Article 5B0WV The Trump administration will add SMIC, China’s largest chipmaker, to its defense blacklist: report

The Trump administration will add SMIC, China’s largest chipmaker, to its defense blacklist: report

by
Catherine Shu
from Crunch Hype on (#5B0WV)

SMIC, one of largest chip makers in the world, is among several companies that the Department of Defense plans to designate as being owned or controlled by the Chinese military, reports Reuters. Earlier this month, President Donald Trump signed an executive order, set to go into effect on January 11, that would bar U.S. investors from buying securities from companies on the defense blacklist.

In a statement to Reuters, SMIC said it continues to engage constructively and openly with the U.S. government" and that it has no relationship with the Chinese military and does not manufacture for military end-users or end-uses."

The largest semiconductor maker in China, SMIC holds about 4% of the worldwide foundry market, estimates market research firm TrendForce. Its U.S. customers have included Qualcomm, Broadcom and Texas Instruments.

There are currently 31 companies on the defense blacklist. SMIC is one of four new companies that the Department of Defense plans to add, according to Reuters. The others are China Construction Technology, China International Engineering Consulting Corp and China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC).

The company delisted from NYSE in May 2019, but it said that the decision was prompted by the limited trading volume and high administrative costs, not the U.S.-China trade war or the U.S. government's blacklisting of Huawei and other Chinese tech companies.

China's largest chipmaker is delisting from the NYSE

SMIC has already been impacted by export restrictions that prevent them from purchasing key equipment from American suppliers. At the beginning of October, it told shareholders that export restrictions set by the U.S. Bureau of Industry and Security could have material adverse effects" on its production.

The executive order, and the possible addition of new companies to the defense blacklist, is in-line with the Trump administration's hard stance against Chinese tech companies, including Huawei, ZTE and ByteDance, that it claims are a potential national security threat through their alleged ties to the Chinese government and military. But the future of a lot of the current administration's policies after the Joe Biden assumes the presidency on January 20 is uncertain.

TechCrunch has contacted SMIC for comment.

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