Exclusive: Israel's chip sales to China jump as Intel
expands
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[March 19, 2019]
By Tova Cohen and Steven Scheer
TEL AVIV (Reuters) - Israel's exports of
computer chips to China soared last year as Chinese companies bought
more semiconductors made at Intel's Kiryat Gat plant.
An official at the Israel Export Institute told Reuters that new data
showed semiconductor exports to China jumped 80 percent last year to
$2.6 billion. An industry source told Reuters that Intel Israel
accounted for at least 80 percent of those sales.
The data will be welcome news for the Israeli government as it pushes
for deeper ties with China and because semiconductors accounted for $3.9
billion of overall goods exports in 2018, according to the institute, a
government agency.
The two countries have started negotiating a trade deal and technology
is expected to be a major part of the discussions. Overall exports of
Israeli goods to China, excluding diamonds, rose 50 percent to $4.7
billion, statistics.
Intel announced a $5 billion investment to expand capacity in its Kiryat
Gat plant in southern Israel in 2017, which makes some of the smallest
and fastest chips in the world.
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That year it also bought Israeli auto-focused chip and technology firm
Mobileye for $15 billion. It said this year it would invest $11 billion
in a new Israeli plant.
A spokesman for Intel said the firm exported $3.9 billion worth of goods
from Israel last year, up from $3.6 billion in 2017. He declined to give
further details of Intel's operations in Israel.
Chinese officials have said they are looking to develop a domestic chip
market because Chinese companies import $270 billion of semiconductors
each year. Israel has a reputation for exporting high-end chips.
Israel's export institute also said sales to China of inspection
equipment for semiconductor manufacturing jumped 64 percent to $450
million last year.
That equipment is used to control and inspect manufacturing processes in
semiconductor plants and is useful for China as its domestic chip
manufacturing increases.
Companies in Israel making such equipment include Orbotech, which was
just acquired by fellow semiconductor equipment maker KLA-Tencor of
California for about $3.4 billion.
That deal was announced a year ago but was held up by Chinese
regulators, who only gave their approval in February.
PIVOT TO ASIA
China is now Israel's second largest export market for goods after the
United States, having overtaken Britain last year.
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Technicians work at Israeli chipmaker TowerJazz's plant in Migdal
HaEmek, northern Israel September 13, 2017. Picture taken September
13, 2017. REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun/File Photo
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Sales of semiconductors to the United States slipped 20 percent to $860 million,
contributing to a 3 percent drop in goods exports. But at $10.9 billion, overall
goods exports still dwarf those to China.
Israel has been pivoting its economy toward Asia in the past few years both
because of perceived political hostility in some European countries and the fact
that Asian markets are growing rapidly.
In recent years, Chinese-based airlines have started direct flights to Tel Aviv,
the two countries signed a visa agreement and are working on the trade deal.
Israel is also in talks for free trade agreements with Vietnam and South Korea.
Some analysts in China expect the ties to get stronger due to the tit-for-tat
trade war between the United States, a major chip producer, and China.
"Because of the trade war, China and Israel's cooperation is closer than it has
been before," said Gu Wenjun, chief analyst at ICWise, a semiconductor
consultancy in Shanghai.
"Israel has the technology and China has the market – the space for cooperation
is big."
Eyal Waldman, founder and CEO of Israeli chipmaker Mellanox, said his company
was benefiting from China's policies.
"In China they prefer to use Chinese silicon and then after that non-U.S.
silicon and only if they don't have that then U.S. silicon, so we are benefiting
from that," he told Reuters.
"We are seeing better growth in China."
Mellanox agreed this week to sell itself to California-based chipmaker Nvidia
Corp for almost $7 billion. Intel lost the bidding war to Nvidia. Russell
Ellwanger, the CEO of another major chip manufacturer TowerJazz, said his
company's growth in China "is very, very strong".
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(Additional reporting by Josh Horwitz in Shanghai and Stephen Nellis in San
Francisco; editing by Anna Willard)
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