FINWIRES · TerminalLIVE
FINWIRES

Japan Approves Additional Funding for Chipmaker Rapidus

-- Rapidus has secured additional funding from Japan's New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO) for its fiscal year 2026 plans to accelerate next-generation 2nm logic semiconductor development.

The approval covers two projects: front-end process R&D for 2nm integration and short-TAT manufacturing, and back-end development for chiplet, package design, and manufacturing tech, according to a statement on Sunday.

The approved funding totalled 631.5 billion yen, according to a Reuters News report, citing Japan's industry ministry.

In fiscal year 2025, Rapidus verified Japan's first 2nm GAA transistor on 300mm wafers and prototyped the industry's first organic RDL interposer using a 600mm square panel.

With the new budget, Rapidus will now progress toward its target of starting mass production in 2027.

Rapidus was established in August 2022 with the support of eight major Japanese companies: Denso(TYO:6902), Kioxia(TYO:285A), MUFG Bank (TYO:8306), NEC(TYO:6701), NTT (TYO:9432), SoftBank(TYO:9984), Sony (TYO:6758), and Toyota (TYO:7203)

Related Articles

Asia

Shakti Pumps (India) Invests INR100 Million in EV Mobility Unit

Shakti Pumps (India) (NSE:SHAKTIPUMP, BOM:531431) said it has invested 100 million Indian rupees in its wholly owned subsidiary Shakti EV Mobility by subscribing to 10 million equity shares, according to a Tuesday filing to the Indian stock exchanges.Shares of the company rose 1% in Wednesday's trade.With this, Shakti Pumps' total investment in the EV mobility unit has increased to 650 million Indian rupees, the filing said.The investment is aimed at supporting business expansion of the subsidiary, it added.

$BOM:531431$NSE:SHAKTIPUMP
Asia

Challenger's Fiscal 2026 Q3 Update Missed Consensus Across Key Life Metrics, Jarden Says

Challenger's (ASX:CGF) fiscal 2026 third-quarter update missed consensus across key Life metrics, with FM outflows significantly worse than expected, driven by institutional equity mandate attrition in both Australian and global equities, according to a Tuesday note by Jarden.The firm's redemption of all CGFPC notes on May 25 simplifies the capital structure, reduces the AT1 coupon burden, and is earnings-per-share accretive.Jarden sees balanced risk/reward for Challenger in the future, with catalysts including capital management flexibility from the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority reform, as well as expanding retirement partnerships across superfunds.It lowered its fiscal 2026 sales forecast to reflect weaker institutional fixed-term sales, partially offset by higher retail annuity sales as partnerships come online.The investment firm retained its neutral rating on Challenger and raised the price target to AU$8.70 per share from AU$8.60 per share.

$ASX:CGF
Asia

Proya Cosmetics 2025 Profit Down 4%, Revenue Slips 2%

Proya Cosmetics (SHA:603605) posted 2025 attributable net profit of 1.50 billion yuan, down 3.5% from 1.55 billion yuan the previous year.Earnings per share slid to 3.80 yuan from 3.92 yuan, according to a Wednesday filing with the Shanghai bourse.Operating revenue declined 1.7% year over year to 10.6 billion yuan from 10.8 billion yuan.Shares of the cosmetics maker were up over 1% in recent trade.

$SHA:603605