Electronics maker Flex 'seized' $100 million of Huawei goods in China:
Global Times
Send a link to a friend
[July 25, 2019] By
Sijia Jiang
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Electronics
manufacturer Flex held up goods worth some 700 million yuan ($101.85
million) of its Chinese client Huawei Technologies for more than a month
after Washington put Huawei on a trade blacklist, China's Global Times
reported on Thursday.
Flex kept the Huawei [HWT.UL] assets in its factory in the southern city
of Zhuhai after Washington added Huawei to an Entity List on May 16 that
prohibits U.S. firms from doing business with it, according to the
report.
Flex, which is dual-headquartered in the United States and Singapore and
manufactures smartphone and 5G base stations for Huawei, did not
immediately respond to an email seeking comment outside U.S. business
hours and did not answer calls to its Zhuhai office.
Guo Fulin, president of international media affairs at Huawei, told
Reuters the company has retrieved some 400 million yuan of goods after
negotiations with Flex last month and is still trying to get back the
rest.
"We cannot understand why their Chinese factory seized our goods. This
is an over-interpretation of the ban," he said.
The Chinese newspaper said Flex has been removed from Huawei's supply
chain due to the incident that had "angered Huawei", but Guo declined to
comment on that.
[to top of second column] |
In May, Huawei was added to the Entity List on national security grounds which
barred it from buying U.S. goods and services. According to a Goldman Sachs
estimate
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/
editorcharts/USA-CHINA-HUAWEI/0H001GSE93H2/index.html, Huawei contributed nearly
2.5 billion yuan, or 5 percent of Flex's total revenue in the third quarter of
2018.
While Washington has given Huawei a temporary reprieve from the ban and U.S.
President Donald Trump signaled he could be relaxing the curbs, it has already
rattled the global technology supply chain tied to Huawei's $105 billion
business that spans telecom equipment and smartphones.
The ban has also caused confusion among global companies and even academic
bodies as the restrictions on their engagement with Huawei were unclear. U.S.
delivery firm FedEx sued the American government last month after the company's
mishandling of Huawei packages caused a public uproar in China.
(Reporting by Sijia Jiang; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |