
China's SMIC says Trump tariffs did not cause expected 'hard landing'
Co-CEO Zhao Haijun told a post-earnings call the company was not consulting with customers on US President Donald Trump's 100 per cent tariff plan for chip imports but expected smaller impact, thanks to contingency plans made after the April tariffs.
"After these past few months, everyone has either stocked up enough inventory for this year and next year, or found other suppliers," Zhao said, "So I think the impact will become even smaller."
Previous tariff rounds had led to cost increases of less than 10 per cent for overseas customers, he added.
China raised additional duties on US goods to 125 per cent in April after Trump effectively raised tariffs on Chinese goods to 145 per cent. On Wednesday Trump vowed a tariff of about 100 per cent on imports of semiconductors, but excluded companies manufacturing in the US or which have committed to do so.
SMIC, which does not have manufacturing in the United States, was blacklisted by the US commerce department in 2020.
China is its dominant market, contributing 84 per cent of second-quarter revenue, flat with the first, while the US made up 12.9 per cent, up slightly from 12.6 per cent.
SMIC's second-quarter revenue rose 16.2 per cent on the year to US$2.2 billion. Its profit attributable to owners declined 19.5 per cent to US$132.5 million, missing analysts' estimates of US$183.35 million, according to LSEG data.
Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), as it is formally known, shipped 2.4 million eight-inch equivalent wafers in the second quarter, up 4.3 per cent from the previous quarter.
Zhao said its production capacity remained insufficient and would stay tight until October due to robust demand from domestic substitution for analogue chips, WiFi and ethernet chips and controller chips for memory.
SMIC's monthly production capacity expanded by 18.5 per cent quarter-on-quarter to 991,000 wafers, with utilisation rates rising to 92.5 per cent from 89.6 per cent in the March quarter.
But Zhao said the fourth quarter is usually a slow season for the industry and rush orders and early shipments would slow then.
SMIC expects third-quarter revenue to increase by 5 per cent to 7 per cent from the second.
Hashtags

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


CNA
an hour ago
- CNA
Asia First - Wed 13 Aug 2025
02:27:30 Min From the opening bell across markets in Southeast Asia and China, to the biggest business interviews and top financial stories, tune in to Asia First to kick-start your business day.


CNA
2 hours ago
- CNA
Tencent says US AI chip import situation unclear as governments negotiate
BEIJING :Chinese tech giant Tencent said on Wednesday it lacks clarity on U.S. AI chip imports as Beijing and Washington continue negotiations, though the company maintains it has sufficient inventory for its AI operations. "We don't really have a definitive answer on the import situation yet. There are a lot of discussions between the two governments. We are waiting to see what exactly comes out of that," Tencent President Martin Lau said during a post-earnings call. The comments come amid ongoing tensions over advanced semiconductor trade between the world's two largest economies. Nvidia's H20 chips, designed specifically for the Chinese market, have been at the center of recent regulatory scrutiny from both governments over security concerns. Lau said the uncertainty would not constrain Tencent's AI ambitions, noting the company has adequate chip supplies for AI model training and multiple deployment options for AI services. The Shenzhen-based company reported strong second-quarter results, with revenue rising 15 per cent to 184.5 billion yuan ($25.7 billion), beating analyst estimates of 178.5 billion yuan according to LSEG data. Gaming remained a key growth driver, with domestic revenue rising 17 per cent to 40.4 billion yuan and international revenue climbing 35 per cent to 18.8 billion yuan. Marketing services revenue increased 20 per cent year-on-year to 35.8 billion yuan, bolstered by the use of AI to enhance the targeting of adverts. Net profit for the quarter reached 55.6 billion yuan, surpassing analyst expectations of 52.3 billion yuan, LSEG data showed. Tencent has accelerated AI investments over the past two years, though capital expenditure has moderated recently. After spending 36.6 billion yuan in the fourth quarter of 2024 and 27.5 billion yuan in the first quarter, its capex fell to 19.1 billion yuan in the second quarter. Lau signaled a more measured approach going forward as the company seeks sustainable monetization from its AI initiatives and to "spend smartly". The company has developed its own large language model, Hunyuan, launching the latest "Turbo S" version in February. But Tencent has also embraced third-party models, notably integrating DeepSeek's technology across its platforms including WeChat, which has over 1 billion monthly active users. ($1 = 7.1756 Chinese yuan renminbi)


CNA
3 hours ago
- CNA
Thai central bank cuts key interest rate to lowest in two years
Thailand's central bank has trimmed its key interest rate to the lowest level in two years in a bid to boost growth. This is the fourth cut in 10 months and a decision widely expected by analysts. The Bank of Thailand brought the rate down to 1.5% with a 25 basis-point cut. The BOT is expecting economic growth to slow in the second half of the year due to US trade policies, as well as a decline in shorter-term tourist arrivals.