Posted on 11/14/2021 6:08:54 PM PST by blam
Days ago we wrote about how VC companies in the U.S. were making significant investments in Chinese semiconductor companies.
Shortly thereafter, it was reported that the White House had rejected a plan by Intel to bolster their chip production capacity in China, according to Bloomberg.
Intel had proposed “using a factory in Chengdu, China, to manufacture silicon wafers,” the report said. It could have been online by 2022, but the White House, “strongly discouraged” the move. Intel likely had to listen since the company is seeking government support in helping expand its capacity for manufacturing semis in the U.S.
Intel told Bloomberg it was now looking at “other solutions that will also help us meet high demand for the semiconductors essential to innovation and the economy.”
The company continued: “Intel and the Biden administration share a goal to address the ongoing industrywide shortage of microchips, and we have explored a number of approaches with the U.S. government. Our focus is on the significant ongoing expansion of our existing semiconductor manufacturing operations and our plans to invest tens of billions of dollars in new wafer fabrication plants in the U.S. and Europe.”
Recall, just days ago we wrote how U.S. firms were splurging on Chinese semi deals, drawing scrutiny from the White House.
U.S. venture capital firms have been “ramping up investments” in Chinese semiconductor companies despite the obvious security conflicts, a report from the Wall Street Journal said. Cumulatively, U.S. firms have helped raise “billions” for Chinese chip startups, we noted.
There has been more than 58 deals in China’s semiconductor industry from 2017 to 2020, we wrote. Among the “active investors” was Intel, who had invested in a Chinese company called Primarius Technologies Co., which makes chip-design tools that the U.S. currently holds the lead in making.
Intel told the WSJ last week that its China investments “are less than 10% of the deals in a global portfolio designed to support its business and generate return”.
VC firms Sequoia Capital, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Matrix Partners and Redpoint Ventures have also made “at least 67 investments” in Chinese chip companies since the beginning of 2020, the report said. Sequoia and Redpoint said their deals have been done “independent” of their U.S. offices in Silicon Valley.
The Journal wrote that “Sequoia Capital’s China unit has made at least 40 investments in Chinese chip-sector companies since 2020”.
We noted last week that the massive tranche of deals had Washington alarmed, with national security adviser Jake Sullivan claiming this summer that the Biden administration is “looking at the impact of outbound U.S. investment flows that could circumvent the spirit of export controls or otherwise enhance the technological capacity of our competitors in ways that harm our national security.”
Now, it looks as though Intel is experiencing this scrutiny first hand.
Amazing that they are going Trumpian.
There must be a back story or two...
What’s AMD doing? Anybody? Would they be an alternative?
Stopped clock. I completely agree with this particular decision - although, probably for all the wrong reasons.
Plus, it’s likely to be reversed soon anyway, like “just 15 days to flatten the curve” and “we’ll never mandate vaccines” and “you won’t need to wear a mask if you’re vaccinated” were all reversed on a dime.
Does the POTUS have the authority to stop it?
Probably realize there is only one path with China now.
That Country is moving to dominate the world and everyone recognizes that a losing power struggle will cause elites to lose money.
AMD sold off their fabs years ago. They just design chips now.
I don’t know. Probably not, now that you mention it. Not that lack of jurisdiction would stop him. (See: Vaccine mandates.)
But, putting high-tech stuff in China is basically just giving it to them. But they aren’t are friends.
The first intelligent decision this administration has made in 10 months.
Well look at the muscles on "The Big Guy"! He's not going to let Xi low ball him. To let something like this slip by, he's going to have to buy a half dozen of Hunter's paintings!
Good outta you, Joe! If you're going to sell us into Chinese slavery, at least line your family's pockets as best you can.
Turns out to be about semiconductors, not semitrailers.
AMD uses TSMC
Probably ITAR related. Intel could push forward, but it would lose a lot of defense-related work that they later use in the commercial sector... and then eventually they would lose anything it did in China because of intellectual property theft.
How US Big Business Is Helping China Dominate The Important Battle For Silicon Chip Dominance
Oh, I agree completely.
It took 30 years for Japan to recognize Texas Instruments' patent on the chip. By that time though, Japan had a highly competitive and mature chip industry.
> Plus, it’s likely to be reversed soon anyway,
They probably haven’t kicked in their “10% for the big guy” yet.
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