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New US Chip Curbs on China Would Risk More Supply Chain Woes

Experts say there could be major impacts, such as price surges, if Washington limits shipments of US chipmaking equipment to memory chip producers in China


Experts have warned there could be far-reaching impacts, such as a surge in prices, if Washington limits shipments of US chipmaking equipment to memory chip producers in China.
South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol and Samsung Electronics vice chairman Lee Jae-yong, left, stand next to US President Joe Biden during a visit to Samsung Electronics' Pyeongtaek campus in May 2022. The company has put billions in a plant in China that would be hit hard by a ban that the US is considering but Samsung is also planning a big plant in Texas. File photo: Jonathan Ernst, Reuters.

Restrictions that Washington is considering slapping on the export of advanced semiconductor equipment to China may disrupt global supply chains and cause prices to spike just as signs emerge that the global chip shortage that has hammered businesses over the past year is easing

That’s the view of some analysts, who say additional curbs would stop chipmakers like South Korean giants Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix from shipping new technology tools to factories they operate in China, preventing them from upgrading plants that serve customers around the world.

Samsung and SK Hynix, which control more than half of the global NAND flash memory chip market, have invested heavily in China in recent decades to produce chips that are vital to customers including tech giants Apple, Amazon, Facebook owner Meta and Google. As well as computers and phones, the chips are used in products like electric vehicles that require digital data storage.

“Samsung’s China production alone accounts for more than 15% of global NAND flash production … If there’s any production disruption, it will make chip prices surge,” said Lee Min-hee, an analyst at BNK Securities in South Korea.

The potential for fresh turmoil should the fresh curbs be approved comes just as chip supply shortages that disrupted businesses from autos to consumer devices over the past year show signs of easing. Supply chain adjustments and weakening consumer demand amid the slowing global economy have combined to repair damage.

But the shortage has yet to be fully resolved. Any signs of fresh disruption could rekindle supply uncertainty, triggering a price surge – as seen earlier this year when China imposed Covid-19 restrictions in Xi’an, where Samsung manufactures chips.

Chipmaking equipment has to be installed and fully tested months before production is due to start. Any delay in shipping the gear to China would pose a real challenge to chipmakers as they seek to manufacture more advanced chips in China facilities.

“Many US companies, like Apple, use Samsung and SK Hynix memory chips. No matter what strategy (the South Korean firms) end up choosing, it will have global implications,” BNK Securities analyst Lee said.

Samsung and SK Hynix declined to comment, while Apple, Amazon, Meta and Google didn’t respond to emails seeking comment.

 

ALSO SEE: US Set to Limit Export of Chipmaking Gear to China Firms

 

 

Huge Korean Investments in China

In Samsung’s memory chip operation in Xi’an, central China, one of the largest foreign chip projects in the country, the company has invested a total of about $26 billion since it broke ground on the site in 2012, including chip production as well as testing and packaging.

The tech giant makes 128-layer NAND flash products in Xi’an, analysts said, chips that store data in devices such as smartphones and personal computers, as well as in data centres.

The facility accounts for 43% of Samsung’s global NAND flash memory production capacity and 15% of the overall global output capacity, according to TrendForce late last year.

The US crackdown, if approved, could also complicate SK Hynix’s ambition to expand its presence in the NAND market where it is ranked third as of first quarter behind Samsung and Japan’s Kioxia Holdings, which was spun out of Toshiba Corp.

SK Hynix completed late last year the first phase of its $9 billion purchase of Intel’s NAND business, including its Dalian, China NAND manufacturing facility.

 

 

Deepening Tensions

The move being considered by the United States is one of several recent signs of deepening tensions between Beijing and Washington over the tech sector.

Congress last week approved legislation to subsidise semiconductor production in the United States. It bars any company that receives federal subsidies from investing in certain chip technology in China during the subsidy period.

The deepening tensions could leave Samsung and SK Hynix having to review strategies on China investments, analysts and industry sources said.

“Until now, companies tended to invest in countries like China, where costs were cheap,” Kim Yang-jae, analyst at Daol Investment & Securities, said.

“That’s no longer going to be the only consideration. The biggest change these potential limits will bring will be where the next chip factories are built.”

They could also face potentially diminishing returns from their multi-billion dollar China plants, which could be stuck making older-technology, less lucrative chips.

SK Hynix has not been able to upgrade its DRAM memory chip production facilities in Wuxi, China with the latest extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) chipmaking machines made by Dutch firm ASML as US officials do not want advanced equipment used in the process to enter the country.

The EUV machines are used to make more advanced and smaller chips that are used in high-end devices such as smartphones.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

 

ALSO SEE:

US, Japan Chips Alliance Aims to Thwart China Ambitions

 

SK Group’s $22bn US Chips, Energy, Bioscience Investment Plan

 

Samsung Starts to Mass Produce Advanced 3-Nanometre Chips

 

US May Hammer China Chip Ambitions With New Curbs Plan

 

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.