
China's top chipmaker SMIC offloads stake in Ningbo affiliate to focus on core operations
Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), mainland China's largest contract chipmaker, has divested its entire stake in an unprofitable chip foundry operation amid a new wave of consolidation in the domestic integrated circuit (IC) industry.
Shanghai -based SMIC agreed to sell its 14.83 per cent stake in Ningbo Semiconductor International (NSI) for 57.01 yuan (US$7.94) per share to semiconductor design firm Goke Microelectronics , according to the chipmaker's filing on Thursday. The deal's total amount was not disclosed.
'This transaction will help the company focus on its core business,' SMIC said in the filing.
A separate filing on Friday by
Shenzhen -listed Goke Microelectronics revealed the firm's plan to buy more shares in NSI – headquartered in Ningbo, eastern
Zhejiang province – from 10 other stakeholders to raise its stake to 94.37 per cent, using a combination of cash and shares. The stakeholders include the
China Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund , also known as the 'Big Fund'.
The
Hong Kong -listed shares of SMIC fell 4.9 per cent to HK$40.20 (US$5.12) on Friday, while its stock in Shanghai gained 0.2 per cent to 84.56 yuan. Goke Microelectronics' shares in Shenzhen rose 5.5 per cent to close at 85.50 yuan.
SMIC's asset sale and Goke Microelectronics acquisition reflect efforts by domestic semiconductor firms to strengthen their operations in response to the US government's
tightened tech restrictions on China
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Standard
an hour ago
- The Standard
Alibaba merges Ele.Me, Fliggy into e-commerce arm
The logo of Alibaba Group is lit up at its office building in Beijing, China. REUTERS


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
China needs yuan-backed stablecoins ‘sooner rather than later', state media urges Beijing
Beijing must be proactive in 'adapting to the trend of stablecoins', and waiting is not an option as the US has a head start, warns an article on Monday in state media that simultaneously calls for leadership to consider legislation regulating stablecoins while hyping up their potential role in making the yuan a more global currency. Advertisement Securities Times, a publication under party mouthpiece People's Daily, said experts and industry insiders 'generally believe that, as an emerging payment tool, the unique advantages and potential risks of stablecoins cannot be ignored, and that the development of [yuan-backed] stablecoins should be sooner rather than later'. Unlike highly volatile cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin and ethereum, stablecoins anchor their values to a fiat currency or other reserve assets, and are meant to combine the efficiency of cryptocurrencies with the reliability of traditional money. While allowing stablecoins to proliferate without regulations would harm the country's financial system, forgoing such an efficient settlement tool could mean missing a golden opportunity for the yuan, the article warns. 'For China, which is promoting the global use of the yuan, proactively regulating stablecoins and therefore facilitating the internationalisation of the yuan might be a better solution,' the piece said. Stablecoins reduce the capital and time costs ... making cross-border transactions more convenient CICC analysts


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
China's housing woes demand action, even if investors look away
As recently as last month, S&P Global Ratings struck a cautiously optimistic tone on the outlook for China's housing market . In a report on May 11, S&P said the sector 'is finally approaching stabilisation', pointing to shallower year-on-year declines in prices of new and second-hand homes in Tier 1 cities. In fact, on a monthly basis, prices began to grow in the final months of last year in response to Beijing's more forceful stimulus measures. However, a cursory glance at the latest data on the residential property market shows the stabilisation of the sector remains elusive. Last month, new and second-hand house prices across 70 cities contracted at the fastest rate in monthly terms in seven and eight months, respectively. Real estate investment, moreover, plunged 12 per cent on an annualised basis while sales of new homes fell 3.3 per cent, sharper falls than in April. Among Tier 1 cities , Shanghai was the only city where prices grew at a faster clip on a monthly basis. The fillip provided by last year's monetary and fiscal stimulus package is fading while little headway has been made in housing destocking. Nomura believes China's property market is 'facing the equivalent of a 'bank run' as many troubled developers have insufficient funding to deliver the pre-sold homes on time'. Yet China's ailing housing market is the crisis investors forgot. Only 1 per cent of investors surveyed while attending a JPMorgan conference on Asian credit markets earlier this month believed China's economy posed the biggest threat to Asian debt markets this year. Nearly 60 per cent cited geopolitics and higher trade tariffs as the most significant risks. Several factors are at work. First, China's housing crisis never caused a full-blown recession, mainly because of the strong performance of exports in recent years and the most accommodative financial conditions since 2010. Wall Street always viewed the crisis as an idiosyncratic event with little or no impact on global markets.