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Zenger
Zenger
World
Natan Ponieman

China’s Restrictions On Semiconductor Metals, Biden’s Cloud Computing Ban: Which Companies Are In The Line Of Fire?

The exterior of the State Department complex is seen on March 14, 2023, in Washington, DC. (Nathan Posner/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

The soft war going on between the U.S. and China took new steps this week as both countries announced measures that could affect each other’s access to key technological resources.

In this photo illustration, a Google BARD AI logo is seen displayed on a smartphone with a Chinese Flag in the background. (Avishek Das/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images) 

The measures are the latest escalation in a battle to dominate key sectors within tech, and are likely to have an effect on companies producing semiconductor equipment as well as those providing cloud computing services.

China’s Metal Export Restrictions: Who Stands To Lose?

On Monday, China announced new restrictions on the export of two metals that are crucial in the manufacturing of semiconductors, 5G base stations and solar panels, among other devices.

While the metals gallium and germanium are not rare, China is the world’s largest producer of both and controls 94% of gallium production.

After the export rules were announced, the price of these metals began to rise, and is likely to affect the cost of goods for companies using them in their supply chain.

According to a report by B. Riley Financials, the restrictions could affect Coherent Corp (NYSE:COHR), a U.S. manufacturer of optical devices and semiconductors, as well as Lumentum Holdings Inc (NASDAQ:LITE), a company producing optical technology used in the manufacturing of semiconductors.

Telecommunications equipment Ciena Corporation (NYSE:CIEN) and optical transmission equipment company Infinera Corp. (NASDAQ:INFN) could also be affected by the measure, which will require special licenses to acquire Chinese-produced gallium and germanium.

According to a Wells Fargo analysis, the Chinese export controls will directly affect U.S.- and Europe-based manufacturers of semiconductor materials using the metals as well as buyers that use them in the processing of compound semiconductors, which are semiconductors that use two or more semiconducting materials.

These include British semiconductor company IQE plc (OTC:IQEPF) and U.S.-based Wolfspeed Inc (NYSE:WOLF) as suppliers and Power Integrations Inc (NASDAQ:POWI), Navitas Semiconductor Corp (NASDAQ:NVTS), Qorvo Inc (NASDAQ:QRVO) and NXP Semiconductors NV (NASDAQ:NXPI) as buyers.

Skyworks Solutions Inc (NASDAQ:SWKS), Qualcomm Inc (NASDAQ:QCOM) and Broadcom Inc (NASDAQ:AVGO) might also be affected by rising prices in germanium as these companies use the element in combination with silicon for the manufacturing of RFFE components used in smartphones.

On Wednesday, it became known the Biden Aaministration is looking into ways it can restrict Chinese access to U.S. cloud-service providers like Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT). These companies would need permission from the U.S. government to provide cloud services to companies in China. The Department of Commerce would oversee the execution of the new restrictions, which are expected to be rolled out in the coming weeks.

Amazon’s AWS and Microsoft’s Azure dominate the U.S. cloud computing market and both have a presence in China. Yet during the first quarter of 2023, 79% of China’s cloud market by expenditure went to Chinese companies Alibaba Cloud (NYSE:BABA), Huawei Cloud, Tencent Cloud (OTC:TCEHY), and Baidu AI Cloud (NASDAQ:BIDU), according to China Internet Watch.

Chinese cloud companies could gain what remains of the market if Amazon and Microsoft are unable to avoid Biden’s restrictions.

In May, China passed a ban on products from large U.S. chip manufacturer Micron Technology (NASDAQ:MU), which its CEO called a “significant headwind.” 

Biden’s CHIPS act, which is seeking to jumpstart the U.S. domestic semiconductor industry, benefits international chip companies that don’t expand in China.

Late last year, the Biden administration imposed an embargo on the most powerful chips from Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMD) that are crucial for the development of large language models used to train AI systems.

Produced in association with Benzinga

Edited by Alberto Arellano and Joseph Hammond

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