Los Angeles Times

U.S. acts to restrict Huawei’s chip supply

Escalation against the Chinese tech giant constrains the entire chipmaking industry.

- By Debby Wu and Todd Shields

The Trump administra­tion moved to prevent chipmakers using U.S. technology from supplying Huawei Technologi­es Co., injecting fresh turmoil into the complex internatio­nal ecosystem that produces computer parts.

The Commerce Department said Friday that it would require licenses before allowing U.S. technology to be used by the Chinese tech company or its 114 subsidiari­es, including its chip-design unit HiSilicon.

The move is designed to inhibit Huawei from producing and designing its own chips, a senior department official said. U.S. officials accuse Huawei of being a security threat tied to the Beijing government, an allegation the company denies.

“We must amend our rules exploited by Huawei and HiSilicon and prevent U.S. technologi­es from enabling malign activities contrary to U.S. national security and foreign policy interests,” Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a tweet.

The new rules require any foreign chipmaker that uses American gear to get a license before it can sell to companies on a U.S. blacklist, which includes Huawei and other prominent Chinese tech giants such as SenseTime Group Ltd. and Megvii Technology Ltd.

The restrictio­ns constrain the entire contract chipmaking industry because it uses equipment from U.S. vendors Applied Materials Inc., Lam Research Corp. and KLA Corp. in wafer fabricatio­n plants.

It steps up an ongoing White House campaign to contain Chinese technology giants viewed as a threat to national security, particular­ly Huawei — the company at the heart of a global fifthgener­ation network rollout and Beijing’s Made in China 2025 effort to lead the developmen­t of future technologi­es. Depositary receipts for Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co., or TSMC, dropped in New York trading. Hours earlier the company, based in Hsinchu, Taiwan, said it plans to spend $12 billion building a chip plant in Arizona, a decision designed to allay U.S. national security concerns and shift more high-tech manufactur­ing to the U.S.

All global chipmakers need gear from U.S.-based companies to fabricate chips for everything from smartphone­s to supercompu­ters. But the latest measure affects TSMC disproport­ionately because it counts on Huawei for about 10% of its revenue, according to Bloomberg’s supply chain estimates.

“We are following the U.S. export rule change closely,” TSMC said in a statement. “The semiconduc­tor industry supply chain is extremely complex, and is served by a broad collection of internatio­nal suppliers. As part of the global semiconduc­tor ecosystem, TSMC maintains long-term collaborat­ions with equipment partners around the world including those located in the United States.”

China and Huawei have threatened retaliatio­n should the U.S. enact further measures to constrain the country’s largest tech company. On Friday, the Global Times — a Chinese tabloid run by the flagship newspaper of the Communist Party — reported that Beijing stood ready to initiate a series of countermea­sures without elaboratin­g.

“This will have a very substantia­l impact on Huawei’s ability to manufactur­e chips both in its smartphone­s as well as in its base stations, which make up 85 or 90% of its overall revenue,” said Gavekal Dragonomic­s analyst Dan Wang. “There’s quite a big possibilit­y that these rules will cut off almost 90% of its revenue.”

Last year, citing those concerns, the U.S. put Huawei on an “Entity List,” requiring U.S. companies to obtain a special license to sell products to the Chinese company. The move has largely frozen Huawei out of getting some of the computer chips it needs to make equipment integral to new high-speed wireless networks.

Huawei continued to use U.S. software and technology to design semiconduc­tors by their production in overseas facilities using U.S. equipment, Ross said in a statement Friday.

Huawei had no immediate comment.

Materials in production today will get a 120-day grace period to not interrupt business continuity, a senior U.S. Commerce Department official said.

A senior State Department official said the action doesn’t mean all licenses will be denied.

More U.S. restrictio­ns could inflict further damage on Huawei. The Shenzhenba­sed company in April reported growth had all but evaporated in the first quarter, after the COVID-19 pandemic wiped out demand for the gadgets that drive its revenue.

Huawei’s HiSilicon is capable of crafting cuttingedg­e semiconduc­tors that power its mobile devices and base stations, a key part of 5G infrastruc­ture, but it depends on TSMC for production. Huawei may be able to source some of its lower-end chip orders back to local foundry Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp., but has no recourse in the advanced processors for which TSMC was the sole manufactur­er.

In late March, Huawei rotating Chairman Eric Xu warned that China will retaliate should the U.S. move to restrict sales by TSMC to his company.

“I don’t think the Chinese government will just watch and let Huawei be slaughtere­d on a chopping board. I believe the Chinese government will also take some countermea­sures,” he said.

 ?? Ou Dongqu Xinhua News Agency ?? HUAWEI chips for 5G base stations are displayed at the 2019 China Internatio­nal Big Data Industry Expo.
Ou Dongqu Xinhua News Agency HUAWEI chips for 5G base stations are displayed at the 2019 China Internatio­nal Big Data Industry Expo.

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