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
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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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