US to require companies winning chipmaking subsidies to share excess
profits
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[February 28, 2023] By
David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Biden administration on Tuesday said it will
require companies winning funds from its $52 billion U.S. semiconductor
manufacturing and research program to share excess profits and explain
how they plan to provide affordable childcare.
The Commerce Department on Tuesday is releasing its plans to begin
accepting applications in late June for a $39 billion manufacturing
subsidy program. The law also creates a 25% investment tax credit for
building chip plants estimated to be worth $24 billion.
The CHIPS Act plays a central role in the Biden administration's effort
to bring semiconductor manufacturing back to the United States. Its
success is vital to U.S. ambitions to keep ahead of China in global
markets.
Recipients who receive more than $150 million in direct funding "will be
required to share with the U.S. government a portion of any cash flows
or returns that exceed the applicant’s projections by an agreed-upon
threshold," the department said.
Companies winning funding are also prohibited from using chips funds for
dividends or stock buybacks, and must provide details of any plans to
buy back their own shares over five years.
The department will consider an "applicant’s commitments to refrain from
stock buybacks in the application review process" in a five-step
application.
Democratic lawmakers have noted the largest U.S. semiconductor companies
have poured hundreds of billions into stock buybacks in recent years,
with Intel spending more than $100 billion on buybacks since 2005. Intel
also pays a dividend.
Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said companies must submit a workforce
plan that includes an outline of workforce needs. Applicants seeking
more than $150 million in direct funding must submit "a plan for how
they will provide affordable and accessible childcare for their
workers."
Applicants must address six program priority areas including plans "to
commit to future investment in the U.S. semiconductor industry,
including to build R&D facilities in the United States."
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Semiconductor chips are seen on a
printed circuit board in this illustration picture taken February
17, 2023. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration
Applicants should also "create opportunities for minority owned,
veteran-owned, and women-owned businesses; demonstrate climate and
environmental responsibility; invest in their communities by
addressing barriers to economic inclusion; and commit to using iron,
steel, and construction materials produced in the United States."
Most direct funding awards are expected to range between 5% and 15%
of project capital expenditures. Commerce said it generally expects
the total amount of an award including loan or loan guarantee, will
not exceed 35% of project capital expenditures.
"We're going to be doing our own diligence. We're not writing blank
checks to any company that asks," Raimondo said. "We're making
companies open their books."
The initial funding opportunity seeks applications for projects
involving leading-edge, current-generation, and mature-node
semiconductors. It will release funding opportunities for
semiconductor materials and manufacturing equipment facilities in
late spring and one for R&D facilities in the fall.
Raimondo noted companies winning awards will be required to enter
into agreements restricting their ability to expand semiconductor
manufacturing capacity in foreign countries of concern like China
for 10 years after winning funding. They cannot engage in any joint
research or technology licensing efforts with a foreign entity of
concern that involves sensitive technologies.
"We're going to be releasing very detailed regulations in the next
few weeks that give companies a clearer sense of what the red lines
are," Raimondo said on Monday ahead of the announcement.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Chris Sanders, Robert
Birsel)
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