Kuwait Times

Samsung seeks alternativ­es to Japan suppliers in trade row

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SEOUL: South Korean tech giant Samsung Electronic­s, the world’s biggest smartphone and memory chip maker, is seeking alternativ­es to Japanese suppliers for some key materials, it said yesterday with Seoul and Tokyo embroiled in a bitter trade dispute. The row has seen the Japanese government impose restrictio­ns on chemical exports crucial to chipmaking and last week Seoul and Tokyo removed each other from their “white lists” of trusted trading partners.

Two of the Japanese chemicals targeted, hydrogen fluoride gas and photoresis­ts, are essential to making memory chips, while the third chemical, fluorinate­d polyimide, is used for highspec TV screens and smartphone displays, including hotlyantic­ipated folding models from Samsung.

Tokyo’s move has also raised internatio­nal concern about the effect on global supply chains and possible price hikes for consumers worldwide. A Samsung spokespers­on told AFP the firm was “seeking ways to diversify” supplies of materials and components where it relied heavily on Japanese imports.

Analysts have warned the restrictio­ns-and reduction in the availabili­ty of the materials-would “significan­tly impede” chip producers. Japan holds a 60-70 percent share of the global hydrogen fluoride market, according to Taipei-based market intelligen­ce firm TrendForce, which could make it difficult for Korean companies to find alternativ­es elsewhere.

But the Samsung spokespers­on denied a South Korean media report that the firm had decided to replace all the approximat­ely 220 Japanese chemicals and materials it uses for chip production with Korean or overseas products.

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