Tag Archives: chips

Chips Are the New Oil and America Is Spending Billions to Safeguard Its Supply

Only in the past two years has the U.S. fully grasped that semiconductors are now as central to modern economies as oil.

In the digitizing world, power tools commonly come with Bluetooth chips that track their locations. Appliances have added chips to manage electricity use. In 2021, the average car contained about 1,200 chips worth $600, twice as many as in 2010.

The supply-chain crunch that created a chip shortage brought the lesson home. Auto makers lost $210 billion of sales last year because of missing chips, according to consulting firm AlixPartners. Competition with China has stoked concerns that it could dominate key chip sectors, for either civilian or military uses, or even block U.S. access to components.

Now the government and companies are spending billions on a frenetic effort to build up domestic manufacturing and safeguard the supply of chips. Since 2020, semiconductor companies have proposed more than 40 projects across the country worth nearly $200 billion that would create 40,000 jobs, according to the Semiconductor Industry Association.

It’s a big bet on an industry that is defining the contours of international economic competition and determining countries’ political, technological and military advantage.

“Where the oil reserves are located has defined geopolitics for the last five decades,”

Intel Corp.

INTC -0.59%

Chief Executive

Pat Gelsinger

declared at a Wall Street Journal conference in October. “Where the chip factories are for the next five decades is more important.”

President Biden at the groundbreaking ceremony for a new Intel semiconductor manufacturing facility in Ohio in September.



Photo:

James D. DeCamp/Zuma Press

As oil became a linchpin of industrial economies in the 1900s, the U.S. became one of the world’s largest producers. Securing the semiconductor supply is more complicated. While one barrel of oil is much like another, semiconductors come in a bewildering range of types, capabilities and costs and depend on a multilayered supply chain spanning thousands of inputs and numerous countries. Given the economies of scale, the U.S. can’t produce all of these itself.

“There’s zero leading-edge production in the U.S.,” said Mike Schmidt, who heads the Department of Commerce office overseeing the implementation of the Chips and Science Act, signed into law by President Biden in August, which directs $52 billion in subsidies to semiconductor manufacturing and research. “We are talking about making the U.S. a global leader in leading-edge production and creating self-sustaining dynamics going forward. There’s no doubt it’s a very ambitious set of objectives.”

The recent shortages that hurt the most didn’t necessarily involve the most expensive chips.

Jim Farley,

Ford Motor Co.

’s chief executive, told a gathering of chip executives in San Jose, Calif., in November that factory workers, meaning workers in North America, had worked a full week only three times since the beginning of that year because of chip shortages. A lack of simple chips, including 40-cent parts needed for windshield-wiper motors in F-150 pickup trucks, left it 40,000 vehicles short of production targets.

Until 2014, machines that treat sleep apnea made by San Diego-based

ResMed Inc.

each contained just one chip, to handle air pressure and humidity. Then ResMed started putting cellular chips into the devices that beamed nightly report cards on users’ sleep patterns to their smartphones and to their doctors.

As a result, regular usage by users climbed from just over half to about 87%. Because mortality is lower for sleep-apnea sufferers who consistently use their devices, a relatively simple chip could help save lives.

An employee assembled ResMed’s sleep apnea devices in Singapore on Dec. 27. Ore Huiying for The Wall Street Journal
ResMed redesigned its machines during the chip shortage. Ore Huiying for The Wall Street Journal

ResMed’s sleep apnea devices are assembled in Singapore. Ore Huiying for The Wall Street Journal

ResMed couldn’t get enough of the cellular chips during the chip shortage when demand for its machines went up, in part because a competitor’s devices were recalled. Some suppliers reneged on supply agreements. Patients faced monthslong waits.

Chief Executive

Mick Farrell

said he implored longstanding suppliers to give priority to his equipment, though his orders were relatively small. “I asked for more, more and more, and to please prioritize us,” he said. “This is a case of life and death—we’re not just asking for something that makes you feel better.”

The company redesigned its machines, which are assembled in Singapore and Sydney, to replace the chips in short supply with others more readily available. It sought out new chip suppliers. It even rolled back the clock and released a version of a device without the cellular chip.

Though the chip shortage has abated somewhat and the company’s newest breathing devices have the cellular chip back, Mr. Farrell worries chip supply could be a bottleneck.

In May, he was one of a group of medical-technology CEOs who pleaded with Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo on a conference call for help. Ms. Raimondo’s staff asked other federal agencies to designate medical equipment as essential and helped connect buyers directly to manufacturers to bypass distributors.

Such pleas also lent urgency to the Biden administration’s efforts, led by Ms. Raimondo, to pass the Chips and Science Act. The U.S. has long been leery of industrial policy, under which the government rather than the market steers resources to particular industries. Many economists criticize industrial policy as picking winners. But many Republican and Democratic legislators argue that semiconductors should be an exception because, like oil, they have vital civilian and military uses.

Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo in July.



Photo:

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Soon after the act passed, Intel, which had pushed Congress to pass the legislation for two years, broke ground on a $20 billion project in Ohio. The Commerce Department will announce guidelines next month for how the law’s manufacturing subsidies will be awarded.

American scientists and engineers invented and commercialized semiconductors starting in the 1940s, and today U.S. companies still dominate the most lucrative links in the semiconductor supply chain: the design of chips, software tools that translate those designs into actual semiconductors, and, with competitors in Japan and the Netherlands, the multimillion-dollar machines that etch chip designs onto wafers inside fabrication plants, or fabs.

But the actual fabrication of semiconductors has been increasingly outsourced to Asia. The U.S. share of global chip manufacturing has eroded, from 37% in 1990 to 12% in 2020, while mainland China’s share has gone from around zero to about 15%, according to Boston Consulting Group and SIA. Taiwan and South Korea each accounted for a little over 20%.

The most cutting-edge manufacturers of advanced logic chips, the brains of computers, smartphones and servers, are

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.

—a foundry that makes chips designed by others—and South Korea-based

Samsung

Electronics Co. Intel comes in third. Memory chips are primarily made in Asia by U.S.- and Asian-headquartered companies. Lower-end analog chips, which often perform just a few tasks in consumer and industrial products, are produced around the world.




Region’s Share of activity

Circuit designs

and software

CPUs and other

digital chips

Activity’s Share of total

Data storage and

computer memory

Equipment used

to make chips

Chip-manufacturing

materials

Chip assembly

and testing

Chip makers are spending billions on new factories that could boost the country’s share of manufacturing…

…but significant obstacles remain, including slow growth in the number of U.S. engineering students.

U.S. semiconductor investments in the next 10 years

Citizenship of graduate students and postdoctoral appointees in U.S. engineering programs

Materials/

suppliers

$9 billion

U.S. citizens

and permanent

residents

Chip-making

factories

$186.6 billion

Region’s Share of activity

Circuit designs

and software

CPUs and other

digital chips

Activity’s Share of total

Data storage and

computer memory

Equipment used

to make chips

Chip-manufacturing

materials

Chip assembly

and testing

Chip makers are spending billions on new factories that could boost the country’s share of manufacturing…

…but significant obstacles remain, including slow growth in the number of U.S. engineering students.

Citizenship of graduate students and postdoctoral appointees in U.S. engineering programs

U.S. semiconductor investments in the next 10 years

Materials/

suppliers

$9 billion

U.S. citizens

and permanent

residents

Chip-making

factories

$186.6 billion

Region’s Share of activity

Circuit designs

and software

CPUs and other

digital chips

Activity’s Share of total

Data storage and

computer memory

Equipment used

to make chips

Chip-manufacturing

materials

Chip assembly

and testing

Chip makers are spending billions on new factories that could boost the country’s share of manufacturing…

…but significant obstacles remain, including slow growth in the number of U.S. engineering students.

Citizenship of graduate students and postdoctoral appointees in U.S. engineering programs

U.S. semiconductor investments in the next 10 years

Materials/

suppliers

$9 billion

U.S. citizens and

permanent residents

Chip-making

factories

$186.6 billion

Region’s Share

of activity

Circuit designs

and software

CPUs and other

digital chips

Activity’s Share of total

Data storage

and computer

memory

Equipment used

to make chips

Chip-manufacturing

materials

Chip assembly

and testing

Chip makers are spending billions on new factories that could boost the country’s share of manufacturing…

U.S. semiconductor investments in the next 10 years

Materials/

suppliers

$9 billion

Chip-making

factories

$186.6 billion

…but significant obstacles remain, including slow growth in the number of U.S. engineering students.

Citizenship of graduate students and postdoctoral appointees in U.S. engineering programs

U.S. citizens

and permanent

residents

Region’s Share

of activity

Circuit designs

and software

CPUs and other

digital chips

Activity’s Share of total

Data storage

and computer

memory

Equipment used

to make chips

Chip-manufacturing

materials

Chip assembly

and testing

Chip makers are spending billions on new factories that could boost the country’s share of manufacturing…

U.S. semiconductor investments in the next 10 years

Materials/

suppliers

$9 billion

Chip-making

factories

$186.6 billion

…but significant obstacles remain, including slow growth in the number of U.S. engineering students.

Citizenship of graduate students and postdoctoral appointees in U.S. engineering programs

U.S. citizens

and permanent

residents

The concentration of so much chip production in three hot spots—China, Taiwan and South Korea—unsettles U.S. military and political leaders. They worry that if China achieved dominance in leading-edge semiconductors, on its own or by invading Taiwan, it would threaten the U.S. economy and national security in a way Japan, an ally, didn’t when it briefly dominated semiconductor manufacturing in the 1980s.

Starting around 2016, U.S. officials began blocking Chinese efforts to procure front-line chip companies and technology. Many in Washington were blindsided last July when a Canadian research firm reported that China’s largest chip maker,

Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp.

, had begun to manufacture 7-nanometer chips—a level of sophistication thought beyond its ability.

With little warning, on Oct. 7, the U.S. government installed the broadest-ever restrictions on chip-related exports to China. The U.S. had long been willing to let Chinese semiconductor capabilities advance, as long as the U.S. maintained a lead. The new controls go much further, seeking to hold China in place while the U.S. and its allies race ahead.

A ceremony marked the beginning of bulk production of 3-nanometer chips at a Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. facility in Taiwan on Dec. 29. Lam Yik Fei/Bloomberg News
A circuit board on display at Macronix International Co. in Taiwan. Annabelle Chih/Getty Images

A ceremony marked the beginning of bulk production of 3-nanometer chips at a Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. facility in Taiwan on Dec. 29, left. A circuit board on display at Macronix International Co. in Taiwan, right. Lam Yik Fei/Bloomberg News; Annabelle Chih/Getty Images

Meanwhile, U.S. officials hope federal subsidies will lead to factories that are sufficiently large and advanced to remain competitive and profitable long into the future. “We have got to figure out a way through every piece of leverage we have…to push these companies to go bigger,” Ms. Raimondo said in an interview. “I need Intel to think about taking that $20 billion facility in Ohio and making it a $100 billion facility. We’ve got to convince TSMC or Samsung that they can go from 20,000 wafers a month to 100,000 and be successful and profitable in the United States. That’s the whole game here.”

That ambition comes at a delicate time for chip makers, many of whom have seen a sharp drop in demand for electronics that were hot during the early days of the pandemic. Intel is paring capital spending amid the slump, and TSMC said this week that weak demand could lead it to cut capital expenditures this year.

To defray the chip companies’ investment needs, Ms. Raimondo has approached private infrastructure investors about participating in chip projects, modeled on

Brookfield Asset Management Inc.’s

co-investment in Intel’s Arizona fabs. Last November she pitched the idea to 700 money managers at an investment conference in Singapore organized by Barclays Bank.

She also approached chip customers including

Apple Inc.

about buying chips these fabs produce. “We will need big customers to give commitments to purchase [the fabs’ output], which will help de-risk deals and show there is a market for these chips,” she said.

Those efforts appeared to pay off in December when TSMC announced it would up its investment to $40 billion in leading-edge chips at a facility already being built on a vast scrubby area north of Phoenix. Formerly home to wild burros and coyotes, it now teems with construction cranes and takes delivery of some of the most advanced manufacturing equipment in the world.

At a ceremony that month attended by Mr. Biden and top administration officials, including Ms. Raimondo, Apple Chief Executive

Tim Cook

and

Advanced Micro Devices Inc.

chief

Lisa Su

pledged to buy some of the facility’s output.

Workers at TSMC’s manufacturing facility in Phoenix in December.



Photo:

Brendan Smialowski/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Still, TSMC told the Commerce Department in a public letter that despite excitement about its plans and local, state and potentially federal subsidies, costs were higher than if a similar operation were built at home.

Morris Chang,

TSMC’s founder, said in November that the differential could be 50%. TSMC said it sent more than 600 American engineers to Taiwan for training.

Outside the U.S., Europe has its own plans to double its share of global production over about 10 years, while authorities in Taiwan, China and other Asian nations are pouring money into the sector. TSMC, in addition to its Arizona project, is building a chip plant in Japan and is looking at potential investments in Europe.

The high cost and scarcity of qualified labor in the U.S. has hampered previous efforts to reshore electronics manufacturing. Mung Chiang, president of Purdue University in Indiana, said computer and engineering students are drawn to chip design or software, areas where American companies are leaders, rather than manufacturing.

“Even if they say, ‘Yes, semiconductor manufacturing sounds really good, I want to do it,’ well, where can they learn the real, live experience?”

In response, Purdue has created a dedicated semiconductor program it hopes will award more than 1,000 certificates and degrees annually by 2030 in person and online. In July,

SkyWater Technology,

a Bloomington, Minn.-based foundry, said it would build a $1.8 billion fab on Purdue’s campus, prospectively supported by Chips funding.

Developing a domestic supply of talent is only half the battle. The U.S. also depends on foreign countries for many key inputs to semiconductors.

The lasers that imprint tiny circuit blueprints on silicon wafers use purified neon gas, made from raw neon typically harvested from large air-separation units attached to steel plants. Those facilities produce the neon when they separate oxygen from the air for use in steel furnaces.

There Aren’t Enough Chips—Why Are They So Hard to Make?

Since the steel industry largely moved out of the U.S. over the past half-century, there is currently very little neon gas being produced domestically. Most has come from Ukraine, Russia and China, but Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has left China as the world’s main source.

“Is this a risk for the U.S.? Absolutely,” said Matthew Adams, an executive vice president at Electronic Fluorocarbons LLC, a Massachusetts-based company that imports, purifies and sells neon and other gases. “A prolonged ban of neon exports from China to the U.S. would shut down a significant portion of semiconductor production after inventories are exhausted.”

A handful of other raw materials used in chip making, such as tungsten, which is transformed into tungsten hexafluoride and used to build parts of transistors on chips, are similarly sourced primarily from China. To truly untie the U.S. chip industry from China would entail undoing several decades of globalization, something industry leaders say isn’t practical.

After working for years to catch up on U.S. technology, China has developed a chip that can rival Nvidia’s powerful A100. WSJ unpacks the processors’ design and capability as the two superpowers race for dominance in artificial intelligence. Illustration: Sharon Shi

Even if the U.S. doesn’t succeed in securing the entire semiconductor supply chain, it does have a chance to reverse the recent historical pattern of losing leadership in one manufacturing sector after another, including passenger cars, railroad equipment, machine tools, consumer electronics and solar panels.

“I don’t think we’ve ever done this before: Try in a conscious, targeted way to regain market share in an industry where we were once the leader, but then lost it,” said

Rob Atkinson,

president of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, which advocates government support of manufacturing.

Write to Asa Fitch at asa.fitch@wsj.com and Greg Ip at greg.ip@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here

Next-Generation MacBook Pro Models With M2 Pro and M2 Max Chips Reportedly ‘Delayed Once Again’

Apple’s next-generation 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro models with M2 Pro and M2 Max chips were slated to hit the market in “early 2023,” but the laptops are now expected to be “delayed once again,” according to Taiwanese publication DigiTimes.

The report does not offer a revised launch timeframe for the new MacBook Pros. In his newsletter last weekend, Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman said Apple planned to release the laptops in the first half of this year and said they will have the same designs and features as the current models, but with M2 Pro and M2 Max chips. Gurman said those chips will offer only marginal performance improvements over the current M1 Pro and M1 Max.

In late October, Gurman said Apple planned to release the new MacBook Pros in the first quarter of 2023 and had tied the launches to an upcoming macOS 13.3 release, but it’s unclear if those plans have changed since then. Based on Gurman’s latest timeframe of the first half of 2023, the new MacBook Pros should finally be released by Apple’s annual developers conference WWDC in June at the latest, but hopefully sooner.

Apple’s chipmaking partner TSMC started mass production of 3nm chips in late December, but reports have conflicted as to whether the M2 Pro and M2 Max chips will be 3nm or remain 5nm like the M1 Pro and M1 Max.

The rest of the report is focused on how MacBook shipments will likely decline 40% to 50% sequentially in the first quarter of 2023, citing unnamed supply chain sources. The report claims that Apple “adjusting its shipment ratios” by adding Wingtech as a MacBook assembler is the primary reason for the substantial decline.

Popular Stories

Apple Just Broke a Tradition It Held for 21 Years

Apple has broken a tradition it maintained for 21 years, releasing no new Macs in the fourth quarter of the year for the first time since 2000, as previously anticipated devices like the next-generation MacBook Pro and Mac Pro models have apparently been pushed out to this year.
Historically, Apple launched at least one new Mac model every year in the fourth quarter that runs between October …

iPhone 15 Pro Expected Later This Year With These 6 Exclusive Features

Apple’s next-generation iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max are expected to be announced in September as usual. Already, rumors suggest the devices will have at least six exclusive features not available on the standard iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus.
An overview of the six features rumored to be exclusive to iPhone 15 Pro models:A17 chip: iPhone 15 Pro models will be equipped with an A17…

Sketchy ChatGPT App Soars Up App Store Charts, Charges $7.99 Weekly Subscription [Update: Removed]

A sketchy app claiming to be the bot ChatGPT has soared up App Store charts, charging users a $7.99 weekly subscription to use a service that is entirely free to use on the web and seemingly has no affiliation to the actual bot.
ChatGPT has soared in popularity recently, with some calling it the “iPhone moment” for AI, given its mainstream appeal. ChatGPT can articulate short and long-form…

iPhone 16 Pro Rumored to Feature Under-Display Face ID Next Year

The iPhone 16 Pro will feature under-display Face ID technology to provide more usable display area, according to The Elec.
The Korean-language report explains that Apple will move the components required for Face ID authentication directly under the iPhone’s display in 2024. When not in use, the TrueDepth camera for Face ID will not be visible under the display, which will appear seamlessly …

iPhone 15 Pro Models Rumored to Be More Expensive

The iPhone 15 Pro models could face a price hike over the iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max, according to recent reports.
According to a rumor from an unverified source on Weibo, Apple will increase the price of this year’s iPhone 15 Pro models to widen the gap with the iPhone 15 Plus. The extent of the potential price hike is not yet clear. The iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max start at …

15-Inch MacBook Air Rumored for 2023, But New 12-Inch MacBook Now Unlikely

Apple plans to release a larger 15-inch MacBook Air in 2023, but a previously rumored 12-inch MacBook with Apple silicon is no longer expected to launch this year, according to the latest information shared by Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman.
Gurman did not share any additional details about the 15-inch MacBook Air, but display analyst Ross Young previously claimed that Apple’s suppliers would begin …

iOS 17 Coming Later This Year: Here’s What to Expect

While there are still around five months remaining until Apple unveils iOS 17, we’re already able to piece together a few details about the upcoming software update based on Apple’s previous announcements and reported information.
Below, we’ve recapped everything that we have heard about iOS 17 so far. Apple is expected to announce iOS 17 alongside iPadOS 17, macOS 14, watchOS 10, and tvOS…

Apple’s 2023 Roadmap: When to Expect New Product Launches This Year

Apple is reportedly planning to launch at least 10 Apple devices this year, with new product releases seemingly planned for each quarter of the year. After months of rumors about many of Apple’s upcoming devices, we have gathered information from a range of sources to provide a tentative roadmap for the company’s launch plans this year. The below time frames are based on information from…

5 New Features and Changes Rumored for the 2023 HomePod

Tuesday January 10, 2023 1:55 am PST by Sami Fathi

Later this year, Apple is expected to reintroduce a new full-sized HomePod, a successor to the original smart speaker which was discontinued almost two years ago.
Apple reportedly discontinued the HomePod in March 2021 due to lackluster sales and a lack of features compared to the speakers offered by Amazon and Google. The HomePod lineup remains part of Apple’s portfolio thanks to the…

Read original article here

Dell looks to phase out China-made chips by 2024 – Nikkei

Jan 5 (Reuters) – Dell Technologies Inc (DELL.N) plans to stop using China-made chips by 2024 and has told suppliers to reduce the amount of other made-in-China components in its products amid concerns over U.S.-Beijing tensions, the Nikkei reported on Thursday.

The news comes after the United States added Chinese memory chipmaker YMTC and 21 “major” companies in the country’s artificial intelligence chip sector to a trade blacklist in December.

PC maker HP Inc (HPQ.N), one of Dell’s rivals, has also started surveying its suppliers to gauge the feasibility of moving production and assembly away from China, the report said, citing sources with knowledge of the matter.

Dell has also asked product assemblers and suppliers of other components such as electronic modules and print circuit boards to help prepare capacity in countries beyond China, such as Vietnam, the report said.

“We continuously explore supply-chain diversification across the globe that makes sense for our customers and our business,” Dell said in a statement.

HP did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

In October last year, the Biden administration published a set of export controls that included a measure to cut China off from certain semiconductor chips made anywhere in the world with U.S. tools.

Reporting by Kanjyik Ghosh in Bengaluru, additional reporting by Tiyashi Datta; Editing by Janane Venkatraman and Devika Syamnath

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Read original article here

CES 2023 Live Blog: TCL’s AR Glasses, LG’s Wireless TV, Nvidia Chips and More

Samsung’s TVs typically are a highlight of CES press day. 

James Martin/CNET

CES 2023 is upon us. The next few days will see a flood of news and press conferences spanning everything from smartphones to PCs and headphones at the world’s largest consumer electronics show. We’ll be all over the announcements and you can check out the highlights in our must-see roundup

Today’s “media day” marks the busiest stretch before CES officially kicks off tomorrow and runs through Jan. 8. Some of the biggest tech companies in the world are slated to show off their latest products in a marathon of keynotes that run through the day. LG kicked things off by talking up its OLED televisions, smart refrigerators and a car cockpit concept that would compete against Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. 

Here are a few of the most important press conferences and when and where to tune in to them: 

TCL is expected to have a slew of television and mobile news. You can catch its stream on our CNET Highlights YouTube channel. 

Samsung typically draws the lion’s share of attention at CES, and you can find the stream on its own newsroom site. It starts at 2 p.m. PT (5 p.m. ET). 

Sony, which is teasing something from its mobility partnership with Honda, will hold its press conference at 5 p.m. PT (8 p.m. ET). You can find the stream on its YouTube channel. 

Also worth tuning in to is AMD CEO Lisa Su’s CES keynote address, which starts at 6:30 p.m. PT (9:30 p.m. ET) and can be found on AMD’s site. 

CES can be overwhelming, which is why this live blog exists. If you don’t have the time to watch every single press event, tune in for real-time updates on the latest news from many of the major press conferences. This is the first time CNET is sending editors to Las Vegas since 2020, so check out our CES hub for more first-hand impressions on the latest tech. 

Read original article here

Micron to Cut 10% of Workforce as Demand for Computer Chips Slumps

(Bloomberg) — Micron Technology Inc., the largest US maker of memory chips, said the worst industry glut in more than a decade will make it difficult to return to profitability in 2023.

Most Read from Bloomberg

The company on Wednesday announced a host of cost-cutting measures, including a 10% workforce reduction, aimed at helping it weather a rapid drop in revenue. Micron also projected a steep sales decline and a wider loss than analysts had estimated for the current quarter.

Semiconductor makers are in the midst of plummeting demand for their products less than a year after being unable to produce enough to meet orders. Consumers have shelved purchases of personal computers and smartphones amid rising inflation and an uncertain economy. Makers of those devices, the main buyers of memory chips, are now stuck with stockpiles of components and are slowing orders for new stock.

The industry is experiencing its worst imbalance between supply and demand in 13 years, according to Micron Chief Executive Officer Sanjay Mehrotra. Inventory should peak in the current period, then decline, he said. Customers will move to more healthy inventory levels by about the middle of 2023, and the chipmaker’s revenue will improve in the second half of the year, Mehrotra said.

“Profitability will be challenged throughout 2023 because of the oversupply that exists in the industry,” he said in an interview. “The rate and pace of the recovery in terms of profitability depends on how fast supply is brought into line.”

Mehrotra said a unique convergence of circumstances — the war in Ukraine, a surge in inflation, Covid and supply disruptions — has thrust the memory chip industry into a repeat of past cycles when prices plummeted and wiped out profits. Micron has responded aggressively to try to quickly get through the difficult period. One the downturn is over, the industry will resume profitable growth helped by demand for artificial intelligence computing and automation of various industries, he said.

Micron, which had already announced factory output reductions, is cutting its budget for new plants and equipment, and now expects to spend from $7 billion to $7.5 billion for the fiscal year, a decline from an earlier target of as much as $12 billion. The company is slowing the introduction of more advanced manufacturing techniques and predicts that spending on new production will fall throughout the industry.

Unlike other parts of the chip sector, products from Micron are built to industry standards, meaning they can be swapped out for those of its competitors. Because memory can be traded like a commodity, its makers are exposed to more pronounced price swings.

Micron’s pledge to reduce output from its factories and slow expansion projects won’t ease the glut of chips available unless rivals, including Samsung Electronics Co. and SK Hynix Inc., follow suit. That step can help support prices but comes with the penalty of running expensive plants at less than full capacity, something that can weigh heavily on profitability.

In addition to its planned workforce reductions, the company has suspended share repurchases, is cutting executive salaries and will skip companywide bonus payments, executives said on a conference call after its results were released.

Micron said sales will be about $3.8 billion in the fiscal second quarter. That compares with analysts’ average estimate of $3.88 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The company projected a loss of about 62 cents a share, excluding certain items, in the period ending in February, compared with a loss of 29 cents expected by analysts.

In the three months ended Dec. 1, Micron’s revenue declined 47% to $4.09 billion. The company had a loss of 4 cents a share, excluding certain items. That compares with an average estimate of a loss of 1 cent a share on sales of $4.13 billion.

Micron’s shares declined about 2% in extended trading after closing at $51.19 in New York. The stock has dropped 45% this year, a worst decline than most chip-related equities. The Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index is down 33% in 2022.

Last month the company warned it was cutting production by about 20% “in response to market conditions.” Boise, Idaho-based Micron had 48,000 employees as of Sept. 1, according to filings.

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Read original article here

Tesla reportedly places massive order of next-gen self-driving chips with TSMC

Tesla has reportedly placed a massive order of chips for its next-gen Full Self-Driving (FSD) computer with Taiwan’s TSMC. The order is so large that it might make Tesla one of TSMC’s biggest customers.

Back in 2016, Tesla started building a team of chip architects led by legendary chip designer Jim Keller to develop its own silicon.

The goal was to design a super powerful and efficient chip to achieve self-driving in consumer vehicles without additional hardware like in custom-built autonomous vehicles operated by Waymo and Cruise.

In 2019, Tesla finally unveiled the chip as part of its Hardware 3.0 (HW 3.0) self-driving computer.

They claim a factor of 21 improvements in frame-per-second processing versus the previous-generation Tesla Autopilot hardware, which was powered by Nvidia hardware, while only barely increasing the power consumption.

When launching the new chip, CEO Elon Musk announced that Tesla is already working on the next generation of the chip, and they expect it to be three times better than the new chip and roughly two years from production.

While it has been more than two years and the chip hasn’t come, there have been increasing rumors about Tesla working on bringing the chip to production.

For the first generation of its self-driving chip, Tesla had been working with Samsung to produce the device.

In 2020, it was rumored that Tesla was working with TSMC on the next generation.

TSMC, or Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited, is one of the world’s largest semiconductor companies.

Now Tesla is reportedly moving forward with TSMC and has started placing large orders for its next-gen self-driving chip, according to reports coming out of China and Taiwan (translated from Chinese):

TSMC is receiving orders for vehicles, and it is reported that it has replaced Samsung and won a large order for Tesla’s new generation of fully automatic driver assistance (FSD) chips, which will be produced at 4/5 nanometers. Tesla is expected to become one of TSMC’s top seven customers next year. It is the first time that TSMC’s main customer has a pure electric car factory, which will help resist the impact of consumer electronics boom adjustments.

According to the report, TSMC plans to supply Tesla’s production from a factory in Arizona.

Not much is known about Tesla’s next FSD computer, but the automaker said that it is not required to achieve Full Self-Driving – though it would improve performance.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

Read original article here

2022-2023 trade chips for every MLB team

The Hot Stove will be burning with free-agent talk all winter, but general managers will also turn to the trade market as they attempt to tweak their rosters for 2023.

The objectives of these executives will differ; some will look to shed payroll, while others will seek answers to their club’s problem areas. Either way, the end result will be some deals that help reshape the baseball landscape.

Blue Jays: Danny Jansen
Jansen hit for power this year (15 home runs, .855 OPS) and he can run a pitching staff well, but the Blue Jays’ catching depth — Alejandro Kirk made the All-Star team, while the club’s former top prospect, Gabriel Moreno, made his big league debut in June — combined with the scarcity of catching around the league could make Jansen an attractive trade chip.

Orioles: Anthony Santander
Baltimore could look to deal for a controllable starting pitcher — Pablo López, perhaps? — which would likely require parting with prospects such as Colton Cowser, Connor Norby or Coby Mayo. But Santander, who is entering the third of his four years of arbitration eligibility, could also be used in such a trade (or a smaller deal).

Rays: Ji-Man Choi
Choi earned $3.2 million in his second year of arbitration, and although he had a mediocre 2022 season, the 31-year-old should have value to other teams at a reasonable price. Choi has a .349 on-base percentage over the past five years, and he could be viewed as a solid platoon option.

Red Sox: Rafael Devers
With Xander Bogaerts having opted out, the door is open for the Red Sox to sign Devers to a nine-figure extension. If the two sides are unable to come to terms on a deal, Boston could look to trade the third baseman with one year remaining before he becomes a free agent rather than risking him bolting next winter with only Draft-pick compensation to show for it.

Yankees: Aaron Hicks
Hicks lost his everyday job this season, and although he is coming off a down year, his contract — he’s owed roughly $30 million over the next three seasons — is reasonable. Other teams might view the 33-year-old as a change-of-scenery candidate, while the Yankees aren’t likely to ask for a big return in any deal.

Guardians: Zach Plesac
Starting pitching remains an area of depth for the Guardians, who could make a trade or two in order to clear out some roster space. Plesac is entering his arbitration years this winter, giving him three more years of control — a major selling point for potential suitors. Although the 27-year-old righty has underperformed over the past two seasons, he has shown the ability to succeed at this level and might benefit from a change of scenery.

Royals: Michael A. Taylor
Taylor’s name was floated around quite a bit prior to last summer’s Trade Deadline, but the center fielder could find himself on the move this offseason with Kyle Isbel and Drew Waters ready to handle everyday roles. Taylor has one year and $4.5 million left on his contract, the type of contract any contender seeking outfield help can handle.

Tigers: Gregory Soto
An All-Star in each of the past two years, Soto has established himself as a reliable closer. Detroit has several areas to address as it looks to bounce back from a disappointing season, and with three years of club control remaining, Soto would be very appealing to multiple contenders.

Twins: Max Kepler
Kepler will earn $8.5 million in 2023 and has a $10 million club option for 2024, a team-friendly deal for the outfielder. Kepler hasn’t come close to matching his production from 2019 over the past three seasons, but the new shift rules could benefit him going forward. No. 5 prospect Matt Wallner is ready to take over in right field, making Kepler expendable as the Twins try to fill other holes on the roster.

White Sox: Lucas Giolito
It’s quite possible that the White Sox try to extend Giolito, who earned $7.45 million in 2022 and is entering his final year of arbitration before becoming a free agent next winter. The right-hander had a subpar season by his standards, but his track record since 2017 would be more than enough for a team to roll the dice on him for one season.

Angels: Jo Adell
GM Perry Minasian has said publicly that he won’t be trading Shohei Ohtani this offseason, though the 2021 AL MVP would instantly become the most sought-after trade candidate if that changes. The Angels have a number of areas to address, and while Adell has struggled during his stints in the Majors, the 23-year-old could be a prime change-of-scenery candidate for a team that still believes in the former 10th overall pick’s talent.

Astros: Forrest Whitley
The 2016 first-round pick still hasn’t made his big league debut, having missed all of 2021 following Tommy John surgery. Whitley, once the gem of the Astros’ farm system, still ranks as Houston’s No. 10 prospect and is only 25 years old. It wouldn’t be surprising if other clubs had interest in Whitley, hoping to unlock his full potential.

Athletics: Sean Murphy
Oakland has unloaded nearly every veteran player on its roster over the past two years, leaving Murphy as one of the few players remaining from the 2019-20 playoff teams. Murphy is entering the arbitration process, giving an acquiring club three years of control prior to free agency. The 2021 Gold Glove winner is considered one of the best defensive catchers in the game, so the Athletics should be able to bring back a nice package while opening up the catching job for Shea Langeliers, who was their No. 1 prospect before graduating to the big leagues this season.

Mariners: Marco Gonzales
Having locked up Luis Castillo on a long-term contract, Seattle has some rotation depth from which to deal. The Mariners were entertaining offers for Gonzales prior to the Trade Deadline, and with No. 2 prospect Emerson Hancock likely to join the rotation in 2023, Gonzales — who will earn $6.5 million in 2023 and $12 million in 2024 — would be solid mid-rotation depth for many contending teams.

Rangers: Mitch Garver
Garver missed nearly three months after undergoing surgery to repair a flexor tendon, opening the door for Jonah Heim to assume catching duties in Texas. Heim doesn’t have the same offensive potential as Garver, but he is one of the best framers in the game, bringing tremendous value behind the plate. Garver earned $3.35 million in 2022 and is entering his final year of arbitration, making him a good value for a team seeking a short-term catching solution.

Braves: Marcell Ozuna
With two years and $36 million remaining on his contract, Ozuna would appear to be difficult to trade, especially after a mediocre season. But what if the Braves attached a prospect and picked up part of the contract — or took back another team’s bad contract — in order to clear the roster spot? With GM Alex Anthopoulos, anything is possible.

Marlins: Pablo López
López was a popular name on this summer’s trade market because the Marlins have a surplus of pitching from which to deal. López earned $2.45 million in 2022 and is entering the second of three arbitration seasons, making him a controllable arm that teams will covet. After posting his third straight season with an ERA below 4.00 while throwing 180 innings, López should have a number of suitors if the Marlins make him available.

Mets: Ronny Mauricio
The Mets’ No. 1 prospect in 2020, Mauricio (currently the team’s No. 6 prospect, per MLB Pipeline) is still highly regarded by talent evaluators. The 21-year-old hit 26 homers and stole 20 bases at Double-A in 2022, but with Francisco Lindor signed through ’31, Mauricio’s future will either be at a new position or with a new club.

Nationals: Luke Voit
Voit had a solid season with the Padres and Nationals, but Washington is undergoing a rebuild, so trading the slugger with two years of arbitration eligibility makes sense. The Nats have Joey Meneses to play first base on a full-time basis, and the 31-year-old Voit has shown raw power during his career and could be an impactful bat when given the opportunity.

Phillies: Rhys Hoskins
The Phillies might make a big play for Trea Turner this offseason, which could mean moving Bryson Stott to third base and Alec Bohm to first base. Hoskins, who earned $7.7 million last season and is entering his final year of arbitration, would be a solid addition to the middle of a number of lineups.

Brewers: Corbin Burnes
Burnes is one of five notable Brewers entering their next-to-last year of arbitration, creating some interesting decisions for Milwaukee in the club’s desire to remain competitive in the long term. Just as the Brewers did with Josh Hader this season, they are likely to entertain offers for Burnes, Brandon Woodruff, Eric Lauer and Adrian Houser, all of whom are eligible for free agency after 2024. Burnes will likely be out of Milwaukee’s price range in terms of an extension and would bring back a huge haul, so while it’s far from a lock that he will be dealt this winter, the Brewers will likely consider all options.

Cardinals: Tyler O’Neill
O’Neill’s underwhelming season was riddled with injury issues, and with both Juan Yepez and Brendan Donovan capable of everyday roles — not to mention top prospect Jordan Walker waiting in the wings — there is a belief that O’Neill could be on his way out of St. Louis. The 27-year-old earned $3.4 million in 2022 and has two years of arbitration eligibility remaining.

Cubs: Ian Happ
It was somewhat surprising when Happ wasn’t dealt before the Trade Deadline, but with one year remaining until he becomes a free agent, the Cubs could look to move him this winter. Happ earned $6.85 million in 2022 and is entering his final year of arbitration, so barring an offseason extension, the outfielder is likely to start ’23 in a new uniform.

Pirates: Bryan Reynolds
Reynolds will continue to appear on this list until the Pirates trade him. Pittsburgh has been reluctant to deal the 27-year-old to this point because he won’t be eligible for free agency until the end of the 2025 season. But those three years of club control would likely mean a huge return, giving GM Ben Cherington something to consider.

Reds: Joey Votto
OK, so this one might be a stretch, but the Reds have very few tradable veterans unless a team wants to take a big chance on Mike Moustakas. Votto is hoping to be ready for Spring Training following shoulder surgery, and while it seems unlikely that he would ask for a trade in the final year of his 10-year, $225 million deal, perhaps the six-time All-Star would like the opportunity to play for a contender again.

D-backs: Jake McCarthy
With a plethora of young outfielders, the D-backs have an area of strength from which to deal this offseason. Arizona has a long list of needs, so while any one of the outfielders could be used as trade bait, McCarthy — who hit eight home runs with 43 RBIs, 23 stolen bases and a .769 OPS in 99 games this season — is the only one of the group who was not a highly regarded prospect.

Dodgers: Cody Bellinger
Since winning the NL MVP award in 2019 to cap an impressive three-year start to his career, Bellinger’s performance has plummeted. He has 29 home runs, 104 RBIs and a .611 OPS in 239 games since the beginning of 2021, and after earning $17 million in 2022, he should receive a small raise in his final year of arbitration before reaching free agency. A change of scenery could benefit the 27-year-old.

Giants: Mike Yastrzemski
Yastrzemski’s 2022 splits suggest he would be better served as a left-handed half of a platoon (.737 OPS vs RHP, .575 OPS vs LHP), and his ability to play all over the outfield provides versatility. With three years of club control remaining, the 32-year-old also brings a reasonable salary as he enters his second of four years of arbitration eligibility.

Padres: Luis Campusano
San Diego’s No. 2 prospect a year ago, Campusano has seen limited time in the Majors in each of the past three seasons. He projects as a solid everyday catcher, but the 24-year-old’s skills are still raw enough that he might not completely mesh with the Padres’ win-now approach. If GM A.J. Preller looks to make a move this winter for a big bat or a pitcher, Campusano could serve as the centerpiece for such a trade.

Rockies: C.J. Cron
Cron has enjoyed success in Colorado, posting two productive seasons in a row with the Rockies. He increased his home run and RBI totals in 2022, though his on-base and slugging percentages each dropped. Entering the final year of his two-year, $14.5 million deal, the 32-year-old Cron is an affordable power bat that could bolster a number of lineups.

Read original article here

China lashes out at latest U.S. export controls on chips

BEIJING (AP) — China on Saturday criticized the latest U.S. decision to tighten export controls that would make it harder for China to obtain and manufacture advanced computing chips, calling it a violation of international economic and trade rules that will “isolate and backfire” on the U.S.

“Out of the need to maintain its sci-tech hegemony, the U.S. abuses export control measures to maliciously block and suppress Chinese companies,” said Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning.

“It will not only damage the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese companies, but also affect American companies’ interests,” she said.

Mao also said that the U.S. “weaponization and politicization” of science and technology as well as economic and trade issues will not stop China’s progress.

She was speaking after the U.S. on Friday updated export controls that included adding certain advanced, high-performance computing chips and semiconductor manufacturing equipment to its list, as well as new license requirements for items that would be used in a supercomputer or for semiconductor development in China.

The U.S. said that the export controls were added as part of ongoing efforts to protect U.S. national security and foreign policy interests.

U.S.-China relations have deteriorated in recent years over technology and security issues. The U.S. has implemented a raft of measures and restrictions designed to prevent China from obtaining chip technology, while China has earmarked billions for investment into the production of semiconductors.

The tensions have impacted semiconductor companies in the U.S. and globally which either export chips or manufacture chips in China. Semiconductor companies such as Nvidia and AMD has seen a 40% decline in stock price over the past year.

“We understand the goal of ensuring national security and urge the U.S. government to implement the rules in a targeted way—and in collaboration with international partners—to help level the playing field and mitigate unintended harm to U.S. innovation,” the Semiconductor Industry Association, which represents U.S. semiconductor industry, said in a statement.

Read original article here

U.S. to use FDPR rule on Chinese buyers of AI and supercomputing chips

The Biden administration is preparing new rules aimed at curbing China’s advanced computing and chip production capabilities — the U.S. government’s most significant effort to date to restrain China’s development of technologies critical for its military advancement.

The rules, scheduled to be announced as soon as this week, will sweep more broadly than a draconian export control previously applied to Chinese tech giant Huawei.

The use of the so-called foreign direct product rule will prevent companies anywhere in the world from selling certain advanced computing chips to Chinese buyers without a U.S. government license if the companies use American technology to make the chips, according to several people briefed on the measure, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the still-unannounced plans.

The rule would apply to semiconductor chips used in supercomputers and certain artificial intelligence applications.

Such advanced computing systems can be used to develop nuclear weapons, hypersonic missiles, and missile defenses, officials said. A loss of U.S. leadership here would “severely compromise” national security and “undermine profitable parts of the U.S. economy,” according to a 2016 report by the National Security Agency and the Department of Energy.

The foreign direct product rule is a particularly harsh trade measure because the rule imposes restrictions not just on chipmakers in the United States, but on any company or factory in the world that relies on American equipment or software to make chips. There is hardly a semiconductor on the planet today that is not made with American tools or designed with software that originated in the United States.

The administration also wants to restrict the export to China of chip-making tools used by Chinese companies such as the country’s leading memory chipmaker, YMTC, and the leading Chinese producer of processors, SMIC. If the rule is enacted as currently envisioned, it would cut off access to American manufacturing and design tools for chips that are 14 nanometers in size or smaller.

“What they’re doing is a stark departure from 30 years of policy,” said Eric Sayers, managing director at Beacon Global Strategies, a national security consulting firm. “It’s a form of technology containment. Not just to stay ahead of China, but to degrade their ability to try to catch up with us.”

Restrictions on China’s largest chip makers could have a significant impact, said Dan Wang, technology analyst at Shanghai-based research firm Gavekal Dragonomics. “They would hurt these companies and their customers, which include leading Chinese electronics makers and internet platforms,” he said.

The Biden administration also is planning to place more Chinese organizations on an export blacklist called the Entity List.

The White House and Commerce Department declined to comment.

Reuters earlier reported on some of these measures.

A plethora of Chinese companies that use high-end AI chips made with American tools or designs are likely to be affected by that rule, analysts said.

Some U.S. chipmakers and manufacturing equipment sellers in recent weeks have publicly said they received government notifications about the new restrictions, including equipment manufacturers Lam Research, KLA Corp. and Applied Materials, as well as chipmakers Nvidia and AMD.

The administration has signaled its intention to use more of its powers to curb Beijing’s efforts to harness technology to gain a global advantage militarily and economically.

“On export controls, we have to revisit the long-standing premise of maintaining ‘relative’ advantages over competitors in certain key technologies,” national security adviser Jake Sullivan said in a speech last month, alluding to China.

The approach of staying only “a couple of generations ahead” is no longer tenable, he said.

When the United States used the foreign direct product rule, or FDPR, to deprive Huawei of chips, it crippled Huawei’s production and sales.

After Russia invaded Ukraine, the United States also used the FDPR to block companies from selling certain semiconductors to buyers in Russia, a ban that U.S. officials say is hurting Russia’s military.

One industry executive, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the new rules and the administration’s general concerns about China will increasingly make it “really difficult” to do business there.

“We’ve been hearing from the administration that they want us to find customers outside of China,” the executive said.

Read original article here

New iPhones have Qualcomm satellite modem, new Apple radio chips

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif., Sept 17 (Reuters) – Apple Inc’s (AAPL.O) iPhone 14 models contain a Qualcomm Inc (QCOM.O) chip that can talk to satellites, but have additional custom-designed Apple components used in the phone’s biggest new feature, according to an analysis of the phone by iFixit and an Apple statement.

Apple released its iPhone 14 lineup on Friday. One of the major new features is the ability to connect to satellites to send emergency messages when there is no WiFi or cellular data connection.

Apple said earlier this month that the iPhone 14 models contain new hardware that makes possible the emergency message service, which Apple plans to turn on with a software update coming in November. Apple did not give details about the satellite-specific hardware.

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

iFixit, a San Luis Obispo, California-based firm that disassembles iPhones and other consumer electronics to assess how easily they can be repaired, took apart an iPhone 14 Pro Max model on Friday, revealing a Qualcomm X65 modem chip.

The Qualcomm chip provides 5G connectivity for cellular networks but is also capable of using what is called band n53, the frequency band used by satellites from Globalstar (GSAT.A).

Globalstar earlier this month announced a deal in which Apple will take up to 85% of Globalstar’s satellite network capacity to enable Apple’s new emergency messaging feature.

In a statement to Reuters on Saturday, Apple said there is additional proprietary hardware and software in the iPhone 14 for the new messaging feature.

“iPhone 14 includes custom radio frequency components, and new software designed entirely by Apple, that together enable Emergency SOS via satellite on new iPhone 14 models,” Apple said in a statement.

Qualcomm did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Luis Obispo, California; Editing by Leslie Adler

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Read original article here

The Ultimate News Site