Well before Washington banned Nvidia’s exports of high-performance graphic processing units to China, the country ... lacking the cash flow to hoard chips, will have to settle for less powerful ...
It is improbable that Chinese companies will receive samples of the chip ... China has launched a cybersecurity investigation into Micron Technology, raising the possibility of a ban on the US ...
US, South Korean and Dutch chip companies have a substantial presence at this year’s China import expo in Shanghai amid Beijing’s drive for chip self-sufficiency in response to an escalating ...
Micron Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ: MU) shares are trading lower despite raising its first quarter of FY24 outlook, which ...
Amid a global surge in semiconductor production, worries about excess capacity are on the rise. The recent tightening of US ...
Two influential Democratic US senators urged the Energy Department to take steps to boost US battery manufacturing, citing China’s dominance and recent Chinese export controls imposed, according ...
The US is introducing further measures to restrict sales of computer chip technology to China in a bid to hobble the country's military advances. Under new rules, the US said it would bar US firms ...
Putting the screws on your own tech champion isn't ... to China, the Netherlands is weighing whether to forbid ASML from exporting some of the equipment needed to manufacture semiconductors. ASML is a ...
Our correspondents in China and the US assess what each leader will be hoping to achieve on Wednesday. The encounter on 15 November will be only their second face-to-face meeting during the Biden ...
Discussions have been ongoing for many months and ramped up when the U.S. imposed its own export restrictions on advanced chip technology to China in October ... of the firm's financial results. But a ...
You can track the trajectory of China's ... t really matter in terms of understanding how crushing this incident has been for those on both sides who have been looking for ways to ease US-China ...
But government deficits don’t exactly work like household debt, as New York Times columnist and Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman contends in his May 13 offering. The big, bad number ...