Four major Chinese industry associations—representing the internet, semiconductor, automotive, and telecommunications sectors—issued a statement on Tuesday urging Chinese companies to exercise caution when purchasing U.S. chips, declaring that U.S. chips are “no longer safe.” The associations collectively represent 6,400 member companies.

These statements noted that escalating U.S. export restrictions could lead to supply chain disruptions and increased operational costs for U.S. companies, affecting the stable supply of U.S. chip products. The association called on its members to seek domestic or other foreign suppliers. Their advice could affect U.S. chipmaking giants such as NVIDIA (NVDA.US), AMD (AMD.US), and Intel (INTC.US) .

The move is seen as China’s determination to get rid of its dependence on U.S. wafers and highlights the growing fragmentation of the international supply chain, according to theFinancial Times.

The U.S. announced on Monday that it was restricting exports of wafer fabrication tools and high-bandwidth memory wafers (HBM) for AI to 140 Chinese companies. In response, China announced a ban on exports of gallium, germanium, antimony and superhard materials to the U.S., as well as stricter controls on graphite.

To subscribe to Bamboo Works weekly free newsletter, click here

Recent Articles

Andre Juice sells juice concentrate

Andre Juice’s growth stalls after bumper period

China’s leading maker of apple juice concentrate reported its revenue contracted in the third quarter, ending a period of strong gains in the previous year and a half Key Takeaways:…
Fuyao Glass logs double digit growth

Fuyao Glass looks to new era as its founder bows out

The son of celebrated entrepreneur Cao Dewang has formally taken the helm at the automotive glass giant, just as the firm unveiled upbeat quarterly earnings Key Takeaway: The company logged…