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SK Hynix’s Intel Nand Business Takeover Wins China Approval

China’s market regulator said on Wednesday that it had approved the acquisition deal – but with conditions


South Korean chip producer SK Hynix warned on Wednesday that it would slash investment after quarterly profit tumbled 60%.
SK Hynix has said the US facility would have an advanced chip production line to mass-produce next-generation high-bandwidth memory chips used in graphic processing units that train artificial intelligence systems. File photo: Reuters.

 

South Korea’s SK Hynix Inc said on Wednesday it has received merger clearances from the Chinese anti-monopoly authority for its acquisition of Intel Corp’s NAND memory chip business, clearing the way for the world’s second-largest memory chipmaker to complete regulatory approvals from all eight countries.

The US chip giant agreed last October to sell its NAND memory chip business to SK Hynix for $9 billion, part of a move to divest to focus on its smaller but more lucrative Optane memory business which uses more advanced technology.

“SK Hynix sincerely welcomes and appreciates the State Administration for Market Regulation‘s merger clearance for the deal. SK Hynix will enhance its competitiveness of NAND Flash and SSD business by continuing the remaining post-merger integration process,” the company said in a statement.

China‘s market regulator said on Wednesday that it had approved the acquisition deal – but with conditions.

The concentration of the PCIe and SATA solid state drive businesses after the acquisition will have or may have a restrictive effect on competition in those markets, so additional conditions to this deal are needed, China‘s State Administration for Market Regulation said in a statement.

Additional conditions include that SK Hynix should not supply PCIe and SATA enterprise-class solid state drive products to China‘s domestic market at unreasonable prices.

The Chinese regulator also said SK Hynix should continue to expand its output of PCIe and SATA enterprise-class solid state drive products within five years of the effective transaction date.

SK Hynix should not force customers in China‘s market to exclusively purchase products from SK Hynix or companies controlled by it, nor should it enter into deals with its main competitors in China that exclude or restrict competition.

 

‘Mutually Beneficial’

The deal is SK Hynix’s biggest acquisition, as the Korean firm tries to boost its capacity to build NAND chips which are used to store data in smartphones and data centre servers and to beef up its pricing power.

“There has been speculation that it will be difficult for SK Hynix to win China’s approval for the deal or any approval could be delayed significantly given the complex situation … amid tensions between the United States and China in the semiconductor sector.

“It seems like the approval could come at the right time without a significant delay as the deal is deemed mutually beneficial for all three countries,” SK Hynix said.

Analysts said the deal will help SK Hynix narrow the gap with market leader Samsung Electronics Co Ltd.

China‘s approval comes a bit later than what the market expected, but this is in line with the company’s goal of receiving Chinese regulatory approval within this year,” Park Sung-soon, an analyst at Cape Investment & Securities, said.

“This acquisition would likely help SK Hynix better expand its NAND solid state drive (SSD) business for enterprise customers like data centres as its NAND SSD business has been predominantly focused on consumer products such as smartphones and PCs” Park added.

SK Hynix shares closed up 2%, outpacing the KOSPI’s 0.3% rise.

 

• Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

ALSO SEE:

SK Hynix to buy Intel’s NAND business for $9 billion

Western Digital and Kioxia Seen In Talks to Create Memory Chip Giant

Samsung Elec Sees Strong Chip Demand, Mobile Recovery as Q2 Profit Jumps

Strong Chip Prices Help Power Samsung Profits Leap

 

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.