Inventec joins hands with Dixon to manufacture laptops and servers in India
NOOR MOHMMED
01/May/2025

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Taiwan-based Inventec forms JV with Dixon Technologies to set up a new electronics manufacturing plant in Tamil Nadu.
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The JV will produce laptops, desktop PCs, and servers, with an annual capacity of 2 million units.
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Dixon to hold 60% stake, benefiting from India’s PLI scheme for IT hardware manufacturing and tech localization.
In a significant boost to India’s electronics manufacturing ecosystem, Taiwanese giant Inventec Corporation has announced its entry into the Indian market through a joint venture (JV) with Dixon Technologies, one of India’s largest homegrown electronic manufacturing service providers. The new JV aims to manufacture notebook PCs, desktop PCs, components, and servers, aligning with the Indian government’s ‘Make in India’ and Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) initiatives for IT hardware.
According to an official stock exchange filing, Dixon Technologies will hold a 60% equity stake, while Inventec, with over $20 billion in annual revenue, will own the remaining 40%. The board of directors for the JV will include three nominees from Dixon and two from Inventec, highlighting Dixon’s lead role in operations and strategic direction.
As part of the agreement, a new manufacturing facility will be established in Kancheepuram, Tamil Nadu, a state rapidly emerging as a manufacturing hub for global electronics and semiconductors. The facility is expected to have an annual production capacity of 2 million units, including laptops and notebooks.
Strategic Importance for India and Dixon
The move is strategically significant for Dixon Technologies, which is already a beneficiary under India’s PLI scheme for IT hardware, covering products like small servers, laptops, tablets, and desktop PCs. The new joint venture enhances Dixon’s positioning in the global electronics supply chain and strengthens India’s ambition to become a global hub for electronics production.
Inventec Corporation, a major original design manufacturer (ODM), supplies computing hardware to tech giants like HP, Dell, and Lenovo. The company’s decision to set up local manufacturing in India reflects a larger trend of supply chain diversification away from China, especially in response to geopolitical tensions and tariff concerns.
According to government and industry insiders, India’s electronics production goals for 2025 include:
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Increasing the value of domestic electronics manufacturing to over $300 billion
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Reducing dependence on imports by strengthening the local component ecosystem
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Attracting top-tier global firms to invest in Indian manufacturing through JVs or wholly owned subsidiaries
This joint venture checks all those boxes. It brings cutting-edge design and manufacturing technology from Taiwan, integrates it with India’s cost-efficient workforce, and ensures policy alignment through Dixon’s PLI participation.
Key Highlights of the JV:
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Location: New factory in Kancheepuram, Tamil Nadu
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Capacity: 2 million laptops and notebooks annually
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Ownership: Dixon (60%), Inventec (40%)
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Product Line: Laptops, desktops, servers, and key PC components
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Board Composition: 3 directors from Dixon, 2 from Inventec
This new venture also reflects a rising global confidence in India’s policy stability, skilled talent base, and the ability to deliver complex, high-volume manufacturing. Tamil Nadu, already home to Foxconn, Pegatron, Tata Electronics, and Samsung, is becoming a nucleus for large-scale electronics manufacturing in South Asia.
Market Impact and Outlook
With Inventec’s entry, competition is likely to intensify in India’s laptop and PC hardware sector. At the same time, Indian consumers and B2B buyers can expect lower prices, faster availability, and better after-sales support as more hardware is locally made.
Furthermore, local manufacturing enables Dixon-Inventec to meet India’s growing demand for:
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Affordable education laptops
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Office and work-from-home devices
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Compact data center servers
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Digital infrastructure products
For Inventec, India becomes a strategic market and manufacturing base, offering not just cost advantages but also proximity to Southeast Asian and Middle Eastern markets. The company is also exploring long-term supply agreements with global PC brands who want to source locally from India for tax and cost optimization.
Industry experts say that the PLI scheme’s continued funding and transparency will be essential in sustaining this momentum. Inventec’s move could prompt other Taiwanese and Korean hardware firms to look at India more seriously, especially as tensions in the Taiwan Strait persist.
Broader Implications
This partnership is more than just a business deal—it represents a geopolitical and supply chain realignment, in which India is no longer just a consumer market but an integral part of the global tech manufacturing network. It helps reduce global dependence on single-country manufacturing, while advancing India’s goal of becoming a trusted alternative in electronics and semiconductor production.
As of now, both Dixon and Inventec have not disclosed the total investment outlay for the new plant, but sources suggest it could be in the range of ₹500–₹700 crore over the next few years. The plant is expected to be operational by mid-2026, with hiring and equipment installation to begin later this year.
Conclusion
The Inventec-Dixon joint venture marks a significant milestone in India’s tech manufacturing journey. By combining Inventec’s global design and production capabilities with Dixon’s local expertise and policy alignment, the partnership sets a benchmark for future international collaborations in India’s electronics sector.
This development is expected to:
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Create hundreds of new jobs in Tamil Nadu
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Boost domestic electronics exports
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Accelerate India’s rise as a hardware manufacturing power
The move underscores that India is no longer just assembling gadgets — it’s beginning to build the future of computing right at home.