The Sun (Malaysia)

TSMC chairman warns China-US deleveragi­ng will drive up costs

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TAIPEI: The deleveragi­ng of ChinaUS supply chains and protection­ism on both sides of the Pacific will only drive up costs and limit the flow of ideas, the chairman of Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co Ltd said yesterday.

The Trump administra­tion has limited supplies to Chinese tech firms like Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd, viewing them as a security threat, and is encouragin­g US factories in

China to move home, part of a broader China-US trade war.

China, for its part, is trying to nurture tech champions of its own like SMIC, its biggest chipmaker, and wean itself off reliance on US suppliers.

Speaking at a semiconduc­tor conference in Taipei, TSMC chairman Mark Liu said over the last four decades the industry had benefited from the free global flow of informatio­n.

“But in the future the climate may change. The informatio­n flow may not be that free. Tariffs may be erected. So we have to prepare for that,” said Liu, whose company is the world’s biggest contract chipmaker.

“One thing is the competitio­n will be stronger. Secondly, the cost of production or developmen­t will be higher because one cannot leverage the whole world like in the past,” he said.

Taiwanese firms like TSMC – a major supplier to the likes of Apple Inc and Qualcomm Inc – have to improve their own technology to respond and remind the world how important the island’s companies are, Liu said.

“Because either side of the Pacific is trying to do their self-sufficient supply chains. They want to do it themselves,” he said.

“Use Taiwan’s engineers’ ingenuity to lift our technology level up.”

TSMC has become caught up in the China-US tension, saying in July it had stopped taking new orders from Huawei in May and did not plan to ship wafers after Sept 15, responding to US curbs on supplying the Chinese company.

TSMC also plans to build a US$12 billion factory in Arizona, in an apparent win for the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to wrestle global tech supply chains back from China. – Reuters

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