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Wisconsin one of six U.S. states Foxconn, Sharp considering for plant

Wisconsin one of six U.S. states Foxconn, Sharp considering for plant

The logo of Foxconn, the trading name of Hon Hai Precision Industry, is seen on top of the company's headquarters in New Taipei City, Taiwan.

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Wisconsin is one of the six states that Foxconn is considering for its display making plants

The world's largest contract electronics maker, Foxconn is looking at six US states including Wisconsin as locations for a display-making plant. Top Executives said that the company would make the decision next month.


"It is one of the six we are considering," Tai Jeng-wu, CEO of Foxconn's Japanese unit Sharp Corp and group vice chairman, told reporters on the sidelines of Foxconn's annual shareholders' meeting.

Formally known as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co, Foxconn has previously valued the proposed US investment at more than $7 billion.

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The Taiwan-based company has been eyeing US investments for some time. The Chairman and Chief Executive Terry Gou visited the White House for talks in April. "In July we will make a conclusion," Gou told shareholders at the company's annual meeting.


Foxconn operates vast factories in China, where it employs a million people and manufactures most of Apple iPhones, but so far it has not invested heavily in manufacturing in the United States.


Gou said in January that while the United States had no panel-making industry, it was the second-largest market for televisions."This time we go to America, it's not just to build a factory, but to move our entire supply chain there," he told shareholders, without providing specific details.
Gou showed shareholders a picture of the "rust belt" depicting the states of Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia, Michigan, Kentucky and Pennsylvania. Though he did not name any of those states as potential locations for the plant. "In the US, the state governors' sincerity and confidence to attract investment ... is beyond my imagination," he said.