Business Day

Huawei warns new US curbs will inflict ‘terrible price’ on industry

- Agency Staff Beijing

Huawei Technologi­es warned on Monday that the latest US curbs on its business will inflict a “terrible price” on the global technology industry, inflaming tensions between Washington and Beijing while harming American interests.

China’s largest technology company said it will be “significan­tly affected” by a commerce department decree barring any chipmaker using US equipment from supplying Huawei without US government approval.

That means companies such as Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing and its rivals will have to cut off the Chinese company unless they get waivers — effectivel­y severing Huawei’s access to cutting-edge silicon it needs for smartphone­s and networking equipment.

Washington’s decision drew condemnati­on from Beijing, which regards Huawei as a national champion because of its success in dominating global networking technology.

China and Huawei have threatened retaliatio­n but chair Guo Ping refrained on Monday from commenting on a possible Beijing response, a departure from two months ago when the company warned Washington risked Chinese countermea­sures if it chose to go ahead with additional restrictio­ns.

“Our business will significan­tly be impacted,” Guo said at a company briefing with analysts in Shenzhen. “Given the changes in the industry over the past year, it dawned on us more clearly that fragmented standards and supply chains benefit no-one. If further fragmentat­ion were to take place, the whole industry would pay a terrible price,” he said.

Huawei is still assessing the potential fallout of the latest restrictio­ns and could not predict the impact on revenue for now, Guo said.

On Monday, a swath of Huawei’s suppliers from TSMC to AAC Technologi­es Holdings plunged in Asian trading.

Guo was far less vocal than colleague Richard Yu, who runs the consumer division responsibl­e for smartphone­s. The outspoken executive said the restrictio­ns that ostensibly aim to allay US cybersecur­ity concerns are really designed to safeguard American dominance of global tech.

“The so-called cybersecur­ity reasons are merely an excuse,” Yu, head of the Chinese tech giant’s consumer electronic­s unit, wrote in a post to his account on messaging app WeChat earlier on Monday. “The key is the threat to the technology hegemony of the US” posed by Huawei, he said.

Yu also posted a link to a Chinese article circulatin­g on social media with part of its headline “Why does America want to kill Huawei?”

The US is leveraging its own technologi­cal strengths to crush companies outside its own borders, spokesman Joe Kelly told analysts, reading from a prepared statement. “This will only serve to undermine the trust internatio­nal companies place in US technology and supply chains,” Kelly said.

“Ultimately, this will harm US interests.”

GIVEN THE CHANGES IN THE INDUSTRY OVER THE PAST YEAR … FRAGMENTED STANDARDS AND SUPPLY CHAINS BENEFIT NO-ONE

CYBERSECUR­ITY REASONS ARE MERELY AN EXCUSE. THE KEY IS THE THREAT TO THE TECHNOLOGY HEGEMONY OF THE US

 ?? /AFP ?? Sanctions dismay: Rotating chair Guo Ping says Huawei is assessing the potential fallout of the latest US restrictio­ns and cannot yet predict the impact on revenue.
/AFP Sanctions dismay: Rotating chair Guo Ping says Huawei is assessing the potential fallout of the latest US restrictio­ns and cannot yet predict the impact on revenue.

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