New Straits Times

WOES LOOM FOR CHINA’S ZTE

Telecom giant unable to continue operating without key supplies, amid rising tension

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WITH a major Chinese smartphone maker on the rocks following United States sanctions, the trade spat between Washington and Beijing appears to be taking a turn for the worse for tech firms in the two global economic powerhouse­s.

Chinese telecom giant ZTE said in the past week its major operations had “ceased” following last month’s US ban on American sales of critical technology to the company, raising the possibilit­y of its collapse.

ZTE depended on American chips and other components, and is unable to continue operating without key supplies.

US officials imposed the ban last month, saying ZTE failed to abide by an agreement to stop selling to Iran and North Korea.

While the ZTE case has a specific legal basis, the ban comes as US-China trade relations have hit a rough patch, amid an intense rivalry for supremacy in key technology fields such as artificial intelligen­ce and 5G, the next-generation wireless systems in the works.

The US administra­tion has barred military and government employees from using smartphone­s from ZTE and fellow Chinese maker Huawei.

President Donald Trump earlier this year blocked a deal that would have allowed a Singaporeb­ased firm to acquire US chipmaker Qualcomm, claiming it would enable Huawei to set the pace the global rollout of 5G technology.

The trade troubles threaten a technology sector that is increasing­ly intertwine­d with major players in the US and China.

“It’s going to disrupt procuremen­t, supply lines, it will affect a lot of companies in various ways,” said one technology industry executive.

“Nobody’s panicking yet but people are nervous and watching.”

James Lewis, a technology specialist with the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, said the tensions are likely to prompt China to step up efforts to disconnect from the US tech sector.

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