ASML shares fall on report US wants to restrict sales to China

ASML logo is seen in this illustration taken February 28, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

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AMSTERDAM, July 5 (Reuters) – Shares in ASML Holding (ASML.AS), a key supplier of equipment to semiconductor makers, fell on Tuesday following a Bloomberg News report that the U.S. government wants to restrict the company from selling equipment to China.

ASML has already been unable to ship its most advanced tools to China, but the report said Washington would also restrict the sale of slightly older machines, citing “people familiar with the matter.”

A spokesperson for ASML said the company was unaware of any policy change.

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“The discussion is not new,” the spokesperson said. “No decisions have been made, and we do not want to speculate or comment on rumours.”

ASML’s U.S. shares sank 7.2% in the wake of the report.

Other chip gear makers also lost ground, with Lam Research (LRCX.O) off 3.6% and Applied Materials (AMAT.O) losing 2.4%.

China is ASML’s third largest market, after Taiwan and South Korea, representing around 16% of 2021 sales, or 2.1 billion euros.

ASML has a near monopoly on the manufacture of lithography systems, machines vital for chipmakers such as Intel (INTC.O), TSMC and Samsung. Lithography systems cost hundreds of millions of dollars apiece and use focused beams of light to create the circuitry of computer chips.

Lithography and other semiconductor manufacturing equipment require an export license, as computer chips are considered “dual use” technology, with military as well as commercial applications.

Since 2019, the Dutch government, in agreement with the U.S., has not granted a license for ASML to sell its most advanced machines, which use “extreme ultraviolet,” or EUV, light waves, to Chinese chipmakers.

ASML still sells “deep ultraviolet,” or DUV, machines, to Chinese customers.

The majority of chips worldwide are manufactured with DUV lithography. Restricting their sale to China would be highly damaging for China’s chip industry and would likely worsen a global semiconductor shortage.

In 2021, the U.S. National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence — led by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt — recommended that the U.S. Departments of State and Commerce should push allies to deny China access to top DUV, EUV and related tools.

In a reaction, analysts from Citi said they viewed a total ban on DUV equipment as “highly unlikely” but further restrictions for equipment makers could be tied to China foreign policy “escalations with Russia or incursions into Taiwan.”

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Reporting by Toby Sterling; Editing by Bernadette Baum, Leslie Adler and David Gregorio

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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