China Injects $2.2 Billion Into Local Chip Firm (bloomberg.com) 50
China's state-backed funds pumped $2.25 billion into a Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. wafer plant to support advanced-chip making as Washington tightens technology restrictions on the Asian nation. From a report: The Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. plant's registered capital jumps from $3.5 billion to $6.5 billion after the investment, the company said in an announcement on Friday. The chipmaker's stake in the Shanghai facility will drop from 50.1% to 38.5%, it said. The plant has capacity to produce 6,000 14-nanometer wafers a month and plans to boost that to 35,000. The new investment came as Washington moved to prevent sales to Huawei by chipmakers using U.S. technology. The Commerce Department on Friday said it would require licenses before allowing U.S. technology to be used by the Chinese company or its 114 subsidiaries, including its chip-design unit HiSilicon.
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Nice strawman dumbass
Try this one, historically, trade prevents wars, and our largest wars of the past century were preceded by nationalistic screeds against international trade
fyi, this does not end well for anybody
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It's not celebration to accept reality. Unless there are some major policy and social changes, the US is on its way out as world leader. We'd all be better off if Europe wins this race to #1, but we don't act like it. Most likely China will take over, and we'll have an authoritarian regime running the planet. That is not going to end well at all.
While unlikely, if we really screw things up, we'll slide below Brazil and India. We'll be just another country with a large population that can't keep their shit t
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The real question (and this is on a scale of 50-200 years), is whether the US want's to become like Britain, that remains a global force despite being overshadowed by its successor (America), due to strong trade relationships, or Spain, which has become a forlorn joke since losing control of it's empire in a series of wars and revolutions.
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In what fucked up version of reality does supporting trade with other countries over petty, money-bleeding, youth-killing exercises in nationalism make me a supporter of any other country?
Oh, yeah, in your cheap-ass copy of nazi profiteering as lead by your hero trump and he merry band of mnuchin's, voss's etc who are bilking the American people while distracting them with saber rattling against our largest trade partner
I can't wait to laugh at your defeat and rally to make sure there are trials charging yo
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Nice strawman dumbass
Nice comma, genius.
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Shhhh, don't tell him about all the stuff China created and the West stole and claimed as their own.
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Such as?
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Gunpowder.
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When did the west claim gunpowder as its own?
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Printing press?
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Anything in the last thousand years?
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By local the headline meant it was a Chinese corporation. I'll admit I was a bit confused until I looked it up.
âoeMade in Chinaâ 2025 Plan (Score:1)
300 or 450 (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:300 or 450 (Score:4, Interesting)
The Saudi and US engineered oil crash of the 80s bankrupted the Soviet Union. If oil had kept high Soviet Union could have spent its way out of any problem.
Next time you wonder why the US is best buds with a head chopping regime remember they helped us win the Cold War.
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No. That is silly fantasy-land stuff, Ivan.
Oil production is a tiny part of the US economy.
Oil production is where Russia and Saudi Arabia get most of their state funds.
Therefore, it is not possible that they are doing the exact same things to the US. If they think they're doing that it is hilarious, because they'd bankrupt their own economies and only delay new US wells by a couple years.
More likely they're fighting each other for market share in a price war that hurts them both, and helps the US economy b
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They're.
You don't seem to comprehend that there is a time term, and that US production merely pauses while the Russians and Saudis bleed.
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Mikhail Gorbachev blamed the Chernobyl accident. Who knows the main cause, but I doubt yours is true. The USSR was working on making Europe dependent upon its natural gas reserves, and it was building its infrastructure for doing so on stolen US tech. That was where the USSR was looking to make its money while simultaneously trying to control Europe's economy. Of course, that all failed rather spectacularly:
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/ne... [telegraph.co.uk]
Interestingly, China is growing eerily similar to the USSR in that i
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The Soviet Union's bankruptcy was due to attempting to match US military spending on stuff that provides little economic return (unless you are Boeing, even less so in old USSR), like missiles and war planes.
In China's case, it is spending to expand it's production of consumer goods that can be profitably sold around the globe
Two different cases, and you are just looking stupid since you do not seem to recognize the difference
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In China's case, it is spending to expand it's production of consumer goods that can be profitably sold around the globe
If people want to buy it currently there is a ground swell that average Joe doesn't want Chinese products, companies are looking to move manufacturing to other countries even some governments https://www.bloomberg.com/news... [bloomberg.com] are looking to remove a bad actor from the stage.
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...or maybe the current Russian oligarchy (with Putin at head) is at fault for bleeding the country's wealth into their own pockets while intentionally gutting education and basic services to their people... all the while blaming the West for their suffering
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Chinese companies are just tentacles of a much larger organism; the state. 2 Billion is nothing. 2 TRILLION is nothing. When you factor in state sponsored programs, they print whatever money is required.
I never said it won't end badly. Such expenditures bankrupted the Soviet Union.
The Chinese state seems to have a considerably more effective reign of terror than Russia ever did. The Three Gorges Dam exists and generates gigawatts of power. Russians would have told the world they built a dam and pocketed the money, to spend on hookers and blow. China gets results when it prints money. The facile analysis is, "Oh, they're just a communist dictatorship. They're all alike." Nope, they're not. Manifestly they're not.
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That was my thinking too; what is the story here?
The company was building a new factory that it was going to own 50.1% of, and their Government stepped in and nationalized a portion of the company so that they only control 38.5% of their new factory.
They were paid using soft money. And they better like the deal, or Darth Xi will alter it further.
Re:300 or 450 (Score:4, Insightful)
These are without a doubt 300mm wafers. All the big semiconductor manufacturing vendors remember getting burned on the 200mm to 300mm conversion. Because it took much longer than planned to make their initial investment on that transition back, anything bigger hasn't happened anywhere other than as proof of concept demos as far I know. The R&D cost of building whole new tool platforms for bigger wafers is so massive that only a handful of customers would even be interesting is supporting it. I expect 300mm will be the high volume wafer size for quite a while.
SMIC is a great place to run a cheap wafer on possibly a ripped-off TSMC process from a few years ago. They have even had to settle in court over stealing IP [reuters.com]. So I would expect this is much more about increasing capacity on the older generation 14nm and larger processes than pushing ahead to really compete at 5nm and beyond.
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Doesn't matter. $2B is pretty much just halfsies on a single cutting edge line.
A new fab costs tens to hundred billion dollars, depending on the technology. $2B can buy an ancient fab, which is still useful for some things. The latest sub-10nm fabs ramp up from $10B or more - the machines themselves are billion dollar investments.
I'm just surprised how low the investment is - you would expect China to do $20B or so which would buy at least one line.
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I have a solution (Score:1)
Re:I have a solution (Score:4, Interesting)
We had a really great opportunity under the TPP to unify the markets of the Pacific rim into a unified bargaining platform and used TRADE to bring China's behavior around...
But no, too many people got suckered in by the "Globalism took muh jooooob" bait and ended up voting for some loser who claimed to have a secret plan...
almost funny, I sure hope the general population learns from this
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almost funny, I sure hope the general population learns from this
I wouldn't bet a single cent on that. More likely the opposite.
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the dip in Chinese imports was another negotiating tactic otherwise either side of the agreement the growth in Australian exports to China is very much the same. The point could be made the profit percentage was better before the deal.
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Here is a comic explaining exactly how the TPP was an awful, awful idea for the American people. [economixcomix.com] Multi-billion dollar companies would have done very well, though. It would have put American workers in direct competition with Thai and other countries' labor. The TPP was first and foremost designed to maximize prices paid by other nations for patented goods, and to establish the ISDS - a system of courts staffed by corporate appointed judges, with the power to supersede sovereignty of local governments. Th
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>>Trump is more punk rock than Jello
fyi,trump is the least punk rock thing ever. If punk was still alive,they would be wiping their asses with his image on their album covers
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Pass Go, collect $2 billion (Score:2)
China is playing Monopoly with the rules of Go.