Sources: Micron plans to stop selling server chips to data centers in China, after a 2023 ban, but will continue to sell chips to auto and smartphone sectors
- China in 2023 banned use of Micron products in critical infrastructure — Micron to continue to sell chips to auto, mobile phone sectors, source says
Source: the Trump administration considers taking equity stakes in CHIPS Act recipients but not in firms that are increasing US investment, like TSMC and Micron
Wall Street Journal :
Sources: US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is looking into government equity stakes in Micron, TSMC, Samsung, and others that receive CHIPS Act funding
‘We should get an equity stake for our money’ Rich Smith / Motley Fool : Why Micron Stock Got Clobbered Today Tyler Lee / Android Headlines : Trump's Plan: Turn CHIPS Act Grants Into Stakes in Samsung...
Sources: Micron has told US customers that it plans to impose a surcharge on some products like SSDs from April 9 to account for President Trump's new tariffs
Sources: the US considers unilateral restrictions on China's access to AI memory chips and equipment, to keep Micron, SK Hynix, and Samsung from supplying China
- SK Hynix and Samsung could be affected by the new US rule — China's AI memory chip capability lags behind global rivals
Beijing warms to Micron, saying the US company is welcome to deepen its footprint in China, after banning Micron equipment in key infrastructure in May 2023
China's commerce minister told Micron Technology Inc's (MU.O) president Beijing would welcome the U.S. semiconductor company deepening …
Micron plans to invest $603M in a chip packaging facility in Xian, China; the country banned Micron's products from its critical infrastructure in May 2023
Source: South Korea won't encourage its memory-chip firms to grab Micron's lost market share in China to not disrupt its long-term US semiconductor relationship
South Korea will avoid capitalizing on China's ban on a US chipmaker, seeing the move by Beijing as an attempt to drive …
Source: South Korea won't encourage its memory-chip firms to grab market share in China lost by Micron, as it could disrupt its bilateral relations with the US
Sam Kim / Bloomberg :
China's Micron ban could help the government boost its domestic memory chip industry, a sector where China has a toehold in its competition with the US
A Chinese government block on Micron Technology's memory chips marks how far apart the two economic powers are drifting on tech policy.