stockmarket

Chinese chipmakers to see big negatives from Biden’s ‘last dance’- Jefferies



Investing.com– Jefferies expects a major negative impact on China’s chipmaking industry from the Biden administration’s latest round of export controls on the sector- one of the final policies under President Joe Biden before a looming regime change.

Biden’s latest round of export restrictions- which will block advanced foundries such as TSMC (NYSE:) and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd (KS:) from making artificial intelligence chips for China- was described as a “very onerous control measure” by Jefferies analysts. 

Chinese companies will now have to undertake extensive documentation and approval processes to order chips from U.S.-linked foundries, presenting the possibility of outright rejection or a prolonged order process. 

Jefferies said the move stands to have a “big negative impact” on China’s GPU/AI ASIC players, given that TSMC and Samsung- which have the most advanced foundry facilities in the globe- will not be able to manufacture chips for the sector. 

While de-speccing is an option- ie running AI chips with fewer transistors- it will make the product less useful, Jefferies said. 

For ADAS/AD players, Jefferies said the impact was less clear, given limited information about transistor counts in the sector. But the new regulations could prevent the sector from advancing technology, giving them a disadvantage against foreign competitors such as NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:) and Qualcomm Incorporated (NASDAQ:). 

The restrictions, introduced this week, cap off a string of curbs imposed by the Biden administration against China, to largely block its access to the fast-growing AI industry. It appears likely that incoming President Donald Trump will continue to keep the restrictions in place, given that he has signaled a largely hawkish stance against China. 

Read More   Amazon, Pinterest, Wayfair Top List Of 7 Stocks Bank Of America Says To Watch In Second Half Of 2024

Still, Chinese chip stocks rallied on Friday, amid persistent bets that major local foundries such as Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (HK:) will benefit from increased local demand. China also launched a probe into U.S. chipmakers over grants under the CHIPS act, as well as allegations of dumping.

 





READ SOURCE

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept our use of cookies.