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China chip ban a US exercise in extreme self-harm

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China chip ban a US exercise in extreme self-harm

CapEx and R&D implode in hard-pressed Western semicon industry while China pours massive funds into chip independence

By DAVID P. GOLDMANOCTOBER 13, 2022
1665784754866.png

New US ban on chip-making equipment to China will ultimately do more harm than good. Image: Twitter

NEW YORK – The Biden administration’s unprecedented package of bans on chip and chip equipment sales to China announced on October 7 could not have come at a worse moment for the global semiconductor industry.

The damage to capital investment and R&D in the Western semiconductor industry will exceed Washington’s modest subsidies for the chip industry by a factor of five or more.

The US measures won’t affect China’s sensors, satellite surveillance, military guidance and other strategic systems because the vast majority of military applications use older chips that China can produce at home. But it may postpone autonomous driving, cloud computing and other efforts to digitize China’s economy.

It will also elicit an all-out Chinese effort to replace American chip-making and design technology. CapEx and R&D will shrink drastically in the US semiconductor industry while China allocates a massive budget to the sector.

On a five- or ten-year horizon, America’s technological edge in semiconductor design and fabrication is likely to vanish. As capital budgets collapse in the Western semiconductor industry, the damage to the US and other Western economies is likely to be greater than the harm inflicted on China.

1665784810722.png

US President Joe Biden wants more advanced semiconductors produced in America. Image: Twitter

The Biden administration meanwhile proposed a 14% budget cut for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which is a much larger cut after inflation. Starving US high-tech industry of public as well as private funds is a strange way to conduct a strategic rivalry with China.

The incipient global recession turned the chip shortage of 2021 into a glut, reflected in a collapse of the Philadelphia index of semiconductor stocks (PHLX) by nearly half during 2022. NVIDIA, the leading US chip designer, has lost 68% of its market capitalization so far this year.

The industry had already cut capital investment plans from about US$200 billion to $160 billion for 2022. US restrictions on exports of semiconductor equipment, design tools and high-end chips to China will shrink revenues further, putting an air pocket into R&D and capital expansion. The world’s dominant chip fabricator, Taiwan’s TSMC, planned $44 billion in CapEx just six months ago but on Wednesday announced a cut to $36 billion.

The Biden administration’s $50 billion, five-year subsidy for onshore chip fabrication will help firms that use older technology to supply the US defense industry, which mainly buys chips five to seven generations behind the cutting-edge semiconductors targeted by the new round of US sanctions.

Smaller American fabricators like GlobalFoundries and SkyWater Technology, who make chips for the US military several generations behind the present state of the art, will benefit from the Biden subsidies. But companies with the most advanced technology have the most to lose, including American manufacturers of chipmaking equipment.

It’s still unclear what loopholes will be left in Washington’s chip bans, or how damaging they will ultimately be. Reuters headlined an October 12 report, “US scrambles to prevent export curbs on China chips from disrupting supply chain,” noting that the leading South Korean fabricators, Samsung and SK hynix obtained a 12-month reprieve for investment in their mainland chip plants, while TSMC obtained a one-year license to ship US chipmaking equipment to its expanding plants in China.

1665784886835.png

Few military applications of chip technology will be affected. According to a 2022 RAND Corporation study, the vast majority of chips used by the US military use so-called mature nodes with wider transistor gate width than the latest 3 to 7-nanometer (nm) chips that only TSMC and Samsung can produce. RAND published the chart below showing the node size of chips employed for key military applications:

1665784936964.png


The new US restrictions won’t stop China’s 2,000 surface-to-ship and surface-to-surface missiles from targeting US aircraft carriers in the Western Pacific, or US air bases in Guam and Okinawa, and they won’t prevent China’s more than 1,000 interceptors from aiming long-range air-to-air missiles at US planes. But they are likely to delay the rollout of key digital applications in China’s civilian economy, such as autonomous vehicles.

The US is “doing everything in our power to protect our national security and prevent sensitive technologies with military applications from being acquired by the People’s Republic of China’s military, intelligence, and security services,” US Commerce Department official Alan Estevez said in an October 7 release.

The best that might be said about the Biden policy is that it came ten years too late to make a dent in the military balance in the Pacific. But the Biden administration estimates that it will spend $30 billion a year in student loan forgiveness over the next ten years, but less than $10 billion a year in subsidies to the US semiconductor industry.

Federal subsidies will cover a small fraction of the reduction in CapEx and R&D due to the economic downturn and restrictions on semiconductor sales to China.

China is by far the world’s largest consumer of semiconductors, with 53% of the global total. The US manufactures just 12% of the world’s chips, but it leads in some areas of chip technology, including some chip-making equipment.

LAM Research, a top producer of etching and other hardware, earned 30% of its sales revenues from China in 2022. KLA, its top competitor, also sells to China. Cadence, a top producer of Electronic Design Automation (EDA) software, obtained 45% of its total revenue from China in the second quarter of 2022.

Two years ago, a Boston Consulting Group study warned that an all-out US ban on chip sales to China would eliminate 37% of the revenue of US semiconductor companies, lead to severe cuts in R&D and capital expenditures, and the loss of 15,000 to 40,000 highly skilled direct jobs in the US semiconductor industry.”


China can’t match American EDA tools yet. It would take China five to ten years to catch up, using software it already had purchased, or pirated copies without manufacturer support. It also can’t match the lithography machines that burn impossibly small transistors with a gate width of 7nm or less, with Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) technology.

1665784996165.png

ASML introduced the first extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines for mass production in 2017, after decades spent mastering the technique. Credit: ASML

That’s available only from Holland’s ASML, and the US has banned sales of the newest machines to China because they contain a significant amount of US intellectual property.

Hardest to gauge is China’s ability to work around US technological restrictions. Mainland China has 20 of the world’s 50 highest-ranked engineering schools – and more if Hong Kong is counted – and graduates seven times the American count of engineers each year. China can’t buy some American technology, but it can hire anyone it wants.

At worst, the damage to China’s economy is likely to be temporary, and the impact on its military capacity is likely to be minimal. But the impact of the incipient depression in the Western semiconductor industry may well do permanent harm.

Follow David P Goldman on Twitter at @davidpgoldman
 
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USA thinks it impose sanctions on every country but why don't they put these sanctions on themselves so no one need their systems any more world can do better than us dollars now
 
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Those that fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.

US slapped many sanction before only to find China back at the top.
 
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The US measures won’t affect China’s sensors, satellite surveillance, military guidance and other strategic systems because the vast majority of military applications use older chips that China can produce at home

Wouldn't this one sentence explain everything about the ban if true? Keep the latest generation of chips out of their latest military hardware.

...and if you think his logic is flawed for stating it...don't you think it is possible some of his other logic is flawed.
 
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I think China is still the underdog and at a big disadvantage compared to the comprehensive capabilities of the western alliance. But things may change in a decade who knows. If there is one thing China is, it is determined.
 
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Wouldn't this one sentence explain everything about the ban if true? Keep the latest generation of chips out of their latest military hardware.

...and if you think his logic is flawed for stating it...don't you think it is possible some of his other logic is flawed.
Lol... Even US high tech weapon used those older generation of chips. They are no smartphone which is limited by size.

You think you need a nano size high end chips for a tank or warship? 😂

China chip ban a US exercise in extreme self-harm

CapEx and R&D implode in hard-pressed Western semicon industry while China pours massive funds into chip independence

By DAVID P. GOLDMANOCTOBER 13, 2022
View attachment 886816
New US ban on chip-making equipment to China will ultimately do more harm than good. Image: Twitter

NEW YORK – The Biden administration’s unprecedented package of bans on chip and chip equipment sales to China announced on October 7 could not have come at a worse moment for the global semiconductor industry.

The damage to capital investment and R&D in the Western semiconductor industry will exceed Washington’s modest subsidies for the chip industry by a factor of five or more.

The US measures won’t affect China’s sensors, satellite surveillance, military guidance and other strategic systems because the vast majority of military applications use older chips that China can produce at home. But it may postpone autonomous driving, cloud computing and other efforts to digitize China’s economy.

It will also elicit an all-out Chinese effort to replace American chip-making and design technology. CapEx and R&D will shrink drastically in the US semiconductor industry while China allocates a massive budget to the sector.

On a five- or ten-year horizon, America’s technological edge in semiconductor design and fabrication is likely to vanish. As capital budgets collapse in the Western semiconductor industry, the damage to the US and other Western economies is likely to be greater than the harm inflicted on China.

View attachment 886818
US President Joe Biden wants more advanced semiconductors produced in America. Image: Twitter

The Biden administration meanwhile proposed a 14% budget cut for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which is a much larger cut after inflation. Starving US high-tech industry of public as well as private funds is a strange way to conduct a strategic rivalry with China.

The incipient global recession turned the chip shortage of 2021 into a glut, reflected in a collapse of the Philadelphia index of semiconductor stocks (PHLX) by nearly half during 2022. NVIDIA, the leading US chip designer, has lost 68% of its market capitalization so far this year.

The industry had already cut capital investment plans from about US$200 billion to $160 billion for 2022. US restrictions on exports of semiconductor equipment, design tools and high-end chips to China will shrink revenues further, putting an air pocket into R&D and capital expansion. The world’s dominant chip fabricator, Taiwan’s TSMC, planned $44 billion in CapEx just six months ago but on Wednesday announced a cut to $36 billion.

The Biden administration’s $50 billion, five-year subsidy for onshore chip fabrication will help firms that use older technology to supply the US defense industry, which mainly buys chips five to seven generations behind the cutting-edge semiconductors targeted by the new round of US sanctions.

Smaller American fabricators like GlobalFoundries and SkyWater Technology, who make chips for the US military several generations behind the present state of the art, will benefit from the Biden subsidies. But companies with the most advanced technology have the most to lose, including American manufacturers of chipmaking equipment.

It’s still unclear what loopholes will be left in Washington’s chip bans, or how damaging they will ultimately be. Reuters headlined an October 12 report, “US scrambles to prevent export curbs on China chips from disrupting supply chain,” noting that the leading South Korean fabricators, Samsung and SK hynix obtained a 12-month reprieve for investment in their mainland chip plants, while TSMC obtained a one-year license to ship US chipmaking equipment to its expanding plants in China.

View attachment 886819
Few military applications of chip technology will be affected. According to a 2022 RAND Corporation study, the vast majority of chips used by the US military use so-called mature nodes with wider transistor gate width than the latest 3 to 7-nanometer (nm) chips that only TSMC and Samsung can produce. RAND published the chart below showing the node size of chips employed for key military applications:

View attachment 886821

The new US restrictions won’t stop China’s 2,000 surface-to-ship and surface-to-surface missiles from targeting US aircraft carriers in the Western Pacific, or US air bases in Guam and Okinawa, and they won’t prevent China’s more than 1,000 interceptors from aiming long-range air-to-air missiles at US planes. But they are likely to delay the rollout of key digital applications in China’s civilian economy, such as autonomous vehicles.

The US is “doing everything in our power to protect our national security and prevent sensitive technologies with military applications from being acquired by the People’s Republic of China’s military, intelligence, and security services,” US Commerce Department official Alan Estevez said in an October 7 release.

The best that might be said about the Biden policy is that it came ten years too late to make a dent in the military balance in the Pacific. But the Biden administration estimates that it will spend $30 billion a year in student loan forgiveness over the next ten years, but less than $10 billion a year in subsidies to the US semiconductor industry.

Federal subsidies will cover a small fraction of the reduction in CapEx and R&D due to the economic downturn and restrictions on semiconductor sales to China.

China is by far the world’s largest consumer of semiconductors, with 53% of the global total. The US manufactures just 12% of the world’s chips, but it leads in some areas of chip technology, including some chip-making equipment.

LAM Research, a top producer of etching and other hardware, earned 30% of its sales revenues from China in 2022. KLA, its top competitor, also sells to China. Cadence, a top producer of Electronic Design Automation (EDA) software, obtained 45% of its total revenue from China in the second quarter of 2022.

Two years ago, a Boston Consulting Group study warned that an all-out US ban on chip sales to China would eliminate 37% of the revenue of US semiconductor companies, lead to severe cuts in R&D and capital expenditures, and the loss of 15,000 to 40,000 highly skilled direct jobs in the US semiconductor industry.”


China can’t match American EDA tools yet. It would take China five to ten years to catch up, using software it already had purchased, or pirated copies without manufacturer support. It also can’t match the lithography machines that burn impossibly small transistors with a gate width of 7nm or less, with Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) technology.

View attachment 886822
ASML introduced the first extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines for mass production in 2017, after decades spent mastering the technique. Credit: ASML

That’s available only from Holland’s ASML, and the US has banned sales of the newest machines to China because they contain a significant amount of US intellectual property.

Hardest to gauge is China’s ability to work around US technological restrictions. Mainland China has 20 of the world’s 50 highest-ranked engineering schools – and more if Hong Kong is counted – and graduates seven times the American count of engineers each year. China can’t buy some American technology, but it can hire anyone it wants.

At worst, the damage to China’s economy is likely to be temporary, and the impact on its military capacity is likely to be minimal. But the impact of the incipient depression in the Western semiconductor industry may well do permanent harm.

Follow David P Goldman on Twitter at @davidpgoldman
Biden is actually a mole working for Xi Jiping and CCP. Introduced those superficial measures that looks to be very patriotic for USA but it's actually sabotage US in future.

Good job Biden, Xi will paid u billions for your hardwork to make China stronger. :enjoy:

China chip ban a US exercise in extreme self-harm

CapEx and R&D implode in hard-pressed Western semicon industry while China pours massive funds into chip independence

By DAVID P. GOLDMANOCTOBER 13, 2022
View attachment 886816
New US ban on chip-making equipment to China will ultimately do more harm than good. Image: Twitter

NEW YORK – The Biden administration’s unprecedented package of bans on chip and chip equipment sales to China announced on October 7 could not have come at a worse moment for the global semiconductor industry.

The damage to capital investment and R&D in the Western semiconductor industry will exceed Washington’s modest subsidies for the chip industry by a factor of five or more.

The US measures won’t affect China’s sensors, satellite surveillance, military guidance and other strategic systems because the vast majority of military applications use older chips that China can produce at home. But it may postpone autonomous driving, cloud computing and other efforts to digitize China’s economy.

It will also elicit an all-out Chinese effort to replace American chip-making and design technology. CapEx and R&D will shrink drastically in the US semiconductor industry while China allocates a massive budget to the sector.

On a five- or ten-year horizon, America’s technological edge in semiconductor design and fabrication is likely to vanish. As capital budgets collapse in the Western semiconductor industry, the damage to the US and other Western economies is likely to be greater than the harm inflicted on China.

View attachment 886818
US President Joe Biden wants more advanced semiconductors produced in America. Image: Twitter

The Biden administration meanwhile proposed a 14% budget cut for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which is a much larger cut after inflation. Starving US high-tech industry of public as well as private funds is a strange way to conduct a strategic rivalry with China.

The incipient global recession turned the chip shortage of 2021 into a glut, reflected in a collapse of the Philadelphia index of semiconductor stocks (PHLX) by nearly half during 2022. NVIDIA, the leading US chip designer, has lost 68% of its market capitalization so far this year.

The industry had already cut capital investment plans from about US$200 billion to $160 billion for 2022. US restrictions on exports of semiconductor equipment, design tools and high-end chips to China will shrink revenues further, putting an air pocket into R&D and capital expansion. The world’s dominant chip fabricator, Taiwan’s TSMC, planned $44 billion in CapEx just six months ago but on Wednesday announced a cut to $36 billion.

The Biden administration’s $50 billion, five-year subsidy for onshore chip fabrication will help firms that use older technology to supply the US defense industry, which mainly buys chips five to seven generations behind the cutting-edge semiconductors targeted by the new round of US sanctions.

Smaller American fabricators like GlobalFoundries and SkyWater Technology, who make chips for the US military several generations behind the present state of the art, will benefit from the Biden subsidies. But companies with the most advanced technology have the most to lose, including American manufacturers of chipmaking equipment.

It’s still unclear what loopholes will be left in Washington’s chip bans, or how damaging they will ultimately be. Reuters headlined an October 12 report, “US scrambles to prevent export curbs on China chips from disrupting supply chain,” noting that the leading South Korean fabricators, Samsung and SK hynix obtained a 12-month reprieve for investment in their mainland chip plants, while TSMC obtained a one-year license to ship US chipmaking equipment to its expanding plants in China.

View attachment 886819
Few military applications of chip technology will be affected. According to a 2022 RAND Corporation study, the vast majority of chips used by the US military use so-called mature nodes with wider transistor gate width than the latest 3 to 7-nanometer (nm) chips that only TSMC and Samsung can produce. RAND published the chart below showing the node size of chips employed for key military applications:

View attachment 886821

The new US restrictions won’t stop China’s 2,000 surface-to-ship and surface-to-surface missiles from targeting US aircraft carriers in the Western Pacific, or US air bases in Guam and Okinawa, and they won’t prevent China’s more than 1,000 interceptors from aiming long-range air-to-air missiles at US planes. But they are likely to delay the rollout of key digital applications in China’s civilian economy, such as autonomous vehicles.

The US is “doing everything in our power to protect our national security and prevent sensitive technologies with military applications from being acquired by the People’s Republic of China’s military, intelligence, and security services,” US Commerce Department official Alan Estevez said in an October 7 release.

The best that might be said about the Biden policy is that it came ten years too late to make a dent in the military balance in the Pacific. But the Biden administration estimates that it will spend $30 billion a year in student loan forgiveness over the next ten years, but less than $10 billion a year in subsidies to the US semiconductor industry.

Federal subsidies will cover a small fraction of the reduction in CapEx and R&D due to the economic downturn and restrictions on semiconductor sales to China.

China is by far the world’s largest consumer of semiconductors, with 53% of the global total. The US manufactures just 12% of the world’s chips, but it leads in some areas of chip technology, including some chip-making equipment.

LAM Research, a top producer of etching and other hardware, earned 30% of its sales revenues from China in 2022. KLA, its top competitor, also sells to China. Cadence, a top producer of Electronic Design Automation (EDA) software, obtained 45% of its total revenue from China in the second quarter of 2022.

Two years ago, a Boston Consulting Group study warned that an all-out US ban on chip sales to China would eliminate 37% of the revenue of US semiconductor companies, lead to severe cuts in R&D and capital expenditures, and the loss of 15,000 to 40,000 highly skilled direct jobs in the US semiconductor industry.”


China can’t match American EDA tools yet. It would take China five to ten years to catch up, using software it already had purchased, or pirated copies without manufacturer support. It also can’t match the lithography machines that burn impossibly small transistors with a gate width of 7nm or less, with Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) technology.

View attachment 886822
ASML introduced the first extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines for mass production in 2017, after decades spent mastering the technique. Credit: ASML

That’s available only from Holland’s ASML, and the US has banned sales of the newest machines to China because they contain a significant amount of US intellectual property.

Hardest to gauge is China’s ability to work around US technological restrictions. Mainland China has 20 of the world’s 50 highest-ranked engineering schools – and more if Hong Kong is counted – and graduates seven times the American count of engineers each year. China can’t buy some American technology, but it can hire anyone it wants.

At worst, the damage to China’s economy is likely to be temporary, and the impact on its military capacity is likely to be minimal. But the impact of the incipient depression in the Western semiconductor industry may well do permanent harm.

Follow David P Goldman on Twitter at @davidpgoldman
 
.
Good job Biden, Xi will paid u billions for your hardwork to make China stronger. :enjoy:

Xi paid Biden billions, I hope he kept the receipt cause poor old befuddled Biden would've forgotten Xi and his billions the next day. :lol:
 
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Xi paid Biden billions, I hope he kept the receipt cause poor old befuddled Biden would've forgotten Xi and his billions the next day. :lol:
Lol.. I think Xi really hope that happened. Screw USA with zero penny paid. The best of both world. :enjoy:
 
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Chip equipment, forge tech is somewhat understandable but they couldn't have banned consumer and server grade + HEDT chips too.. have they ?
 
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Biden is an AI robot. A successful DARPA project. Sometime AI software malfunctions, like shaking hands in the air or not realizing his recently dead political party members.
 
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Biden is an AI robot. A successful DARPA project. Sometime AI software malfunctions, like shaking hands in the air or not realizing his recently dead political party members.
he's a demented corpse is what he is

his handlers do all the policy work.
 
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he's a demented corpse is what he is

his handlers do all the policy work.
He was put in office. I don’t even remember him running for the elections. All of a sudden he was Democratic Party front runner/nominee and than bam President.

Deep state just wanted Trump gone because he won’t follow the script.
 
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He was put in office. I don’t even remember him running for the elections. All of a sudden he was Democratic Party front runner/nominee and than bam President.

Deep state just wanted Trump gone because he won’t follow the script.
True. They used the whole covid BS to shield him from doing any real electioneering and campaigning, rallies etc, and the MSM doubled down on demonizing Trump for not following the "covid, covid , covid.." fearmongering.

I doubt he's very popular in the US, even if a lot of people also hated Trump.

This guy is a total embarrassment for the US, weird they couldn't find anyone else (dem, repub or whatever else) .. very sus, his whole term. Next one should be interesting, no way old man Biden can run again without his fake covid cover.

May be Prasiden DeSantis next lol
 
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the MSM doubled down on demonizing Trump for not following the "covid, covid , covid.." fearmongering.
It was all set up.

weird they couldn't find anyone else
Cuz all other running candidates were either part Hispanic Chinese, Indian, Jew or some thing idealistic crazy like Bernie sanders . They needed old vetted person back in the office after testing Trump.

I doubt he's very popular in the US, even if a lot of people also hated Trump.
1FA5575E-FD06-4077-AFE2-4E21CFC33114.png
 
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Lol... Even US high tech weapon used those older generation of chips. They are no smartphone which is limited by size.

Wow you are sooo short-sighted. You think weapons aren't in development using computer vision and AI chips? Maybe the next generation of missiles fired from a 6th gen plane uses computer vision and AI to lock onto an enemy plane so it can't be fooled by flares or chaff making them far far more deadly. Maybe instead of going for the jet exhaust the AI searches for the weakest point...like the cockpit...thus enabling a smaller explosive saving weight and thus giving the missile a longer range.

Maybe the questions will be more like this:
Missile AI: I see an enemy fighter jet
Missile AI: It looks like a J-15.
Missile AI: I feel the weakest point is the cockpit
Missile AI: I will hit the cockpit.
 
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