Exclusive: Top Japanese chip gear firm to
honor U.S. blacklist of Chinese firms - executive
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[June 11, 2019]
By Makiko Yamazaki
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's Tokyo Electron,
the world's No.3 supplier of semiconductor manufacturing equipment, will
not supply to Chinese clients blacklisted by Washington, a senior
company executive told Reuters.
The decision shows how Washington's effort to bar sales of technology to
Chinese firms, including Huawei Technologies, is ensnaring non-American
firms that are not obliged to follow U.S. law.
China, which is locked in a crippling trade war with the United States,
is pushing to build its semiconductor industry to reduce its reliance on
U.S., Japanese and European suppliers for chip-making machinery.
"We would not do businesses with Chinese clients with whom Applied
Materials and Lam Research are barred from doing businesses," the
executive said, referring to the top U.S. chip equipment firms.
"It's crucial for us that the U.S. government and industry see us as a
fair company," he said, citing Tokyo Electron's long U.S. partnership
since the 1960s, when it started off as an importer of U.S. equipment.
He did not want to be named given the sensitivity of the matter. Applied
Materials and Lam Research declined to comment.
Another major Japanese chip equipment supplier is also considering
halting shipments to blacklisted Chinese firms, a person familiar with
the matter said.
"The issue is beyond something we can decide on our own," said the
person, who also declined to be identified.
Executives at other equipment suppliers said they were communicating
closely with the Japanese industry ministry.
"We haven't received any specific instructions from the ministry," one
of the executives said. "We are aware that we could be in deep trouble
if we take advantage of the U.S. export ban to expand businesses with
China."
DIFFICULT TO REPLACE U.S. RIVALS
The Tokyo Electron executive did not specify the names of the Chinese
clients, but state-backed memory chipmaker Fujian Jinhua Integrated
Circuit Co is currently on a list of entities that cannot buy technology
goods from U.S. firms.
Fujian Jinhua did not respond to an emailed request for comment. A
handful of other Chinese companies and research institutions are on a
'red list' that U.S. companies have been advised to avoid.
Huawei's chip arm, HiSilicon, is a so-called fabless company focusing on
chip design and thus is not normally a buyer of chip-manufacturing gear.
But Huawei also faces major risks from non-U.S. suppliers adhering to
the U.S. blacklist.
British chip designer ARM, owned by Japan's SoftBank, has halted
relations with Huawei, potentially crippling the Chinese company's
ability to make new chips for its future smartphones.
But Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, global leader in chip
production and maker of many Huawei chips, has said it would continue to
be a supplier to Huawei.
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Chinese and U.S. flags are set up for a signing ceremony during a
visit by U.S. Secretary of Transportation Elaine Chao at China's
Ministry of Transport in Beijing, China April 27, 2018.
REUTERS/Jason Lee
U.S. law specifies that any product comprising 25% or more U.S.
content is subject to the U.S. export control restrictions.
But the Japanese chip equipment executives did not cite that as a
reason for cutting off supplies to some Chinese companies.
"It's not impossible for Japanese companies like Tokyo Electron to
replace their U.S. rivals and complete production lines for China,"
an executive at a U.S. chipmaker said. "But in reality, that's very
difficult considering a U.S. backlash."
CHINA CHIP TECHNOLOGY LAGS
Five Japanese companies rank among the world's top 10 chip equipment
firms. The highly specialized chip equipment industry is relatively
small, but the gear is strategically critical for all semiconductor
manufacturers.
Making chips involves numerous processes that require different
types of equipment. Each market segment is typically dominated by
just a few players.
Tokyo Electron controls nearly 90% of the market for microchip
coaters and developers. It competes directly with Applied Materials
and Lam Research in some segments.
Beijing has been investing heavily to grow domestic chip equipment
suppliers as part of an effort to achieve its goal of producing 70%
of the semiconductors it uses by 2025.
But industry sources say technologies at those suppliers are still
far behind, leaving China dependent on imported equipment.
Today, only 16% of the semiconductors used in China are produced
in-country, half of which are made by Chinese firms, according to
the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a
Washington-based think tank.
But aggressive investments by local chipmakers and foreign players
like Samsung Electronics made China the world's No.2 market for chip
equipment last year.
Many chip equipment manufacturers are forecasting substantial profit
drops this year as the China-U.S. trade war dampens demand for chips
and chip equipment globally.
(Reporting by Makiko Yamazaki; additional reporting by Stephen
Nellis in San Francisco, Editing by Jonathan Weber and Himani Sarkar)
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