City
Epaper

US proposes new annual approval system for Samsung, SK Hynix semiconductor equipment shipments to China

By ANI | Updated: September 9, 2025 11:15 IST

Seoul [South Korea], September 9 : Instead of the previously more flexible regulations, the U.S. Department of Commerce is ...

Open in App

Seoul [South Korea], September 9 : Instead of the previously more flexible regulations, the U.S. Department of Commerce is considering a new system of granting annual approvals for semiconductor equipment shipments to Chinese factories operated by Samsung Electronics Co. and SK Hynix Inc., as per a report by Pulse, the English service of Maeil Business Newspaper Korea.

Although still under review, the permanent comprehensive status applied until now will no longer be available. However, the worst-case scenario, requiring case-by-case approval for every single piece of equipment brought into the Chinese plants, appears to have been avoided.

Citing Bloomberg, the report stated that on Monday, during discussions with South Korea last week, the U.S. Commerce Department proposed a "site license" system.

Under this arrangement, companies such as Samsung and SK Hynix, which operate semiconductor fabs in China, would submit detailed annual lists of the equipment, components, and materials they need, and obtain U.S. government approval on a yearly basis.

The "site license" system is stricter than the Validated End-User (VEU) program, which granted indefinite comprehensive approval for importing equipment into China.

The Trump administration revoked VEU status for Samsung and SK Hynix after about three years. "While the site license is procedurally more complex than VEU, it is seen as a second-best option that allows Korean semiconductor companies to continue running their Chinese plants," the report noted.

The Trump administration has consistently argued that the VEU system, introduced under the previous Biden administration, was a regulatory loophole and has maintained its stance against reinstating it.

As a result, the industry had feared a worst-case scenario of requiring approval for every shipment of equipment.

According to U.S. federal estimates, the two companies could have been forced to seek as many as 1,000 approvals annually. If site licenses are introduced, Korean chipmakers would be spared from having to obtain approval every time they import equipment.

The report, citing Bloomberg, stated that the plan could be viewed as a practical compromise, offering more predictability than case-by-case permits.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalDefence Secretary meets Israeli Defence Minister, signs MoU to boost India-Israel defence ties

International"Trump feels very strongly about India-US relationship": White House

InternationalThird India-Belgium Foreign Office Consultations reviews full spectrum of ties

CricketVirat Kohli turns 37: Deep dive into stunning numbers of India's all-format batting juggernaut

InternationalJaishankar meets Sri Lankan Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa, discusses ties and regional cooperation

Business Realted Stories

BusinessPaytm reports strong Q2 with 24% revenue growth, PAT of Rs 211 crore, driven by robust business model, AI-led opportunities

BusinessPaytm’s net profit improves to Rs 211 crore in Q2, revenue up 24 pc

BusinessMehli Mistry steps down from Tata Trusts, recalls commitment to Ratan Tata

BusinessIndia-UK Science and Technology Partnership dashboard unveiled

BusinessWhen AI takes over, India will emerge as most influential civilisation: Report