The Mercury News

With resources, China fights for chip independen­ce

- By Raymond Zhong and Cao Li

Liu Fengfeng had more than a decade under his belt at one of the world’s most prominent technology companies before he realized where the real gold rush in China was taking place.

Computer chips are the brains and souls of all the electronic­s the country’s factories crank out. Yet they are mostly designed and produced overseas. China’s government is lavishing money on anyone who can help change that.

So last year Liu, 40, left his job at Foxconn, the Taiwanese giant that assembles iPhones in China for Apple. He found a niche highend films and adhesives for chip products and quickly raised $5 million. Today, his startup has 36 employees, most of them in the tech hub of Shenzhen, and is aiming to start mass production next year.

“Before, you might have had to beg Grandpa and call on Grandma for money,” Liu said. “Now, you just have a few conversati­ons, and everyone is actively bidding and hoping you get started as soon as possible.”

China is in the midst of a mass mobilizati­on for chip mastery, a quest whose aims can seem just as harebraine­d and impossible at least until they are achieved as sending rovers to the moon or dominating Olympic gold medals. In every corner of the country, investors, entreprene­urs and local officials are in a frenzy to build up semiconduc­tor abilities, responding to a call from the country’s leader, Xi Jinping, to rely less on the outside world in key technologi­es.

Their efforts are starting to pay off. China remains far from hosting real rivals to U.S. chip giants like Intel and Nvidia, and its semiconduc­tor manufactur­ers are at least four years behind the leading edge in Taiwan. Still, local companies are expanding their ability to meet the country’s needs, particular­ly for products such as smart appliances and electric vehicles, which have more modest requiremen­ts than supercompu­ters and high-end smartphone­s.

The turbocharg­ed chip push could prove one of the most enduring legacies of President Donald Trump’s pugilistic trade policies toward China. By turning the country’s dependence on foreign chips into a cudgel for attacking companies like Huawei, the administra­tion made Chinese business and political leaders resolve never to be caught out that way again.

But as Beijing broadens its ambitions in semiconduc­tors, it is also setting itself up for larger potential failures and dialing up the amount of money it might lose in the process. Several chip projects have run aground recently because of frozen funding and mismanagem­ent. A statebacke­d chip conglomera­te, Tsinghua Unigroup, warned this month that it was in danger of defaulting on nearly $2.5 billion in internatio­nal bonds.

In a way, China is hoping to achieve the same kind of liftoff that helped it progress from making plastic toys to crafting solar panels.

With semiconduc­tors, though, “the model starts to break down a little bit,” said Jay Goldberg, a tech industry consultant and former Qualcomm executive. The technology is eye-wateringly expen

sive to develop, and establishe­d players have spent decades accumulati­ng know-how. Europe, Goldberg noted, once had many “incredible” chip companies. Japan’s chipmakers are leaders in certain specialize­d products, but few would call them bold innovators.

“My point is, there is a ladder China’s moving up it,” Goldberg said. But it’s “unclear which outcome they go to.”

Beijing’s recent love of chips began with the creation of a giant, chip-focused investment fund in 2014. The government set a lofty goal: China would produce 40% of the chips it consumed by 2020. That didn’t happen. Morgan Stanley analysts estimate that Chinese brands bought $103 billion in semiconduc­tors last year, of which 17% was from local vendors. They predict the share will rise to 40% in 2025, far short of the government’s target of 70%.

China has charged ahead with renewed urgency because of the U.S. assault on Huawei, the Chinese tech champion, which has been choked off from buying U.S. chips or even chips made using U. S. software and tools. The U.S. Commerce Department imposed similar curbs this month on exports to China’s most advanced chip manufactur­er, Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp., citing concerns over military ties. SMIC has denied its products have any military use.

And so, China this year has rolled out new tax breaks for chips, including a 10-year exemption from corporate tax and duty-free imports of materials. State-backed funds have invested in both startups and publicly traded companies, including when SMIC listed shares in Shanghai in July.

At a top-level meeting on the economy last week, the Communist Party’s leaders enshrined technologi­cal self-reliance as one of the country’s “Five Fundamenta­ls” for economic developmen­t.

Complete self-sufficienc­y in chips, however, would mean recreating every part of the lengthy supply chains for some of the most complex technology on earth a mission that would seem to lead, if not to madness, at least to waste.

According to an analysis by China Economic Weekly, a magazine affiliated with the Communist Party’s official newspaper, People’s Daily, the number of chip-related companies in China climbed by 58,000 between January and October this year, or roughly 200 a day. Some of these, the magazine noted, were in Tibet not a place traditiona­lly associated with cutting- edge tech.

“Up until very recently this year the goal had been: With state backing, move up the value chain, specialize where China has a comparativ­e advantage, but don’t really try and fall down the rabbit hole of trying to build everything yourself,” said Jimmy Goodrich, vice president for global policy at the Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n, a group that represents U.S. chip companies.

Now, “it’s very clear that Xi Jinping is calling for a redundant domestic supply chain,”

Goodrich said. “And so the rules of economics, comparativ­e advantage and the supply-chain efficienci­es have basically been thrown out the door.”

The government is conscious of the dangers. Staterun news outlets have amply covered the recent semiconduc­tor flameouts. The message to other startups: Don’t mess it up.

When the state broadcaste­r China Central Television visited one stalled project in the eastern city of Huai’an recently, it found dozens of giant machines idling on the factory floor, many of them still sheathed in plastic.

“There have been some stunning absurditie­s that defy logic and common sense,” China Economic Weekly said.

Yet there has also been progress. Two companies, Yangtze Memory Technologi­es and ChangXin Memory Technologi­es, are gearing up to put China on the map in memory chips, which store data. Local manufactur­ers of logic chips, which perform computatio­ns, are expanding production, largely for Chinese customers.

 ?? GILLES SABRIE — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Beijing’s drive to free itself from reliance on imported semiconduc­tors has lifted firms. Some have flamed out. But there has been progress.
GILLES SABRIE — THE NEW YORK TIMES Beijing’s drive to free itself from reliance on imported semiconduc­tors has lifted firms. Some have flamed out. But there has been progress.

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