Chipmaking tool firms expect boom in China sales despite export rules
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[April 21, 2023] By
Stephen Nellis
(Reuters) - Two companies that make tools for manufacturing chips said
that they expect sales to China to boom later this year despite U.S.
export restrictions on equipment used to make cutting-edge
semiconductors.
The comments by California-based Lam Research and the Netherlands' ASML
Holdings NV are a sign that China may be a bigger customer for the
industry than expected this year given its strong demand for
less-advanced chips like those used in electric vehicles (EVs).
The companies reported quarterly earnings that beat analyst
expectations, though Lam's sales were lower than a year ago because of a
downturn in the memory market.
Both also said they expect sales to Chinese companies to increase in the
coming months despite the U.S. imposing sweeping restrictions on China's
semiconductor sector in October, arguing that Beijing was using American
chipmaking technology to modernize its military.
Lam is subject to the U.S. export restrictions, and ASML will face new
rules from the Dutch government on China sales later this year. But
those rules so far have only affected equipment used in making the most
advanced chips.
Lam and ASML said Chinese customers are buying tools for building less
advanced chips that go into products like EVs, mobile phones and
personal computers amid the country's drive for more self-sufficient
production.
In Lam's case, it had originally estimated that the China restrictions
would cost it between $2 billion and $2.5 billion of revenue in 2023.
But the company said it had received a "clarification" of the rules from
the U.S. government that Chief Financial Officer Doug Bettinger said
during a conference call would allow Lam to sell "a few hundred million
dollars" worth of tools that it initially thought were banned.
A Lam spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment on what the
clarification from U.S. regulators entailed.
Lam also said that it had received around half a billion dollars in
advanced cash payments, primarily from new customers.
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Employees are seen working on the final
assembly of ASML's TWINSCAN NXE:3400B semiconductor lithography tool
with its panels removed, in Veldhoven, Netherlands, in this picture
taken April 4, 2019. Bart van Overbeeke Fotografie/ASML/Handout via
REUTERS
"I will acknowledge it's got a decent Chinese footprint to it,"
Bettinger said of the group of new customers.
ASML said it has a backlog of about 39 billion euros, the equivalent
of about two years of tool shipments. Chief Executive Peter Wennink
told investors during a conference call that Chinese customers
working to make less advanced chips make up about 30% of those
orders. That's a jump from November, when ASML said China made up
18% of its then 38 billion euro backlog.
Wennink said those Chinese chipmakers were focused on markets like
electric vehicles, which require many more chips than their
combustion-engine counterparts. Most of those chips do not require
ASML's most advanced tools.
"This is where ... the mature semiconductor space is very important
and needs to grow. And this is where China is very strong," Wennink
said.
Later this year, ASML will have to start applying for Dutch export
licenses for what are called immersion deep ultraviolet lithography
machines (DUV) for shipment to China after the U.S., Dutch and
Japanese governments agreed to begin regulating the tools.
They are not ASML's most advanced machines but are still close
enough to its state-of-the-art machines to make powerful computing
chips and were previously not restricted by export rules.
Wennink said ASML expects to sell about 93 immersion DUV machines
this year, after several years of strong demand. They are cheaper
than its most advanced systems but still cost tens of millions of
euros each.
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Jamie
Freed)
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