Intel scraps $5.4 billion acquisition of Tower Semiconductor after regulators fail to approve deal

Technology

In this article

Signage outside Intel headquarters in Santa Clara, California, Jan. 30, 2023.
David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Intel on Wednesday terminated its acquisition of Israeli chipmaker Tower Semiconductor, saying it failed to secure the required regulatory approval.

The tech giant said in a statement it is scrapping the planned deal “due to the inability to obtain in a timely manner the regulatory approvals required under the merger agreement.”

The U.S. chip giant will pay a termination fee of $353 million to Tower.

Intel announced intentions to buy Tower — a contract chipmaker that manufactures semiconductors for other companies — in February 2022 for $5.4 billion.

The deal would have given Intel a foothold in the specialty technologies on which Tower focuses, like radio frequency and industrial sensors. 

Tower Semiconductor shares were down 8% around 4:18 a.m. ET.

Reuters, citing people familiar with the matter, reported on Tuesday that Intel did not secure approval for the deal from the Chinese authorities before the deadline passed. Chinese authorities have not publicly communicated approving the purchase.

Articles You May Like

Plan to sanction people smuggling gangs is a bold and novel departure – but can the government make it bite?
Soldier who exploded Tesla Cybertruck outside Trump hotel ‘used generative AI to plan attack’
Trump says he will revoke Biden offshore drilling ban on first day in office
Russia is alarmed by Trump’s Greenland plan – but it could work in the Kremlin’s favour
Body found in Spain believed to be missing Belfast man – reports