Honda Extends China Plant Closures on Nexperia Chip Shortages
By Reuters | 05 Jan, 2026
The Dutch government's takeover of the Dutch subsidiary of China's Wingtech penny-chip business has hurt most of the world's carmakers.
Honda Motor said on Monday it will extend a production halt at three car plants in China by two weeks due to a semiconductor shortage, highlighting persistent supply chain strains for Japan's second-biggest automaker.
The factories, run with Guangzhou Automobile Group, had been set to restart operations on Monday but will now resume on January 19, a company spokesperson said.
The disruption follows delays in chip shipments of Nexperia, a Dutch subsidiary of Chinese firm Wingtech, which has forced some automakers to slash output over the past months.
Honda did not directly attribute the latest adjustment to Nexperia.
Honda also halted or reduced production at North American plants from late October into November last year due to chip shortages, underscoring its vulnerability to supply swings.
(Reporting by Maki Shiraki; Writing by Daniel Leussink; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)
Recent Articles
- Iranian Resistance Economy Likely to Outlast Trump's Tattered Credibility
- US Weekly Jobless Claims Fell on AI Boom Buildout Halo
- Meta Seeks Up to $25 Billion with Bond Sale
- US Q1 Growth Rose to 2% on Reopening of Government
- Bombardier Profits Beat on Repair Demand on Markedly Higher Private Jet Use
- Prada's US Sales Drove Q1 Revenue Rise
- Inflation Posted Biggest Gain in Three Years in March
- US General to Brief Trump on Military Options to Break Iran Deadlock
- US House OKs Plan to Budget $70 Billion More for ICE
- Samsung to Compete Against TSMC for Cutting-Edge 2-nm Process Chip Fabrication
