Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Global chip giants’ losses expand in first quarter

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MAJOR internatio­nal chipmakers have reported rising losses in the first quarter of 2023 amid weak demand and sweeping US chip export curbs on China, the world’s largest semiconduc­tor market.

Washington’s reckless disturbanc­e in businesses will continue to cloud the outlook for the industry, as major chipmakers have life-and-death stakes in the huge Chinese market, analysts said.

Samsung reported operating profit of 640 billion won (US$478,55 million) in the first quarter, plunging 95 percent year-onyear. This is the company’s worst quarterly performanc­e since 2009, when the chip industry was battered by the global financial crisis.

Intel suffered a net loss of US$2,8 billion in Q1 from a year-earlier net profit of US$8,1 billion. It was Intel’s largest quarterly loss ever, data showed. Industry analysts said major chip firms’ losses reflect a severe supply and demand mismatch and disruption in the industry amid mounting US chip export controls on China, elevated inflation and a gloomy world economy.

“Amid weak consumer spending on smartphone­s and computers, the manufactur­ers have reduced stock-up of chips, leading to historic revenue drops for many semiconduc­tor giants,” Liang Zhenpeng, a senior industry analyst, told the Global Times on Thursday.

US chip export controls on China also affect chipmakers’ business, because “it’s hard for them to fill the void if they’re banned from selling to Chinese companies”, he said.

The reckless US chip ban has affected the supply and demand of semiconduc­tors across the world, Xiang Ligang, director-general of the Beijing-based Informatio­n Consumptio­n Alliance, told the Global Times on Thursday.

“Chip firms started to hoard semiconduc­tors in 2021 amid a US push for ‘tech decoupling’ from China, which led to excess inventorie­s,” he said, projecting that the problem may ease in the second half of 2023.

However, China added almost 100 new chip production lines, which will lead to a great change in global supply and demand. US chip ban backfires

As part of its move to contain China’s rise, the US stepped up efforts to exclude China from the global semiconduc­tor industry chain. After imposing sweeping export restrictio­ns on shipments of chipmaking tools to China last October, the US pressured the Netherland­s and Japan to join its chip export controls on China, in addition to signing a memorandum of understand­ing with India on semiconduc­tor cooperatio­n to enlist India to join its small circle.

US President Joe Biden is reportedly planning to issue an executive order in coming weeks restrictin­g US investment in China, according to US media reports.

Many foreign semiconduc­tor firms have bet on China’s strong economic rebound to drive market demand. But they dare not invest much in new production capacity, in part due to a lack of confidence amid rising uncertaint­ies brought about by US unilateral­ism and protection­ism, Ma Jihua, a veteran industry expert, told the Global Times.

South Korean chipmaker SK Hynix Inc plans to reduce investment in 2023 by more than 50 percent.

Despite the Biden administra­tion’s push for “tech decoupling,” US semiconduc­tor companies still want access to the huge China market, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday, citing a major industry group.

“It’s our biggest market and we’re not the only industry that lays claim to that,” said John Neuffer, the president that chief executive officer of the US Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n (SIA).

“Our view is that we need to play in that market,” he said.

Striving for breakthrou­ghs

China is the world’s largest consumer of semiconduc­tors, and global chipmakers face life-and-death stakes if they lose the massive Chinese market, analysts said.

According to the SIA, China remained the largest single market for semiconduc­tors in 2022, with sales of $180.4 billion, about one-third of the global total.

While the US continues to push for “tech decoupling,” China is steadily making breakthrou­ghs in key technologi­es and boosting domestic replacemen­ts. — Global Times

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Quantum chips

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