Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Ltd., trading as Foxconn Technology Group, is a multinational electronics contract manufacturing company with its headquarters in Tucheng, New Taipei, Taiwan.
Today, it is the world's largest contract electronics manufacturer[3] and the fourth-largest information technology company by revenue.[4] The company is the largest private employer in Taiwan[5] and one of the largest employers worldwide.[6][7] Its founder and chairman is Terry Gou.
Foxconn manufactures electronic products for major American, Canadian, Chinese, Finnish and Japanese companies. Notable products manufactured by Foxconn include the BlackBerry,[8] iPad,[9] iPhone, iPod,[10] Kindle,[11] Nintendo 3DS, Nokia devices, Xiaomi devices, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Wii U, and Xbox One.[12] As of 2012, Foxconn factories manufactured an estimated 40% of all consumer electronics sold worldwide.[13]
ThanQ.
It should be noted (and from now on?) that Foxconn is Taiwanese and not PRC. The former being a free people that embrace the liberty afforded by capitalism, the latter being a communist country.
Taiwan is viewed as a type of “Isreal in Asia” where-in the larger surrounding countries despise its very existence; especially the PRC.
Here is a list of more the 70 major contractees of FoxConn's more than 500 Consumer Electronic manufacturing customers which have contracted with Foxconn to manufacture one or more of their brand name products that I've been able to compile from financial press news articles where their contractural relationships were mentioned over the past eight years or so:
- Acer Inc. (Taiwan)
- Alcatel (France)
- Amazon (United States)
- Amoi (China)
- Apple Inc. (United States)
- Archos (France)
- ASRock (Taiwan)
- Asus (Taiwan)
- BBK (China)
- Barnes & Noble (United States)
- BenQ (South Korea)
- Blackberry (Canada)
- Cisco (United States)
- Coolpad (China)
- Dell Inc.(United States)
- EVGA Corporation (United States)
- Fujitsu (Japan)
- GE Thomson
- Google (United States)
- Griffin Technologies (United States)
- Gründig Mobile (Germany)
- Haier (China)
- Hewlett-Packard (United States)
- HiSense (China)
- Honor (China)
- HTC (Taiwan)
- Huawei (China)
- Intel (United States)
- IBM (United States)
- Kyocera Communications (Japan)
- Komko (China)
- LeEcco (China)
- Lenovo (China)
- Lenovo/Motorola Mobility (China)
- LG Lucky GoldStar (South Korea)
- Meizu (China)
- Microsoft (United States)
- Microsoft MSI (Taiwan)
- Motorola Communications (United States)
- NCR (United States)
- NEC Casio Communication (Japan)
- Netgear (United States)
- Nintendo (Japan)
- Nokia Oyj (Finland)
- Olivetti (Italy)
- OnePlus (China)
- Oppo (China)
- PackardBell (Netherlands)
- Panasonic (Japan)
- Philips (Netherlands)
- Pioneer Electronics (Japan)
- Samsung (South Korea)
- Sanyo (Japan)
- Sharp (Japan)
- Siemens (Germany)
- Smartisan (China)
- Sony (Japan)
- TCL Communication Technology (China)
- Technology Happy Life (China)
- Telefunken (Germany)
- Thomson (France)
- Toshiba (Japan)
- Vivo (China)
- VSun (China)
- Vizio (United States)
- Vodophone (UK)
- Wasam (China)
- Xiaomi (China)
- Zoostorm (New Zealand)
- ZTE (China)
- ZUK (China)
There are many more no-name, generic, store brand, and Chinese brands, as well as government contracts manufactured and assembled by Foxconn, as well as sub-assemblies for inclusion in other products such as automobiles, aircraft, missiles, ships, machine tools, Point-of-sale equipment, etc., which Foxconn makes. They employ almost 2 million people. The last figure I heard was that Foxconn was
Oops, got interrupted. . .
The last figure I heard was Foxconn was making over 50% of the world’s Consumer Electronics.