TSMC Suspends Advanced Chip Orders For China Customers

Dominant contract chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) is to stop taking orders for advanced chips for mainland China customers as of Monday, according to local media reports.

TSMC told mainland customers in a notice last week that it would stop accepting orders for chips made with its 7-nanometre or smaller process nodes beginning on Monday, 11 November, reports said.

The move, first reported by Chinese semiconductor media outlet ijiwei.com, comes after Canadian research firm Techinsights discovered a TSMC part in Huawei’s 910B artificial intelligence (AI) chip, suggesting US-sanctioned Huawei had obtained the part in violation of US export controls.

TSMC denied wrongdoing and said it would work with the US Department of Commerce to resolve the issue.

Image credit: Intel

Shipments suspended

Huawei said it “has not produced any chips via TSMC since the US Department of Commerce implemented its amended foreign direct product rule that targeted Huawei in 2020”.

TSMC has since suspended shipments to graphics processor developer Sophgo, based in Xiamen, mainland China, according to a Reuters report.

Sophgo said it “has never engaged in any direct or indirect business relationship with Huawei”.

The Financial Times cited two unnamed sources as saying that future supplies of advanced chips to mainland customers could be subject to an approval process likely to include US regulators.

Mainland China is a relatively small market for TSMC, accounting for 11 percent of its third-quarter revenue, compared to 71 percent for North America, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence’s Visible Alpha.

Compliance move

But the move could be a blow for mainland companies that have begun developing their own advanced chips for uses such as artificial intelligence (AI) model development and inference, including tech giants such as Alibaba and Baidu as well as start-ups.

TSMC is looking to avoid any appearance of non-compliance with US export rules ahead of an expected tightening of regulations this year, as well as under Donald Trump’s second administration beginning in January.

The company is investing $65 billion (£50bn) to build new factories in Arizona under a Biden-era plan to subsidise domestic chip production, and said that so far its US investment plans remain unchanged.

Matthew Broersma

Matt Broersma is a long standing tech freelance, who has worked for Ziff-Davis, ZDnet and other leading publications

Recent Posts

China’s YMTC Publishes Memory Patent Applications

US-sanctioned YMTC publishes nearly 20 memory patent applications, showcasing innovations in efficiency and chip construction

16 hours ago

CATL ‘In Talks’ For Controlling Stake In Nio’s Power Unit

Battery giant CATL reportedly in talks to buy controlling stake in unit of EV maker…

17 hours ago

BYD Launches Luxury Denza EV Brand In Europe

Chinese EV giant BYD launches high-end Denza brand in Europe to compete with Mercedes, BMW…

17 hours ago

US Power Utilities Receive Massive AI Data Centre Requests

US power companies say in some cases data centre requests exceed their peak demand or…

18 hours ago

Microsoft Ends Projects With Wicresoft In China

Some 2,000 support staff reportedly laid off as Microsoft ends China outsourcing deal with its…

18 hours ago

Singapore Banks Hit By Ransomware Data Breach

DBS, Bank of China Singapore say customer data compromised after printing services supplier hit by…

19 hours ago