Infineon Technologies AG will open a €5 billion ($5.8 billion) semiconductor fabrication plant in Germany, the company's largest single capital commitment and a keystone project in the European Union's decade-long plan to manufacture 20% of global chips by 2030. The facility, backed by EU subsidy mechanisms under the European Chips Act, marks the first major greenfield fab completion in the bloc's sovereignty push. Production begins Q3 2026.
The Dresden site will fabricate 300mm power semiconductors on nodes optimized for electric vehicles, industrial motor drives, and renewable energy inverters — categories where Infineon already holds 18% global market share. The plant is designed for 40,000 wafer starts per month at full ramp, expected by late 2028. EU co-funding covers approximately €1 billion through direct grants and tax incentives, conditioned on technology transfer agreements that require Infineon to license certain process modules to second-tier European chipmakers by 2029. Brussels is treating this as the template: capital intensity softened by state support, in exchange for ecosystem-wide capability building.
The timing matters because Infineon is trading subsidy certainty against demand risk. Power semiconductor lead times collapsed from 52 weeks in early 2023 to 12 weeks today, and automotive OEM inventories remain elevated after the EV slowdown in Germany and France. Infineon's management is effectively betting that EU-domiciled production insulates them from the next U.S.-China trade confrontation — Washington has signaled a second round of CHIPS Act restrictions targeting firms with meaningful China exposure, and Infineon derives 24% of revenue from Greater China. The new German capacity allows rebalancing without walking away from that revenue base. Fund managers should note that Infineon's CapEx-to-sales ratio will exceed 25% through 2027, compressing free cash flow and likely suspending buybacks. The trade is optionality for margin pressure.
For the broader European semiconductor thesis, this is the canary metric: if Infineon's plant ramps on schedule and secures 70% utilization by 2029, expect STMicroelectronics and NXP to announce similar subsidy-backed builds in France and the Netherlands. If it stalls, the entire EU semiconductor sovereignty narrative reprices.watch whether Infineon's Tier 1 automotive customers — particularly Volkswagen Group and Stellantis — commit to long-term offtake agreements in the next six months, and whether they demand price concessions in exchange. Also watch the European Commission's Q4 2026 review of Chips Act effectiveness; any wavering on future subsidy tranches would immediately impair project NPVs across the sector.
Infineon's share price is up 4.2% in Frankfurt morning trade, but the real test is module two: whether Berlin extends comparable support to the analog and mixed-signal fabs the EU also needs, or whether this was the glamour project that exhausts political capital.