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Nexperia Cuts Wafers to China Plant: Carmakers’ Chip Fears Rise

by Tradinghow
October 31, 2025
in Economy, Stock Trading
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Nexperia Cuts Wafers to China Plant: Carmakers’ Chip Fears Rise
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Dutch chipmaker Nexperia has suspended supplies of wafers to its Chinese assembly plant, according to a letter addressed to its customers. The move could exacerbate a supply squeeze that is worrying automakers around the world.

The letter, dated October 29 and reviewed by Reuters, was signed by Nexperia’s interim CEO Stefan Tilger. It said the company imposed a suspension of supplies to its plant in Dongguan, in southern China’s Guangdong province, on October 26.

That action, it said, was “a direct consequence of the local management’s recent failure to comply with the agreed contractual payment terms.”

 

ALSO SEE: Chinese Manufacturing Slumps to Six-Month Low, as Exports Fall

 

Nexperia has been locked in a dispute with its Chinese unit since the Dutch government took control of Nexperia from its Chinese owner Wingtech Technology on September 30.

It also removed its Chinese CEO, citing concerns that its technology could be appropriated by Wingtech.

The company’s move came after the Dutch chipmaker’s Chinese unit resumed supplying semiconductors to local customers but stipulated that all sales to distributors would need to be settled using the Chinese yuan.

Previously, transactions had been settled with foreign currencies like the US dollar.

The company produces large volumes of chips in the Netherlands that are widely used in the automotive and consumer electronics industries. Some 70% of the Netherlands-produced chips are packaged in China and sold mostly to distributors.

“While we have maintained shipments for as long as commercially feasible, continuing the current flow of supply from our front-end sites is no longer justifiable,” the letter said.

“Unless these contractual obligations are fully satisfied, we cannot resume wafer supply to the site. Nexperia is developing alternative solutions to ensure (that) supply (is) continuing to our customers.”

Nexperia added that the decision did not reflect an intention to withdraw from its site in Dongguan or from the Chinese market as a whole, adding that it remained committed to finding a resolution to the problem.

Nexperia said it is financially independent of Wingtech and it does not raise capital from Wingtech, the letter stated.

 

Price of auto chips soars

The group confirmed that it sent the letter but said it could not comment further. Nexperia China and Wingtech did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Court filings showed that the seizure by the Dutch government came as US pressure was rising on Nexperia after Wingtech was placed on a restricted-export list, though Dutch authorities say governance shortcomings were the trigger.

On October 4, China’s commerce ministry blocked Nexperia from exporting chips from China.

Industry bodies have sounded the alarm over the possible impact on production, with Stellantis saying on Thursday that it had set up a “war room” to monitor the situation.

Japanese automaker Nissan said it had enough chips at the moment to last until the first week of November without disruption.

Some Nexperia products that used to cost just a few Chinese cents have gone up in price to two or three yuan each over the past two weeks, more than 10 times their original cost, according to a source familiar with the matter.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

ALSO SEE:

Dutch Take Control Of Chinese-Owned Chipmaker Fearing Tech Leaks

Dutch Minister Says China ‘Biggest Threat’ to Chip Tech Secrets

Chinese-Owned Nexperia Set to Take Over Dutch Chip Startup

UK’s Largest Chip Plant Staff Want to Keep China Owners – BBC

ASML Employee Who Stole Chip Secrets ‘Went to Work at Huawei’

China’s Dutch Chip-Equipment Imports Jump 1,050% – SCMP

China Threatens to Cut Off ASML Over New US Chip Curbs

Chinese Spies Targeting Dutch Tech: Intelligence Agency

Probe Into US Chip Equipment Maker’s Gear Sent to China’s SMIC

Samsung, Nvidia Discussing HBM4, Next Level of Memory Chips

China Bought $40bn Advanced Chip Tools Despite Curbs: US Lawmakers

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.





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