India's Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology approved twelve semiconductor manufacturing projects valued at ₹1.64 lakh crore ($19.3 billion), the largest single-wave greenfield commitment in the subcontinent's chip-building history. The same week, South Korea announced mega-fab cluster expansions in Honam and Chungcheong involving hundreds of trillions of won, with equipment orders already flowing to Applied Materials and Tokyo Electron. Together, the moves represent $40+ billion in committed foundry and assembly capacity outside the Taiwan Strait, the first time non-China emerging markets have coordinated this scale of semiconductor capital without multinational anchor tenants.
The Indian approvals span logic fabs, assembly test facilities, and compound semiconductor lines. Four projects involve domestic consortia led by Tata Electronics and CG Power; eight involve joint ventures with Foxconn, Micron, and Singapore-based ATMPs. The Ministry of Finance confirmed co-investment from the India Semiconductor Mission fund, which underwrites 50% of project capex for qualified ventures. First wafer output is scheduled for Q2 2027 at the Gujarat and Karnataka sites. South Korea's announcement centers on Samsung Foundry's Pyeongtaek expansion and SK hynix's memory node migration, with provincial governments in Jeolla and Chungcheong pledging tax holidays and pre-cleared environmental permits. The combined footprint approaches 1.2 million wafers per month when all lines reach steady state in 2029.
The timing is not coincidental. U.S. export controls on high-bandwidth memory and extreme ultraviolet lithography tools to China have pushed foundries to derisk Taiwan-centric supply chains. India's twelve approvals were fast-tracked after the Commerce Department's February clarification that fabs using U.S.-origin equipment below 7nm could qualify for CHIPS Act export credits if they serve allied defense contractors. South Korea's cluster announcements follow $230 billion in announced semiconductor investment since 2023, but this wave is the first with binding construction schedules and named offtake agreements. LG Display, Hyundai Motor, and Indian conglomerates Reliance and Adani have signed multi-year wafer purchase contracts, a shift from speculative capacity to pre-sold production.
Both markets are structurally underweight in family-office and sovereign wealth portfolios relative to their share of global foundry capex. India holds 2.1% of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index despite hosting 7% of announced semiconductor investment since 2024. South Korea's weighting is 12.4%, but that reflects legacy Samsung Electronics exposure, not the foundry and materials layer now drawing capital. The Invesco RAFI Emerging Markets ETF rebalanced in March to add 340 basis points of India semiconductor exposure, the largest single-sector shift in the fund's eighteen-year history. Taiwan Semiconductor's forward P/E of 22x contrasts with India's Tata Electronics at 14x and South Korea's DB HiTek at 11x, a valuation gap that persists despite comparable capex-to-revenue ratios.
Watch for three follow-on events. First, India's fiscal 2026 budget in July will clarify whether the Semiconductor Mission receives the ₹50,000 crore top-up requested by the Ministry; approval would fund six additional projects already in technical review. Second, Samsung Foundry's April earnings call will disclose Honam cluster utilization rates and customer mix; any mention of U.S. defense or automotive clients would confirm the strategic pivot. Third, Applied Materials' backlog disclosure in May will show the split between China, Taiwan, and rest-of-world shipments; a 15% shift toward India and South Korea would mark the fastest geographic reallocation in the company's fifty-year history.
The India Semiconductor Mission's next board meeting is June 12. South Korea's Ministry of Trade holds its cluster working group review on June 19. Both dates land before the July G7 summit, where semiconductor export frameworks are the listed first agenda item.