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Greater China Dominates Global Microchip Exports [Infographic]

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Greater China Dominates Global Microchip Exports [Infographic]
Jul 27, 2022,12:18pm EDT

The so-called Chips+ bill passed the U.S. Senate on Tuesday and has a good chance of becoming law as it moved on to the House. As fears of a confrontation with China are heightening, negotiations that lasted more than a year are finally coming to fruition for the bill which is looking to increase the competitiveness of the U.S. microchip industry, thereby alleviating dependency on Greater China and the shortage of microchips felt globally.

According to Yahoo News, the cost of the bill is still being calculated, but is expected to come in at around $79 billion spent over the next ten years. This includes a key provision of $50 billion that will go directly to U.S. chipmakers for the expansion of facilities as well as for research and development.

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This chart shows the countries with the biggest export values of electronic integrated circuits in 2020 (in billion U.S. dollars).

For now, Mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan are dominating global microchip production, which allows them to control half of the worldwide export market. As seen in numbers available from the UN Comtrade database, Greater China exports of microchips totaled almost $400 billion in the pandemic year of 2020—the latest for which full data is available. The U.S. exported semiconductors worth around $44 billion the same year, still the seventh-highest in the world.

In 2021, exports out of Greater China were back up to around $522 billion, while those out of the U.S. rose to just below $53 billion.

Rapid, ongoing shift in chip production

As recently as 1990, the U.S. still produced almost 40 percent of semiconductors globally, with Europe responsible for roughly another 40 percent. But the growth of cheaper production facilities in Asia set in motion a trend that quickly changed where microchips typically come from. Just ten years later, in the year 2000, Europe and the U.S. together contributed only slightly more than 40 percent to global semiconductor manufacturing, with Japan, South Korea and Taiwan taking up almost all the rest of it. By 2010, Mainland China had already carved out a small share of the market. That subsequently grew to around 15 percent by 2020 and is expected to expand to as much as a quarter of global production by 2030, taking away market shares from competitors in the U.S., Europe and Asia all at the same time.

As disruptions to supply chains caused microchip shortages during the Covid-19 pandemic, several countries started initiatives looking to reverse the above trend and boost production of the critical asset at home. Before the U.S., Japan and the EU had already announced actions to produce more semiconductors domestically. The fast growth of Mainland China’s chip production will be hard to catch up to, however.

 
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China MSIC made a micro chip that is two generations ahead of what it is currently capable of making

Chinese military and Huawei, which is being sanctioned by US, will benefit greatly from this new Chinese technological breakthrough.

 
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China's memory upstart YMTC edges closer to rivals with 232-layer chip​

By Josh Horwitz
August 4, 2022

KLT3S5YWSBNTFE3UA24IAVWEOM.jpg

SHANGHAI, Aug 4 (Reuters) - Chinese chipmaker Yangtze Memory Technologies Co Ltd (YMTC) on Wednesday announced new memory chip technology that would help it catch up with rivals Micron and SK Hynix, just as Washington considers steeper curbs on Chinese semiconductor companies.

The company unveiled its fourth-generation 3D NAND chip, the X3-9070, and its first to feature 232 layers of memory cells, government-backed media outlet Global Times reported on Wednesday.

That places it close to rival Micron, which last month said it aimed to start mass production of its 232 layer chip by the end of the year.

South Korea's SK Hynix has also developed its first 238-layer memory chip, boasting a new industry benchmark.

A YMTC spokesperson declined to comment on the Global Times report.

Industry experts say that while YMTC will unlikely launch mass production of the chip any time soon, it nevertheless marks a breakthrough for the company.

The company's market share remains in the single digits, but it is aggressively expanding production capacity and R&D with the help of state subsidies.

Toby Zhu, who tracks China's chip sector at research firm Canalys, says that while the YMTC's revenue has improved over the years, gaps remain between it and market leaders.

Once a little-known player backed by the ailing Chinese state-conglomerate Tsinghua Unigroup, YMTC has attracted attention in the chip industry for its fast advancements in R&D.

Bloomberg reported in March that phone maker Apple Inc (AAPL.O) was considering using YMTC as a memory chip supplier, which would mark a major boon for the upstart company.

Reuters reported earlier this week that Washington, citing a growing threat from China, is considering placing restrictions on companies that supply to YMTC, forbidding equipment makers from selling parts to the company that enable it to manufacture chips at 128 layers and above.

The restrictions, if enacted, could rattle YMTC's ambitions to grow its business, not unlike how sanctions in 2020 rattled Chinese phone maker Huawei Technologies Co Ltd (HWT.UL)

 
.

China's memory upstart YMTC edges closer to rivals with 232-layer chip​

By Josh Horwitz
August 4, 2022

KLT3S5YWSBNTFE3UA24IAVWEOM.jpg

SHANGHAI, Aug 4 (Reuters) - Chinese chipmaker Yangtze Memory Technologies Co Ltd (YMTC) on Wednesday announced new memory chip technology that would help it catch up with rivals Micron and SK Hynix, just as Washington considers steeper curbs on Chinese semiconductor companies.

The company unveiled its fourth-generation 3D NAND chip, the X3-9070, and its first to feature 232 layers of memory cells, government-backed media outlet Global Times reported on Wednesday.

That places it close to rival Micron, which last month said it aimed to start mass production of its 232 layer chip by the end of the year.

South Korea's SK Hynix has also developed its first 238-layer memory chip, boasting a new industry benchmark.

A YMTC spokesperson declined to comment on the Global Times report.

Industry experts say that while YMTC will unlikely launch mass production of the chip any time soon, it nevertheless marks a breakthrough for the company.

The company's market share remains in the single digits, but it is aggressively expanding production capacity and R&D with the help of state subsidies.

Toby Zhu, who tracks China's chip sector at research firm Canalys, says that while the YMTC's revenue has improved over the years, gaps remain between it and market leaders.

Once a little-known player backed by the ailing Chinese state-conglomerate Tsinghua Unigroup, YMTC has attracted attention in the chip industry for its fast advancements in R&D.

Bloomberg reported in March that phone maker Apple Inc (AAPL.O) was considering using YMTC as a memory chip supplier, which would mark a major boon for the upstart company.

Reuters reported earlier this week that Washington, citing a growing threat from China, is considering placing restrictions on companies that supply to YMTC, forbidding equipment makers from selling parts to the company that enable it to manufacture chips at 128 layers and above.

The restrictions, if enacted, could rattle YMTC's ambitions to grow its business, not unlike how sanctions in 2020 rattled Chinese phone maker Huawei Technologies Co Ltd (HWT.UL)

where's the guarantee it will thrive after US sanctions? It apparently depends on US for equipment.
 
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where's the guarantee it will thrive after US sanctions? It apparently depends on US for equipment.
US depending on China is more like it, sanctions always end up in China's favor, over a decade ago NASA started sanctioning China and baning China from all internaitonal space cooperations, now we all come to know how those American sanctions greatly helped China.
 
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China, Taiwan, Hong kong, Singapore consist of Greater China.
dude - why include singapore. This is surest way of making enemies and irritating people. I have seen posts claiming Vietnamese and koreans as little brothers of china.
 
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dude - why include singapore. This is surest way of making enemies and irritating people. I have seen posts claiming Vietnamese and koreans as little brothers of china.
Many multinational companies have the Greater China headquarters covering Singapore
 
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