Waterloo Region Record

China tech stocks Lenovo, ZTE tumble after chip hack report

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HONG KONG — Chinese tech stocks Lenovo Group and ZTE Corp. tumbled in Hong Kong on Friday following a news report Chinese spies might have used chips supplied by another company to hack into U.S. computer systems.

Lenovo shares closed down 15.1 per cent while ZTE lost 11 per cent.

Bloomberg News cited unidentifi­ed U.S. officials as saying malicious chips were inserted into equipment supplied by Super Micro Computer Inc. to American companies and government agencies.

Lenovo, with headquarte­rs in Beijing and Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, is the biggest global manufactur­er of personal computers and has a growing smartphone brand.

“Super Micro is not a supplier to Lenovo in any capacity,” said Lenovo in a statement. “Furthermor­e, as a global company we take extensive steps to protect the ongoing integrity of our supply chain.”

A spokespers­on for ZTE, headquarte­red in Shenzhen in southern China, said she wasn’t aware of the report.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Bloomberg said Chinese military operatives added components to Super Micro products made at factories in China. It said the components included code that caused the products to accept changes to their software and to connect to outside computers.

Super Micro, headquarte­red in San Jose, Calif., denied its products contained malicious chips.

“Supermicro has never found any malicious chips, nor been informed by any customer that such chips have been found,” said a company statement.

Chinese tech companies face heightened scrutiny in the United States.

A 2012 report by a congressio­nal panel said ZTE and Chinese rival Huawei Technology Ltd. were security risks and warned American telecoms companies not to buy their equipment.

ZTE faced possible bankruptcy this year after Washington imposed a seven-year ban on sales of U.S. technology to the company over its exports to Iran and North Korea.

American authoritie­s lifted the ban in July after ZTE paid a $1 billion fine, agreed to replace its executive team and hire U.S.-selected compliance officers.

“Super Micro is not a supplier to Lenovo in any capacity.”

LENOVO STATEMENT

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