New export curbs make relying on Japan riskier for China
Japan is home to numerous key linchpins in chip supply chain
By Takashi Mochizuki and Yuki Furukawa
April 5, 2023 at 6:00 AM GMT+7Updated onApril 5, 2023 at 10:00 AM GMT+7
<iframe
src="https://www.bloomberg.com/media-manifest/embed/iframe?id=e4882fc4-d658-43ba-b87f-5f5c1a4e4c1e"
allowscriptaccess="always"
frameborder="0"></iframe>
Japan’s decision to join the US and
Netherlands in restricting exports of chipmaking gear to China is giving the
allies powerful new weapons to deploy in the escalating technology war.
Japan’s
trade ministry said last week that suppliers of 23 types of chip technology
will need government
approval to export to countries including China as early as July. That affects
a broad range of companies that have been central to China’s efforts to build a
domestic chip industry, including Tokyo Electron Ltd., Nikon Corp. and Screen Holdings Co.
While not as high-profile as their counterparts in the US or
Netherlands, Japanese companies control key steps in the semiconductor supply
chain, which could be used as potential chokepoints against China. Screen, for
instance, is the leading producer of wafer cleaning equipment. Lasertec Corp. is the
sole supplier of machines needed to inspect designs for the world’s most
advanced chips, using extreme ultraviolet lithography chipmaking.
“The goal of these new controls is to cut off Chinese firms from a
broad array of advanced chipmaking tools with the aim of making it more
difficult for Chinese firms to manufacture advanced chips for
artificial-intelligence purposes,” said Chris Miller, an economic historian and
author of Chip War: the Fight for the
World’s Most Critical Technology. The idea is to slow down China’s
tech development to help widen the gap between China’s military capabilities
and that of the US and its allies, he said.
When the Biden administration unveiled its sweeping restrictions on
chip-related exports to China in October, American companies such as Applied Materials Inc. were
directly affected by the rules. With the addition of the Netherlands and now
Japan, all the major countries that produce chipmaking equipment are
participating in the China blockade. The restrictions cover the most advanced
machines, including those that make logic chips at 16 nanometers or more
advanced geometries.
“Japan joining
the export curbs will do great harm to China’s ability to make and develop
chips smaller than 16 nanometers,” said Akira Minamikawa, analyst at research
company Omdia.
The
three-country alliance will certainly compel Beijing to step up efforts to
develop Chinese supplies of chipmaking equipment and materials, so it’s no
longer reliant on foreign suppliers. But that will take years and increase the
cost of producing semiconductors for the Chinese market.
“Even if China
develops its own chip technology, the standards will be completely different
from those of the rest of the world,” said Toyo Securities analyst Hideki
Yasuda. “That’s going to mean more costly chips that lower its tech
competitiveness.”
Over the weekend, China’s Foreign Minister Qin Gang urged his Japanese counterpart to
refrain from supporting US efforts to suppress the Chinese semiconductor
industry. Qin said a chip blockade will only strengthen Beijing’s resolve to
achieve self-reliance. On Tuesday evening, China’s Ministry of Commerce issued a statement saying
the country had “grave concern” over Japan’s plans.
Chinese chip-related stocks surged amid optimism that they will
benefit from Beijing’s semiconductor efforts. Ingenic Semiconductor Co. jumped
13% on Monday and another 10% on Tuesday.
Yoshimasa
Hayashi, Japan’s minister of foreign affairs, declined to make any such
commitments during his trip to Beijing, instead pressing Qin for the swift
return of a Japanese citizen detained by Beijing.
The country’s stance will likely cost Japanese companies in lost
sales. Nikon, for example, gets about 28% of its revenue from China and it has
been banking on strong demand for its immersion lithography machines in China
to help finance its next technological bet, aimed at closing the gap with Dutch
rival ASML Holding NV.
“This forces
Nikon to go back to the drawing board on its China strategy for immersion
lithography machines,” said Kazuyoshi Saito, senior analyst at Iwai Cosmo
Securities.
Nikon is now
evaluating the impact of Japan’s chip curbs on its earnings, a spokesperson
said. “We will follow all regulations and work to maximize our performance
within any given framework.”
Japan is home
to dominant makers of photoresist coaters and developers and mask inspection
equipment needed to make the most advanced chips, as well as the single biggest
source of silicon wafers and many of the fine chemicals necessary.
Many have
grown with the Chinese economy, helping to fuel their customers’ technological
ascent. Some even benefited from the geopolitical rivalry between Washington
and Beijing, as that spurred more Chinese customers to pay a premium for
Japanese equipment, bolstering Japan chip gear exports to its biggest trading
partner last year, despite a slowdown in the overall semiconductor market.
Screen gets about a quarter of its revenue from China now, helped
by a surge in demand from chipmakers such as Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. But if Chinese customers can no longer buy its
gear they will have to turn to less proven alternatives.
Prior to Japan’s announcement, it had said it
expected that proportion to fall to around 20% for 2023. The company said it would
follow the Trade Ministry instructions.
Yokohama-based Lasertec holds a unique place in
the semiconductor supply chain. It’s the only supplier of machines that do
design inspections for extreme ultraviolet, or EUV, lithography chipmaking, the
most advanced process for making chips. Its shipments to China were already
constrained due to a ban on ASML’s EUV lithography machine shipments.
Japan’s new restrictions — which don’t affect
exports bound for favored trading partners Taiwan, South Korea and Singapore —
are an about-face that is resetting expectations throughout the country’s $30
billion semiconductor equipment making industry.
Tokyo Electron, which gets about 25% of its
sales from mainland China, could see that drop by five to 10 percentage points,
according to Bloomberg Intelligence analysts Masahiro Wakasugi and Brian
Moran.
Tokyo Electron will act appropriately after
assessing any new regulations, a spokesperson said.
While China will try to develop its own
technologies, historically it’s been difficult to catch up in semiconductor
technology due to the rapid improvement in processing power in rivals’
integrated circuits, said Miller.
“Japan’s new restrictions make it much harder
for China,” he said.
(Updates with China Ministry of Commerce statement in 9th paragraph)
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-04-04/us-gets-new-levers-from-japan-to-curb-china-s-chip-ambitions?leadSource=uverify%20wall
No comments:
Post a Comment