Gasgoo Munich-The Amsterdam Enterprise Chamber issued a ruling on February 11 in the Nexperia case, refusing to lift temporary measures imposed on Wingtech and its chairman, Zhang Xuezheng, or restore the company’s legal control as a shareholder. The court also moved to launch a formal investigation into Nexperia.
Image Credit: Nexperia
Wingtech swiftly fired back with a statement expressing strong dissatisfaction. The company argued the court’s logic was contradictory: maintaining temporary measures while dragging the case into a lengthy investigation. Those measures have already inflicted irreversible damage on Nexperia’s operations. A once-stable supplier now faces eroding client trust and turmoil within its core team, putting more than 25,000 customers and thousands of employees at risk. Citing internal information, the statement warned that governance led by the interim management is accelerating the divestment of key assets, threatening the stability of the global semiconductor supply chain.
Notably, the ruling expanded the scope of the investigation to include Nexperia’s current interim management. Wingtech welcomed this move, urging the court to conduct a thorough probe into the interim management’s governance actions. The statement emphasized that Wingtech and its key executives have always acted lawfully and compliantly in their investment and operations of Nexperia, capable of withstanding any professional, neutral investigation free from external interference.
Wingtech reiterated that the only viable solution is the immediate and unconditional lifting of all temporary measures to restore its full shareholder rights and governance control. The company said it will continue pursuing legal avenues to fully restore control over Nexperia, aiming to stabilize the global industrial chain.









