The Trump administration is considering whether to add China’s leading contract chipmaker SMIC to a trade blacklist, Reuters reported Friday citing a Defense Department official.
A Pentagon spokeswoman said the Defense Department was working with other agencies to determine whether to make the move, which would force US suppliers to seek a difficult-to-obtain license before shipping to the company, the report said.
Earlier this week, the Pentagon made a proposal to place SMIC on the entity list to the End User Committee, a panel led by the Commerce Department that also includes the State and Energy Departments and makes decisions about entity listings, the report cited a person familiar with the matter as saying.
While the Pentagon official did not outline the reasons for the action, SMIC’s relationship to the Chinese military is under scrutiny, the report cited a US official and two former officials briefed on the matter as saying.
It was not clear whether the other agencies supported the plan, the report said.
Last month, SMIC said in response to an investor question online that it was mass-producing 14nm chips and yield is improving.
SMIC says 14nm chips are in mass production and yields are improving
In 2019, SMIC's first-generation 14nm FinFET technology started mass production, although it's behind competitors such as TSMC, GlobalFoundries, and United Microelectronics Corporation.
Its second-generation FinFET technology platform is in the customer introduction phase.
Before it's listing on the Sci-Tech innovation board (STAR Market), SMIC said that the 28nm process technology mainly serves end customers in the fields of mobile phone SOC chip, IoT, digital TV, etc., and the 14nm process IC wafer foundry business mainly serves end customers in the fields of mobile phone application processors.
SMIC shares hit new low since IPO, market capitalization down 150 billion yuan from July's high