San Francisco Chronicle

Tech firms sidestep Trump ban to sell to Huawei

- By Paul Mozur and Cecilia Kang Paul Mozur and Cecilia Kang are New York Times writers.

SHANGHAI — U.S. chipmakers are still selling millions of dollars of products to Huawei despite a Trump administra­tion ban on the sale of U.S. technology to the Chinese telecommun­ications giant, according to four people with knowledge of the sales.

Industry leaders including Intel and Micron have found ways to take advantage of a provision on labeling U.S.made goods, said the people, who spoke on the condition they not be named because they were not authorized to disclose the sales.

Goods produced by U.S. companies overseas are not always considered U.S.made. The components began to flow to Huawei about three weeks ago, the people said.

The sales will help Huawei continue to sell products such as smartphone­s and servers, and underscore how difficult it is for the Trump administra­tion to clamp down on companies that it considers a national security threat, like Huawei. They also hint at the possible unintended consequenc­es from altering the web of trade relationsh­ips that ties together the world’s electronic­s industry and global commerce.

The Commerce Department’s move to block sales to Huawei, by putting it on a socalled entity list, set off confusion within the Chinese company and its many U.S. suppliers, the people said. Many executives lacked deep experience with U.S. trade controls, leading to initial suspension­s in shipments to Huawei until lawyers could puzzle out which products could be sent. Decisions about what can and cannot be shipped were also often run by the Commerce Department.

U.S. companies may sell technology supporting current Huawei products until midAugust. But a ban on components for future Huawei products is already in place. It’s not clear what percentage of the current sales were for future products. The sales have most likely already totaled hundreds of millions of dollars, the people estimated.

While the Trump administra­tion has been aware of the sales, officials are split about how to respond, the people said. Some officials feel that the sales violate the spirit of the law and undermine government efforts to pressure Huawei, while others are more supportive because it lightens the blow of the ban for U.S. corporatio­ns. Huawei has said it buys around $11 billion in technology from U.S. companies each year.

Intel and Micron declined to comment.

“As we have discussed with the U.S. government, it is now clear some items may be supplied to Huawei consistent with the entity list and applicable regulation­s,” John Neuffer, the president of the Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n, wrote in a statement last week.

“Each company is impacted differentl­y based on their specific products and supply chains, and each company must evaluate how best to conduct its business and remain in compliance.”

In an earnings call last week, Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra, said the company stopped shipments to Huawei after the Commerce Department’s action last month. But it resumed sales about two weeks ago after Micron reviewed the entity list rules and “determined that we could lawfully resume” shipping a subset of products, Mehrotra said. “However, there is considerab­le ongoing uncertaint­y around the Huawei situation,” he added.

A spokesman for the Commerce Department, in response to questions about the sales to Huawei, referred to a section of the official notice about the company being added to the entity list, including that the purpose was to “prevent activities contrary to the national security or foreign policy interests of the United States.”

The fate of Huawei, a crown jewel of Chinese innovation and technologi­cal prowess, has become a symbol of the economic and security standoff between the United States and China. The Trump administra­tion has warned that Chinese companies like Huawei, which makes telecom networking equipment, could intercept or secretly divert informatio­n to China. Huawei has denied those charges.

While the Trump administra­tion has pointed to security and legal concerns to justify its actions, some analysts have worried that Huawei and other Chinese tech companies have become pawns in the trade negotiatio­ns. Along with Huawei, the administra­tion blocked a Chinese supercompu­ter maker from buying U.S. tech, and it is considerin­g adding the surveillan­ce technology company Hikvision to the list.

Kevin Wolf, a former Commerce Department official and partner at the law firm Akin Gump, has advised several U.S. technology companies that supply Huawei. He said he told executives that Huawei’s addition to the list did not prevent U.S. suppliers from continuing sales, as long as the goods and services weren’t made in the United States.

A chip, for example, can still be supplied to Huawei if it is manufactur­ed outside the United States and doesn’t contain technology that can pose national security risks. But there are limits on sales from U.S. companies. If the chipmaker provides services from the United States for troublesho­oting or instructio­n on how to use the product, for example, the company would not be able to sell to Huawei even if the physical chip were made overseas, Wolf said.

“This is not a loophole or an interpreta­tion because there is no ambiguity,” he said. “It’s just esoteric.”

In some cases, U.S. companies aren’t the only source of important technology, but they want to avoid losing Huawei’s valuable business to a foreign rival. For instance, Idahobased Micron competes with South Korean companies like Samsung and SK Hynix to supply memory chips that go into Huawei’s smartphone­s. If Micron is unable to sell to Huawei, orders could easily be shifted to those rivals.

Beijing has also pressured U.S. companies. This month, the Chinese government said it would create an “unreliable entities list” to punish companies and individual­s it perceived as damaging Chinese interests. The following week, China’s chief economic planning agency summoned foreign executives, including representa­tives from Microsoft, Dell and Apple. It warned them that cutting off sales to Chinese companies could lead to punishment and hinted that the companies should lobby the U.S. government to stop the bans. The stakes are high for some of the U.S. companies. Apple, for example, relies on China for many sales and for much of its production.

Wolf said several companies had scrambled to figure out how to continue sales to Huawei, with some businesses considerin­g a total shift of manufactur­ing and services of some products overseas. The escalating trade battle between the United States and China is “causing companies to fundamenta­lly rethink their supply chains,” he added.

That could mean that U.S. companies shift their knowhow, on top of production, outside the United States, where it would be less easy for the government to control, said Martin Chorzempa, a research fellow at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics.

“American companies can move some things out of China if that’s problemati­c for their supply chain, but they can also move the tech developmen­t out of the U.S. if that becomes problemati­c,” he said. “And China remains a large market.”

“Some of the big winners might be other countries,” Chorzempa said.

Some U.S. companies have complained that complying with the tight restrictio­ns is difficult or impossible and will take a toll on their business.

On Monday, FedEx filed a lawsuit against the federal government, claiming that the Commerce Department’s rules placed an “impossible burden” on a company like FedEx to know the origin and technologi­cal makeup of all the shipments it handles.

FedEx’s complaint didn’t name Huawei specifical­ly. But it said that the agency’s rules that have prohibited exporting U.S. technology to Chinese companies placed “an unreasonab­le burden on FedEx to police the millions of shipments that transit our network every day.”

“FedEx is a transporta­tion company, not a law enforcemen­t agency,” the company said.

A Commerce Department spokesman said it had not yet reviewed FedEx’s complaint but would defend the agency’s role in protecting national security.

 ?? Susan Walsh / Associated Press ?? Former Commerce Department official Kevin Wolf said some businesses are considerin­g shifting manufactur­ing and services of some products overseas.
Susan Walsh / Associated Press Former Commerce Department official Kevin Wolf said some businesses are considerin­g shifting manufactur­ing and services of some products overseas.

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