US orders chip equipment companies to halt shipments to Hua Hong over advanced AI chip concerns

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The US Department of Commerce has directed chip equipment suppliers including Lam Research, Applied Materials, and KLA to stop shipping tools to Hua Hong facilities developing 7-nanometer chipmaking capabilities. The move targets China's second-largest chipmaker as it prepares to produce artificial intelligence chips, potentially costing US suppliers billions while escalating tech tensions ahead of the Trump-Xi summit in May.

US Restrictions Target China's Second-Largest Chipmaker

The U.S. Department of Commerce last week ordered chip equipment companies to halt certain shipments to Hua Hong, marking an escalation in Washington's efforts to slow China's development of advanced semiconductor capabilities

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. The department sent letters to at least a handful of companies informing them of new restrictions on tools and materials destined for Hua Hong facilities that US officials believe will make China's most sophisticated chips

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. Top US chip equipment companies Lam Research, Applied Materials and KLA, each with significant business supplying China, were among those believed to have received the directive, according to sources familiar with the matter.

Source: Reuters

Source: Reuters

Manufacturing Advanced Chips With 7-Nanometer Technology

The US restrictions specifically target two Hua Hong facilities: Fab 6, which currently operates 28/22-nm technology in Shanghai, and Fab 8a, believed to be under construction

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. Reuters exclusively reported in March that Hua Hong Group had developed advanced chip manufacturing technologies that could be used to produce artificial intelligence chips, a milestone in Beijing's efforts to boost chipmaking self-sufficiency. The group's contract chipmaking business, Huali Microelectronics, was preparing a 7-nanometer chipmaking process at its Shanghai plant. Currently, SMIC, China's largest contract chipmaker, is the only domestic company that can make chips with 7-nm technologies. The letters from the Commerce Department also aim to prevent shipments to Huali, sources said.

National Security Concerns Drive Technological Lead Protection

In recent years, the Commerce Department has restricted US companies from shipping equipment to Chinese factories producing advanced chips as part of an effort to safeguard the U.S.' technological lead in making AI and other advanced chips on national security grounds

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. The US House of Representatives Select Committee on China stated the US is "right to act to protect America's technological edge," emphasizing the new restrictions on Hua Hong are about "safeguarding national security"

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. The Commerce Department communication, known as an "is-informed" letter, allows the US to bypass lengthy rule-writing processes to quickly impose new licensing requirements on specific companies.

Source: ET

Source: ET

Billions at Stake and Rising Tensions Ahead of Trump-Xi Meeting

US chip equipment companies and other suppliers could lose billions of dollars in sales, especially if they were supplying a chipmaking plant under construction or one retooling to begin making more advanced chips

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. The restrictions could slow China's domestic chipmaking drive, though Hua Hong may be able to replace the tools with ones from foreign or Chinese companies. The recent letters carry this policy forward but could increase tension with China ahead of President Donald Trump's scheduled meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing in May

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. China's foreign ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said China hopes the US will take concrete actions to maintain the stability and smooth functioning of global industrial and supply chains. Shares of Hua Hong Semiconductor fell 4.29% in Shanghai following the news.

Huawei Connection Raises Stakes for AI Chip Production

China's tech giant Huawei Technologies, which is on a US trade blacklist, has been collaborating with Hua Hong and is planning to move part of its AI chip production from SMIC to Hua Hong, sources said

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. Huali's research and development of 7-nm chips at its Hua Hong Fab 6 site began last year with support from Huawei-backed SiCarrier. Huali is planning an initial production capacity of a few thousand 7-nm wafers a month by the end of 2026. Chris McGuire, a senior fellow for China and emerging technologies at the Council on Foreign Relations, called this "an overdue and welcome first step from the Trump administration," but noted that "to have any effect, it must capture all shipments from US toolmakers, including from their overseas subsidiaries." The effectiveness of these measures will depend on whether Hua Hong can source alternative equipment and how strictly the restrictions are enforced across global supply chains.

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