Business World

More Chinese firms looking to Malaysia for assembly of high-end chips

- Reuters

SINGAPORE — A growing number of Chinese semiconduc­tor design companies are tapping Malaysian firms to assemble a portion of their high-end chips, keen to hedge risks in case the US expands sanctions on China’s chip industry, sources said.

The companies are asking Malaysian chip packaging firms to assemble a type of chip known as graphics processing units (GPUs), according to three people with knowledge of the discussion­s.

The requests only encompass assembly — which does not contravene any US restrictio­ns — and not fabricatio­n of the chip wafers, they said. Some contracts have already been agreed, two of the people added.

The people declined to disclose the names of the companies involved or to be identified, citing confidenti­ality agreements.

Seeking to limit China’s access to high-end GPUs that could fuel artificial intelligen­ce (AI) breakthrou­ghs or power supercompu­ters and military applicatio­ns, Washington has increasing­ly placed restrictio­ns on their sales as well as on sophistica­ted chipmaking equipment.

As those sanctions bite and an AI boom fuels demand, smaller Chinese semiconduc­tor design firms are struggling to secure sufficient advanced packaging services at home, analysts have said.

Some of the Chinese companies are interested in advanced chip packaging services, two people said.

Advanced packaging of chips can significan­tly improve chip performanc­e and is emerging as a critical technology in the semiconduc­tor industry. This sometimes involves the constructi­on of chiplets where chips are packaged tightly to work together as one powerful brain. —

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