THE HEADLINE
Budget 2026: ISM 2.0 Allocates ₹40,000 Cr to Break the ‘Assembly Trap’—Tata and Polymatech Lead the Pivot to Equipment & IP Sovereignty.
EXECUTIVE BRIEF: THE 2026 INFLECTION POINT
The “Assembly Phase” is over. The Union Budget 2026-27 signals a ruthless strategic correction in India’s semiconductor roadmap. While ISM 1.0 (2022-2025) successfully planted the flags—bringing ATMP and Fab proposals to Gujarat and Assam—ISM 2.0 is the value-capture phase.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s announcement of a ₹40,000 crore ($4.8B) outlay for the expanded Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS) and the launch of ISM 2.0 is not just an incentive boost; it is a structural pivot. The government is effectively telling the market: We will no longer subsidize just the box; we are funding the machine that makes the box and the brain inside it.The Core Shift:
1. From Fabs to Feeders: Capital allocation moves upstream to Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment (SME) and materials (gases, chemicals, wafers).
2. From Licensees to Owners: A hard push for “Full-Stack Indian IP,” specifically targeting RISC-V architectures and Edge AI designs.
3. Private Sector Hegemony: Unlike the state-heavy initial phase, 2026 sees private conglomerates (Tata, Kaynes, Polymatech) taking the lead in execution, with the state retreating to a “capex-enabler” role.
THE STRATEGIC PIVOT: ISM 1.0 VS. ISM 2.0
The “Strategist” analysis reveals that ISM 1.0 was about presence. ISM 2.0 is about profitability and resilience.The “Assembly Trap” Avoidance:
Without ISM 2.0, India risked becoming a “glorified assembly line”—importing expensive wafers and equipment, adding minimal value, and re-exporting. By targeting the SME market (projected to be a $120B+ global sector in 2026), India aims to capture the 40-50% margins found in tool making, rather than the 5-8% margins in assembly.
THE PRIVATE SECTOR VANGUARD: WHO IS LEADING?
The narrative of “Government-led” is dead. 2026 is the year of the Indian Corporate Titan.
1. Tata Electronics: The Ecosystem Anchor
Tata is no longer just building a fab; they are building a fiefdom.
- 2026 Status: Commercial production at the Dholera Fab (partnered with PSMC) is imminent.
- The Pivot: Tata has expanded into automotive chip design through a strategic partnership with Japan’s ROHM. They are not just printing chips; they are designing the power management ICs (PMICs) for the global EV market.
- Strategic Signal:Â Tata is leveraging the ECMS expansion to localize the supply chain for its own fabs, effectively verticalizing the industry within one conglomerate.
2. Polymatech Electronics: The Dark Horse Giant
While the media focused on Tata, Chennai-based Polymatech has executed a silent blitz.
- The IPO Event: Preparing for a massive ₹10,000 crore ($1.2B) IPO in 2026.
- Focus Area: Opto-semiconductors and GaN (Gallium Nitride) chips. Unlike logic chips, these are critical for 5G/6G and medical devices—high margin, lower volume.
- Expansion: A ₹1,143 crore facility in Chhattisgarh is already operationalizing. Polymatech represents the “Specialized Silicon” success story ISM 2.0 wants to replicate.
3. Kaynes Technology: The Executor
Kaynes has transitioned from an EMS player to a full-blown OSAT (Outsourced Semiconductor Assembly and Test) powerhouse.
- 2026 Milestone:Â Mass production at its Sanand, Gujarat facility begins Jan 2026.
- The Play: Partnering with Alpha & Omega Semiconductor, Kaynes is proving that mid-cap Indian firms can execute faster than PSUs. They are the prime beneficiary of the ECMS ₹40k crore expansion, using it to fund advanced packaging lines.
THE NEW OIL: EQUIPMENT & IP SOVEREIGNTY
This is the most “CXO-critical” aspect of the budget. The government has realized that IP is the highest value capture.The “RISC-V” Bet:
India is doubling down on RISC-V (open-standard instruction set architecture). The budget allocates specific funds for “Industry-led Design Centers.”
- Why? ARM and x86 architectures are owned by Western entities. RISC-V is open. By funding startups (like those in the DLI scheme) to build RISC-V cores, India insulates its defense and critical infra sectors from potential future sanctions or licensing fees.
- 2026 Outlook: Expect Ola’s Krutrim and other DLI-backed startups to tape out India’s first commercial AI logic chips this year, moving beyond “design” to “silicon.”
Equipment Localization:
ISM 2.0 incentives explicitly target the manufacturing of:
- Gases & Chemicals:Â Photoresists, high-purity gases (needed for the Dholera fab).
- Spare Parts:Â Consumables for lithography and etching machines.
- The Goal:Â Reduce the OpEx of Indian fabs by 20-30% by sourcing consumables locally.
DATA INTEL: THE 2026 LANDSCAPE
| Entity | 2026 Key Initiative / CapEx | Strategic Focus (ISM 2.0 Aligned) |
|---|---|---|
| Tata Electronics | Dholera Fab Commercialization + Assam ATMP | Logic Chips (28nm), Auto-Grade PMICs (IP) |
| Polymatech | ₹10,000 Cr IPO + Chhattisgarh Expansion | Opto-semiconductors, GaN Chips |
| Kaynes Tech | ₹3,300 Cr Sanand Facility (Live Jan ’26) | Advanced OSAT, Power Modules |
| ISM 2.0 Fund | ₹40,000 Cr (ECMS Expansion) | Capital Goods, Equipment, Materials |
| DLI Startups | ~50 Startups (Targeted) | RISC-V Cores, Edge AI IP |
STRATEGIC IMPLICATIONS FOR THE C-SUITE
1. The Supply Chain “Lock-In” Opportunity
For automotive and industrial CXOs: The window to lock in long-term supply contracts with Indian fabs is now. By 2027, capacity at Tata and Kaynes will be fully booked by global players seeking “China+1” diversity.
2. The M&A Wave in Design
With the government subsidizing IP creation, expect a flurry of acqui-hires. Large Indian IT services firms (TCS, HCL, Wipro) will likely acquire DLI-funded chip design startups in 2026 to offer “Silicon-to-Software” services.
3. The Risk Vector: Talent vs. Steel
The budget solves the “Steel” (infrastructure) problem but exposes the “Talent” gap. While “training centers” are announced, the lead time for a lithography engineer is 5+ years. The short-term constraint for ISM 2.0 will not be capital; it will be human competence.
FINAL VERDICT
Budget 2026 is a statement of maturation. India has graduated from “begging for fabs” to “building the ecosystem.” For the Strategist, the signal is clear: The alpha is no longer in announcing a plant; it is in owning the IP that runs on it and building the machines that make it.
Contextual Source:Ministry of Electronics & IT (MeitY) Policy Framework
