Back to News
Advertisement
Advertisement

⚡ Community Insights

Discussion Sentiment

100% Positive

Analyzed from 266 words in the discussion.

Trending Topics

#china#https#own#chips#equipment#chip#japan#beijing#huawei#global

Discussion (3 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

mgh2about 2 hours ago
functionmouseabout 1 hour ago
it's gonna be so easy for them lol
toomuchtodo30 minutes ago
Very much so. China is a third of global manufacturing capacity, and is very likely able to build their own chips if and when needed.

> China’s industrial policy has gone fully vertical, funding every layer from photoresist to processor. Big Fund III, a $47.5 billion state vehicle that began deploying in 2025, prioritizes the weakest links: lithography, fab equipment, and design software.

https://pantheoninsights.substack.com/p/chinas-chip-making-c...

> China sales for Japan’s top five chipmaking equipment suppliers fell 10%, a first-time decrease. This suggests a significant change in the global semiconductor landscape, more than Western news reports indicate. It is not just about US export controls. It also reflects Beijing’s accelerating success in building up its own domestic companies. Western media often describes China’s chip self-sufficiency as a response to US pressure, but the situation in China and Japan is more complex.

> For China, this sales decline confirms its strategy is working. Reports from Beijing and state media highlight the growing strength of companies like Naura Technology Group. This shows real progress in replacing foreign reliance with homegrown capabilities. China’s focus on domestic production is not new, but the data now show it is effective, even in sophisticated equipment sectors where Japan has traditionally led. Chinese industry leaders openly express optimism, seeing current conditions as a way to boost their own innovation and market presence.

https://asiaai.fyi/japans-ai-shift-chip-woes-automation-hope...

> Huawei Technologies said on Monday it will make industry-leading semiconductors using a new technology in five years, underscoring Beijing's efforts to neutralise U.S. sanctions that have made it hard for China to build cutting-edge chips.

> Huawei, in a semiconductor symposium in Shanghai, said its high-end chips will have transistor density equivalent to 1.4-nanometre processes by 2031, but did not provide independent performance data.

https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/huawei-proposes-n...