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Germany's Infineon suspends US shipments to Huawei

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TAIPEI -- German chipmaker Infineon Technologies has suspended certain shipments to Huawei Technologies, three people familiar with the matter told the Nikkei Asian Review, in the first sign that Washington's crackdown on the Chinese tech giant is beginning to choke off vital chip supplies from non-U.S. companies.

The German chipmaker confirmed to Nikkei that it was halting deliveries of products originating in the U.S. due to the new rules. However it insisted that the majority of products supplied to Huawei had not been affected by the U.S. export controls and these deliveries continued.

Infineon's decision to stop U.S. deliveries came after the U.S. Department of Commerce last week red-flagged Huawei by putting it on the so-called Entity List, which requires American companies to obtain a license if shipping products to the Chinese company. Foreign companies using a certain amount of American technology for products sold to Huawei are also subject to the same restriction, lawyers have told Nikkei Asian Review.


"Infineon decided to adopt a more cautious measure and stopped the shipment. But it will hold meetings this week to discuss [the situation] and make assessments," one of the people said. Another source said the German chipmaker wanted to avoid potential legal problems while it assessed compliance requirements. It was not yet clear whether Infineon's suspension was only temporary and if it would resume doing business with Huawei after it clarifies the legal issues this week, one of the sources said.

The German group said it had been able to adapt its supply chain to ensure continuity of deliveries . "We have a set of measures in place to thoroughly monitor any possible changes in the legal frameworks of our respective markets, enabling us to make adaptions in our international supply chain. This enables us to make efficient and proactive adjustments supporting our ability to deliver wherever possible," the group said in a statement.

While Infineon's sales to Huawei amount to a fraction of its annual revenues -- just 2% according to Goldman Sachs analysts -- the German company's decision could have serious repercussions for the Chinese tech giant. It is already seeing sources for vital supplies to its telecom equipment and smartphone businesses begin to dry up. The move could influence other key European and Asian suppliers to take a similarly cautious approach, industry sources told the Nikkei Asian Review. Under the U.S. rule, companies that fail to obtain a licence for supplying an entity on the list risk being blacklisted themselves.

U.S. chipmakers Qualcomm and Qorvo have already stopped shipping products to Huawei, Nikkei Asian Review reported earlier. Neither company responded to requests for comment. American memory chipmakers Micron Technology and Western Digital also stopped shipment to Huawei, another source told the Nikkei Asian Review. Micron confirmed to the Nikkei Asian Review on Monday in a statement that "As a U.S. based company with a global footprint, Micron respects and complies with all laws and regulations in the U.S. and other countries where we operate." Western Digital did not comment. In preparation for the U.S. crackdown, Huawei has stockpiled roughly six months to one year of key components, Nikkei reported last week.

Google, which provides the Android operating system for Huawei smartphones told Nikkei Asian Review in a statement that it was "complying" with the U.S. order, which will require it to seek licences to continue business with Huawei. This means the Chinese company's smartphones could lose access to updated versions of popular applications such as Gmail and Google Maps. However the U.S. company said "Google Play and the security protections from Google Play Protect will continue to function on existing Huawei devices.” The blow to Huawei's overseas smartphone business comes just as the Chinese company has overtaken Apple to be the world's number two in the January-March period.

ST Microelectronics, another key European chipmaker, is set to have meetings this week to discuss whether it will continue shipping to Huawei, a source familiar with the plan told the Nikkei Asian Review. For now, ST Microelectronics is maintaining deliveries.

Huawei's key Asian chip supplier Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the world's largest contract chipmaker, also continues to deliver to Huawei but is conducting due diligence to assess the potential impact.

TSMC said on Friday the company owns a "complicated and sophisticated export control compliance system" and "based on the data in the system we are not changing our shipping practice for the time being," Nikkei has reported.

Other Asian suppliers such as Japan's Toshiba Memory, the world's second biggest NAND flash memory provider, and Japan Display Inc, the screens supplier, told Nikkei they were investigating the implications for their businesses of the U. S. blacklist of Huawei.

Huawei's founder Ren Zhengfei told Japanese media on Saturday at company headquarters in Shenzhen that it would be "fine" even if Qualcomm and other American suppliers could not sell chips to Huawei. "We have already been preparing for this," Ren said in his first interview after U.S. restricted trade with his company last week.

https://asia.nikkei.com/Economy/Trade-war/Germany-s-Infineon-suspends-US-shipments-to-Huawei
 
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Stupid move. It is lucky for European countries that China can stand firmly facing America. So they can hide behind of China not being shot by the tariff man.
 
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UPDATE 1-Infineon denies report it has suspended Huawei shipments
MAY 20, 2019 / 8:58 PM / UPDATED 13 HOURS AGO
3 MIN READ

FRANKFURT, May 20 (Reuters) - German chipmaker Infineon is continuing most shipments to Huawei, it said on Monday, denying a report in Japan’s Nikkei daily that it had suspended deliveries to the Chinese telecoms firm.

Infineon, which makes power-management chips used in cars, smartphones and wind turbines, said most of its products were not covered by the U.S. export control restrictions announced by the Trump administration last Thursday.

“As of today, the great majority of products Infineon delivers to Huawei is not subject to U.S. export control law restrictions, therefore those shipments will continue,” Infineon said in a statement.

Nikkei, citing two people familiar with the matter, reported that Infineon had halted deliveries after Washington added Huawei to a trade blacklist, immediately enacting restrictions that will make it difficult for the telecom firm to do business with U.S. companies.

The report hit European chip stocks, with Infineon falling 4% in Frankfurt trading.

STMicroelectronics, which competes with Infineon on the Chinese market, fell 8%. STM declined to comment after Nikkei reported that it would hold meetings this week to discuss whether to continue shipping to Huawei.

Infineon, in a statement to Reuters, said only goods originating in the United States were affected by the export controls. It added it had flexibility to reconfigure supply chains to address changes in applicable laws.

“This enables us to make efficient and proactive adjustments supporting our ability to deliver wherever possible,” the company said.

Infineon declined to go into further detail, but its annual report lists Huawei as a leading customer of its Power Management and Multimarket (PMM) division, which it says is the global leader with a 26.3 percent market share.

It acquired its main U.S. production facilities through the $3 billion takeover of International Rectifier in 2015. International Rectifier specialises in the use of gallium nitride in power-management products.

The PMM division accounted for 31 percent of Infineon’s annual revenues of 7.6 billion euros ($8.5 billion) last year.


https://www.reuters.com/article/hua...-has-suspended-huawei-shipments-idUSL5N22W35D
 
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I think if Chinese government is smart enough, they will start to organize to create OS of their own and it's ecosystem. For both ARM based PC and Mobile.

The true intentions of USA is to complete isolate China, and to destroy it.

Huawei case is just the beginning of more Chinese companies get sanctioned by USA. The greater the companies, the bigger the change. Basically it's blocking and killing China in the long run.

The less China depend on USA, the less USA can weaponized it against China.
 
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Usa technology companies will lose billions. Trump does not care about American chip makers. Non Chinese/ American suppliers will benefit.
 
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I think if Chinese government is smart enough, they will start to organize to create OS of their own and it's ecosystem. For both ARM based PC and Mobile.

The true intentions of USA is to complete isolate China, and to destroy it.

Huawei case is just the beginning of more Chinese companies get sanctioned by USA. The greater the companies, the bigger the change. Basically it's blocking and killing China in the long run.

The less China depend on USA, the less USA can weaponized it against China.
Even if China companies in years successful created a chinese OS, who in the world will trust a chinese made OS? Pakistan? Ok. Cambodia? Ok. Some poor countries in Africa? Ok. But the rest? Good luck.

What’s about apps? Who will develop apps for a chinese OS? Coders in Congo? China is not welknown for good writing codes.
 
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Even if China companies in years successful created a chinese OS, who in the world will trust a chinese made OS? Pakistan? Ok. Cambodia? Ok. Some poor countries in Africa? Ok. But the rest? Good luck.

What’s about apps? Who will develop apps for a chinese OS? Coders in Congo? China is not welknown for good writing codes.
The world has lost trust to American OS already. Everyone can see the fact that they are American government political paws.
 
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The world has lost trust to American OS already. Everyone can see the fact that they are American government political paws.
Ok but people trust OS of Google, Microsoft, Apple because they know the companies are independent, not obliged by laws to work with domestic intelligence agency. The same can’t be said for China companies.
 
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Are you sure these companies are independent? Ask your deep soul please.
You don’t understand the West. People generally don’t trust the government. Governments come and go. People trust the constitution. Companies enjoy more trust than governments do.

Germany has “Grundgesetz” - the basic law. That is the only thing that matters most. Every individual, every company, every government must respect the basic law.
 
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Even if China companies in years successful created a chinese OS, who in the world will trust a chinese made OS? Pakistan? Ok. Cambodia? Ok. Some poor countries in Africa? Ok. But the rest? Good luck.

What’s about apps? Who will develop apps for a chinese OS? Coders in Congo? China is not welknown for good writing codes.

I don't think China don't have a good programmer.

It just lacks of government support, and market condition that already being dominated by matured companies from USA.

It's bothersome to start from zero, that is why I'm suggesting to use open source Android OS platform as the base for mobile and desktop OS.

Use private companies to develop it and compete in the market to win. Many of the Chinese custom Android OS like MIUI, etc are quite interesting.


In hardware part, ARM processor is predicted to be the future, even it predicted to replace x86 in PC realm. For China to pursue USA in x86, it's may be too late, but not in ARM. Even this is the change for China to set foothold in the market, especially high powered high performance ARM processor for PC. Huawei with Kirin processor is a good start. In the long run, ARM will win against x86, but the race starts now.


Despite may be Chinese OS is not as good as Android, but still able to run Android app and supported with superior hardware, I don't think China will lose. Just look at Mobile phone market today, despite many people say that iOS is better.

I don't think China will lose, it just needs to be smart and work harder, as usual.

I don't know whatever there are smart officials in China to realize it, or they just give up.
 
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I think Chinese have one of the best govt sponsored coders aka hackers. They just need to repurpose them.
 
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I don't think China don't have a good programmer.

It just lacks of government support, and market condition that already being dominated by matured companies from USA.

It's bothersome to start from zero, that is why I'm suggesting to use open source Android OS platform as the base for mobile and desktop OS.

Use private companies to develop it and compete in the market to win. Many of the Chinese custom Android OS like MIUI, etc are quite interesting.


In hardware part, ARM processor is predicted to be the future, even it predicted to replace x86 in PC realm. For China to pursue USA in x86, it's may be too late, but not in ARM. Even this is the change for China to set foothold in the market, especially high powered high performance ARM processor for PC. Huawei with Kirin processor is a good start. In the long run, ARM will win against x86, but the race starts now.


Despite may be Chinese OS is not as good as Android, but still able to run Android app and supported with superior hardware, I don't think China will lose. Just look at Mobile phone market today, despite many people say that iOS is better.

I don't think China will lose, it just needs to be smart and work harder, as usual.

I don't know whatever there are smart officials in China to realize it, or they just give up.
It’s not easy to develop software. The future of the world is software, not hardware. Companies valued hundreds of billions dollars are software companies Google, Microsoft etc.
Software makes aircraft fly or crash. See Boeing. Software makes fighter F35 fly.

The US is a great place in making software. She attracts talents from all the world. I worked in Chicago for while. Great city great atmosphere great feeling. A great country for developing everything. China is not a country that attracts foreign talents. China is a country exclusively for Chinese.

Even if Xi Jinping pours hundreds of billions dollars into developing a domestic software sector, I don’t see, how can the closed minded country develop a software for any country outside the Great Wall.
 
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Even if China companies in years successful created a chinese OS, who in the world will trust a chinese made OS? Pakistan? Ok. Cambodia? Ok. Some poor countries in Africa? Ok. But the rest? Good luck.

What’s about apps? Who will develop apps for a chinese OS? Coders in Congo? China is not welknown for good writing codes.
Check how many Chinese apps you are using. =)

You don’t understand the West. People generally don’t trust the government. Governments come and go. People trust the constitution. Companies enjoy more trust than governments do.

Germany has “Grundgesetz” - the basic law. That is the only thing that matters most. Every individual, every company, every government must respect the basic law.
It seems you don't understand the US and how it works.

Are you sure these companies are independent? Ask your deep soul please.
Well their destiny is either be our bitch or an american one. Doesn't matter much to them anyway.
 
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