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Foxconn Arm In India Is Set To Lose Its Country Head Foulger

The group's long-time executive in India is leaving just as the manufacturer is pushing to expand in the South Asian country.

Josh Foulger, managing director of Foxconn India Pvt., poses for a photograph on an assembly line in the mobile phone plant of Rising Stars Mobile India Pvt., a unit of Foxconn Technology Co., in Sriperumbudur, Tamil Nadu, India, on Friday, July 12, 2019. Foxconn, also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., opened its first India factory four years ago, it now operates two assembly plants with plans to expand those and open two more. The company was integral to China’s transformation into a manufacturing colossus, and founder Terry Gou has told India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi that Foxconn could help India do the same.
Josh Foulger, managing director of Foxconn India Pvt., poses for a photograph on an assembly line in the mobile phone plant of Rising Stars Mobile India Pvt., a unit of Foxconn Technology Co., in Sriperumbudur, Tamil Nadu, India, on Friday, July 12, 2019. Foxconn, also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., opened its first India factory four years ago, it now operates two assembly plants with plans to expand those and open two more. The company was integral to China’s transformation into a manufacturing colossus, and founder Terry Gou has told India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi that Foxconn could help India do the same.

Foxconn Technology Group is losing a long-time executive in India, just as the manufacturer is pushing to expand in the South Asian country.

Josh Foulger, the country head of Foxconn’s Bharat FIH arm, is leaving the company after nine years, people familiar with the matter said. His last day will be this month, they said, asking not to be named as the matter is private. His plans going forward couldn’t immediately be learned.

Foulger, a three-decade veteran in the electronics industry, has helped Taiwanese contract manufacturer Foxconn and its customers including Xiaomi Corp. expand in India. He worked closely with Xiaomi’s former India boss Manu Jain to assemble Xiaomi smartphones in local Foxconn factories, helping the Chinese brand become a force in the fast-growing Indian market.

Over time though, Bharat FIH began losing share of the Xiaomi business as the Chinese brand sought more local partners. Last year, Xiaomi added domestic contender Dixon Technologies India Ltd. as a smartphone assembler as the country’s government encouraged manufacturers to work more closely with Indian suppliers.

Foxconn representatives didn’t have immediate comment when Bloomberg News reached out for the story. Foulger didn’t reply to a WhatsApp message seeking comment.

Bharat FIH has postponed plans to list on Indian stock exchanges, and has yet to make significant headway on its ambition to start manufacturing electric two-wheelers.

Taiwanese parent Foxconn, the world’s largest assembler of iPhones and other electronics for global brands, is expanding capacity in India as geopolitical tensions and economic uncertainty begin to disrupt its main operations in China. Foxconn is setting aside roughly $2.7 billion primarily to build plants in southern India, joining other manufacturers in exploring the Asian country as an alternative global production base.

Prior to joining Foxconn, Foulger was a senior executive at Nokia Oyj and oversaw a huge mobile-phone manufacturing complex for the Finnish company in southern India.

--With assistance from Jane Lanhee Lee.

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