What the US-China chip war means for a critical American ally

US President Joe Biden, accompanied by South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Samsung chairman Lee Jae-yong tour a semiconductor facility in Pyeongtaek. PHOTO: NYTIMES

SEOUL – Samsung and SK Hynix, the semiconductor titans of South Korea, have spent over US$52 billion (S$71 billion) to build up their operations in China. Business with China has long made up a sizable portion of their sales.

But the ties between South Korea’s chip companies and China are under strain from geopolitics.

South Korea, which relies heavily on its semiconductor sector for jobs and revenue, is wedged between China and the United States, South Korea’s long-standing ally, in their trade war over technology.

To curb China’s access to advanced chips that could power its military, Washington has escalated steps to control the sale of such technologies. The Biden administration imposed restrictions last October, raising alarms in Seoul and setting off furious lobbying in Washington to try to minimise damage to South Korea’s semiconductor industry.

A one-year waiver from the export rules that the companies received in mid-October is set to expire soon. While a new waiver is widely expected, uncertainty surrounds how long it might last.

“Geopolitical issues have become the biggest risk for companies to manage,” South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol said in June, speaking at a meeting of government officials and business executives about a national semiconductor strategy. “Companies cannot resolve this problem alone,” he said, calling the competition over chips an “all-out war”.

Manufacturing semiconductors requires supply chains that cross national borders, and the efforts to impose new rules on the industry have tested commercial alliances in Asia, Europe and the US. But few countries have wrestled with the potential economic disruption from trade restrictions as much as South Korea.

Not only is China a big customer of chips made in South Korea, but both Samsung and SK Hynix have major production facilities in China.

Semiconductors account for 20 per cent of South Korea’s exports. Samsung and SK Hynix have long dominated the market for memory chips, which are used in smartphones and laptops to store data. Samsung sold 36 per cent of all memory chips and SK Hynix 25 per cent as of June, according to data calculated from TrendForce, a market research firm.

Over the past decade, China has received more than half – at one point almost 67 per cent – of South Korean chip exports. That number dropped to 55 per cent in 2022, according to a calculation of South Korean government data by The New York Times.

Samsung does not provide semiconductor sales numbers for China. Partly because of a drop in demand for chips and China’s economic slowdown, two of the company’s chip-related subsidiaries in China that disclosed their financial information showed a 35 per cent fall in sales of chips and displays in the first half of 2023.

SK Hynix’s share of revenue from China peaked at nearly 47 per cent in 2019. It shrank to 27 per cent in 2022, still an important part of the company’s business.

“To give up the large market that is China? We won’t be able to recover,” Mr Chey Tae-won, SK Hynix’s chair, said at a news conference in July.

One of the most outspoken South Korean politicians on the issue is Ms Yang Hyang-ja, a lawmaker in the National Assembly and a former Samsung executive. She called the country “a victim” in the trade dispute and proposed tax cuts to help chipmakers. Her bill, the K-Chips Act, was passed in March.

“We are taking a direct hit,” she said.

Samsung uses its facilities in China to produce 40 per cent of its NAND chips, one of two kinds of memory chips that help devices store data. SK Hynix produces 30 per cent of its NAND chips in China and almost half of its DRAM chips, which enable short-term storage for personal computers and servers.

The companies’ exposure to China is a challenge, said Ms Avril Wu, a senior research vice president at TrendForce. “It’s not easy to withdraw, yet continuing to invest further is unwise, as nobody knows what might happen in the future,” she said.

Samsung said in a statement that its investments were made to address the needs of global customers and other demands.

Samsung and SK Hynix are not alone in facing uncertainty caused by the China-US tensions. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, the world’s largest chipmaker, is also waiting to hear from the US Department of Commerce on the fate of its waivers to the export controls.

The Commerce Department declined to comment but referred to a statement by deputy commerce secretary Don Graves, who said during a recent trip to South Korea that the US would “do everything” it could to ensure that companies could continue their businesses.

No matter the outcome of the waiver decision in Washington, the US export controls and inclination to contain China’s tech supply chain could force Samsung and SK Hynix to change their business strategies in China.

One possibility is that the companies could use their factories in China to serve customers in China, said Mr Song Myung-sup, a semiconductor analyst at Hi Investment & Securities. They could also shift the focus of their production on less advanced products, he said, to avoid the US restrictions.

Already, the uncertainties surrounding the curbs, as well as a short-term slump in demand for chips, have stalled the construction of a SK Hynix plant in the Chinese city of Dalian, Mr Song said. Neither SK Hynix nor Samsung has plans at the moment to invest more in China, he said.

SK Hynix said that the construction of its Dalian factory was going as planned but that it had reduced its previously outlined capital spending in 2023.

In turn, the South Korean government has said it will expand its domestic chip-making capacity over the long term by creating a semiconductor “mega-cluster” in Yongin, a 40-minute drive from a gigantic Samsung chip manufacturing campus. Samsung has said it will invest US$228 billion over the next two decades.

Separately, SK Hynix vowed in 2022 to make a US$11 billion investment in a plant in South Korea that it has started to build.

The restrictions on business with China and promises of US government incentives are also spurring more investment in the US. Samsung said it would spend US$17 billion on a facility in Taylor, Texas, while SK Hynix has pledged US$15 billion for an American chip-packaging plant and a research centre, and is in search of a location for the plant.

For South Korea, there is the risk of economic retaliation from China for aligning itself too closely with the US.

South Korea waited almost a year before reluctantly joining an initiative proposed by President Joe Biden in 2022 to form a semiconductor “Chip 4” alliance with the US, Japan and Taiwan.

Ms Yang, the South Korean lawmaker, said the US-Chinese tech rivalry was destined to change the global supply chain for chipmaking. South Korea must accept that reality, she said.

But she worries about the pressure it will put on South Korea, using a common idiom that described her country in relation to the two superpowers. “The shrimp’s back may burst in a fight between whales,” she said. NYTIMES.


Football news:

<!DOCTYPE html>
Kane on Tuchel: A wonderful man, full of ideas. Thomas in person says what he thinks
Zarema about Kuziaev's 350,000 euros a year in Le Havre: Translate it into rubles - it's not that little. It is commendable that he left
Aleksandr Mostovoy on Wendel: Two months of walking around in the middle of nowhere and then coming back and dragging the team - that's top level
Sheffield United have bought Euro U21 champion Archer from Aston Villa for £18.5million
Alexander Medvedev on SKA: Without Gazprom, there would be no Zenit titles. There is a winning wave in the city. The next victory in the Gagarin Cup will be in the spring
Smolnikov ended his career at the age of 35. He became the Russian champion three times with Zenit

3:05 Adani auditor EY faces India accounting regulator inquiry: Sources
2:28 Ford, UAW reach tentative deal to end strike including record pay raise
2:28 Ford agrees to record 25% wage hike in tentative deal to end UAW strike
2:18 ESR-Logos Reit posts 19.4% rise in Q3 net property income, positive rental reversions
1:58 'I don't know why he went crazy': Man beats up cleaner and 5 passers-by in Punggol Park
1:55 EC World Reit fails to sell two China logistics assets
1:48 South Korea economic growth holds steady on exports as risks loom
1:32 ATP roundup: Daniil Medvedev headlines day of sweeps at Vienna
0:38 'Big Show' Maxwell blasts World Cup light show
0:27 NBA All-Star Game reverts to East-West classic format
0:14 UOB Q3 net profit drops 1% to $1.38 billion after one-off Citi acquisition costs
0:09 SK Hynix sales decline slows in sign of recovery for chips
23:57 Telegram channels offer explicit sex videos and photos for a fee, similar to SG Nasi Lemak
23:55 Morgan Stanley’s Ted Pick will succeed James Gorman as CEO
23:28 Facebook parent Meta quarterly profit more than doubles
23:22 Jail, fine for woman who verbally abused SGH staff, argued with police in viral video
22:22 Injuries add to Newcastle woes in Dortmund loss
21:57 Top cycling teams explore creating new competitive league -sources
21:22 Atletico fight back to draw thriller with Celtic
21:17 Leipzig battle past Red Star 3-1 to tighten hold on Group G second spot
21:00 S&P 500, Nasdaq end sharply lower as Alphabet disappoints, Treasury yields bounce
20:32 Alcaraz on the mend, plans to play Paris Masters, ATP Finals
19:22 Mercedes to move on from Austin blow with 'sunny optimism'
19:12 Three changes for Argentina to face England
19:07 Gimenez double leads to Feyenoord 3-1 win over Lazio
18:17 Perez to feel the love even if the dream is dashed
17:42 Bosnia FA sanctioned by UEFA over crowd trouble
17:27 Australia's Maxwell puts on 'Big Show' with incendiary hundred
15:27 Forget Twickenham’s record win for Boks, it’s this weekend that counts
15:06 Apple raises prices of TV+ to US$9.99 from US$6.99 per month; fees of other services also up
14:51 Mapletree Industrial Trust Q2 DPU falls 1.2% to $0.0332 on enlarged unit base
14:27 Online abuse of Curry unacceptable, says Farrell
14:07 Sri Lanka hope Silverwood insights can help topple England
14:05 29 local brands honoured with Singapore Prestige Brand Award this year
13:57 Gakpo available for Liverpool's game with Toulouse, says Klopp
13:22 iFast Q3 net profit gains 308.4% to $8.5 million
11:13 Honda, GM scrap plan to co-develop cheaper EVs
10:40 $2.6 billion renewal project of North-South, East-West MRT lines to be mostly completed by Dec 2023
9:52 Jail for man who cheated 68 victims of $380k in one of Singapore's worst rental scams
9:38 $2.8b money laundering case: Porsche, 2 Rolls-Royces among luxury cars seized from Bukit Timah bungalow
11:03 VAR officials replaced after offside error in Liverpool defeat
11:01 Ajax Amsterdam league match abandoned after RKC goalkeeper Etienne Vaessen knocked out
10:58 Sabalenka shines in first match as No. 1, Vondrousova crashes in Beijing
10:43 Players would pay to play in Ryder Cup, says Johnson
10:13 Fiji will not look past Portugal in quarter-final hunt
10:00 London on cusp of becoming biggest stock market in Europe again
9:56 Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg’s strength a surprise for his MMA trainer
9:34 Pep Guardiola criticises Ruben Dias and Mateo Kovacic after defeat by Wolverhampton Wanderers
9:07 New York remains world's top financial center in survey, London second
8:53 Games-S.Korea beat China for badminton gold, but hosts gain shooting world record
8:43 Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez dominates Jermell Charlo to maintain super middleweight supremacy
8:03 Wing Graham revelling in Scotland’s attacking approach
7:52 Duane Vermeulen happy to don Springboks jersey after watching Ireland loss from stands
7:07 Tears as South Korea whitewash China for 'precious' badminton gold at Asian Games
6:48 Japanese Grand Prix red-flagged due to heavy rain
6:43 Cricket-England at the ODI World Cup
6:43 Cricket-India at the ODI World Cup
6:43 Cricket-Australia at the ODI World Cup
6:00 Slowing, greying and in debt, can China’s industrial heartland be revived?
5:58 Games-Athletics official in stable condition after being hit by hammer
5:58 Games-Yubol claims surprise golf gold for Thailand as Ashok crashes out
5:40 1,900 BTO flats along the Rail Corridor in Choa Chu Kang to be launched in early October
5:25 Hazy days ahead? PSI nears 100 on Saturday; NEA says it may increase if wind direction changes
5:08 Flawless Kudermetova stuns Pegula to claim Tokyo title
4:02 Saved by doctor's appointment: Siblings narrowly escape Hougang flat fire
3:19 Shanti Pereira wins 200m heats to qualify for Asian Games final just 12 hours after clinching silver medal in women's 100m
2:55 Lalit Kumar completes 150 international appearances for Indian hockey
2:36 Shanti Pereira tops 200m heats to qualify for Asian Games final
2:01 New scam alert: UOB says circulating Taylor Swift meet-and-greet invites are fake
2:00 What the US-China chip war means for a critical American ally
1:28 'Impossible': Staff at Choa Chu Kang stall claims cockroach on siew mai is not from stall but from customer's house
0:55 SIMBEX 23: India, Singapore bilateral maritime exercise concludes
22:57 Ageing Singapore offers a blueprint for action
22:08 Klopp fumes over decisions as nine-man Liverpool lose at Spurs
21:58 Romania will improve if they learn from harsh lessons - coach
21:58 Romania will improve if they learn from harsh Rugby World Cup lessons - coach
21:38 Scotland's Townsend faces decisions ahead of Ireland showdown
21:08 Unstoppable Martinez scores four as Inter cruise past Salernitana
21:08 Scotland set up Ireland showdown with huge Romania win
20:08 Lazio are on right track despite Milan loss, Sarri says
19:13 Back to basics helps Fiji rally to sink Georgia
19:08 'The Korean guy' gets Guardiola's attention
19:03 Courageous Cantlay rams taunts down European throats
18:43 Ten Hag understands Man United fans booing after Palace defeat
18:38 It's not all on Eddie, says Wallabies assistant coach
18:23 Europe lead by five in Ryder Cup, but US finally show fight
18:03 Fiji dig deep to beat Georgia and close on last eight
17:58 Champions City shocked by Wolves, Manchester United lose again
17:58 Luton learned valuable lessons to secure first Premier League win
17:43 WTA roundup: Ons Jabeur coasts to title at Ningbo Open
17:28 Italy tries to digest All Black avalanche
17:03 Bowen, Soucek on target as West Ham ease past Sheffield United
16:58 Luton sink sorry Everton to secure first Premier League win
16:58 Games-India win thriller over arch-rivals Pakistan for squash gold
16:33 Arsenal heap more misery on Bournemouth with 4-0 away win
16:25 In 11.27 seconds, Pereira writes a fast and fabulous history
16:13 Almiron, Isak score as Newcastle see off Burnley
16:05 Manchester clubs hit by surprise defeats in English Premier League
15:23 Napoli keep on climbing table with 4-0 win at Lecce
15:13 Sanchez shines as Argentina set up Japan showdown