BusinessMirror

US wants Dutch supplier to stop selling chipmaking gear to China

- BY JILLIAN DEUTSCH, ERIC MARTIN, IAN KING & DEBBY WU Bloomberg Opinion

THE US is pushing the Netherland­s to ban ASML Holding NV from selling to China mainstream technology essential in making a large chunk of the world’s chips, expanding its campaign to curb the country’s rise, according to people familiar with the matter.

Washington’s proposed restrictio­n would expand an existing moratorium on the sale of the most advanced systems to China, in an attempt to thwart China’s plans to become a world leader in chip production. If the Netherland­s agrees, it would broaden significan­tly the range and class of chipmaking gear now forbidden from heading to China, potentiall­y dealing a serious blow to Chinese chipmakers from Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp. to Hua Hong Semiconduc­tor Ltd.

American officials are lobbying their Dutch counterpar­ts to bar ASML from selling some of its older deep ultraviole­t lithograph­y, or DUV, systems, the people said. These machines are a generation behind cutting-edge but still the most common method in making certain less-advanced chips required by cars, phones, computers and even robots.

ASML’S American Depositary Receipts extended losses to as much as 8.3 percent, the biggest intraday drop since March 2020, after Bloomberg’s initial report. Shares in Nikon Corp., a smaller rival to the Dutch firm in that sphere of chipmaking gear technology, slid as much as 8.6 percent in Tokyo—heading for their biggest drop in almost two years. SMIC and Hua Hong also fell more than 1 percent in early Hong Kong trading on Wednesday.

The issue arose during US Deputy Commerce Secretary Don Graves’s visit to the Netherland­s and Belgium in late May and early June to discuss supply chain issues, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the discussion­s were private. During that trip, Graves also visited ASML’S headquarte­rs in Veldhoven and met Chief Executive Officer Peter Wennink.

“ASML’S sales could narrow by 5%10 percent if it’s banned from selling deep ultraviole­t tools in China. As the chip equipment maker’s revenue already reflects a ban on extreme ultraviole­t tool shipments to the country, it may experience less impact vs. peers such as Applied Materials, which derives 25 percent to 30 percent of its sales from China,” said Masahiro Wakasugi and Brian Moran, Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analysts.

The Dutch government has yet to agree to any additional restrictio­ns on ASML’S exports to Chinese chipmakers, which could hurt the country’s trade ties with China, the people said. ASML is already unable to ship its most advanced extreme ultraviole­t, or EUV, lithograph­y systems, which cost about 160 million euros ($164 million) per unit, to China as it cannot obtain an export license from the Dutch government.

The US push on ASML comes as President Joe Biden separately considers easing some of the Trump-era tariffs on consumer goods from China. While China may welcome such a move at a time of tense relations between the two powers, Biden’s administra­tion has continued his predecesso­r’s efforts to restrict China’s access to US technology.

The US Department of Commerce and the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs declined to comment.

“The discussion is not new. No decisions have been made and we do not want to speculate or comment on rumors,” an ASML spokeswoma­n said.

ASML is the world’s top maker of lithograph­y systems, machines that perform a crucial step in the process of creating semiconduc­tors. ASML’S dominance of the market for that type of equipment means that further cutting China off from access to its products would undermine the Asian country’s ambitions to make itself more self-sufficient in production of the crucial electronic components.

“China’s share of the global

chip-equipment market is negligible,” said Alex Capri, a research fellow at the Asia-based Hinrich Foundation, characteri­zing chip production as “a choke point” in China’s plans to bulk up its semiconduc­tor muscle.

The older generation of machinery, DUV, is less capable than more advanced EUV lithograph­y equipment but remains indispensa­ble in manufactur­ing many of the types of chips that are currently experienci­ng acute shortages. Washington is focused on banning sales of the most advanced type of DUV technology, immersion lithograph­y machines, the people said.

American officials are also trying to exert pressure on Japan to stop shipping the same technology to Chinese chipmakers, one of the people said. Japan’s Nikon competes with ASML in this area.

Immersion lithograph­y is also known as argon fluoride immersion, or simply Arfi. According to China-based Founder Securities, ASML sold 81 Arfi systems in 2021, compared with four from Nikon, giving the Dutch firm a 95 percent market share.

“We have no informatio­n regarding this matter,” a Nikon spokeswoma­n said.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said in June he is against reconsider­ing trade relations with China and called for the EU to develop its own policies toward Beijing. China is the Netherland­s’ third-biggest trade partner after Germany and Belgium.

ASML opposes a ban on sales of DUV lithograph­y equipment to Chinese customers because it is already a mature technology, Wennink said earlier this year. Chinese-based facilities, run by either domestic or foreign companies, account for 14.7 percent of ASML’S total revenue in 2021, according to company disclosure­s and data compiled by Bloomberg.

ASML is also alleging potential IP infringeme­nt by a Chinese tech firm supported by the country’s government. US efforts to block the export of chipmaking equipment began under the Trump administra­tion. Washington pressured the Dutch government to prevent sales of EUV lithograph­y systems, which are required to produce the most sophistica­ted semiconduc­tors and in which ASML has a monopoly.

Major US chip-equipment makers including Applied Materials Inc. and Lam Research Corp. are already banned from selling certain advanced products to SMIC due to national security concerns. The potential DUV ban could further hit SMIC and its Chinese peers.

“Lithograph­y equipment is the most difficult equipment for China to replace when it comes to semiconduc­tor production,” said Johnson Wang, an analyst at Taiwan Institute of Economic Research. “Without access to foreign DUV lithograph­y equipment, the progress of China’s chip industry could come to a halt.”

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