Categories: Tech & Auto

Applied Materials to pay $252 million over illegal exports to China

By Karen Freifeld and Jasper Ward WASHINGTON, Feb 11 (Reuters) – The U.S. Department of Commerce on Wednesday announced a $252 million settlement with Applied Materials for illegally exporting chipmaking equipment to China's top chipmaker Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. In 2023, Reuters exclusively reported that Applied Materials was under U.S. criminal investigation for producing semiconductor equipment in Massachusetts, then shipping the equipment to a subsidiary in South Korea, before sending it on to SMIC in China. The shipments began, Reuters reported, after the U.S. Commerce Department added SMIC to its "Entity List" in December 2020 over its apparent ties to the Chinese military. The listing restricted exports of goods and technology to the company. In documents released on Wednesday, the Commerce Department said Applied Materials shipped ion implanters – a critical piece of equipment for chip manufacturing – first to Applied Materials Korea for assembly and then onward to China without applying for and receiving the required export license. The Santa Clara, California-based semiconductor equipment company and its South Korean subsidiary made illegal shipments on 56 occasions in 2021 and 2022, the department said in a statement. The value of the goods illegally shipped was about $126 million to SMIC, it added. Applied Materials said it was pleased it had reached a settlement with the Department of Commerce, and that the U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission had notified the company that they had closed their related investigations without action. The Department of Justice did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Securities and Exchange Commission declined to comment. The $252 million penalty – twice the transaction value – is the maximum allowed by law, the department said. (Reporting by Karen Freifeld and Jasper Ward; Additional reporting by Ismail Shakil; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman, Thomas Derpinghaus and Lincoln Feast.)

(The article has been published through a syndicated feed. Except for the headline, the content has been published verbatim. Liability lies with original publisher.)

Indianews Syndication

Share
Published by
Indianews Syndication

Recent Posts

Exclusive-NBCUniversal may enter video game business after Comcast split, sources say

By Echo Wang, Dawn Chmielewski and Milana Vinn June 29 - NBCUniversal is eyeing opportunities…

2 hours ago

Exclusive-NBCUniversal may enter video game business after Comcast split, sources say

By Echo Wang, Dawn Chmielewski and Milana Vinn June 29 - NBCUniversal is eyeing opportunities…

2 hours ago

NBCUniversal to be split from Comcast in latest media shakeup

By Aditya Soni and Anhata Rooprai June 29 (Reuters) - Comcast will split into two…

4 hours ago

‘Elle’: Prime Video’s ‘Legally Blonde’ prequel series is a charmer

Pink meets grunge as “Elle” drops a young Elle Woods into a mid-’90s Seattle high…

7 hours ago

‘Silo’ season 3 review: Apple TV series returns with best season yet

“Silo” is so gripping it makes you anxious about a duck-topped PEZ dispenser with no…

7 hours ago

NBCUniversal to be split from Comcast in latest media shakeup

By Aditya Soni and Anhata Rooprai June 29 (Reuters) - Comcast will split into two…

7 hours ago