The global AI boom is driving orders back to Chinese foundries as overseas rivals shift production towards high-margin AI chips and high-bandwidth memory, creating a shortage in mature-node semiconductors, according to the head of Chinaโs top contract chipmaker. โAI demand has directly pushed power-management and other mature capacity into shortage,โ said Zhao Haijun, co-CEO of Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC), during the companyโs first-quarter earnings call on...
Chinaโs leading semiconductor foundries, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) and Hua Hong Semiconductor, expect their second-quarter sales to rise amid a dynamic global market defined by surging artificial intelligence demand and a memory supply crunch, while Hua Hong said it hopes this weekโs Xi-Trump meetings could help relax US export controls. SMIC expected its second-quarter revenue to range between US$2.86 billion and US$2.91 billion, up from US$2.51 billion in the...