This week, the results of bidding for Toshiba Memory assets have not been announced, and the timing of the publication of the annual financial report may be delayed. It would seem that this gives time to potential buyers of the Japanese company's memory business more time to prepare for the deal. The Chinese giant Foxconn , for example, proposes to fold into the profile business of Toshiba "all over the world," mainly American, in order not to provoke Japanese discontent from the series of "leaking important technologies to communist China."
The head of Hon Hai Precision Industry (Foxconn), as DigiTimes explains, is trying to convince representatives of the Japanese corporation Toshiba that the purchase by the Taiwanese giant of the solid-state memory business is not an indication of the inevitable export of technology to China. Terry Gou (Terry Gou) hints to representatives of Toshiba that it should be more afraid not of technology leakage, but of their lagging behind the same South Korean competitors.
A potential Taiwanese investor argues that Toshiba will be able to continue research in Japan, and if new developments need to be protected by patents, Foxconn is ready to start filing relevant applications. The company is interested in expanding its presence in the Chinese market, and buying Toshiba assets should not be considered an act of sabotage or unfriendly actions. The press, according to Terry Gow, spreads a lot of false information about Foxconn's intentions regarding Toshiba's assets for sale.