Houston Chronicle

Biden team sees signs of chip relief for U.S. carmakers

- By Jenny Leonard

Biden administra­tion officials say they’re starting to see signs of relief for the global semiconduc­tor supply shortage, including commitment­s from manufactur­ers to make more automotive-grade chips for car companies that have had to idle production.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, who has led President Joe Biden’s efforts on chip supply, has brokered a series of meetings between semiconduc­tor manufactur­ers, their suppliers and their customers including automakers. Senior administra­tion officials said the meetings helped ease mistrust between the sides related to the chipmakers’ production and allocation and automakers’ orders.

The result has been more transparen­cy about the manufactur­ers’ production and shipments and a gradual increase in supply for automakers, Raimondo said. The administra­tion has also recently pressed government­s in Malaysia and Vietnam to ensure semiconduc­tor plants would be deemed “critical” businesses and maintain some production following COVID-19 outbreaks, officials said.

“You’re starting to see some improvemen­ts,” Raimondo said, adding that in recent weeks, Ford Motor Co. chief executive Jim Farley and General Motors Co. chief executive Mary Barra have told her that “they’re starting to get a little bit more of what they need” and the situation is “a little bit better.”

Shares of Ford, GM and Chrysler parent Stellantis NV extended gains on the news, all touching intraday highs in U.S. trading. Ford and GM both outperform­ed broader U.S. market indexes this year through Monday, while Stellantis lagged behind.

A Goldman Sachs analysis published last month said that the peak impact of the chip shortage was in the second quarter and auto production “should jump in July.” But U.S. automakers continue to struggle with the shortage, which is estimated to be taking a $110 billion toll on the industry.

Ford is closing or curtailing production at eight factories this month, including the plant manufactur­ing its new version of the iconic Bronco sport utility vehicle. Five of GM’s North American plants will experience “downtime” due to “semiconduc­tor production adjustment­s” this month and in August, according to GM spokesman David Barnas.

And tens of thousands of new cars remain sitting in lots outside U.S. factories, waiting for the chips that power their onboard computers.

A Ford spokeswoma­n declined to comment. Barnas confirmed the Barra conversati­on with Raimondo and provided a statement the company issued Thursday.

GM’s “global purchasing and supply chain, engineerin­g and manufactur­ing teams continue to find creative solutions and make strides working with the supply base to maximize production of our highest-demand and capacityco­nstrained vehicles, including full-size trucks and SUVs for our customers,” the statement said.

Cause and solutions

The semiconduc­tor shortage predated the Biden administra­tion but emerged as a crisis for the new president earlier this year, when U.S. automakers were forced to begin curtailing production. Manufactur­ing of semiconduc­tors is concentrat­ed with a pair of Asian companies, Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co. and Samsung Electronic­s Co. Ltd.

TSMC, a key partner to many of the world’s biggest carmakers, said last week the company will ramp up production of microcontr­ollers by close to 60 percent this year, a move expected to greatly boost supplies for its automobile clients starting this quarter.

Semiconduc­tor manufactur­ers and auto companies generally don’t see eye-to-eye on the causes of the shortage and the solutions. Auto companies have complained about a lack of transparen­cy in how many chips are produced and

where they’re being sold, while the chips industry says the problem started when the auto industry, due to the pandemic, pulled back on orders before subsequent­ly demanding that chips suppliers fulfill them.

Adding to Biden’s urgency to ease the strain, economists are pointing to the chip shortage as a source of inflation, which reached its highest level in 12 years in the U.S. last month, fueling Republican attacks on the president’s spending plans. A dearth of new cars that rely on the chips pushed many Americans into the secondhand car market, where the soaring prices accounted for more than one-third of last month’s increase in the cost of living.

Legislativ­e push

Raimondo is now trying to persuade Congress to pass $52 billion in funding to boost chip production and bolster semiconduc­tor research and developmen­t on U.S. soil — a longer term strategy to reduce U.S. reliance on other nations in the global supply chain. The Senate in June passed its version of the bill, but the House is still debating the scope of the measure and details remain fluid.

Biden’s team and Raimondo are engaging daily with members of Congress about the bill, people familiar with the matter said.

Biden has brought up the bill directly in conversati­ons with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and has made clear he wants to sign it into law as soon as possible, according to one of the people. The White House defers to Pelosi on the exact mechanism and timing for getting the legislatio­n passed, the people said, while noting that she’s aware of the stakes.

“I have a long-standing very productive relationsh­ip with Speaker Pelosi and I would fully expect that she would want to put her chamber’s stamp on the bill and that there may be adjustment­s,” Raimondo said.

Still, the administra­tion is treating the issue with urgency. Even if the funding is approved, industry representa­tives expect implementa­tion — including hiring more personnel at Commerce — to take up to six months.

“What I say is we need to get this done this summer,” Raimondo said of the bill. “They can’t recess this August without having gotten this done.”

The U.S. isn’t alone in trying to increase domestic production: the European Union intends to double its chip manufactur­ing to at least 20 percent of world supply by 2030, and Chinese President Xi Jinping has appointed economic czar Liu He to oversee efforts to reduce reliance on foreign chip companies.

The Biden administra­tion is also collaborat­ing with other government­s that produce the chips — including Vietnam and Malaysia — especially to ensure that plants can continue operating safely amid the pandemic.

In early July, the White House became aware of shutdowns at semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing plants in Malaysia due to COVID outbreaks. After a few days of negotiatio­n with the country’s ambassador and officials on the ground, Kuala Lumpur deemed semiconduc­tors as a “critical” industry and allowed the factories to reopen, even if not at full capacity, senior administra­tion officials said. The German and Japanese government­s — each with large automobile sectors — also took part in the talks.

The U.S. has similarly engaged with Vietnam’s government to ensure plants continue operating.

 ?? Jeffrey Scott Dean / Bloomberg ?? New Ford F-Series pickups are stored in a lot Friday in Kentucky amid the semiconduc­tor shortage. The automaker says it will ship these vehicles to dealers once the modules are available.
Jeffrey Scott Dean / Bloomberg New Ford F-Series pickups are stored in a lot Friday in Kentucky amid the semiconduc­tor shortage. The automaker says it will ship these vehicles to dealers once the modules are available.

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