EconomyChina’s top chipmaker says geopolitical tension adds to industry...

China’s top chipmaker says geopolitical tension adds to industry ‘panic’


Rising geopolitical tension, high inflation and a cyclical downturn in chip demand have triggered “some panic” in the chip industry, the chief of China’s largest semiconductor maker has warned, in comments that follow a week of Chinese military exercises near Taiwan.

The overlap of factors that include the threat of “regional conflict overseas” had “brought some panic to the industry and led to an extreme quick freeze reaction in some parts of the supply chain” with customers abruptly cancelling orders, Zhao Haijun, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation’s chief executive, said on Friday.

Although Zhao did not mention Taiwan directly, the statement marks the first time a mainland Chinese semiconductor boss has publicly hinted at the impact of rising tension in the region.

Zhao’s remarks come a day after ex-Arm chief Tudor Brown resigned from the SMIC board, saying that “the international divide has further widened”.

China’s military said on Wednesday that the exercises it conducted around Taiwan in retaliation for a visit by US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi were complete, but added that it would continue regular patrols in the area.

Analysts believe that a further escalation in tensions, especially Chinese military activity that frequently interferes with the island’s air and shipping traffic, could disrupt global chip supply chains.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company accounts for more than half of the world’s made-to-order chips and for about 90 per cent of the global supply of the most advanced chips.

A hot conflict would also increase the likelihood of Washington further toughening sanctions against Chinese technology companies. In December 2020, the US Department of Commerce added SMIC to its “entity list” after months of regulatory scrutiny of the chipmaker. The entity list is an export blacklist of foreign businesses for which US companies need to obtain licences in order to sell them technology.

Zhao said demand had slowed the most for chips used in smartphones and consumer electronics. Chinese smartphone vendor sales dropped by half in the first six months of the year, he said. “We see many orders stopped,” Zhao added.

SMIC reported a 3.3 per cent increase in revenue to $1.8bn and a 15 per cent jump in net earnings to $447mn in the second quarter over the previous three months.

It forecast growth to slow to about 1 per cent in the current quarter, but said its gross margin, now at 39.4 per cent, would not be significantly affected.

SMIC’s Shanghai-listed stock was down nearly 1 per cent on Friday and 18.7 per cent year-to-date.

Zhao said demand for chips used in industrial controllers, automotive applications and high-end connectivity remained strong and stable, and supply shortages in these segments persisted. Demand in the Chinese market was also expected to buffer the weakness elsewhere for SMIC, he said.

Mark Li, an analyst at Bernstein, said the semiconductor market correction was doing less damage to SMIC than feared.

While growth in average selling prices of the company’s chips sharply slowed to 1 per cent from 9 per cent in the previous quarter, the strong profit margins suggested that “the correction is more gradual and benign than expected”, Li wrote in a research note.



Original Source Link

Latest News

Is Angelina Jolie Dating Broadway Star Justin Levine?!

Angelina Jolie could be off the market! During Thursday’s episode of the Deux U podcast, the gossip maven read...

Tim Cook says Apple is uniquely well-positioned for AI

iPhone sales may be slow, but Apple’s CEO argues the company is primed to seize the AI moment. After...

Michael Saylor Delivers Bitcoin Masterclass To Fortune 1000 Companies

In a Keynote address at MicroStrategy World: Bitcoin for Corporations, MicroStrategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor delivered a masterclass...

Apple sales beat expectations despite China decline

Stay informed with free updatesSimply sign up to the Global Economy myFT Digest -- delivered directly to your...

Microsoft releases inaugural AI transparency report

In its Responsible AI Transparency Report, which mainly covers 2023, Microsoft touts its achievements around safely deploying AI...

Must Read

6G speeds hit 100 Gbps in new test — 500 times faster than average 5G cellphones

A consortium of companies in Japan has built...

Here’s why new home sales inch higher despite 7% mortgage rates

While the spring housing market has been plagued...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you