By Eduardo Baptista and Heekyong Yang
BEIJING/SEOUL (Reuters) – Chinese chip companies targeted by Washington with fresh export controls have vowed to speed up supply chain localisation and said they would be able to continue production thanks to recent efforts to build equipment stockpiles.
The latest curbs, the third U.S. crackdown on the Chinese sector in three years, focused on chipmaking equipment, software and high-bandwidth memory. They restrict exports to 140 companies, including chip equipment maker Naura Technology Group and ACM Research.
Empyrean, a maker of electronic design automation (EDA) tools also known as Beijing Huada Jiutian Technology, said its inclusion on the list would have little impact on operations.
“The company will seize the development opportunity to accelerate the localisation process of full-process EDA tools,” it said in a stock market statement.
Jiangsu Nata Opto-Electronic Material, which manufactures materials used in chipmaking, told Chinese news outlet Yicai it had stocked up and would also make domestic substitutions, but did not provide specifics.
Others, such as semiconductor test systems provider Beijing Huafeng Test & Control Technology, said they had already fully localised their supply chain, the 21st Century Business Herald newspaper reported.
While Chinese authorities called the move “economic coercion”, the measures appeared to have little impact on chip-making stocks, which rose slightly on Tuesday as analysts said the curbs were less stringent than feared.
MANAGEABLE DISRUPTION
The U.S. curbs target the “weakest spot” in the Chinese semiconductor industry, which relies heavily on foreign equipment for manufacturing, said Martijn Rasser, managing director at Datenna, a data intelligence platform focused on China’s technology.
Capital expenditure by the Chinese chip industry next year will likely fall by $10 billion, or about 30% year-on-year, to $35 billion, as a result of these curbs, Jefferies analysts said in a note.
But other analysts said the curbs may not have the desired effect as Chinese chip firms have since last year ramped up purchases of foreign made equipment from the likes of Dutch lithography machine maker ASML and U.S. toolmaker Lam Research.
For the first nine months of this year, China’s imports of semiconductor equipment increased by a third to $24.12 billion, according to data from China Customs.
“This was as close to the continuation of the status quo in terms of it’s making things very difficult for manufacturers at the leading-edge but it’s not going to disrupt that progress any more than the existing regulations,” said Jeff Koch, an analyst at research group SemiAnalysis.