Global Times

TSMC’s US plant a warning to mainland sector: analysts

- By GT staff reporters

Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co ( TSMC), the world’s largest contract chipmaker, has started hiring for its first US plant in 20 years, media reported.

Analysts said that TSMC’s move comes partly from US pressure and partly from market demand and technical resources. They added that this developmen­t should be another warning for Chinese mainland chipmakers to be self- reliant as soon as possible.

Constructi­on will start next year in the US state of Arizona, with an investment of $ 12 billion, and the company will hire over 600 engineers and executives, of whom 300 will be fresh graduates, the Nikkei reported on Wednesday, citing TSMC Chairman Mark Liu.

Analysts said that there will be an impact on the supply of chips to Chinese mainland companies, but from the US crackdown rather than a single company. The US crackdown remains the sword of Damocles hanging over the industry’s head. To be self- reliant, Chinese mainland enterprise­s must abandon the speculativ­e purchases of technology, they suggested.

“Controllin­g the production of advanced chips is equivalent to occupying the advantage of future technology,” said Zhang Xiaorong, director of the Beijing- based Cutting- Edge Technology Research Institute.

On May 15, the US Department of Commerce announced that it was extending Huawei’s temporary license for another 90 days to August 13, while it slapped a ban on licenses to stop TSMC from making chips for Huawei. On the same day, TSMC announced plans to build a 5- nanometer wafer plant in Arizona that will begin production in 2024, with a monthly capacity of 20,000 wafers.

In terms of the license ban, an industry practition­er, who declined to be identified, told the Global Times that TSMC is the manufactur­er for US chip designer Xilinx whose products are used in F- 35 fighter jets, and there are fears that technology and data could be leaked to the Chinese mainland.

The person also noted that apart from the large global share taken by TSMC, its world- beating manufactur­ing process has also touched a nerve in the US, as products including Apple’s iPhone12, MediaTek’s Breguet 1000 and Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 865, rely on TSMC’s manufactur­ing technology and mass production of 5- nm chips.

Zhou Xibing, a financial writer who follows Huawei closely, said that due to persisting China- US trade friction, TSMC had to make a choice under US pressure. “If a plant is built in the US, access to new technologi­es will be more extensive. But most importantl­y, the US is the largest market for TSMC in terms of revenue,” he told the Global Times.

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