Tech war: China-listed unit of server maker Inspur on US trade blacklist changes domicile to a location 2km from parent

In This Article:

Shenzhen-listed Inspur Electronic Information Industry Co, the main listed vehicle of Chinese server maker Inspur Group that was added to a US trade blacklist last week, held a board meeting this week to change its domicile to an address about two kilometres away from its parent group.

In a corporate filing, the company did not give any reason for the change, but the decision was made just days after the US Department of Commerce added Inspur Group, which owns a 36 per cent equity stake in the unit, to Washington's Entity List for allegedly obtaining US technologies in support of China's military modernisation. US exporters must obtain a government licence to sell any American products or services to companies on the list.

Although the listed vehicle, which is a separate entity from its parent group in legal terms, is not on the Entity List, its share price has been hammered. Its Shenzhen-traded shares have lost over 20 per cent since Washington blacklisted parent Inspur Group, and turnover of the stock hit an all-time high on Monday, indicating that investors are panic-selling over fears about its business prospects if it loses access to the advanced chips it needs to power its servers.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

The change of corporate domicile, from the address of its sanctioned parent to a nearby office building within the same postcode zone in the city of Jinan, capital of eastern Shandong province, partly reflects the limited options available to Chinese tech firms when it comes to mitigating the risks of US sanctions given their reliance on American components or technologies, analysts said.

Gary Ng, senior economist for Asia-Pacific at French investment bank Natixis, said the growing list of Chinese tech champions under US sanctions - more than 600 China entities are now on the Entity List - has also discouraged investor appetite for the country's tech hardware sector.

"Unless the [listed] firms achieve a breakthrough ... and build a sole China supply chain for their products ... there is a limit to stockpiling and their ability to produce will be constrained by the sanctions at some point in time," Ng said. "Therefore, investors have become conservative and will focus on firms with mature technology if they really want to bet on China's reopening."

Details are sketchy on whether Inspur Group's affiliated entities that are not on the sanctions list can purchase American semiconductors. US suppliers such as Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), which provide the high-end chips used in Inspur's servers, are trying to figure out if they need to halt sales to units of Inspur Group, Reuters reported. AMD said at an investor conference this week it was seeking clarification on the rules.