PUBLISHED WED, AUG 3 20228:47 PM EDT
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KEY POINTS
·
U.S. House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi’s Taiwan trip has once again shone a spotlight on the island’s
critical role in the global chip supply chain and in particular on TSMC.
·
TSMC manufacturers semiconductors for
technology giants such as Apple and Nvidia.
·
Pelosi met with TSMC Chairman Mark
Liu, in a sign of how critically important semiconductors are to U.S. national
security and the integral role that the company plays in making the most
advanced chips.
Rafael Henrique |
Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images
U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi may have left Taiwan but the visit
has cast a spotlight once again on the island’s critical role in the global
chip supply chain and in particular on the world’s biggest chipmaker, Taiwan
Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., or TSMC.
The controversial visit, which angered Beijing, saw Pelosi meet with
TSMC Chairman Mark Liu, in a sign of how critically important semiconductors
are to U.S. national security and the integral role that the company plays in
making the most advanced chips.
Semiconductors, which go into everything from our smartphones to cars
and refrigerators, have become a key part of the U.S. and China’s rivalry over
technology in the past few years. More recently, a shortage of semiconductors
has spurred the U.S. to try to catch up with Asia and maintain a lead over
China in the industry.
“Taiwan’s unresolved diplomatic status will remain a source of intense
geopolitical uncertainty. Even Pelosi’s trip underlines how important Taiwan is
for both countries,” Reema Bhattacharya, head of Asia research at Verisk
Maplecroft, told CNBC’s “Street Signs Europe” on Wednesday.
“The obvious reason being its crucial strategic importance as a chip
manufacturer and in the global semiconductor supply chain.”
Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan
and meeting with TSMC show the U.S. can’t do it alone and will require
collaboration with Asian companies that dominate the most cutting-edge chips.
TSMC’s crucial role
TSMC is a foundry.
That means it manufactures chips that other companies design. TSMC has a long
list of clients from Apple to Nvidia, some of the world’s
biggest technology companies.
As the U.S. fell behind in chip manufacturing over the last 15 years or
so, companies like TSMC and Samsung Electronics in South Korea, pushed ahead
with cutting-edge chipmaking techniques. While they still rely on tools and
technology from the U.S., Europe and elsewhere, TSMC in particular, managed to
cement its place as the world’s top chipmaker.
TSMC accounts for 54% of the global foundry market, according to
Counterpoint Research. Taiwan as a country accounts for about two-thirds of the
global foundry market alone when considering TSMC alongside other players like
UMC and Vanguard. That highlights the importance of Taiwan in the world’s semiconductor market.
When you add Samsung into the mix, which has 15% of the global foundry
market share, then Asia really dominates the chipmaking sphere.
That’s why Pelosi
made it a point to meet with TSMC’s chairman.
Taiwan invasion fears
China views democratically, self-ruled Taiwan as a renegade province
that needs to be reunified with the mainland. Beijing spent
weeks telling Pelosi not to come to Taiwan.
During her visit, China ratcheted up tensions by carrying out military
drills.
There is a concern that any kind of invasion of Taiwan by China could
massively affect the power structure of the global chip market, giving Beijing
control of technology it had not previously had. On top of that, there is a
fear that an invasion could choke off the supply of cutting-edge chips to the
rest of the world.
“Most likely, the
Chinese would ‘nationalize it,’ (TSMC) and begin integrating the company, and
its technology, into its own semiconductor industry,” Abishur Prakash,
co-founder of advisory firm the Center for Innovating the Future, told CNBC via
email.
However, TSMC’s Liu told CNN that an invasion of Taiwan would render the chipmaker “not operable.”
“Nobody can control
TSMC by force,” Liu said.
What is the U.S. doing?
The U.S. is putting a big emphasis on reshoring manufacturing. Under CEO
Pat Gelsinger, Intel has looked to revamp its foundry business after
falling behind TSMC for so many years.
But the U.S. has also looked to convince other companies to set up shop
on its soil.
TSMC is currently building a $12 billion manufacturing plant in Arizona to
make highly advanced chips.
Last week, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the Chips and Science Act which
includes $52 billion in funding designed to boost semiconductor manufacturing
in the U.S. and improve competitiveness with China.
The U.S. has also looked to limit China’s access to technology.
In 2020, Washington introduced a rule that
requires foreign manufacturers using American chipmaking equipment to get a
license before they’re able to sell semiconductors to Chinese telecommunication
equipment giant Huawei. TSMC made Huawei’s smartphone processor chips. But
after the U.S.’s move, TSMC could no longer supply the chips to Huawei.
As a result, Huawei’s smartphone business was hurt.
That same year,
China’s largest chipmaker Semiconductor Manufacturing International
Corporation was put on a U.S. export blacklist restricting its access
to key technologies.
How does China stack up?
China has made
boosting its semiconductor industry a strategic priority over
the past few years with a focus on self-reliance and weaning itself off of
American technology.
SMIC is crucial to China’s ambitions, but sanctions have cut it off from
the key tools it requires to make the most cutting-edge chips as TSMC does.
SMIC remains years behind its rivals. And China’s
semiconductor industry still relies heavily on foreign technology.
TSMC does have two
chipmaking plants in China but they are producing less sophisticated
semiconductors unlike the manufacturing facility in Arizona.
Chipmaking alliances
The U.S. has been looking to form partnerships on semiconductors with allies in Asia including
Japan and South Korea as a way to secure supply of the crucial components and
maintain a lead over China.
TSMC meanwhile is caught in the middle of the U.S.-China rivalry and
could be forced to pick sides, according to Prakash. Its commitment to an
advanced semiconductor plant in the U.S. could already be a sign of which
country it is siding with.
“In fact, a company like TSMC has already ‘picked sides.’ It’s investing
in the U.S. to support American chip making, and has said it wants to work with
‘democracies,’ like the EU, on chip making,” Prakash said.
“Increasingly,
companies are striking an ideological tone in who they work with. The question
is, as tensions between Taiwan and China increase, will TSMC be able to
maintain its position (aligning with the West), or will it be forced to
recalibrate its geopolitical strategy.”
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