Fresh Sign of Huawei’s Comeback: Exclusive Shipment of Chinese-Made Surveillance Chips

Fresh Sign of Huawei’s Comeback: Exclusive Shipment of Chinese-Made Surveillance Chips

BEIJING/SHANGHAI, Sept 20 (Reuters) – A Huawei Technologies unit is shipping new Chinese-made⁣ chips for surveillance cameras‌ in⁣ a fresh sign the Chinese tech giant is finding ways around four years​ of U.S. export controls, two sources briefed on the‌ unit’s⁣ efforts said.The shipments to surveillance camera manufacturers from the company’s HiSilicon⁣ chip design unit started this year, according to one ‍of the sources, and​ a third source familiar with the⁢ industry supply chain. One of the sources briefed on the unit said⁤ at least ‌some⁣ of the ⁢customers were Chinese.Huawei also unveiled new ‌smartphones in recent weeks that⁢ use advanced chips, which‍ analysts say are domestically made. The developments indicate the Chinese tech giant is overcoming Washington’s export controls, which since 2019 ‌have barred it from ⁣obtaining components and technology from U.S. ⁤firms without approval.”These surveillance⁣ chips are relatively easy to manufacture‌ compared to ‌smartphone processors,” ⁣said the source familiar with the surveillance camera industry’s supply chain, adding that​ HiSilicon’s return would shake up the market.A key factor is that the company appears to have ⁤worked around U.S. restrictions on chip design software. Huawei in March announced⁢ it had ⁣made breakthroughs in design tools for chips produced at​ and above 14 nanometres⁤ – two to three generations behind leading-edge technology, but an advance for the company.HiSilicon mainly supplies chips ⁤for ⁤Huawei equipment but has had external customers such as Dahua Technology (002236.SZ)⁤ and Hikvision (002415.SZ). Before the U.S. export controls, it was the dominant‍ chip supplier ‍to the⁢ surveillance camera sector, with brokerage Southwest Securities estimating​ its global share in 2018 at 60%.By ⁣2021, HiSilicon’s global market share plummeted to just​ 3.9%, according to data from consulting firm Frost & Sullivan.One‍ of the sources briefed on the unit’s efforts said that HiSilicon had shipped some‌ low-end surveillance chips since ​2019 but ⁤that its focus was on the high-end arena and reclaiming market share from⁢ the likes of Taiwan’s Novatek​ Microelectronics Corp (3034.TW).All three sources declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter.Huawei ⁤declined to comment.HIGH-END TOOLSHuawei ⁣drew attention in late August⁢ when⁣ it ⁣rolled out the⁢ Mate 60 Pro, a new smartphone that ⁣uses an advanced ​chip and that users said⁣ was capable of 5G speeds. The event was ‍cheered by Chinese state media and the public as⁤ a comeback for⁢ Huawei’s smartphone business after it was crippled by the U.S. sanctions.Research firm TechInsights, which examined the Mate 60 Pro, found that it was powered by‍ a new Kirin 9000S, an advanced chip it ‍said was most likely made in China by China’s top⁣ chip foundry, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp⁣ (SMIC) (0981.HK).Huawei has not commented on the phone’s 5G capabilities ​or how it produced the advanced chip. The Kirin series has historically⁣ been designed by HiSilicon, and…

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