Advertisement
Advertisement
Semiconductors
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
The logo of British semiconductor company Arm seen on a smartphone screen in front of a business webpage. Photo: Shutterstock

Arm laying off and relocating over 70 engineers in China amid cutbacks in chip industry, including at Qualcomm

  • About 15 staff members whose positions are being eliminated will be offered different roles working on China-related projects
  • The British firm’s actions mirror those of major chip firms, and come as China’s contribution to its global sales fell 5 percentage points to 20 per cent

Arm Holdings has recently laid off over 70 software engineers in China though it will relocate some of the roles outside of the Asian nation, according to people with knowledge of the move.

The British firm’s actions mirrored those of major chip companies including Qualcomm that have cut back on the global staffing level earlier this year as the semiconductor industry faces a downturn due to lacklustre demand for electronics. In November, Arm gave a disappointing sales forecast amid a slump in smartphone sales.

About 15 of the staff whose positions are being eliminated will be offered different roles working on China-related projects, according to one of the people, who declined to be identified discussing private matters.

SoftBank’s Arm soars after successful IPO despite China risks

The jobs being terminated are currently filled by contract software engineers who have worked on projects that span Arm’s business around the world, according to another one of the people.

“In order to ensure that the China Software Ecosystem can fully maximise the benefits of Arm performance and features, Arm is restructuring its China software engineering resources to focus on direct support for local developers,” the Cambridge, UK-based company said in a statement.

China’s contribution to Arm’s global sales fell to about 20 per cent from 25 per cent as rest of the world grew much faster, chief financial officer Jason Child told analysts in November.

The SoftBank Group-backed firm has been impacted by restrictions Washington has imposed on technology exports to Chinese companies as Arm has developed some of its proprietary designs, widely used by mobile devices, in the US.

Arm is still recovering from the turmoil of an extended dispute with the ousted head of Arm China, a joint venture owned by SoftBank and a group of Chinese investors.

27:21

Biden’s China tech policy goal: a 10 year handicap

Biden’s China tech policy goal: a 10 year handicap

Former Arm China Chief Executive Officer Allen Wu had refused to leave his post after being dismissed and it took investors years to retake control.

Arm China acts as the sales office for the British chip designer in the largest market for semiconductors. Earlier this year, the Chinese entity itself let go of over 100 employees, most of them working in the research and development unit to create new chip technology for the local market, the people said.

Arm has outsourced the work of supporting its Chinese customers to Arm China through a division called global service, which had as many as 200 employees at one point. Over 70 employees at that department have been let go, with some expecting an offer to be relocated, according to one of the people. Arm China did not immediately respond to a request seeking comment.

2