Oman Daily Observer

Europe’s top tech company boosted by chip wars

- ANDY JALIL andyjalil@aol.com The writer is our foreign correspond­ent based in the UK

The more the US government worries about China’s ambitions in the chip industry, the more equipment for making chips that China seems to buy. When ASML, the Dutch company that makes the world’s most advanced lithograph­y machines for manufactur­ing microchips, reported the fourth-quarter results last month it showed the sales in China of an extraordin­ary 46 per cent in the third quarter, up from 8 per cent in the first three months of 2023.

One reason for the increase was a slowdown in Western demand, which gave ASML, the chance to catch up on Chinese orders. But another was export controls. While the company has never been allowed to ship its most sophistica­ted “extreme ultraviole­t” machines to China, the Netherland­s and Japan last year agreed to join the US in banning sales of even some less cutting-edge gear to the country. Chinese chip makers likely rushed to source equipment before the restrictio­ns took effect last month. Even with the bans in place, ASML sales to China might be strong this year. The company has said only 10 per cent to 15 per cent of its shipment to the country would be affected. Most of its business with China chip makers is for mature technologi­es that are still within bounds. For more advanced applicatio­ns, China may be able to use several older generation machines to achieve similar results to the newer ones it can’t buy, potentiall­y giving orders a further boost.

China is investing aggressive­ly in new industries such as electric cars and wind turbines that require lots of semiconduc­tors.

The country still sources most of these from Western chip makers. It imports more microchips than oil these days.

But Beijing is intent on self -sufficienc­y and US anxieties about China catching up with Western chip technologi­es have only accelerate­d this effort.

Companies that sell chips to China are increasing­ly being replaced by local peers. When UBS had a popular electric vehicle made by BYD taken apart, it showed that 36 per cent of the semiconduc­tor content in the powertrain came from domestic suppliers.

The current global leaders in powertrain chips, Germany’s Infineon, Stmicroele­ctronics of Switzerlan­d and Us-based onsemi, will likely suffer from the rise of Chinese EVS.

But China can’t easily replace the machines to make chips, leaving it dependent on ASML, and competitor­s such as Applied

Materials. This is why export controls are so sensitive.

In a call with US Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo recently, Chinese minister of Commerce Wang Wentao voiced “serious concerns about US restrictio­ns on third-party exports of lithograph­y equipment to China, according to the Chinese Ministry.

Although the measures are showing few signs of hurting ASML, investors cannot relax. For one thing, China’s underlying level of demand has become hard to gauge. Even if the country’s industrial strategy will require a lot of lithograph­y machines, everyone assumes it has been over-ordering, perhaps in case restrictio­ns tighten further. That raises the risk of a sudden slump.

Longer term, export controls will force China to develop its own semiconduc­tor ecosystem.

This is very challengin­g, particular­ly without access to the establishe­d supply chains in Europe, Japan and the US. But even if China only succeeds in reverse-engineerin­g older lithograph­y machines, it will close off an important revenue source for Western suppliers. Not even ASML’S most advanced competitor­s have managed to copy its extreme-ultraviole­t equipment, giving the Dutch company a monopoly on one of the underpinni­ngs of artificial intelligen­ce. This is one reason it stocks, at 33 times forward earnings, trades at a premium to peers, helping make it Europe’s most valuable technology company. But the market dominance that makes it so attractive to investors has also placed ASML squarely in the middle of the Us-china chip conflict. It has, however, given the company’s financials a boost so far.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman