This is not investment advice. The author has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Wccftech.com has a disclosure and ethics policy.
The new cold war, cloaked in silicon, is ratcheting up, with uncontested supremacy in the emerging AI-led, productivity-unlocking paradigm up for grabs. With the US and its allies determined to thwart Beijing's access to cutting-edge chips, China is finding progressively more creative ways to circumvent those restrictions, all the while trying to ramp-up its indigenous capacity.
Now, Nikkei Asia is reporting that China splurged a whopping $25 billion on chipmaking equipment in the first half of 2024, constituting a new record. What's more, China's global shopping spree for specialized chipmaking equipment eclipsed the one recorded by the US, South Korea, and Taiwan in H1 2024, and that too on a cumulative basis!
At a more granular level, China accounted for a whopping 49.9 percent of Tokyo Electron's revenue in the June-ending quarter. Similarly, ASML, Applied Materials, Lam Research, and KLA respectively earned 49 percent, 32 percent, 39 percent, and 44 percent of their total revenue in the just-concluded quarter from Beijing's relentless shopping spree.
China appears to be stockpiling critical chipmaking equipment ahead of the US presidential election in November and the attendant threat of a significant escalation in silicon-related sanctions on Beijing.
In the same vein, China today threatened Japan with a severe economic retaliation should it further restrict the sale and servicing of chip-related equipment to Chinese firms, promising to starve Tokyo of critical raw materials and minerals that are required for the production of automobiles. Bear in mind that Beijing currently maintains a waning monopoly on the supply of rare earth metals.
Of course, as we reported earlier today, China's indigenous chips are, for
Read more on wccftech.com