Chinese tech giant Huawei is reportedly building secret semiconductor-fabrication facilities in China to evade U.S. sanctions, according to the Semiconductor Industry Association, which claims that Huawei has acquired existing plants and is constructing three others using state funding.
Nvidia warns that additional U.S. export restrictions on its chips to China would result in a "permanent loss" for American semiconductor firms in one of the world's largest markets.
Chinese chip stocks rally after Huawei's launch of the Mate 60 Pro phone, with investors speculating that it could be using a 5G capable chip, potentially benefitting China's local semiconductor sector.
The US has expanded restrictions on exports of Nvidia artificial-intelligence chips, including to the Middle East, in an escalation of its crackdown on China's technological capabilities.
Chinese smartphone company Huawei has released its latest model, the Mate 60 Pro, which features an advanced chip designed and manufactured in China, despite US sanctions intended to hinder the country's technological progress, showcasing China's ability to innovate without relying on US technology.
Huawei and China's top chipmaker SMIC have developed an advanced 7-nanometer processor for the new Huawei Mate 60 Pro smartphone, marking progress in China's domestic chip ecosystem and a challenge to U.S. restrictions on Huawei's access to chipmaking tools.
China is planning a $41 billion fund to boost its semiconductor industry in response to US restrictions on exporting chips to the country.
The launch of Huawei's new smartphone raises questions about global technology and control of the future, as the Chinese company unveils a smartphone powered by an advanced chip, potentially challenging US efforts to block China from acquiring cutting-edge computer chips.
China's Huawei Technologies' development of an advanced chip for its latest smartphone demonstrates the country's determination to fight back against U.S. sanctions, but the efforts are costly and may lead to tighter restrictions from Washington, according to analysts.
China has reportedly ordered officials at central government agencies to not use Apple's iPhones and other foreign-branded devices for work or bring them into the office, potentially impacting foreign companies operating in China as tensions between the US and China escalate.
The US government is seeking more information about the Huawei Mate 60 Pro smartphone, particularly its advanced chip, to determine if American restrictions on semiconductor exports were bypassed.
The chair of the House of Representatives' committee on China has called for the U.S. Commerce Department to halt all technology exports to Huawei and China's top semiconductor firm, SMIC, after the discovery of new chips in Huawei phones that may violate trade restrictions.
The Biden administration's export ban is causing China's largest contract chipmaker, SMIC, to face restrictions on export sales, leading to concerns about the acceleration of the US-China tech war.
The recent unveiling of Huawei's Mate 60 Pro smartphone, powered by the Kirin 9000s chip, has sparked debates about its significance in the US-China technology cold war.
Ten Republican lawmakers are urging the Commerce Department to impose stricter sanctions on Huawei and Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC), after the companies showcased a domestically manufactured advanced smartphone chip that allegedly violated U.S. export controls, prompting concerns about the effectiveness of current export controls in preventing U.S. technology from reaching China.
SK hynix Vice Chairman Park Jung-ho denies doing business with Huawei and calls for further investigation into the memory used in Huawei's controversial Mate 60 Pro smartphone, suggesting that Chinese sanctions may not be as effective as hoped.
The U.S. government is investigating how Huawei and SMIC managed to create 7nm Kirin 9000S 5G chipsets in violation of American sanctions, while Foxconn workers assembling the Huawei Mate 60 Pro in China are paid 19.2% more than those assembling the iPhone.
Huawei's chip design unit, HiSilicon, is shipping new Chinese-made chips for surveillance cameras, indicating that the company is finding ways around the US export controls and reclaiming market share in the sector.
Despite conflicting claims, the U.S. Commerce Secretary has stated that there is no evidence that Huawei can manufacture smartphones with advanced semiconductors at scale.
Huawei may launch a mid-range 5G phone as early as October, indicating that the company has overcome U.S. sanctions.