Beijing’s biggest chip-making champion SMIC faces uncertain future after US blacklisting

  • SMIC’s addition to the blacklist will significantly hurt its research and development of advanced processes smaller than 10 nanometre
  • The company’s more mature 55- and 65-nm nodes contributed to 25.8 per cent of total wafer revenue in the July-September quarter

Che Panin Beijing
The headquarters of Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp in Shanghai. Photo: Bloomberg

The future of Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), mainland China’s largest contract chip maker, is now under a cloud after it was put on a US trade blacklist, which the company said would make it difficult to develop advanced chip-making processes in the country.

“[The addition to the blacklist] will have significant negative impacts on research and development of advanced processes smaller than 10 nanometres [based] upon our initial assessment,” SMIC said in a statement on Monday, adding that the short-term impact on the company’s operation and finances would be limited.

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