Exclusive-Samsung, SK Hynix to be spared brunt of China chip crackdown
by U.S. -sources
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[October 07, 2022] By
Alexandra Alper and Karen Freifeld
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Biden
administration plans to spare SK Hynix and Samsung from the brunt of new
restrictions on memory chipmakers in China aimed at thwarting Beijing's
technological ambitions and blocking its military advances, sources
said.
The Commerce Department, which plans to release new curbs on exports of
technology to China this week, will likely deny requests by U.S.
suppliers to send equipment to Chinese firms like Yangtze Memory
Technologies Co Ltd (YMTC) and ChangXin Memory Technologies, Inc (CXMT)
if they are making advanced DRAM or flash memory chips, the sources
said.
However, license requests to sell equipment to foreign companies making
advanced memory chips in China will be reviewed on a case by case basis,
sources said, potentially allowing for them to receive the equipment.
"The goal is not to hurt non-indigenous companies," one of the people
briefed on the matter said.
The White House and Commerce Department declined to comment. SK Hynix
Inc, Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, YMTC, and CXMT did not respond to
requests for comment.
The Chinese Embassy in Washington on Thursday described the expected
rules as "sci-tech hegemony." It accused the United States of using its
"technological prowess ... to hobble and suppress the development of
emerging markets and developing countries."
The move could assuage the worst fears of South Korean memory chipmakers
that the United States might hobble their China-based manufacturing
business in its effort to thwart China's rise, cripple YMTC and protect
vulnerable U.S. memory chipmakers.
They still worry, however, that the case-by-case review standard is far
from an explicit greenlight for U.S. equipment to be shipped to their
Chinese facilities and could result in bickering with regulators over
what shipments to approve.
Details of some of the new regulations facing China-based memory
chipmakers have not been previously reported.
The new curbs target China-based producers of DRAM chips, which hold
information from applications while the system is in use, and NAND
chips, which are used for data and file storage.
U.S. suppliers seeking to ship equipment to China-based semiconductor
firms would not have to seek a license from the Commerce Department if
selling to firms producing DRAM chips above the 18 nanometer node, NAND
Flash chips below 128 layers, or logic chips above 14 nanometers, the
sources said.
However, U.S. companies selling sophisticated technology to indigenous
Chinese chipmakers producing DRAM chips at 18 nanometers or below, NAND
flash chips at or above 128 layers or logic chips at or under 14
nanometers would have to apply for a license that would be reviewed with
the tough "presumption of denial" standard.
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Employees walk past the logo of SK Hynix
at its headquarters in Seongnam, South Korea, April 25, 2016.
REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
U.S. suppliers seeking to sell the equipment to non-Chinese origin
companies operating in China and producing those same types of chips
would also face a license requirement but the applications would be
reviewed on a case-by-case basis, the sources added.
If published as expected, the rules would mark the first U.S. bid
through export controls to target Chinese production of memory chips
without specialized military applications, representing a more
expansive view of American national security, according to export
control experts.
They would also hit YMTC, a rising power in manufacturing NAND chips
founded in 2016. Its expansion and low-price offerings represent "a
direct threat" to U.S.-based Micron Technology Inc and Western
Digital Corp, the White House said in a June 2021 report.
YMTC is already under investigation by the Commerce Department over
whether it violated U.S. export controls by selling chips to Chinese
telecoms company Huawei Technologies Co Ltd. Its chips are being
evaluated by Apple Inc for inclusion in some of its iPhones in
China, a major concern for U.S. lawmakers and the Biden
administration.
The rules could also hurt CXMT, a state-backed Chinese company that
is working to enter the DRAM market.
LAM Research Corp, Applied Materials Inc and KLA Corp, major U.S.
vendors of equipment to make chips, are likely to be hit by the
restrictions. LAM and Applied Materials did not respond to requests
for comment. KLA declined to comment.
South Korea's Samsung has a facility producing NAND Flash memory
chips in China's Shaanxi Province. South Korean rival SK Hynix has
purchased Intel Corp's NAND flash memory chip manufacturing business
in Dalian and produces DRAM chips at another China-based facility.
According to consulting firm Yole Intelligence's Walt Coon, 25% of
SK Hynix's and 38% of Samsung's NAND wafer production is based in
China, and about 50% of SK Hynix's DRAM production is in China.
Reuters first reported that the United States was considering
limiting shipments of American chipmaking equipment to memory chip
makers in China including YMTC, part of a bid to halt China's
semiconductor sector advances and protect U.S. companies.
Reuters also reported last month that the Biden administration
planned in October to broaden curbs on U.S shipments to China of
semiconductors used for artificial intelligence and chipmaking
tools.
(Reporting by Alexandra Alper and Karen Freifeld; Editing by Chris
Sanders and Richard Chang)
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