New potential U.S. export controls on a broader set of artificial intelligence-related chips could have massive impacts on the chip industry and American chipmaker Nvidia, said Colette Kress, Nvidia’s chief financial officer. Kress, speaking about reports that the Biden administration could tighten existing chip export restrictions as it prepares to finalize its China chip export control rule from October, said new license requirements could deal permanent damage to American chip industry sales in China.
Exports to China
The Biden administration is still considering a range of “very technical questions” on its upcoming outbound investment restrictions, which is partly why the rules haven’t yet been released, said Mike Pyle, deputy national security adviser for international economics. He said officials are still working through how to define the types of technologies that would be captured by the program and the types of investments that would be screened, and are still speaking with industry about how to best scope the restrictions.
Proposed U.S. guardrails around the Chips Act aren’t likely to stop semiconductor companies from applying for funding, Michael Schmidt, the Commerce Department official in charge of the program, said this week. While Semiconductor Industry Association CEO John Neuffer agreed, he also urged the government to coordinate any chip-related restrictions with trading partners or risk U.S. companies losing Chinese market share, calling the idea of decoupling a “protectionist fairy tale.”
The U.K. varied the antidumping duty on heavy plate of non-alloy or other alloy steel products from China to apply for five years, running from March 1, 2022, until March 1, 2027, the Department for International Trade announced. The duties, ranging from 65.1% to 73.7%, include a 73.7% rate for all companies not given an individual rate by the department.
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The U.S. should launch a new office within the Bureau of Industry and Security to measure the intended and unintended impacts of export controls on global supply chains before they are implemented, technology policy experts said in a new Atlantic Council report this week. This could help the U.S. better calibrate its trade restrictions so they don’t alienate allies and hurt American competitiveness, the report said, and could ultimately better convince trade partners to join in on the controls.
China formally accepted the World Trade Organization's Agreement on Fisheries Subsidies June 27. The deal, struck at the 12th Ministerial Conference and requiring a two-thirds majority for ratification, imposes rules to crack down on subsidies for illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing.
Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley said she would block all exports of sensitive technology to China and put in place new investment restrictions on Chinese purchases of agricultural land if she is elected to the White House. Haley, the former U.N. ambassador during the Trump administration who announced her 2024 presidential candidacy earlier this year, said President Joe Biden is “not up to the task” of protecting U.S. national security from risks posed by China and previewed several new policies that could cut off a range of trade between the two countries.
DOJ rolled out indictments on June 23 against four China-based chemical manufacturing companies and eight employees and executives at these companies for knowingly making, selling and distributing precursor chemicals for fentanyl proliferation in the U.S. Filing three cases at two New York district courts, Attorney General Merrick Garland said the suits stand as an effort to target "every step of the movement, manufacturing, and sale of fentanyl -- from start to finish." The cases mark the first time a Chinese company or individual has been charged for trafficking fentanyl precursor chemicals.
The House Foreign Affairs Committee last week advanced two sanctions-related bills, one involving China and another dealing with Iran.