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Trailing-edge foundry roadmaps for GlobalFoundries, UMC, and SMIC — mature node chipmakers each pursue differing strategies and IP

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Why This Matters

Trailing-edge foundries like GlobalFoundries, UMC, and SMIC are crucial for manufacturing chips used in automotive, industrial, and defense applications, especially as they pursue diverse strategies to stay competitive amid geopolitical and technological challenges. Their evolving approaches impact the supply chain, innovation, and regional chip sovereignty, shaping the future landscape of semiconductor manufacturing.

Key Takeaways

The global foundry market is dominated by TSMC, which captured 69.9% of global foundry revenue in 2025, but beyond the glitz and glamor of the leading edge sit a tier of foundries that collectively manufacture the chips found in cars, power supplies for AI servers, RF front-end modules, display drivers, industrial controllers, and defense systems. GlobalFoundries, UMC, and SMIC posted a combined 2025 revenue of roughly $24 billion and hold approximately 13.5% of the global foundry market between them.

Each is pursuing a fundamentally different strategy shaped by geography, regulation, and technology choices. GlobalFoundries is becoming a U.S. and European specialty foundry, backed by $1.575 billion in CHIPS Act funding and a $3.1 billion Department of Defense contract.

Meanwhile, UMC is bridging from pure mature-node services into 12nm FinFET territory through a manufacturing partnership with Intel, and SMIC is China's de facto national champion, expanding mature-node capacity at enormous scale while pushing the limits of what DUV lithography can achieve under tightening export controls. We break down each of these trailing-edge foundries to see what might be coming up next.

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GlobalFoundries

(Image credit: Getty Images / Bloomberg)

GlobalFoundries (‘GloFo’) exited leading-edge development in 2018 when it canceled its 7nm program and has since repositioned as a specialty foundry focused on differentiated process platforms. That strategy produced FY2025 revenue of $6.79 billion (up 1% year-over-year), with Q4 gross margin of 27.8% and full-year operating cash flow of $1.73 billion. The company's automotive segment hit a record $1.4 billion, up 17% year-over-year, according to its SEC filing.

Its current node portfolio runs from 12LP FinFET down to 180nm and spans several specialty platforms. The company's flagship is 22FDX, a 22nm fully depleted silicon-on-insulator (FD-SOI) process targeting ultra-low-power IoT, automotive radar, millimeter-wave 5G, and microcontrollers with embedded MRAM support. Meanwhile, 45RFSOI is the dominant global platform for 5G RF front-end modules. Below those sit 28nm, 40nm, and 55nm logic nodes, alongside BCD for power management, SiGe BiCMOS for high-frequency analog, and a ramping GaN-on-silicon platform at its Vermont facility.

Two recent acquisitions, however, have expanded GloFo beyond pure-play manufacturing. It bought Singapore-based Advanced Micro Foundry last year, making it one of the world's largest silicon photonics foundries, and acquired MIPS (for RISC-V CPU and AI inference IP) along with Synopsys' ARC and RISC-V processor IP portfolio. The company now offers customers pre-built compute IP alongside fabrication, a model no other trailing-edge foundry currently can.

Swipe to scroll horizontally Node Technology Target applications Primary fab Status 12LP/12LP+ FinFET High-performance SoCs Malta, NY Production 22FDX/22FDX+ FD-SOI, eMRAM IoT, automotive radar, mmWave 5G, MCUs Dresden; Malta Production 28SLP/28SLPe Bulk CMOS Mainstream logic Dresden; Singapore Production 45RFSOI RF SOI 5G RF front-end modules Singapore Production 40/55nm BCDLite BCD, analog Power management ICs Singapore Production 90/130/180nm CMOS, SiGe, GaN Automotive MCUs, secure elements, RF, GaN power Vermont; Dresden Production Silicon photonics Integrated photonics Optical transceivers, co-packaged optics Singapore Expanding

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