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Apr 21, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
South Korea's Iljin Materials Co., which produces copper foils for rechargeable batteries and printed circuit boards (PCBs), has received 800 billion won ($715 million) in fresh funding from Seoul-based STIC Investments.
STIC will inject the money into Iljin's Malaysia-based subsidiary IMM Technology to fund the construction of Iljin's first production facility in Europe, according to investment banking sources on Apr. 21. The terms and details of STIC's investment, including its ownership of the Malaysia unit after the funding, were not immediately disclosed.
The new factory to be built is understood to be located near a plant of Northvolt, a Swedish battery manufacturer, to which Iljin has recently signed a 10-year contract to supply 17,147-ton copper foils worth at least 400 billion won. The supply contract came shortly after Northvolt won a $14 billion battery order from Volkswagen last month for the next 10 years as the German carmaker is accelerating its push into electric vehicles.
The financing deal marks STIC's second investment in the medium-sized Korean company and also comes as IMM Technology, a wholly owned unit of Iljin Materials, is preparing for a domestic initial public offering. Iljin had acquired 100% of IMM in 2017.
Back in 2019, STIC had invested 600 billion won in Iiljin Materials, which was used to expand IMM Technology's plant in Malaysia. The plant has a bigger capacity than Iljin's 16,000-ton facility in Iksan, North Jeolla Province, which is the largest copper foil plant in South Korea.
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