BENGALURU, July 11 (Reuters) - India's Vedanta (VDAN.NS) fell over 2% on Tuesday, a day after Taiwan's Foxconn (2317.TW) said it withdrew from a $19.5 billion semiconductor joint venture with the metals-to-oil conglomerate.
The companies partnered last year to set up semiconductor and display production plants in Gujarat state.
S&P Global Ratings said that Vedanta's planned semiconductor business does not increase immediate liquidity pressure, adding that it believes there is no immediate sizable funding commitment for the semiconductor project, pending government approval.
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), the country's market regulator, had imposed a 3 million rupee($36,430.76) fine nearly two weeks ago on Vedanta for disclosure requirement violations regarding the Foxconn venture.
Shares of Vedanta fell as much as 2.6% to 275 rupees apiece, after having already fallen over 24% as of last close, since the partnership was announced in February last year.
Persons:
Taiwan's Foxconn, Narendra Modi's chipmaking, Varun Vyas, Dhanya Ann Thoppil, Sonia Cheema
Organizations:
Reuters, Indian, Securities, Exchange Board of India, Vedanta, Thomson
Locations:
BENGALURU, Gujarat, Bengaluru