcast studio by shifting its award-winning narrative podcasts such as "Business Wars" to Audible and consolidating creator-led shows into a new unit, according to a memo seen by Reuters. About 110 employees will be laid off as part of the process, while many Wondery employees will transition to other parts of Amazon, the company said in an emailed statement on Monday. Wondery CEO Jen Sargent will depart the company following a transition period, the memo said. Intense competition in the expensive podcast industry as well as a growing focus on creator-led video content have prompted audio streaming companies including Spotify to diversify their podcasts as they look to lower costs and attract more users to their platforms. "As video podcasting has grown in popularity, we have learned that creator-led, video-integrated shows have different audience needs and require distinct discovery, growth and monetization strategies compared to audio-first, narrative series," Steve Boom, vice president of audio, Twitch and games at Amazon, wrote in the memo. Wondery was acquired by Amazon in 2021 and has seen podcast revenue quadruple since then as the studio expanded its slate to include video podcasts and creator-driven series, according to the memo. Under the new structure, Wondery's narrative podcast studio - home to shows such as "Dr. Death" and "American Scandal" - along with the Wondery+ subscription service, will move to Audible, the e-commerce giant's audio platform. Its creator-focused podcast team that produces shows including "Mind the Game", "New Heights", and "Armchair Expert" will join a new Creator Services group within Amazon's Talent Services division. This new team will continue to operate the creator-focused podcast studio under the Wondery brand. "By making these changes, we can better support creators in monetizing their content across multiple channels," Amazon said.