The Phnom Penh Post

China chip giant SMIC shares fall

-

SHARES in China’s biggest chip maker plunged on Monday following weekend media reports that Washington has imposed export controls on the company, the latest salvo in the battle for technologi­cal dominance over Beijing.

In a major blow for China’s advanced tech ambitions, the US Commerce Department reportedly ordered companies to seek permission before selling equipment to Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp (SMIC).

Equipment sold to the Chinese company posed an “unacceptab­le risk” of being diverted to “military end use” according to a letter sent to major US computer chip firms that was seen by The Wall Street Journal and the Financial Times.

News of the letter, which was first reported on Saturday, hit SMIC’s share price in Hong Kong on Monday morning with the company opening 7.64 per cent lower at HK$17.10 (US$2.20).

Advanced tech has become one of the many battlefron­ts that have opened up in the last few years as relations between Beijing and Washington plummet to their lowest levels since diplomatic relations were restarted in 1979.

SMIC is China’s biggest contract manufactur­er of chipsets and a key pillar of Beijing’s plans to achieve semiconduc­tor self-reliance.

Analysts say China’s dependence on foreign – including US-made – chips hinders that national goal.

Backed by several Stateowned entities, SMIC has made strides at improving China’s chip capabiliti­es but it remains heavily reliant on imported equipment and software.

Under the new rules announced by the Commerce Department, US companies that want to sell equipment to SMIC will now have to apply for a licence.

SMIC has not issued a statement since the letter was sent out.

But as reports surfaced earlier this month that US officials were mulling export restrictio­ns, it denied having any relationsh­ip with China’s military.

SMIC said: “The company manufactur­es semiconduc­tors and provides services solely for civilian and commercial endusers and end-uses.”

The export restrictio­ns for SMIC come after a similar US campaign to hobble Chinese telecoms giant Huawei, which Washington fears could allow the Chinese government to tap into global telecoms networks.

 ?? XINHUA NEWS AGENCY ?? SMIC’s share price in Hong Kong opened 7.64 per cent lower at HK$17.10 (US$2.20) on Monday morning.
XINHUA NEWS AGENCY SMIC’s share price in Hong Kong opened 7.64 per cent lower at HK$17.10 (US$2.20) on Monday morning.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia