U.S. Chip Export Restrictions Rattle AI Stocks, Global Tech Sector
Semiconductor and artificial intelligence stocks tumbled after reports surfaced that the U.S. Department of Commerce plans to revoke export waivers for Samsung, SK Hynix, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. The move WOULD force these chipmakers to seek individual licenses for shipping American equipment to their Chinese facilities—a significant escalation of tech trade controls.
Market reaction was immediate and broad-based, reflecting investor concerns about disrupted supply chains. The Commerce Department insists the policy aligns with existing semiconductor export rules rather than representing a new trade offensive. This nuance matters: the decision comes just weeks after U.S.-China trade talks produced pledges to avoid fresh export barriers.
Blanket waivers currently allow these Asian tech giants to bypass case-by-case approvals for advanced chipmaking tools. Their revocation could reshape global semiconductor production geography—and potentially accelerate China's push for self-sufficiency. The affected companies account for nearly 60% of global memory chip production.