Business Standard

Samsung, Hynix probed by China amid chip-price rally

- BLOOMBERG

Samsung Electronic­s Co. and SK Hynix Inc, two of the world’s biggest chipmakers, said they’re being investigat­ed by China’s government after their US rival Micron Technology Inc received a similar visit from the country’s regulators.

Investigat­ors from China’s regulatory agency visited Samsung’s Chinese sales offices on May 31, Suwon, South Korea-based company said in an emailed statement. “Samsung is cooperatin­g with Chinese authoritie­s.” Hynix, based in Icheon, South Korea, said separately it is cooperatin­g.

Micron, the largest US maker of computer memory chips, said last week that Chinese authoritie­s visited its offices in that country, potentiall­y opening another front in a growing trade dispute between the world’s two largest economies. China is the largest maker for semiconduc­tors yet isn’t home to even one of the top 10 producers of the crucial electronic components. The memory chip market has been increasing­ly concentrat­ed in the hands of Micron and its two Korean rivals, who have enjoyed record profits from the devices that are essential to everything from supercompu­ters to smartphone­s over the last year.

None of the three chipmakers have said publicly what they are being questioned about. South Korean media said China was accusing them of colluding with each other to hike memory chip prices.

“It’s an expression of China’s intention to bring down memory prices,” said Park Kang-ho, an analyst at Daishin Securities Co. “It’ll have some psychologi­cal effect, but it’s unlikely to have a serious impact on the share prices.”

China has been spending heavily to boost its domestic supply of semiconduc­tors, buying chipmaking equipment from South Korea. Its companies such as Huawei Technologi­es Co. and Xiaomi Corp. compete with Samsung in the global smartphone market, while the Korean company is struggling to regain its momentum with its phone sales in the Chinese market.

According to reports, China has been accusing Samsung, Hynix and Micron of colluding with each other to hike memory chip prices

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