-
Advertisement
Semiconductors
BusinessCompanies

Chinese buyout firm Citic Capital Partners says a semiconductor sector rising to tech war challenge is ripe for the picking

  • Tech war with US could improve buyout opportunities in China’s semiconductor sector as Chinese tech giants increasingly rely on home-grown components
  • Pace of deal making at firm could increase from four deals every year at present

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Citic Capital Partners owns 80 per cent of US fast-food company McDonald’s China and Hong Kong operations. Photo: Bloomberg
Georgina Lee

Citic Capital Partners, the Chinese home-grown buyout firm that recently acquired 80 per cent of US fast-food company McDonald’s China and Hong Kong operations, sees potential deal opportunities in China’s semiconductor sector, an industry that is moving rapidly towards self sufficiency amid the ongoing US-China technology war.

With the launch of fifth generation cellular network technology, or 5G, Chinese telecoms companies will increasing rely on Chinese chip makers to deliver their services, Eric Xin, Citic Capital Partners’ managing partner in charge of private-equity investment in China, said. The firm is Chinese financial conglomerate Citic Capital’s private-equity arm.

“Leading telecoms equipment suppliers such as Huawei and ZTE will play a key role in supporting chip supply chain development in China. Over the short term, this change could be tough and will not happen overnight. But in the long run, it will only help Chinese semiconductor companies,” he said in an interview on the sideline of the AVCJ Private Equity & Venture Forum this month.

Advertisement

The United States government has placed Huawei Technologies on a blacklist that prevents American companies from selling it chips and components on national security grounds. Xin said that, as a result, smaller companies in China were getting more orders as US companies such as Intel, Qualcomm and Texas Instruments stayed away. He said this improved buyout opportunities in the Chinese chip sector, but did not specify whether his team had targeted such companies.

While Citic Capital Partners is best known for deals in the consumer, telecoms, media and technology and business services sectors, it is no stranger to technology transactions. In 2015, it was part of a consortium that bought OmniVision, a US maker of chips, sensors and wafer-level components for advanced imaging technologies.

The firm has US$7.4 billion in committed capital, and in August successfully raised its fourth China buyout fund, which at US$2.8 billion is its largest private-equity fund to date.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x