Star-Telegram

US revokes Intel, Qualcomm licenses to sell chips to Huawei

- BY MACKENZIE HAWKINS AND ERIK WASSON

The U.S. has revoked licenses allowing Huawei Technologi­es Co. to buy semiconduc­tors from Qualcomm Inc. and Intel Corp., according to people familiar with the matter, further tightening export restrictio­ns against the Chinese telecom equipment maker.

The decision will affect sales of chips for use in Huawei phones and laptops, according to the people, who discussed the move on condition of anonymity. House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul confirmed the administra­tion’s decision in an interview Tuesday. He said the move is key to preventing China from developing advanced artificial intelligen­ce.

“It’s blocking any chips sold to Huawei,” said McCaul, a Texas Republican who was briefed about the license revocation­s for Intel and Qualcomm. “Those are two companies we’ve always worried about being a little too close to China.”

While the decision may not affect a significan­t volume of chips, it underscore­s the U.S. government’s determinat­ion to curtail China’s access to a broad swathe of semiconduc­tor technology. Officials are also considerin­g sanctions against six Chinese firms that they suspect could supply chips to Huawei, which has been on a U.S. trade restrictio­ns list since 2019.

Intel expects revenue to fall “below the midpoint” of its previously guided range of $12.5 billion to $13.5 billion in the second quarter due to the ban, it said in a statement on Wednesday.

Qualcomm confirmed in a statement Wednesday that Commerce had revoked one of its licenses to sell to Huawei and said that it “will continue to comply with all applicable export control regulation­s.”

Withdrawin­g the export licenses is “economic coercion” and violates World Trade Organizati­on rules, China’s Ministry of Commerce said in a statement on Wednesday.

The U.S. Commerce Department confirmed the withdrawal of “certain licenses” for exports to Huawei, but declined to offer specifics. The Democratic administra­tion has come under pressure to do more to stop Huawei and other Chinese tech companies after signs of progress in the country’s semiconduc­tor developmen­t.

“We continuous­ly assess how our controls can best protect our national security and foreign policy interests,” the agency said in a statement Tuesday.

Qualcomm recently said that its business with Huawei is already limited and will soon shrink to nothing. It has been allowed to supply the Chinese company with chips that provide older 4G network connection­s. It’s prohibited from selling ones that allow more advanced 5G access.

“This is small,” said Stacy Rasgon, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein. “Qualcomm has already said that the Huawei business is going away anyway.”

Huawei doesn’t rank in Qualcomm’s list of top 10 customers, according to Bloomberg supply chain analysis. It also doesn’t feature in Intel’s list of top customers.

Rasgon points out that Huawei only ships about five million desktop and notebook computers annually, or 2% of the market, so even if Intel has been supplying all the processors for those the impact on Intel’s earnings will be minimal.

The U.S. is also pressing allies including Japan, the Netherland­s, South Korea and Germany to tighten curbs on selling and maintainin­g chip manufactur­ing tools in China – with Huawei as the main target of that effort.

McCaul and other Republican lawmakers, including House Republican Conference Chairwoman Elise Stefanik and Senator Marco Rubio, have urged Commerce to revoke licenses for companies to sell chips to Huawei. Their calls escalated after the company unveiled a smartphone powered by an advanced, made-in-China processor while Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo was visiting China in August.

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