| 
			In August, President Joe Biden signed legislation providing $52 
			billion in government funding to boost semiconductor manufacturing 
			and research and a 25% investment tax credit for chip plants 
			estimated to be worth $24 billion.
 "Without strict controls, we are concerned that CHIPS funding may 
			result in a subsidy for additional buybacks, enriching executives 
			and stockholders at taxpayers’ expense while undermining the goals 
			of the legislation," said the letter signed by Senators Elizabeth 
			Warren and Tammy Baldwin and Representatives Sean Casten, Jamaal 
			Bowman, Pramila Jayapal
 
 and Bill Foster.
 
 Commerce has said it will "give preference in awards to companies 
			who commit to make future investments that grow the domestic 
			semiconductor industry ... and not engage in stock buybacks."
 
 The letter to Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo notes the largest 
			U.S. semiconductor companies have spent hundreds of billions on 
			stock buybacks in recent years, with Intel spending over $100 
			billion on buybacks since 2005.
 
 Commerce hopes to begin seeking applications by February for $39 
			billion in semiconductor chips subsidies to build new facilities and 
			expand existing U.S. production.
 
 Commerce, which confirmed it received the letter, has said chips 
			companies awards will be "no larger than is necessary to ensure the 
			project happens here in the United States” and will discourage 
			“race-to-the-bottom subsidy competitions between states and 
			localities.”
 
 Chipmaker Micron Technology said Tuesday it planned to invest up to 
			$100 billion over the next 20-plus years to build a computer chip 
			factory complex in upstate New York.
 
 The lawmakers expect Commerce "to announce additional protections 
			and to refine its existing guidance over the coming weeks and 
			months" and ask if Commerce will require companies to attest on 
			applications for chips funding "that they will not engage in 
			buybacks for a set period of time."
 
 (Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Kim Coghill)
 
 [© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.]
 Copyright 2022 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  
			Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. 
				  |  |