Samsung Electronics is delaying the completion of its new semiconductor factory in Taylor, Texas, as the company continues to struggle to find customers to use its new chip-making plant on US soil.

The South Korean company will be spending over $37 billion on its semiconductor plant in Texas in the years to come, after Samsung was awarded up to $4.7 billion of funding from the Biden administration and the CHIPS Act. The investment included a fab in Taylor, Texas, which was meant to make cutting-edge chips and be online by 2024... now that has been pushed back until 2026.
A source close to the situation told Nikkei Asia: "The process (of completing the Taylor fab) is delayed because there are no customers. (Samsung) is not in a situation where it can do something, even if it brings equipment in at the moment".
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A chip supply chain executive that's also familiar with the matter told Nikkei Asia that Samsung, which is already making chips at its Austin, Texas-based semiconductor fab, is in no rush to install chip-making equipment at its Taylor-based plant. This source added: "Local demand for chips isn't particularly strong, and the process nodes Samsung planned several years ago no longer meet with current customer needs. However, overhauling the plant would be a major and costly undertaking, so the company is adopting a wait-and-see approach for now".





