The Manila Times

Top US chip firms flock to China

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THE chief executive officers (CEOs) of some leading US semiconduc­tor companies visited China this week to attend the China Developmen­t Forum (CDF) in Beijing, expressing their commitment to the Chinese market and willingnes­s to pursue cooperatio­n.

Chinese analysts pointed out on Monday that the moves showed that the companies are not thinking exactly along the same lines as the Biden administra­tion, which tries to push for a “small yard and high fence” in the sphere of technology in its containmen­t game against China.

Despite the US government’s decoupling efforts, the CEOs of AMD, Qualcomm and Micron were among the foreign corporate heads who attended the CDF, which was held on Sunday and Monday. They also took the opportunit­y to meet with Chinese officials, who emphasized that China’s commitment to high-level opening up will not change.

Sanjay Mehrotra, president and CEO of Micron Technology, elaborated at a CDF seminar on Monday on the importance that cooperatio­n in China has on Micron’s efforts to maintain its global lead in storage chips, and he pledged to forge the future with industry peers from around the world, including China.

On Sunday, during his meeting with AMD CEO Lisa Su, Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao said that China is a stabilizin­g force for the global semiconduc­tor supply chain.

Wang said that the developmen­t of the semiconduc­tor sector requires global cooperatio­n, and it is hoped that the US could work together with China to draw clear security boundaries and provide stable expectatio­ns for businesses.

He further noted that China’s drive to develop new quality productive forces will offer greater opportunit­ies to foreign companies, including American businesses.

Similar messages were sent by Wang during his meeting with Cristiano Amon, CEO of Qualcomm. During the meeting, Wang said that openness is a trademark of China and the Chinese government is committed to optimizing the business environmen­t and providing services to foreign-invested enterprise­s in their investment and operations.

Amon said that close cooperatio­n among countries is needed for the high-tech sector to grow, and Qualcomm hopes that the Chinese

and US government­s could foster stable expectatio­ns and an enabling environmen­t for business investment and operations.

Analysts believe that the recent intensive visits to China by many US chip company executives reflect that they have different thinking from the “small yard and high fence” strategy advocated by the Biden administra­tion.

The futility of the US government’s five-year campaign to crack down on China in the technology sphere also persuaded many who had previously bet the US would win to return to the track of cooperatio­n, they noted.

“As top beneficiar­ies of a highly globalized semiconduc­tor industrial and supply chain, global chip giants know very well what China’s huge market means to them,” Ma Jihua, a veteran telecom observer, told the Global Times on Monday.

For these companies, it is a choice for survival. The US government wants to decouple, but not the technology companies, because decoupling from China will threaten their very well-being or even existence, Ma said.

Despite its openness claims, the US has ramped up efforts to contain China’s technology companies through increasing­ly stringent export controls using the excuse of national security. It has pushed its allies to stop selling certain chipmaking machine tools to Chinese companies and forbidden US-based Nvidia from selling consumer graphics cards in China.

In meeting with Mehrotra on Saturday, Wang said China welcomes Micron to stay deeply engaged in the Chinese market, accelerate the implementa­tion of its investment projects in China and fully abide by Chinese laws and regulation­s.

At a press conference on February 27, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Mao Ning said that the “small yard and high fence” of the US government will not stop China’s innovation-driven developmen­t, nor will it do any good to US companies or the entire semiconduc­tor industry.

Open cooperatio­n is the core driving force for the growth of the semiconduc­tor industry. China is one of the major semiconduc­tor markets in the world. To fragment the market, destabiliz­e global industrial and supply chains, and stymie efficiency and innovation serves no one’s interests, Mao said.

 ?? GLOBAL TIMES PHOTO ?? COMMITMENT
Visitors at Qualcomm’s booth at the 2023 China Internatio­nal Fair for Trade in Services on Sept. 6, 2023. USbased Qualcomm is one of the semiconduc­tor companies that expressed its commitment to the Chinese market.
GLOBAL TIMES PHOTO COMMITMENT Visitors at Qualcomm’s booth at the 2023 China Internatio­nal Fair for Trade in Services on Sept. 6, 2023. USbased Qualcomm is one of the semiconduc­tor companies that expressed its commitment to the Chinese market.

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