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Huawei has run out of chipsets for its smartphones

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Huawei Technologies Co has finally run out of in-house-designed semiconductors for its smartphones after US trade sanctions effectively cut the company’s access to advanced new chips, according to a report by Counterpoint Research.


Shenzhen-based Huawei, which briefly surpassed Samsung Electronics to lead global smartphone shipments in early 2020, has struggled to get new in-house-designed integrated circuits (ICs) manufactured by a major chip foundry after Washington tightened trade restrictions in August 2020, covering the firm’s access to semiconductors developed or produced using US technology, from anywhere.


Privately-held Huawei and chip design arm HiSilicon were added to the US government’s trade blacklist, known as the Entity List, in 2019. At the time, HiSilicon said it had a backup plan to ensure the group’s survival, while research firms Haitong and Canalys indicated that Huawei had been stockpiling critical US components for almost a year.


“Based on our checks and sell-through data, Huawei has finished its inventory of HiSilicon chipsets,” Counterpoint said in its latest report on global smartphone application processor market share.

HiSilicon’s share of the global smartphone application market this year reached zero in the third quarter, down from 0.4 per cent in the previous quarter and 3 per cent in the second quarter of last year.


The report added that it was “not possible” for Huawei to obtain advanced new ICs from major contract chip makers, such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co or Samsung, because of the tightened US restrictions.

Huawei did not immediately reply to a request for comment on Wednesday.

As of the third quarter, the global market for smartphone system-on-a-chip shipments was led by MediaTek, Qualcomm and Apple, according to the Counterpoint report.

The latest industry data highlights the difficulties that Huawei, which operates in more than 170 countries, continues to go through three years after it was blacklisted by the US.


Before the tightened US sanctions, HiSilicon accounted for 16 per cent of the global chipset market share in the second quarter of 2020, according to Counterpoint data, on the back of its shipments of advanced Kirin chips used on Huawei’s smartphones.

HiSilicon also dropped out of the rankings of the world’s top 25 semiconductor vendors because of the stifling US trade restrictions, which also reduced China’s overall share in the global chip market, according to a report published in April by research firm Gartner.


Its Kirin chip supply constraints have kept the smartphone business of Huawei, the world’s largest telecommunications equipment maker, under pressure. In September, the company launched its new flagship Mate 50-series smartphones without 5G mobile connection owing to the US sanctions.

HiSilicon also dropped out of the rankings of the world’s top 25 semiconductor vendors because of the stifling US trade restrictions, which also reduced China’s overall share in the global chip market, according to a report published in April by research firm Gartner.


Its Kirin chip supply constraints have kept the smartphone business of Huawei, the world’s largest telecommunications equipment maker, under pressure. In September, the company launched its new flagship Mate 50-series smartphones without 5G mobile connection owing to the US sanctions.

The company’s latest flagship smartphones, which have 4G and satellite connections, are powered by Qualcomm chipsets.

Once China’s biggest smartphone vendor, Huawei has seen its market share fall in its home market. In the third quarter, the company remained out of the top-five vendor rankings in China, which was led by Vivo, Oppo, former Huawei budget handset brand Honor, Apple and Xiaomi, according to data from tech market research firm Canalys.


Huawei has recently been working to expand its patent-licensing arrangements, as part of efforts to boost revenue amid the struggles of its once-lucrative smartphone business. Earlier this month, Huawei agreed to license some of its smartphone technologies to rival Oppo.

 
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Huawei Technologies Co has finally run out of in-house-designed semiconductors for its smartphones after US trade sanctions effectively cut the company’s access to advanced new chips, according to a report by Counterpoint Research.


Shenzhen-based Huawei, which briefly surpassed Samsung Electronics to lead global smartphone shipments in early 2020, has struggled to get new in-house-designed integrated circuits (ICs) manufactured by a major chip foundry after Washington tightened trade restrictions in August 2020, covering the firm’s access to semiconductors developed or produced using US technology, from anywhere.


Privately-held Huawei and chip design arm HiSilicon were added to the US government’s trade blacklist, known as the Entity List, in 2019. At the time, HiSilicon said it had a backup plan to ensure the group’s survival, while research firms Haitong and Canalys indicated that Huawei had been stockpiling critical US components for almost a year.


“Based on our checks and sell-through data, Huawei has finished its inventory of HiSilicon chipsets,” Counterpoint said in its latest report on global smartphone application processor market share.

HiSilicon’s share of the global smartphone application market this year reached zero in the third quarter, down from 0.4 per cent in the previous quarter and 3 per cent in the second quarter of last year.


The report added that it was “not possible” for Huawei to obtain advanced new ICs from major contract chip makers, such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co or Samsung, because of the tightened US restrictions.

Huawei did not immediately reply to a request for comment on Wednesday.

As of the third quarter, the global market for smartphone system-on-a-chip shipments was led by MediaTek, Qualcomm and Apple, according to the Counterpoint report.

The latest industry data highlights the difficulties that Huawei, which operates in more than 170 countries, continues to go through three years after it was blacklisted by the US.


Before the tightened US sanctions, HiSilicon accounted for 16 per cent of the global chipset market share in the second quarter of 2020, according to Counterpoint data, on the back of its shipments of advanced Kirin chips used on Huawei’s smartphones.

HiSilicon also dropped out of the rankings of the world’s top 25 semiconductor vendors because of the stifling US trade restrictions, which also reduced China’s overall share in the global chip market, according to a report published in April by research firm Gartner.


Its Kirin chip supply constraints have kept the smartphone business of Huawei, the world’s largest telecommunications equipment maker, under pressure. In September, the company launched its new flagship Mate 50-series smartphones without 5G mobile connection owing to the US sanctions.

HiSilicon also dropped out of the rankings of the world’s top 25 semiconductor vendors because of the stifling US trade restrictions, which also reduced China’s overall share in the global chip market, according to a report published in April by research firm Gartner.


Its Kirin chip supply constraints have kept the smartphone business of Huawei, the world’s largest telecommunications equipment maker, under pressure. In September, the company launched its new flagship Mate 50-series smartphones without 5G mobile connection owing to the US sanctions.

The company’s latest flagship smartphones, which have 4G and satellite connections, are powered by Qualcomm chipsets.

Once China’s biggest smartphone vendor, Huawei has seen its market share fall in its home market. In the third quarter, the company remained out of the top-five vendor rankings in China, which was led by Vivo, Oppo, former Huawei budget handset brand Honor, Apple and Xiaomi, according to data from tech market research firm Canalys.


Huawei has recently been working to expand its patent-licensing arrangements, as part of efforts to boost revenue amid the struggles of its once-lucrative smartphone business. Earlier this month, Huawei agreed to license some of its smartphone technologies to rival Oppo.

This should set a goof.example to others that using and relying on US technology while being a US adversary/rival and against US interests is a road to nowhere from now on.....US still controls most of the worlds top end technology and its influnce is felt around the globe..so if you want to go against the US netter develop all your own technology yourself(thats if you can) . Huawei case should set a good example to others.
 
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This should set a goof.example to others that using and relying on US technology while being a US adversary/rival and against US interests is a road to nowhere from now on.....US still controls most of the worlds top end technology and its influnce is felt around the globe..so if you want to go against the US netter develop all your own technology yourself(thats if you can) . Huawei case should set a good example to others.

The 1990s have called mikey. They want their “only white man can make magical technology “ ideology back

Technology is not magic….. its purely a numbers game.

The western countries looted and genocided the rest of the earth to build up their wealth levels and maintain a monopoly on RD development. By poaching the best minds of the earth

Those trends are over my friend.

West has overplayed its hand. Nobody wants to be dependent on them anymore.

Technology or finances. Even western allied countries were absolutely shocked and horrified when they saw how lawless the western system is when they blatantly tried to steal russias money
Whats to stop them stealing their money in the future? Is what arab and asian allied countries to the west are thinking. There is no system or rules, just the whims of western think tanks and lobbysts pullingtheir “politcians” strings


Say goodbye to western financial/ technologicL dominance. The western edge is eroding by the day. You can live off looted wealth for only so long my delusional friend
 
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The 1990s have called mikey. They want their “only white man can make magical technology “ ideology back

Technology is not magic….. its purely a numbers game.

The western countries looted and genocided the rest of the earth to build up their wealth levels and maintain a monopoly on RD development. By poaching the best minds of the earth

Those trends are over my friend.

West has overplayed its hand. Nobody wants to be dependent on them anymore.

Technology or finances. Even western allied countries were absolutely shocked and horrified when they saw how lawless the western system is when they blatantly tried to steal russias money
Whats to stop them stealing their money in the future? Is what arab and asian allied countries to the west are thinking. There is no system or rules, just the whims of western think tanks and lobbysts pullingtheir “politcians” strings


Say goodbye to western financial/ technologicL dominance. The western edge is eroding by the day. You can live off looted wealth for only so long my delusional friend
Seriously dont get the point you are trying to make. Seems like just a rant against the West with no substance to be honest..doesn't change reality though.
 
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This should set a goof.example to others that using and relying on US technology while being a US adversary/rival and against US interests is a road to nowhere from now on.....US still controls most of the worlds top end technology and its influnce is felt around the globe..so if you want to go against the US netter develop all your own technology yourself(thats if you can) . Huawei case should set a good example to others.

This is actually a good lesson for countries around the world who value their independence to not rely on the US technology.
 
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I actually bought a Huawei phone a few years ago and I have to say, it was the best built phone I have ever owned. I refuse to buy Samsungs anymore since they constantly have issues.

Having said that, where are our resident government employees?
They have spent 12 years posting about China making super computers and chips and blah blah blah. Yet here we are.
Do our resident government employees only get paid to create propaganda topics or are they just hiding from reality?
 
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I actually bought a Huawei phone a few years ago and I have to say, it was the best built phone I have ever owned. I refuse to buy Samsungs anymore since they constantly have issues.

Having said that, where are our resident government employees?
They have spent 12 years posting about China making super computers and chips and blah blah blah. Yet here we are.
Do our resident government employees only get paid to create propaganda topics or are they just hiding from reality?
I’ve got a Huawei phone for work. It’s one of the best phones I’ve ever owned.
 
. . . . .
This should set a goof.example to others that using and relying on US technology while being a US adversary/rival and against US interests is a road to nowhere from now on.....US still controls most of the worlds top end technology and its influnce is felt around the globe..so if you want to go against the US netter develop all your own technology yourself(thats if you can) . Huawei case should set a good example to others.
Translation -
Tonya Harding couldn't beat Nancy Kerrigan to be the best figure skater so she send ex husband to whack and break Nancy's leg. With Nancy out of the way, Tonya won.... :yahoo: yeah!
 
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This should set a goof.example to others that using and relying on US technology while being a US adversary/rival and against US interests is a road to nowhere from now on.....US still controls most of the worlds top end technology and its influnce is felt around the globe..so if you want to go against the US netter develop all your own technology yourself(thats if you can) . Huawei case should set a good example to others.
Of course China will develop all technologies by itself. The Huawei case is very similiar to Pearl Harbor incident. It's US surprise attack to China. As Chinese prime foreign minister Yang Jiechi said: "We didn't expect US is so mean." Roosevelt said same to Japan in 1941. China used to believe globalization promoted by US. Suddently without any warning, US ended the globalization. After Pearl Harbor attack, US was also in disadvantage position for 2 years and then resumed. I think same scenario will happen in this chip war.
 
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Of course China will develop all technologies by itself. The Huawei case is very similiar to Pearl Harbor incident. It's US surprise attack to China. As Chinese prime foreign minister Yang Jiechi said: "We didn't expect US is so mean." Roosevelt said same to Japan in 1941. China used to believe globalization promoted by US. Suddently without any warning, US ended the globalization. After Pearl Harbor attack, US was also in disadvantage position for 2 years and then resumed. I think same scenario will happen in this chip war.

I don't understand if the West can act like "Tech Mafia", why can't China act like "Rare earth Mafia"? Because Chinese are simply more noble than those in the west?
 
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I don't understand if the West can act like "Tech Mafia", why can't China act like "Rare earth Mafia"? Because Chinese are simply more noble than those in the west?
I think it is because so far US is still one of biggest customers for China. When the decoupling between China and US is accomplished, China will take counter measures.
 
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